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RANKED – The Matrix

Often held up as one of the hallmarks of the sci-fi genre, Lana and Lily Wachowski’s Matrix franchise has a long and complicated past: a universally loved and acclaimed original offering giving way to some of the most divisive sequels in film history; adored and staunchly defended by their fans and reviled by those that didn’t fully gel with the future-looking CGI spectacle. With the series making a long overdue return with Resurrections we thought we’d revisit the world of Neo, Trinity and Morpheus, ranking each instalment from the worst to the (some might say obviously) best. Now pop a red pill and let’s get into it…

5. The Matrix Revolutions (2003)

Village Roadshow Pictures, 2003

What should have been the epic franchise’s big finale ends up a bloated mess of a film with Revolutions, largely due to the shift in focus from Neo’s (Keanu Reeves) adventures to the maddeningly uninteresting battle for Zion. In theory, giant mechs going toe to toe with robotic squids sounds like it should be a spectacle for the ages, but after the inventiveness of the scenes within the Matrix the Wachowski’s seem content to rest on their laurels; filling the bland background of Zion with dull, confusing firefights that never seem to end despite the machines obvious dominance. This is also about 80% of the entire two hour runtime and for a final film with as much confusion to wrap up as the Matrix that makes for a frustrating time.

It also means that Neo’s storyline feels extremely rushed, the big cliffhanger of his whereabouts from Reloaded resolved so swiftly it begs the question why it needed to even happen in the first place. The rain soaked showdown between Neo and Smith is entertaining, even if the strobe light effect is borderline seizure inducing, and serves as a satisfying conclusion to such an intense rivalry. But the blinding of Neo and his subsequent transformation into pure light are strange twists to say the least, albeit somewhat expected at this point in the franchise given what the Wachowski’s have shown us. Still, if it means getting away from Zion and back to the Matrix for a few whacky minutes, then bring it on.

4. The Animatrix (2003)

Warner Bros. Animation, 2003

While it may seem like an obvious expansion of the story now, The Animatrix was an unusual concept back in 2003. Give a bunch of Japanese animation studios free reign to create a series of nine short films set within the Matrix universe and see what they come up with (a premise mimicked to brilliant effect with this year’s Star Wars: Visions). The result is a mixture of some of the best storytelling in the franchise since the original film and at its worst, stories that are simply boring. Everything from the origins of the machine uprising to a noir detective story featuring Carrie-Anne Moss’ Trinity is explored and whilst the stories don’t amount to much in terms of furthering the overarching storyline of the main series, they do offer a tantalising glimpse into the Matrix outside of Neo, and all the weird and wonderful places that premise can journey to.

The animation is consistently gorgeous and even in those less interesting stories there is always a positive to be found, whether that be a gorgeous, fully CGI sword-fight scene or the unusually depraved, disgustingly violent sight of a robot ripping a brain from a skull (not positive obviously but tell me how many other animations you’ve seen that have done that). Overall it’s the element of fun and strangeness that makes the Animatrix a success; where the films got lost in an overly serious narrative of choice and chosen ones, these stories are simply able to experiment and have fun with the universe, often finding humour in it and, as the series is known for, producing some truly awesome fight sequences.

3. The Matrix Resurrections (2021)

Village Roadshow Pictures, 2021

Almost twenty years after the trilogy ended, this return to the Matrix doesn’t exactly feel necessary, with Lana Wachowski’s scorn for the current state of the entertainment industry overshadowing the actual story being told, but it is a mostly fun return to this world which thankfully doesn’t seem to take itself too seriously. With Neo once again trapped within the Matrix and struggling to tell the real from the programmed, the task falls on a new crew of survivors – led by Jessica Henwick’s Bugs and a reincarnated Morpheus (Yahya Abdul-Mateen II) – to spring the Chosen One from his digital prison and launch a desperate rescue mission to free Trinity.

Wachowski’s commentary quickly grows tiring, but it is her willingness to embrace humour which the franchise had previously avoided that makes Resurrections such an enjoyable ride. The story isn’t as needly complex as the other sequels – essentially boiling down to a series of rescue missions – and this makes for a far more digestible film; we can sit back and watch Neo kick the crap out of the bad guys without worrying whether the choices he is making are affecting some larger, constrictive prophecy. Where it falls short of the rest of the franchise is in the action; the finely choreographed fight scenes of the earlier films replaced by the quick-cut action of the modern blockbusters Wachowski seeks to lampoon. The point is made but a bit of the old kung-fu Neo specifically points out he still knows wouldn’t have gone astray.

2. The Matrix Reloaded (2003)

Village Roadshow Pictures, 2003

The first of the sequels makes tremendous leaps both forward and backwards for the franchise. From a technical perspective the Wachowski’s were at the forefront of the early 2000’s push towards CGI, making for some bold, innovative action set-pieces that could not have been previously done. Now, watching these films in 2021 that CGI doesn’t hold up all that well, just look at the video-game looking confrontation between Neo and the endless Agent Smiths (Hugo Weaving), but the Wachowski’s certainly get points for trying. The highway chase sequence however is quite possibly the most highly regarded sequence of all the Matrix sequels and for good reason; it is a genuinely edge of your seat thrill ride that doesn’t take its foot off the gas (see what I did there) for a single second, hokey CGI be damned.

Where the series starts its steady decline is in the story department. There are some seriously huge leaps in storytelling and logic being thrown at the viewer and it all feels so rushed, with new characters and concepts introduced in almost every scene without being properly explained. None of it truly coalesces into anything other than a minor wrinkle in Neo’s journey towards realising his potential as the Chosen One, with a constant “is he or isn’t he” plot line never fooling the audience for a minute and distracting from the already confusing main story. He’s Keanu Reeves, of course he’s the one. This is also the film that introduces the concept of Zion and the franchise’s most dull side-story. For the last remnants of humanity it sure is a visually bland and boring place; hell even the machines get down with some funky strobe lights from time to time. No amount of dance party orgies can make you care about Zion, and Revolutions only serves to further highlight how utterly not compelling that storyline is.

1. The Matrix (1999)

Village Roadshow Pictures, 1999

No matter how weird the Wachowski’s took the franchise in an effort to top themselves, the original Matrix remains the best and a defining piece of sci-fi action cinema. The introduction to this dystopian cyberpunk world of chosen heroes and machine uprisings takes its time drip-feeding you the extensive word-building it lays out, taking full advantage of Neo as the audience surrogate rather than the all-powerful Messiah figure he becomes and having fun with his training. The “I know kung-fu” sequence remains a series high-point – a thrilling introduction to the action that would forever change the genre – and the climactic subway fight scene is a spellbindingly tight, spectacularly choreographed edge-of-your-seat sequence that feels gritty and high stakes unlike most of the CGI spectacle that followed.

Indeed this feels like one of the few times the series is ever truly accessible; the narrative is streamlined, the rules of the world are easily understood and you genuinely feel for Reeves’ protagonist, an everyman thrown into the deep end and forced to swim. Carrie-Anne Moss is effortlessly cool in her introduction as Trinity, even if her relationship with Neo doesn’t feel entirely earned and Lawrence Fishburne’s Morpheus is the perfect guide to shepherd us through through the confusion; a comfortably reassuring and suave presence disguising a man desperate for something to believe in. An awe-inspiring introduction to what would become one of the most influential and divisive sci-fi franchises of all time.