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THE MATRIX RELOADED - R-RATED
Stars: Keanu Reeves, Laurence Fishburne, Carrie-Anne Moss, Jada Pinkett-Smith,
Hugo Weaving, Clayton Watson, Nona Gaye, Monica Bellucci, Anthony Zerbe
Directors: Andy Wachowski, Larry Wachowski
Screenwriters: Andy Wachowski, Larry Wachowski
It's a wild and furious ride as the Matrix gets Reloaded and we wend our way to November's
wrap of this truly awesome sci-fi/action trilogy with Revolutions and I can't wait.
Reloaded explains a little more about how the matrix, a massive computer program, came to
overtake humankind and what our heroes Neo (Keanu Reeves), his mentor
Morpheus (Laurence Fishburne) and his soul-mate Trinity (Carrie-Anne Moss) must do
to save the world from the machines. As it opens, the last human city, Zion,
located in the Earth's core, has been discovered and an army of evil sentinels
is sent to destroy it. Neo, whose powers have escalated since the last film, but apparently
not his ego, gets another earful from the Oracle (Gloria Foster) and is sent on a '
mission to find the "Keymaker" (Randall Duk Kim) who can lead them to the matrix's power source.
Meanwhile, Agent Smith (Hugo Weaving) goes rogue and has cloned himself, many times over.
His mission remains the same - stop Neo at all costs. Only now, in addition to the Agents Smith,
there are a set of evil albino twins to contend with.
You'll enjoy eyeball-popping martial arts sequences: Neo fighting about a hundred of the Smith
clones all at the same time and not one losing his ultra-cool sunglasses; Neo holding back
various evil forces on a mansion staircase; Morpheus kicking agent butt atop a
speeding tractor-trailer on the freeway; Trinity holding her own against a set of agents while
she escapes from the top floors of a high-rise.
It's a gorgeously mounted production with handsome scenic design in Zion as the human inhabitants, living deep below the earth's
surface, have carved a new world for themselves. Cubbyhole apartments line the walls and are as cozily appointed as a
hobbit's; there's a magnificent
cathedral-like chamber amid the stalactites where Morpheus delivers his speech of hope;
a massive ship docking bay sits at one end of the
city and different levels are devoted to engineering marvels that recycle air and water.
Features: Harold Perrineau as Link, the new operator on Morpheus' ship, the Nebuchadnezzar; Jada Pinkett-Smith as Zion ship Captain Niobe; Harry Lennix plays Morpheus' nemesis,
Commander Lock; Anthony Zerbe is Zion Councilor Hamann, Neil and Adrian Rayment play the
evil Albino Twins. Playing captors of the Keymaker are Monica Belucci as Persephone and
Lambert Wilson as Merovingian.
The film ends in a cliffhanger, setting up the trilogy's finale and
if you sit through the credits, you'll get a nice surprise - the first run trailer
for The Matrix Revolutions.
Lotta says: There is one critical information scene with the architect (Helmut Bakaitis) of the matrix that is
a little difficult to understand - I think largely because it is too much information given with not
enough time to process it. Other than that, this film does not disappoint on any level.
Studio: Warner Bros.
Production Company: Silver Pictures, Village Roadshow Pictures Entertainment,
ESC Entertainment, Sony Pictures Imageworks Inc.
Reviewed 5/15/03
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