La cité humaine de Sion se défend contre l'invasion massive des machines alors que Neo se bat pour mettre fin à la guerre sur un autre front tout en affrontant également l'Agent Smith dissid... Tout lireLa cité humaine de Sion se défend contre l'invasion massive des machines alors que Neo se bat pour mettre fin à la guerre sur un autre front tout en affrontant également l'Agent Smith dissident.La cité humaine de Sion se défend contre l'invasion massive des machines alors que Neo se bat pour mettre fin à la guerre sur un autre front tout en affrontant également l'Agent Smith dissident.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Récompenses
- 5 victoires et 36 nominations au total
Avis à la une
It seems the brothers must have cribbed the original story for the first Matrix, since the last 2 show none of the original's subtlety or interest, just rehashing and CGI multiplication.
One evil robot, two evil robots, many many evil robots. Wow, what an idea, what creativity!
Viewing the behind-the-scenes on DVD disc 2, you can see the reasons for the incoherence of story and scenes - the huge fractured design team, numerous 'senior this' 'senior that', all contributing to some corporate creation lacking any inspiration. Maybe the corporate cube-farm culture works for making cars, but it doesn't seem to work for films.
I would have liked to have seen another level of reality exposed behind the mindless machines, and why are they so mindlessly evil when they can think up such a subtle ruse to enslave the humans? It isn't consistent. Why not introduce an alien ET culture who is really the master culture enslaving the machine culture by some similar hallucinatory ruse. Or, have the humans escape by transcending their bodies, as in all the traditional gnostic spiritualities.
All in all, the Matrix is just a retread of the movie TRON. TRON at least had some insight into what the machine mindset and motivation for domination might be, e.g. tyrannical game addiction, much like the decadent Roman emperors. The Matrix, after the first film, gives no thought to any subtle motivations of the machine culture, preferring the tired cliché of 'alien villain = mindless unrelenting violence'.
And in the end it all comes down to difference and a right to choose.
Of the three films, 'Revolutions' is definitely the least imaginative and the least interesting. What separated the first two episodes in the series from most other action films was the willingness on the part of the filmmakers to bring some thematic depth and narrative complexity to a genre that, all too often, finds no room for such qualities. The previous two films didn't always succeed in their endeavor - often emerging as more hollow and pretentious than meaningful and profound - but they managed to remain intriguing even in their moments of failure. Unfortunately, the same cannot be said for 'Revolutions,' which spends so much time on repetitive action scenes and special effects that there is little time left over for storyline and theme. In a strange way, Neo himself ends up getting lost in this film, dropping off the radar screen for astonishingly long stretches of time, only to re-emerge periodically to remind us that there really is supposed to be a purpose buried somewhere beneath all this ear-splitting commotion (this could be re-titled 'Finding Neo'). The sad fact, though, is that, once we arrive at the climactic scene to which all three films have been building, the resolution turns out to be a ham-handed muddle, utterly lacking in clarity and coherence After an almost six-hour-long buildup over the course of the three films, the audience is left scratching its collective head wondering just what it was that happened before the closing credits started rolling by. Perhaps smarter people than I can figure all this out for, frankly, after the overall disappointment occasioned by this film, I couldn't muster either the desire or the effort to probe very deeply into the matter.
It goes without saying that the special effects in this film are spectacular - we would expect nothing less - but what we don't get from 'Revolutions' - which we did from the two previous 'Matrix' films - is that little something extra in the form of intelligence and sophistication that made them more than just the bland, over-produced, assembly-line products they easily could have become - and which 'Revolutions' very nearly is. Even the stolid earnestness of Keanu Reeves can't convince us this time around that there is anything hidden under all those cool gadgets and explosions worth our looking into.
Thus endeth the Matrix series, not with a bang but with a whimper - intellectually speaking that is.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe street corner where Neo and Smith fight in the crater is the same corner from which Neo made his phone call at the end of Matrix (1999) - the corner of Pitt, Hunter, and O'Connell Streets in Sydney, Australia. You can see the phone booth to the right when they hit the ground.
- GaffesWhen Bane is talking to Neo while holding the knife to Trinity's throat, the blood appears and disappears on her throat.
- Citations
The Oracle: What about the others?
The Architect: ...What others?
The Oracle: The ones that want out.
The Architect: Obviously they will be freed.
The Oracle: I have your word?
The Architect: What do you think I am? Human?
- Crédits fousThe giant robotic head is listed in the credits as "Deus ex machina" Meaning "a god from a machine." In Greek and Roman drama, deus ex machina referred to a god lowered by stage machinery to resolve a plot or extricate the protagonist from a difficult situation.
- Versions alternativesWhen the film was released in theaters, the waste disposal machine shown at the end had red eyes but on the DVD release the eyes were changed to green. The making of documentary on the DVD still shows the machine with red eyes, obviously the documentary used older footage.
- ConnexionsEdited into The Matrix: Path of Neo (2005)
- Bandes originalesThe Trainman Cometh
Written by Ben Watkins and Don Davis
Produced by Juno Reactor
Co-produced by Don Davis
Performed by Juno Reactor and Don Davis
Meilleurs choix
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Site officiel
- Langues
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Matrix: Revoluciones
- Lieux de tournage
- Sociétés de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Budget
- 150 000 000 $US (estimé)
- Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 139 313 948 $US
- Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 48 475 154 $US
- 9 nov. 2003
- Montant brut mondial
- 427 344 325 $US
- Durée2 heures 9 minutes
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 2.39 : 1