Or Morpheous could've just been wrong. He saw the harvesting plant and assumed. (Of course this is fanwank. In expositional stuff like this we should take characters at their literal word.)
It's actually Morpheus and yes the critics in their audio commentary made a note of pointing out that he was less than honest with Neo when he recruited and liberated him but then again Morpheus was following what the Oracle told HIM about his destiny. There was lying and misdirection going on during the entire series.
It's actually Morpheus and yes the critics in their audio commentary made a note of pointing out that he was less than honest with Neo when he recruited and liberated him but then again Morpheus was following what the Oracle told HIM about his destiny. There was lying and misdirection going on during the entire series.
Like the idea this was a planned trilogy of films...
It's actually Morpheus and yes the critics in their audio commentary made a note of pointing out that he was less than honest with Neo when he recruited and liberated him but then again Morpheus was following what the Oracle told HIM about his destiny. There was lying and misdirection going on during the entire series.
Like the idea this was a planned trilogy of films...
I hear this a lot and I tend to think it's not as cut-and-dried as people make it out to be.
Did the Wachowskis have scripts for 3 movies written at the time they were doing The Matrix? Most likely not.
Did they have some idea what the sequels would be like, assuming they got any? Quite probably.
We can speculate as to how much planning was in place regarding sequels but it's extremely unlikely they were completely unplanned at the time The Matrix was released. That's just part of writing anything: while you tell the particular story you're interested in for the first movie/book/whatever, you leave the door open so you can tell more stories and you give it some thought even if you never end up following through.
So, I think it's unfair to say it's a lie that there was a planned trilogy. It might be an exaggeration but I find it hard to believe the Wachowskis hadn't given sequels any thought at all and hadn't brainstormed an overall arc for a potential trilogy. It's a natural thing for someone to do in the course of writing anything: how far can I go with this? Are there more stories to tell here?
I think this stems from people wanting to blame the lackluster quality of the sequels on something concrete. "Well, they didn't plan it out advance, that's why they sucked." I think that's a copout answer. It is probably more accurate to say the Wachowskis didn't really grasp the potential of what they had--and if the allegations that they stole the story are true, it even makes sense that they couldn't construct decent sequels since the original wasn't their idea in the first place.
But the idea that a series must be planned in advance from day one in order to be good is absurd and has ample counterexamples. There is a balance to be had between doing things totally on the fly and having every tiny aspect of your series nailed down from beginning to end.
The only way using humans as batteries works for me is if you look at it as revenge by the Machines for all their years of enslavement at the hands of man. They could have just killed them all and found a different, more efficient power source, but that would be letting humankind off too easy. They wanted to punish them, to make them serve the Machines as they had served man. If that had been mentioned at some point I would have been happy.
The only way using humans as batteries works for me is if you look at it as revenge by the Machines for all their years of enslavement at the hands of man. They could have just killed them all and found a different, more efficient power source, but that would be letting humankind off too easy. They wanted to punish them, to make them serve the Machines as they had served man. If that had been mentioned at some point I would have been happy.
Didn't the Animatrix's "Second Renaissance" mention that?
Like the idea this was a planned trilogy of films...
I hear this a lot and I tend to think it's not as cut-and-dried as people make it out to be.
Did the Wachowskis have scripts for 3 movies written at the time they were doing The Matrix? Most likely not.
Did they have some idea what the sequels would be like, assuming they got any? Quite probably.
We can speculate as to how much planning was in place regarding sequels but it's extremely unlikely they were completely unplanned at the time The Matrix was released. That's just part of writing anything: while you tell the particular story you're interested in for the first movie/book/whatever, you leave the door open so you can tell more stories and you give it some thought even if you never end up following through.
So, I think it's unfair to say it's a lie that there was a planned trilogy. It might be an exaggeration but I find it hard to believe the Wachowskis hadn't given sequels any thought at all and hadn't brainstormed an overall arc for a potential trilogy. It's a natural thing for someone to do in the course of writing anything: how far can I go with this? Are there more stories to tell here?
I think this stems from people wanting to blame the lackluster quality of the sequels on something concrete. "Well, they didn't plan it out advance, that's why they sucked." I think that's a copout answer. It is probably more accurate to say the Wachowskis didn't really grasp the potential of what they had--and if the allegations that they stole the story are true, it even makes sense that they couldn't construct decent sequels since the original wasn't their idea in the first place.
But the idea that a series must be planned in advance from day one in order to be good is absurd and has ample counterexamples. There is a balance to be had between doing things totally on the fly and having every tiny aspect of your series nailed down from beginning to end.
Ultimately, whether or not they had it planned or not, stole anything or not, these two movies were rushed into production before there was a good script in place.
[edit] @ Robert
Oh, right. I forgot that Morpheus said "combined with a form of fusion, they had all the power they'd need."
Yeah, the processing power idea makes a hell of a lot more sense than using people as batteries. Maybe that is what the Machines are using them for and their arrogance prevents them from admitting it to the humans.
[edit] @ Robert
Oh, right. I forgot that Morpheus said "combined with a form of fusion, they had all the power they'd need."
Yeah, the processing power idea makes a hell of a lot more sense than using people as batteries. Maybe that is what the Machines are using them for and their arrogance prevents them from admitting it to the humans.
If you trust TVTropes (scroll down to the "films" entry), the "Humans as parallel processors" idea was what the first film's story used, but some studio execs thoguht it was too confusing so the back story got changed to what we ended up with.
[edit] @ Robert
Oh, right. I forgot that Morpheus said "combined with a form of fusion, they had all the power they'd need."
Yeah, the processing power idea makes a hell of a lot more sense than using people as batteries. Maybe that is what the Machines are using them for and their arrogance prevents them from admitting it to the humans.
If you trust TVTropes (scroll down to the "films" entry), the "Humans as parallel processors" idea was what the first film's story used, but some studio execs thoguht it was too confusing so the back story got changed to what we ended up with.
Dammit, I clicked the link and wound up spending hours reading the articles again. Happens every single time. TV Tropes is more addictive than heroin.
I actually thought Reloaded was a worthy sequel. As for Revolutions, well, the big Smith/Neo fight at the end was cool.
I love all the movies and I get what was being done. They all are a whole and tell the same story. The clue to the whole this is that the Oracle gambled based on what she had learned about humans and what motivates their actions and used that to bring about the end of the war.
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