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downflow311
10-31-2003, 06:24 PM
from aintitcool.com:

Friday, October 31, 2003
Wez and Darth Sucubus say MATRIX REVOLUTIONS is all style and flash over substance and character...

Hey folks, Harry here with some very disappointed reviews of MATRIX REVOLUTIONS. If you don't want spoilers, don't read these... they get pretty specific - especially the second review. Let's hope the film really isn't nothing but visual fx work with dashes of character... The line from both reviews that really scares me is the one that says that Neo and Trinity and Morpheus are essentially Guest Stars in their own movie. Ouch....

If MATRIX REVOLUTIONS was a hard core porno film, it would be a succession of "money" shots. Not in my memory has a film been filled with a succession of ejaculatory fx shots that cover any semblence of story in goo. Forget TERMINATOR 3. MATRIX REVOLUTIONS is the real rise of the machines, the ultimate triumph of visuals over narrative. And as such, a stunning, crushingly disapointing ending to what could have been the post-punk answer to the LORD OF THE RINGS trilogy. Watching it, you feel like Dorothy after she's pulled back the wizard's curtains. But there's no lovable geezer behind the curtains. Rather an insane producer and two directors who've completely blown their minds on all the visual fx toys that money can buy. There are few answers for the people who so desperately waited in line to find out how to get back to Kansas. Rather, it's an e-ticket to ILM with a few cursory explanations on the back. REVOLUTIONS is a voyage that's worth taking in spite of itself to find out how the damn thing wraps up, but you can't help but feel resentful by the end of it.

Those who faulted RELOADED for its endless metaphysical gobbledygook will actually find themselves missing it here. REVOLUTIONS' lines are even more fortune cookie in their maddening "can you guess what I'm talking about" minimalism. And when the action starts, there's no talk at all. Like RELOADED, the first half hour of REVOLUTIONS is a gabfest, with characters stumping like political candidates, promising much without answering anything. Virtually all of this is done within the Matrix, which doesn't make an appearance until the ending. And the trip is nothing to write home about. A shiny, minimal train station, an S & M club that's even more defanged than RELOADED's sweaty rave. Even Lambert Wilson's wonderfully mincing Mergovician is pale here, with remote interest provided by ROAD WARRIOR's Bruce Spence as a train program who owes more than a bit to Vincent Schiavelli's more flavorful turn in GHOST. Only Mary Alice as a new Oracle is able to give some dignity to the empty platitudes that stand for the Warchowski's keys to the kingdom.

And upon the return to the real world, the battle of the machines starts. And goes on. And goes on. And goes on. To the point where Neo and Trinity vanish for what seems to be an hour. Imagine one of the fights in JEDI not cutting away, and you'll get the idea. Sure the visuals are amazing. Some of the best committed to screen. The kind of stuff that sucks the air out of your lungs with the sheer imagination on hand. But the sheer relentlessness of it all ultimately becomes tedious, numbing, then angering. Where are the characters? As an equally disgruntled friend put it, "they're guest stars in their own movie." Tools to pilot the fx with. REVOLUTIONS cardinal sin is in exhibiting none of the wit or storytelling of the first film. Hell, even the second film.

REVOLUTIONS ends with a cosmic battle that's so cool that you can't help but imagine Superman or Ultron in the characters' places. Anyone but the characters on hand, who throw seventy punches when they could get by with ten. Yet for how great all the airborne stuff is, the hand-to-hand combat is boringly staged, about one step above RELOADED's teahouse fight. And by the end, you just want Neo and Smith to get it over with. To reach some frigging answer. An explanation. And when it "comes," the sentiments are pure cyberpunk Hallmark card quality.

There is no victory without sacrifice. But the sacrifices in REVOLUTIONS seem unusually hollow. Unworthy. Almost cheap. If this had the greatness of Wagnerian opera, it would work- a la Ripley's plunge into the furnace at the ending of ALIEN3- a far more interesting third film than this. But REVOLUTIONS is so committed to its spectacle that the sudden injection of tragic humanity seems like an arbitrary afterthought. It pisses you off rather than making you feel.

While RELOADED never quite worked, there was a kind of crazy-quilt greatness to it. Without enough neatness to almost make you forgive the flaws. REVOLUTIONS amounts to one great big "huh?" Joel Silver, a producer prone to spectacles of the best and worst kind, has given the Warchowskis the run of the ship. And they've just plain gone crazy,. THE MATRIX may not have had an original bone in its body, but it somehow made everything new again with a sense of character-driven imagination that turned this into one of the best science fiction films ever. And the Warchowskis probably should have stopped there. If the MATRIX RELOADED worked because of the expectations it set up, MATRIX REVOLUTIONS stumbles under the weight with all of the technical possibilities that Silver's money can buy. And the Warchowskis have run with into the ground with their ejaculatory reliance on fx. Somehow, Neo, Trinity and Morpheus are still lost in the matrix, despite the film's "finality." Indeed, THE PHANTOM MENACE seems like a triumph of character development in comparison to REVOLUTIONS. And probably the saddest thing about these two MATRIX sequels is that there's far more imagination and personality afforded to the Warchowski's concepts in THE ANIMATRIX. Perhaps REVOLUTIONS would have worked in anime, but not when you want flesh and blood from the people you've grown to care about. And the directors who handle humanity with the precision of a computer animator.

Wez

BEWARE OF SPOILERS!!! Darth Sucubus isn't happy about MATRIX REVOLUTIONS and spills beans... Watch out!
"radio" writes the screenplay for matrix revolutions!

...or so it seemed. i saw a screening last night in ny with my fifteen year old son and his friend. and all i have to say is, "so the machines and the humans decide to LIVE TOGETHER IN PEACE AND HARMONY?!?!" what??

that's right. that's the big dopey ending. peace and harmony. what a joke.

the so-called big battle betwixt the machines and MTV-Spring-Break-Zion is okay. there's a lot of yelling and bullets and it seems to go on forever. (sarcasm coming up next) oh there's this really great character! he's a kid and he's 16 and he ain't never been to a war before but he wants to fight real bad. to save zion and all. gee Wally, he's just got to fight! All the kids are doing it! Oh, and there's this tough old general, who don't "cotton to no greenhorn in his outfit"... oh yeah i've seen it all before. we've all seen it all before.

and whoever designed the really cool fight-suits with giant guns (ala Aliens Dockloaders) obviously didn't think building a shield to protect the human driver was a good idea. and they somehow figured that it would be okay if the guns had to be reloaded via a wheelbarrow!! A WHEELBARROW!!

Oh, the greenhorn kid sort of saves the day. And that makes the old general guy awful proud.

but the zion-fight does at least get the heart pumping which is more than i can say for the first hour. the dialog is simply laughable. think George-Lucas-awful.

"just one kiss before i die..." there were more than a few guffawing at the campy dialog.

the big battle between neo and mr smith is a fairly big snooze as well. it lasts all of five minutes and neo fights only one mr smith for some dopey reason.

there's a few cool things that happen. Very very few. i won't say what they are because if i give those rare few moments away there will literally be NO REASON whatsoever to see this film.

and the big ending... the climax of this three-part epic is... the machines and the humans live in peace. yep. they're going to free any human battery that want's to be free and they can go ahead and live in peace.

i never thought i'd say this but it's actually worse than Reloaded! it's not just a bad Matrix film... it a bad movie!

i'm really glad i didn't pay for it. buy some candy. you'll need it to get the rotten taste out of your mouth.

--

Darth Sucubus


my expectations for this film have fell way down. it appears as though the peace ending is in fact the truth. still cant wait to se it, but i wont be expecting much which is probably a good thing;)

jediknight
10-31-2003, 06:25 PM
I wish they would have said rather neo fails or not...

downflow311
10-31-2003, 06:26 PM
true. but what scares me is that all the reviews say the questions from reloaded are not really answered. that scares me.

ambrosia
10-31-2003, 07:55 PM
This doesn't look good. The effects sound like their everything I could hope them to be... but it sounds like the Wachowski's have put the story and explainations on the backburner and hashed up some really mundane ending.

DARKMANX
10-31-2003, 08:02 PM
The first reviews from this site were extremely positive so obviously there have to negative ones.The movie comes out next week and the wait is rather painful.I'll make up my own mind when I see it but so far with the footage shown it looks amazing then so again so did Reloaded a movie a lot of people took a major dump on but one that is one of my favourites and found more engaging then the first one.

spiderman_2k
10-31-2003, 08:04 PM
:(

soremekun
10-31-2003, 08:51 PM
Some of the ainitcool reviews are bogus. Scroll down and look for the red, bold font:
http://www.aintitcool.com/display.cgi?id=16340

Diabolous-ex
10-31-2003, 11:30 PM
Originally posted by soremekun
Some of the ainitcool reviews are bogus. Scroll down and look for the red, bold font:
http://www.aintitcool.com/display.cgi?id=16340

Only someone from america, whos whole political history is based around conflict, would have a sook about a movie ending in peace!

dogisburning
10-31-2003, 11:45 PM
This sounds like ****...Probably another idiot that doesn't like the Matrix wrote this.

Diabolous-ex
11-01-2003, 12:02 AM
Pfff, aziff, the matrix is wikid as the WB have done it. Genius!

freakyplatypus
11-01-2003, 12:20 PM
I also agree that it sounds like astericks.

downflow311
11-01-2003, 12:21 PM
:lol:

adt100
11-05-2003, 08:49 AM
I was just on my way out to catch the film at UCI when I spotted this review from Freeserve.co.uk

Almost made me not bother to go and see the thing. :rolleyes: -

The Matrix Revolutions: will it blow you away?

The Matrix Revolutions (15)
Running Time: 129 mins
Directed by: The Wachowski brothers
Starring: Keanu Reeves, Carrie-Anne Moss, Laurence Fishburne, Jada Pinkett Smith, Nona Gaye


What’s the story?

War breaks out as the machines attack the rebel city of Zion. Meanwhile, Neo must battle the increasingly powerful Agent Smith and also discover his true purpose…


What we say

After all this time, all the hype, all the talk of 'the future of movie making', anything short of the original film’s impact was going to be a disappointment and Revolutions, more so than Reloaded, comes up shorter than Frodo Baggins. Visually innovative effects have fallen by the wayside, replaced instead with yet more overblown, in-your-face cinematic fireworks as the audience struggles to find any sense in the plot or any empathy with the characters. Neo and Trinity’s romance is about as convincing as Charles and Di’s, while the talents of Monica Bellucci are once again criminally wasted as the story fails to tie up loose ends, or indeed satisfy in any way. It’s still a spectacle in places, particularly some of the action inside of Zion, and if you like your movies flashy, loud and devoid of logic, you’ll be okay. It’s just a shame that after the waiting and the obvious effort put in, you’re left with a big empty feeling where your expectations once were. 2.5/5

What the critics say:

'You can virtually see the mystique peeling away while beholding the turgid melodrama, patchy plotting, windy dialogue and, yes, spectacular combat effects of this grand finale.' Todd McCarthy, Variety


'The Matrix Revolutions is a triumph of incomprehensible mutterings which masquerade as dialogue, interspersed with dull special effects sequences that descend into a blur of computer-generated flickering. If the second film was a disappointment, the supposedly slam-bang finale is a crushing, mind-numbing bore.' Damon Smith, PA

'A relentless assault on the senses, with epic sci-fi action on a level we've rarely seen.' Montreal Film Journal 3.5/4

'Best sink a couple of pints and turn up late, to "ooh" and "aah" over the big battle scene, which perks things up somewhat, even if you do start to root for the machines.' BBC 2/5

'For everyone who loves shameless escapism and harmless apocalyptic fun, join the stampede to see the most eagerly awaited production of the year. It is remarkably exciting. And that's what it's all about.' The Daily Mirror

'At the risk of understatement, The Matrix Revolutions sucks. It's not that the final chapter in the trilogy doesn't have stunts and visual wizardry to drop your jaw. It's just that it all adds up to a supersize nothing.' Rolling Stone 2/5

'Reloaded was certainly a lumpy, gaseous treatise of a movie, but viewers of Revolutions may find themselves looking back on it fondly.' New York Times

'When it comes to a film standing the test of time, the audience must have an emotional attachment with the story. A bunch of emotion-free humans dressed in black, wearing sunglasses, and millions of computer-generated machines doesn't fill that bill.' CNN

'If you thought Reloaded was OK or even good (as I did), you're going to be merely disappointed by Revolutions. But if you didn't like Reloaded, God help you when you storm out of the theater and try to get your money back. You deserve it.' Filmcritic.com

Ben Piears, Freeserve Entertainment


Ah well, never mind. :(

There's always the final installments of LOTR an SW to look forward to. :)