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The Matrix Resurrections review: This needlessly complicated idea should have stayed dead

Keanu Reeves and Carrie-Anne Moss look exhausted in this convoluted fourth film.

1.5/5
Manisha Lakhe
Dec 22, 2021
The Matrix Resurrections review: This needlessly complicated idea should have stayed dead

Keanu Reeves in The Matrix Resurrections | YouTube

The Matrix Resurrections

Story: Thomas Anderson is a successful video game designer, and like all Americans, he goes to therapy and gets his coffee… He has been told that the Matrix didn’t happen, it’s all in his head. Trinity is now a housewife with two kids! It takes a new crew that has taken the red pill to remind Thomas that he’s Neo, the legend.

Review: ‘One pill makes you larger/ and one pill makes you small/ and ones that mother gives you/ don’t do anything at all…’ goes the song that you should know if you are a fan of the holy trilogy. Looks like Lana Wachowski has dished us a ten-foot-tall Alice who does nothing at all for the fans but talk, talk and give us so much talk, you wish you had not jumped headlong into this rabbit hole. No wonder Neo and Trinity look fed up through the movie.

Reincarnation is not a new concept for Indians (remember reading those ‘local boy remembers his past life’ type snippets in newspapers?), so it gets really tiresome when you have a smorgasbord of characters, explaining and explaining some more to the usually gorgeous Keanu Reeves why he should not be a confused Thomas Anderson, game designer but Neo the saviour for over an hour into the movie. The movie should have been titled The Dithering instead of Resurrections you think, as you wish your coffee would turn into many martinis.

You also wish they’d stop talking so much. They talk about what is real and what is imagined, whether there is destiny or free will, and more importantly, everyone tries to convince Thomas Anderson that he’s Neo and The One, even though you remember the Oracle telling him clearly (after so many years too), ‘Sorry kid, you’ve got the gift but looks like you’re waiting for something.’ You grew up knowing that Neo cannot be The One if he doesn’t believe that he’s the one. But there’s so much gobbledegook philosophy from everyone (oh yes, Priyanka Chopra Jonas appears too, spouting a whole lot of it from her chocolate plum lipsticked mouth).

Everyone includes Morpheus 2.0 (Yahya Abdul-Mateen II) who’s so foppish, it’s hard to take him seriously (where’s the man who pursued his belief in The One, you wonder). There’s the lovely electric blue-haired Jessica Henwick (hers is the only believable back story) and her crew, plus there’s Trinity (Carrie Anne-Moss), who now believes and lives a life of Tiffany, a mom to three kids (we see two and third is mentioned) and a husband called Chad, played by Chad Stahelski (unbelievable that macho man of patriarchy would let his wife ride a motorbike, let alone work with them!).

As an audience, we are ready to go chasing rabbits, but all we do is fall (sorry Jefferson Airplane) because when the action comes, there’s no thrill anymore. The bots who swarm act like zombies, climbing on cars and chasing in large groups. Trinity and Neo on a bike between colliding cars that burst into flames should have been an awesome action sequence, but it gets so predictable, you begin to check messages on your phone. Hugo Weaving’s Agent Smith is incomparable, but Jonathan Groff makes for a strong enemy too. And yes, they could’ve explained why his story arc suddenly changes. The real villain of the story is believable too, but then he also talks and talks and then talks some more…Tiresome.

Deja Vu the cat again and again and again must’ve been funny on paper. On the big screen? Not. Plus, why ruin a perfect trope where machines are bad, and sentinels are scary? This ‘Not all machines’ theory came out of nowhere. Plus a children’s movie called Big Hero 6 already showed us how microbots can choose to become a person, so you’re not amazed at the special effects at all… Fans of the trilogy were happy to eat protein slop (has all the nourishment a body needs, no?) Why offer this steak? We would have loved a reboot, a remastered version of the trilogy far more than watching Neo and Trinity in a hostage video of a movie.

Verdict: It’s interminably long, and the philosophy gets too convoluted to make sense after a while. Whereas the three Matrix films combined action and philosophy seamlessly and simply, this one just dithers. And despite being dialogue-heavy, the lead pair say very little. As a homage, the film fails. Watch it at home.

Manisha Lakhe writes on film and tv shows, is a poet, teacher, traveller and mom (and not necessarily in that order). Could sell her soul for Pinot and a good cheesecake.

The Matrix Resurrections is playing in Indian cinemas. Watch the trailer here:

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Cast and Crew

Keanu Reeves

Neo

Yahya Abdul-Mateen II

Morpheus

Christina Ricci

Gwyn de Vere

Jada Pinkett Smith

Niobe

Priyanka Chopra Jonas

Sati

Daniel Bernhardt

Agent Johnson

Max Riemelt

Sheperd

Brian J. Smith

Berg

Andrew Lewis Caldwell

Jude

Toby Onwumere

Sequoia

William W. Barbour

Businessman

Cabran E. Chamberlain

Runner

Michael J. Gwynn

Business Runner

Andrew Koponen

Businessman

Elizabeth Swaney

Runner

Clayton Watson

Kid

Carrie-Anne Moss

Trinity

Jessica Henwick

Bugs

Ellen Hollman

Echo

Jonathan Groff

Smith

Neil Patrick Harris

The Analyst

Lambert Wilson

The Merovingian

Eréndira Ibarra

Lexy

Telma Hopkins

Freya

Ian Pirie

Lieutenant

Chris Reid

Kenny Beers

SWAT Team Member

Thomas Dalby

SWAT Officer

Erwin Felicilda

Runner

Linda Joy Henry

Runner

John Lobato

FBI Agent

Anne-Marie Olsen

Coffee Shop Patron

Steve Tanabe

FBI Agent

Etienne Vick

Business Entity

James D. Weston II

Military

Christina Ricci

Gwyn de Vere

Priyanka Chopra Jonas

Sati

Max Riemelt

Sheperd

Brian J. Smith

Berg

Andrew Lewis Caldwell

Jude

Toby Onwumere

Sequoia

Ellen Hollman

Echo

Jonathan Groff

Smith

Neil Patrick Harris

The Analyst

Lambert Wilson

The Merovingian

Eréndira Ibarra

Lexy

Telma Hopkins

Freya

Kenny Beers

SWAT Team Member

Linda Joy Henry

Runner

Anne-Marie Olsen

Coffee Shop Patron

Keanu Reeves

Neo

Yahya Abdul-Mateen II

Morpheus

Jessica Henwick

Bugs

Jada Pinkett Smith

Niobe

Michael X. Sommers

Skroce

Mumbi Maina

Ellster

Purab Kohli

Zen

Sabrina Strehl

Fiona

Cooper Rivers

GJ

Frank Isom

Brainstormer #2

Donald Mustard

Deus Machina Employee #2

Joe Mazza

Cop

Julian Grey

Brandon

Tiger Hu Chen

M.O.T.C.

Amadei Weiland

Agent White

Nicolas de Pruyssenaere

Lead SWAT

Aaron Pina

FBI

London Breed

Calliope

Mercy Malick

Wife

James McTeigue

Innocuous Man

William W. Barbour

Businessman

Daniel Bernhardt

Agent Johnson

Thomas Dalby

SWAT Officer

Erwin Felicilda

Runner

John Lobato

FBI Agent

Ed Moy

Noodle Shop Patron

Elizabeth Swaney

Runner

Clayton Watson

Kid

Carrie-Anne Moss

Trinity

Joshua Grothe

FunktIøn

L. Trey Wilson

Hanno

Max Mauff

Quillion

Freema Agyeman

Astra

Andrew Rothney

Scott

Esther Silex

Brainstormer #1

Leo Sheng

Bobbi

John Gaeta

Deus Machina Employee #1

Kim Libreri

Deus Machina Employee #3

Chad Stahelski

Chad

Gaige Chaturantabut

Donnie

Volkhart Buff

Kush

Stephen Dunlevy

Agent Jones

Ian Pirie

Lieutenant

Felix Quinton

SWAT

Dani Swan

Woman in Red

Steven Roy

Thomas's Reflection

Juval Dieziger

Utrix Driver

Sarah McTeigue

Tiffany's Reflection

Cabran E. Chamberlain

Runner

Michael J. Gwynn

Business Runner

Andrew Koponen

Businessman

Steve Tanabe

FBI Agent

Etienne Vick

Business Entity

James D. Weston II

Military

Frank Christian Marx

Gay Guy at the Gym

Purab Kohli

Zen

Dane E. Connor

Runner

Dom Hecht

Homeless Swarm Runner

Susan Trishel Monson

Deus Ex Machina Secretary

John Ozuna

Pedestrian

John Denton

Business Runner

Buddy Rahming

Office Worker

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