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In the year 1999, "The
Matrix" and "Fight Club"
were undoubtedly the
best films of the year.
The Matrix was truly
revolutionary in special
effects, specifically in
CGI
(Computer-Generated-Imaging)
technology. The still
cameras that were used
to capture multiple
angles of a single shot,
in bullet-time
technology, was a
creative new approach.
The film is initially
suspenseful with people
not knowing quite what
was happening until
Morpheus (Lawrence
Fishburne) reveals that
Neo's (Keanu Reeves)
reality was actually a
fabricated world that is
an elaborate simulation
created by machines. Neo
and the majority of the
world's inhabitants have
been stuck in simply a
mental simulation
prison.
The magnitude of
philosophy in sync with
special effects make
"The Matrix" a
one-of-a-kind movie
masterpiece. College
classes show this movie
in their philosophy
class, and at the same
time can prove to be one
of the best special
effects movies ever.
Supplementally, "The
Matrix" also provides
endless action and a
pretty solid storyline
that influences
Author:
RichardRowell328
from Santa Maria,
CA
the philosophical ideas
in the movie.
The color palette along
with the time and effort
put into stunts also
accelerates this movie
on all filming levels.
"The Matrix" leaves the
viewer a sense of pride
in the world he/she can
live in to just know
that people are capable
of creating at this
level. Unfortunately,
monetary and timing
motives offset the
potential quality of the
sequels. "The Matrix
Reloaded" and "The
Matrix Revolutions" were
just a waste of time and
weren't carefully
thought out, as was the
first Matrix.
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