Matrix Revolutions
review by
Cynthia Fuchs, 7 November 2003
Imbalance
"Why,
Mr. Anderson?" asks Agent Smith (Hugo Weaving), for what seems
the umpteenth time. "Why get up?" Why, indeed? Repeatedly
battered and penetrated and tossed about, Neo (Keanu Reeves) always
gets up. And his tenacity -- so coolly trenchcoated and
martial-artsed -- surely frustrates the self-multiplying program
Smith. And now, in Matrix Revolutions, which the Wachowski
brothers promise is the last movie (if not the last video game or
dvd-full-of-extras), you're reminded just why he does get up, time
after time. He does it, says the messiah, because it's his choice.
Ah
yes. Choice -- whether a function of illusion, faith, or actual free
will -- is the philosophical maguffin that runs throughout the
franchise. You choose to purchase the Matrix continuing spew of
merchandise, just as you choose to appreciate Revolutions'
effects in lieu of character development or novelty. And you choose
to recall, no doubt, that the previous half-film, Reloaded,
left loose ends that the current film is supposed to resolve.
That
irresolution took a particular form -- Neo's human body on a gurney,
his other self shot out into a limbo space somewhere between the
slickster haven Matrix and the sweaty-body-filled Zion. This
installment begins by visualizing that limbo as a white-on-white
subway station, titled "Mobil Ave." Discovered by a family
of programs headed by Rama (Bernard White), who last time out sold
the Oracle's termination codes to the French-accented Merovingian
(Lambert Wilson), in order to save his endearingly optimistic
program-daughter, Sati (Tanveer Atwal). The way out involves a
train, run by the Trainman (still sprightly and bad-toothed Bruce
Spence, looking much as he did in the Road Warrior films, and
as good as reason as any to sit through Revolutions, even if
he's only on screen for about five minutes total).
All
this is to say that Revolutions is not efficient and
surprising like The Matrix, but rather clunky and convoluted
like Reloaded. The uncleverly circular plot -- reportedly
informed by ETM (the Enter the Matrix game) plot turns and
speeches -- takes Neo, Trinity (Carrie-Anne Moss), and Morpheus
(Laurence Fishburne) through the same motions as before. They visit
the Merovingian's writhing-punks-in-Hel Club, providing one more
glimpse of Persephone's (Monica Bellucci) stunning breasts; Zion's
Council (again featuring Anthony Zerbe, Cornell West, and Harry
Lennix's clench-jawed Commander Lock); and, with the help of
enigmatic Seraph (Collin Chou), the Oracle's kitchen (where she's
baking cookies as well as smoking a few more cigarettes). Only now
the Oracle is transformed from Gloria Foster, who died during
production, to Mary Alice, whose gracious performance is much
welcome, especially alongside her costars' general woodenness.
Their
dispassion might seem apt, given Revolutions' incessant
repetition of ideas and dialogue: "I see you're filled with
doubt," she observes of Morpheus, "clouded with
uncertainty," just before she tells him that he needs to make
up his own damn mind, that is, he needs to make a choice. The
question, as always, is whether that choice is his, or whether all
he thinks or does is the effect of a greater system. That Morpheus
is the most fervent Neo-disciple (Lock accuses him of believing in
"miracles"), following wherever he's led, doing whatever
he's bid.
While
Morpheus' earnest piety invites jokes (the Merovingian remains the
most entertaining program, delighting in his adversary's impulse to
"get straight to business"), he's almost balanced by
sinewy Niobe (Jada Pinkett Smith), who finally shows up some 45
minutes into the action. Angry and skeptical, she trusts in her own
skills above all, and, as most everyone tells her, she's a
"hell of a pilot." "Come on, keep up!" Niobe
yells at Morpheus. "I'm trying," he wails. She steers her
ship back to Zion through the impossible to navigate
"mechanical line" just in time to restart yet another
battle of the titan machines. The film includes frequent and ongoing
videogamey battles, all loud and fiery, mostly boring, the
almost-climactic one taking up many many minutes, a super-duper
display of CGI extravagance with precious little interest in
character.
Pinkett
Smith's Luke Skywalkery performance thus serves two purposes,
neither especially helpful for the film per se: her Niobe is so
gritty that other characters pale by comparison, and Niobe's ascent
to piloting greatness underlines how much Revolutions borrows
from previous (and upcoming) like-minded sagas, where the right
choice is the only choice and vice versa. No one is going to turn
and run in such a-hero-is-called flicks.
The
fact that she is Jada and not feather-haired Mark Hamill rehearses
the Matrix industry's most progressive sociopolitical agenda,
namely, Zion's primary actors are of color, save for Trinity and
sometimes Neo, when viewers forget Keanu's race-mix. The third film
has it a few ways, granting sober Captain Mifune (Nathaniel Lees),
buzzcut Charra (Rachel Blackman), and relentless Zee (Nona Gaye)
some brief superhuman moments during the assault on Zion, then
granting next-generation status to "The Kid" (Clayton
Watson), as banal and white-boyish as can be.
Surely,
the series has worked hard to rethink racism and race relations,
within and without a slavery framework. Here, the most remarkable
moment comes when Smith visits Oracle, accompanied by several of his
multiple other/same selves. When he begins running on about what she
knows and doesn't know, whether his violence is preordained or his
own choice, she smokes, quietly. "You are a bastard," she
says. Comes the retort: "You would know, mom." It's the
nastiest, most unresolved bit of dialogue in the film. And that's
it. From there, he's off to fight with his "opposite" Neo,
and she's left to think up more ways to upset the
"balance" that her "opposite," the Architect
(Helmut Bakaitis), endeavors to maintain. Just how this is a choice
is hard to say.
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Written and
Directed
by:
Andy Wachowski
Larry Wachowski
Starring:
Keanu Reeves
Laurence Fishburne
Carrie-Anne Moss
Hugo Weaving
Harry Lennix
Matt McColm
Jada Pinkett Smith
Monica Bellucci
Mary Alice
Lambert Wilson
Harold Perrineau Jr.
Clayton Watson
Rated:
R - Restricted.
Under 17 requires
parent or adult
guardian.
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