If that were the case, then I can believe the story is that Trinity can only continue to exist in the Matrix with her body kept on life support in a pod, or that is what they want Neo to believe.
I thought the look of Zion was one of the best visuals of the original movies--it defied expectations and really brought out the theme of the movies that we hadn't seen in the first movies-- that the people who resisted the Matrix were people who did not fit into the narrative of the "real world" the Matrix presented. Zion was filled with non-whites, and in a contemporary film it would also prominently portray a variety of genders/orientation. People who never believed they fit in the straight, white world of the Matrix.
And they want to live a different lifestyle. The rave, dance scene showing people in this grungy environment enjoying the movement of their real bodies along with the touch and feel of other real bodies. Made complete sense to me.
As for how it expanded on the mythos of the first movie; I can't help be feel this is one of those cases of "less is more." The idea of Zion was a lot more interesting than the sweaty rave town it turned out to be.
I thought the look of Zion was one of the best visuals of the original movies--it defied expectations and really brought out the theme of the movies that we hadn't seen in the first movies-- that the people who resisted the Matrix were people who did not fit into the narrative of the "real world" the Matrix presented. Zion was filled with non-whites, and in a contemporary film it would also prominently portray a variety of genders/orientation. People who never believed they fit in the straight, white world of the Matrix.
And they want to live a different lifestyle. The rave, dance scene showing people in this grungy environment enjoying the movement of their real bodies along with the touch and feel of other real bodies. Made complete sense to me.