Home The Matrix Resurrections

The Matrix Resurrections (15)

Cast: Priyanka Chopra Jonas, Keanu Reeves, Carrie-Anne Moss, Yahya Abdul-Mateen II, Christina Ricci
Genre: SciFi
Author(s): Lana Wachowski, Aleksandar Hemon, David Mitchell
Director: Lana Wachowski
Release Date: 22/12/2021
Running Time: 148mins
Country: US
Year: 2021

Thomas Anderson is an award-winning designer of The Matrix video game trilogy. Based in San Francisco at the company he co-owns with business partner Smith, Thomas makes regular visits to a kindly therapist and swallows prescribed blue pills to calm the voices in his head. When a renegade operative called Bugs and a new iteration of Morpheus persuade Thomas to pop a red pill, humanity's saviour takes another tumble down the rabbit hole with a motorcycle enthusiast called Tiffany.


LondonNet Film Review
The Matrix Resurrections (15)

When Lana and Lilly Wachowski hardwired cinema audiences into The Matrix in 1999, the rush of blood to the head from “bullet time” was intoxicating. They supercharged a hyperkinetic style of filmmaking that was pillaged relentlessly by pop culture. The franchise suffered cardiac arrest with the bamboozling second chapter, The Matrix Reloaded, then flatlined a few months later in 2003 with the tortuous conclusion The Matrix Revolutions…

Contrary to its promising title, The Matrix Resurrections turns off life support and unplugs itself at the mains, reuniting principal cast members Keanu Reeves and Carrie-Anne Moss for a nonsensical and nostalgic exercise in chest-puffing self-aggrandisement. A blitzkrieg of old footage nods and winks at an art-imitating-life-imitating-art conceit that invites one character to verbally reference “our beloved parent company Warner Bros” and another to exit limply from the fray with the sign-off “This is not over. I will see you in a franchise spin-off”. If box office takings are brisk, I fear their threat may be prophetic rather than pathetic.

Directed solely by Lana, the fourth picture has a dongle wedged so far up its USB port that it fails to realise the only people laughing at the in-jokes are on screen. Action sequences are breathlessly choreographed, recycling key motifs including bullet casings tumbling in slow motion, but a night-time car chase fails its MOT and looks strikingly similar to the zombified automotive carnage in South Korean horror sequel Train To Busan Presents: Peninsula.

If seeing is believing then Thomas Anderson (Reeves) is now an award-winning designer of The Matrix video game trilogy. Based in San Francisco at the company he co-owns with business partner Smith (Jonathan Groff), Thomas makes regular visits to a kindly therapist (Neil Patrick Harris) after a failed suicide bid and blithely swallows prescribed blue pills to calm the voices in his head. “Don’t make this film Keanu,” they mouth. Unheeded. When a renegade operative called Bugs (Jessica Henwick) and a new iteration of Morpheus (Yahya Abdul-Mateen II) persuade Thomas to pop a red pill, humanity’s saviour takes another tumble down the rabbit hole with a motorcycle enthusiast called Tiffany (Moss).

The Matrix Resurrections is too meta to matter beyond the curiosity value of Reeves and Moss, both in their fabulous 50s, defying gravity again in sunglasses and billowing trench coats. Regrettably, they share insufficient screen time to rekindle molten screen chemistry while Abdul-Mateen II is a lacklustre substitute for Laurence Fishburne’s theatricality. Henwick is a spunky if woefully underwritten addition.

At the end of The Matrix Revolutions, exiled program Sati asked the Oracle if they would ever see messianic Neo again after his self-sacrifice in Machine City. “I suspect so, some day,” intoned the sage. For once, I wish she was wrong.

– Jo Planter


Popular on LondonNet


London Cinemas Showing The Matrix Resurrections


From: Friday 19th April
To: Thursday 25th April

No cinema infomation at the moment

From: Friday 26th April
To: Thursday 2nd May

No cinema infomation at the moment

UK and Irish Cinemas Showing The Matrix Resurrections


From: Friday 19th April
To: Thursday 25th April

No cinema infomation at the moment

From: Friday 26th April
To: Thursday 2nd May

No cinema infomation at the moment