Reviewed by: Jason Murphy
CONTRIBUTOR
Moral Rating: | Very Offensive |
Moviemaking Quality: |
|
Primary Audience: | Mature Teen to Adult |
Genre: | Sci-Fi Action |
Length: | 2 hr. 16 min. |
Year of Release: | 1999 |
USA Release: |
March 31, 1999 |
Featuring | Keanu Reeves, Laurence Fishburne, Carrie-Anne Moss, Joe Pantoliano, Hugo Weaving, Belinda Mcclory, Julian Arahanga, Marcus Chong, Robert Taylor, Matt Doran, Paul Goddard |
Director |
Andy Wachowski Larry Wachowski |
Producer |
Joel Silver |
Distributor |
Warner Bros. Pictures, a Warner Bros. Entertainment Company |
“Unfortunately, no one can be told what The Matrix is. You have to see it for yourself.”
If I had to sum up my feelings about this film in a short phrase, this line from the trailer probably comes closest. “The Matrix” is a terrific film, one of the rare ones that successfully mixes intelligent concepts with jaw-dropping action and effects. Thomas “Neo” Anderson (Keanu Reeves) is a software designer cum hacker who is plagued by disturbing occurrences that are hard for him to merely pass off as mere nightmares. In search for an answer to his questions, he encounters the mysterious “Morpheus” (Laurence Fishburne) and his band of rebels who try to convince Neo that the world as he knows it is little more than an elaborate computer simulation, and that Neo is “the One”—a liberator prophesied to free humanity from its bondage to a malevolent AI.
From a creative standpoint, “The Matrix” is absolutely stunning. It is easily the most stylish movie I have seen in ages (“Dark City,” “Face/Off,” and “Blade” included). Despite drawing from such eclectic sources as “Alice in Wonderland,” the Bible, Hong Kong action cinema, and all manners of science-fiction, noire, and westerns, the film still feels amazingly fresh. The darkly stunning visuals, terrific sound design and music all add tremendously. The performances are great, and even Keanu Reeves did a fine job, though granted, his role isn’t a tremendously challenging one. If the movie fails anywhere, it is in some of the dialogue, which is occasionally cheesy, and lapses into Buddhist psycho-babble sometimes. That said, I found much of the screenplay to be very intelligent, with touches of profound truth and dry humor mixed into it.
From a Christian perspective, “The Matrix” is a mixed bag. The basic story is one of a Messiah come to save an enslaved humanity. However, worked in among this story is a touch of Eastern religion, a fair amount of profanity (including using Christ’s name), and a heavy dose of violence. While I felt the violence was not necessarily gratuitous, be warned: it is occasionally very graphic, and parents would do well to note that this is NOT for the younger teen audience. Some might find the film’s premise of a “fake reality” somehow offensive, but in my opinion, it is an intriguing idea, maybe a warning to our increasingly on-line culture, but not anti-Christian in any way. In short, I would highly recommend this film to those not likely to be offended by the language and violence. It is a piece of terrific film-making; one of the most exhilarating and interesting blockbusters I have seen. I can’t really say more… “You have to see it for yourself.”
See reviews of the other films in this series: The Matrix: Reloaded / The Matrix: Revolutions
The second is bad news for liberals. “The Matrix” provides a place for reformers and misfits. You can do all the reforming you want—Neo was a subversive hacker by night, you recall—without doing the Matrix any harm. All the time he thought he was challenging the system, he was still being used as a “battery” to power that system.
The third is that even the Matrix, even the “Prince of the Power of the Air” can’t make you stop wondering what it is all about; nor can it make you stop following up your doubts with actions. The cautions the reviewer gave—the goo-goo messianism, for instance—are important and need to be borne in mind. But there is a great deal of value here for Christians who know how to see this film.