The Matrix series
The Matrix series consists primarily of three
films,
The Matrix,
The Matrix Reloaded and
The Matrix Revolutions, all written and directed by the
Wachowski brothers and set in
the same universe. The characters and settings of the series are further explored in other media, including
animation,
comics and
video games.
The series depicts a complex
science fiction story incorporating many
philosophical elements. Other influences include
cyberpunk,
mythology,
Hong Kong action films (particularly "
heroic bloodshed" and
martial arts movies),
computer science and
philosophy of mind. Concepts of several
religions are also explored, including
Hinduism,
Christianity,
Gnosticism and
Buddhism.
The series began with
1999's
The Matrix. The film, written and directed by the Wachowskis and produced by
Joel Silver, was highly successful, earning $456 million worldwide and beating
Star Wars Episode I: The Phantom Menace for the
Academy Award for Visual Effects. The movie's mainstream success led to the
greenlighting of the next two films of what the Wachowskis maintain was conceived as a trilogy,
The Matrix Reloaded and
The Matrix Revolutions. It was a number of years and several iterations of scripts before the final movies were approved. The two sequels, which tell a continuous story rather than being
stand-alone episodes, were filmed simultaneously and released six months apart.
In acknowledgement of the
Japanese
anime that was a strong influence on the
Matrix series,
The Animatrix was produced. This is a collection of nine
animated short films intended to further flesh out the concepts, history, characters and setting of the series. The
Animatrix project was conceived and overseen by the Wachowski brothers, but they wrote only four of the segments themselves and did not direct any of them. Much of the project was created by notable figures from the world of Japanese animation. Four of the films were originally released on the series' official website, one was shown in cinemas with
Dreamcatcher, and the others first appeared with the DVD release of all nine shorts shortly after the release of
The Matrix Reloaded.
In May
2003, at the same time as
The Matrix Reloaded appeared in cinemas in the
United States,
Enter the Matrix was released. The first of three video games related to the films, it told a story running parallel to
Reloaded and featured scenes shot during the filming of the movie, but especially for the game.
November 5 2003 saw both the conclusion to the film trilogy and an unprecedented event: the simultaneous worldwide release of a major motion picture, when
The Matrix Revolutions hit cinema screens worldwide at exactly the same time.
Two more
Matrix video games were released in
2005. The
MMORPG The Matrix Online continues the story beyond
Revolutions, while
The Matrix: Path of Neo allows players to control the series' protagonist
Neo in scenes from the film trilogy.
In addition, several
comics and
short stories based on the series â€" some written by the Wachowskis, others by guest creators â€" have been released on the official website. Many of these have since been collected in two printed volumes.
Reception of sequels
While the first movie was extremely successful, viewers continue to debate the quality of the sequels. Some fans and professional critics believe they exceed the quality and conceptual heights of the first film, while others found the later films disappointing. [
1]
Upon release,
The Matrix Reloaded received mixed reviews. Some said that
"The Matrix Reloaded is first class high-voltage entertainment with stunt sequences that are absolutely breathtaking and will have you sitting on the edge of your seat" [
2] whereas others claimed that it had been "hyped beyond the point where it [could] possibly deliver".
[The Matrix… Reloaded or overloaded? URL retrieved 2 February 2006.] Fans responded that it was not possible to fully appreciate it without experiencing the entire series, including
The Matrix Revolutions,
The Animatrix and the video game
Enter the Matrix.
Several sequences in
Reloaded were sources of controversy whereby some either loved or hated these scenes with generally little middle-ground. On the negative side, a so-called "
rave scene" in the human city of Zion was particularly vilified by some,[
3] as were the various conversations between characters on the subjects of
causality, purpose and the humans' dependence on machines; some felt these concepts were not as well-integrated into the screenplay as those of the original film, with entire scenes devoted to such discussions[
4].
When
The Matrix Revolutions was finally released, a common complaint was that it did not give satisfying answers to the questions raised in
Reloaded [
5][
6], and instead raised new ones. However, many attribute this to a lack of audience understanding of the complex concepts that were presented.
Literature
The story makes numerous historical and literary references, including
Alice's Adventures in Wonderland,
Judeo-Christian imagery about
Messianism,
Buddhism,
Gnosticism and the
novels of
William Gibson, especially
Neuromancer. Gibson popularized the concept of a world-wide
computer network with a
virtual reality interface, which was named "the matrix" in his
Sprawl Trilogy. However, the concept and name apparently originated even earlier in the
1976 serial
The Deadly Assassin on the British
science-fiction television series
Doctor Who, which featured a virtual reality known as
the Matrix. The first writer about a virtual reality, populated with unsuspecting victims, was
Daniel F. Galouye with
Simulacron Three in
1964.
The concept of
artificial intelligence overthrowing or enslaving mankind had previously been touched on by hundreds of
science fiction stories. Many have commented that
The Matrix was inspired by the work of
Philip K. Dick, not only dealing with issues of Gnosticism and
prophetic visions but also the war against the machines in a post-
apocalyptic world. The idea of a world controlled by machines and all of humanity living underground goes back to the
1909 short story The Machine Stops by
E. M. Forster.
The plot of
The Matrix bears some resemblance to the basic plot of Gibson's
Neuromancer. This is not necessarily surprising, since both
The Matrix and
Neuromancer are roughly in the same
cyberpunk sub-genre of science fiction (a sub-genre which
Neuromancer did much to establish and on which it has had a pervasive influence). In both stories a computer hacker is recruited to perform a particularly difficult task. Some of the relevant conventions related to the genre include the
tough-guy hacker/
cracker hero, his optional female
sidekick, and the more-or-less malevolent artificial intelligences.
Several illustrative differences between the two works also exist. For example, Gibson's human Turing Police are tasked to limit the growth of artificial intelligences. The Agents of
The Matrix, by contrast, are AIs who curtail human development. Gibson shows humans working alongside the AI Wintermute; their eventual triumph is presented as a victory for the "good guys". Again in contrast, the human-AI collaboration in
The Matrix—Cypher defecting to the agents—appears to undermine all that good and right stand for. From this standpoint, some narrative elements of
The Matrix can be seen as inversions of those in
Neuromancer.
One other connection between the two is the use of a location called
Zion. In
Neuromancer,
Zion is an orbital colony founded by
Rastafarians, where the main characters dock before traveling to
Freeside, the giant orbital station where the final act of the novel takes place. In
The Matrix,
Zion is the underground home of the free humans (never seen on-screen in the first movie, but featured prominently in the two sequels). It is possible that this is only a coincidence, and that Zion is used as a generalized metaphor for a mythical city which could be considered to be the last hope for humanity. However, given the obvious influences of
Neuromancer on
The Matrix, and the appearance of many
Rastamen in Zion, it is likely that the name
Zion is used both as a
metaphor (including its meaning to the Rastafari movement) and as a gesture of
homage to Gibson.
In addition,
Neuromancer has undoubtedly contributed to the technology seen in
The Matrix. In
The Matrix, various skills can be loaded into humans jacked into the matrix. This is strikingly similar in concept to the Microsofts used in
Neuromancer which also granted a variety of skills to the user. Also, accessing the matrix in both
Neuromancer and
The Matrix involves the use of a neural interface (a cyberspace deck in
Neuromancer and the metal plugs in
The Matrix). Furthermore, in
The Matrix, the ability for a human's senses to be stimulated while jacked into the matrix resembles how Simstim functions in
Neuromancer.
Some resemblances also exist to
Frank Herbert's seminal novel,
Dune, the concept of a war between humans and machines with religious overtones (Herbert's
Butlerian Jihad).
Other similarities can be seen in Matrix Revolutions. Neo is blinded by a murder attempt and after that, Neo can still see, but in a "different way", reminding, again, Paul Muad'Dib in
Dune Messiah. Just after that, Neo sees what can be called a "golden path", as is called the path, choice, Muad'Dib from
Dune decided not to take, although in
Matrix Revolutions, Neo takes this path.
Also, Neo decides to sacrifice himself giving himself to the machines in order to save mankind, much alike to Paul Muad'Dib abandoning everyone to go to the desert in the
Dune Messiah in order that his empire doesn't cause more deaths throughout the universe.
The Matrix is only one of several pieces of fiction that have been
influenced by this book.
The Invisibles
The film also shares many similarities with the first volume of
Grant Morrison's
counter-culture comic book
The Invisibles, of which the Wachowski brothers have professed a familiarity (Morrison has gone so far as to claim that the Wachowskis have
plagiarised the book).[
7]. These similarities are as follows:
*Like Neo, the principal character in the early issues of
The Invisibles (Dane MacGowan) is a young rebel who regularly breaks the law. They are both wanted by two opposing sides of an ancient conflict for their innate abilities (Dane's psychic; Neo has skills within the Matrix) and because they are predestined to be important in the war.
*Like Neo, Dane's initiation involves taking a drug to commit himself to the "true" reality, then leaping from the top of a tall building.
*One of the recurring elements in
The Invisibles is the magic mirror, a strange, seemingly living substance similar to liquid metal, that can act as a doorway to reality. A similar magic mirror is touched by Neo in
The Matrix. Like the mirror in The Matrix, the magic mirror can run all over the body of whoever touches it, seemingly consuming them but actually allowing them passage to other planes of reality/false reality.
*In
The Invisibles, the "evil" side controls the false reality that humanity is trapped in, and takes the form of figures of authority, including agents wearing black sunglasses and suits.
*Meanwhile, the rebels - the only ones who are aware of what reality really is - are a rag-tag bunch of oddballs wearing highly stylised clothing who are forced to act as terrorists, striking back with their own reality-warping powers to free humankind. They also take up codenames after joining the rebellion. Both sides are similar to those in
The Matrix.
*The leader of the rebel cell (
King Mob) that locates Dane is a bald man wearing round spectacles - similar to Morpheus in
The Matrix.
*The climactic arc of volume 1 of
The Invisibles sees King Mob kidnapped and tortured by the enemy in order to make him give up the aliases and locations of the Invisible army. As a result, the other Invisibles in his cell - including Dane - must break in and free him.
Cinematic
The Matrix reused some of the film sets from
Dark City, a movie filmed shortly before that was similar in plot and style but was not yet released long enough to have influenced the movies as
The Matrix had already entered post-production by the time
Dark City was released theatrically.
The Matrix incorporates many other cinematic influences, ranging from explicit homage to stylistic nuances, some of which have been acknowledged by the Wachowski brothers.
Its action scenes use a physics-defying style drawn directly from
martial arts films, integrating
Hong Kong-style
wire work and
kung fu (under the guidance of
Yuen Wo Ping). The hyper-active gun fights recall the work of directors such as
John Woo and
Ringo Lam, while the shot composition during the build-up to Neo's climactic
duel with Agent Smith is reminiscent of
clichés of
Western films (featuring
close-ups of hips and complete with modern-day
tumbleweed).
In the film
Total Recall (based on a short story by
Philip K. Dick)
Arnold Schwarzenegger's character is offered a red pill to return to reality, in precisely the same way that Neo is, while the action scenes of
Strange Days take place in virtual reality. The premise of characters being trapped in a computer-generated world has also been used in the
Red Dwarf novel
Better Than Life, among others.
The Matrix also uses a common science fiction setting in which a
dystopian Earth has formed through a struggle between humanity and machinery or AI, in which a small human "resistance" must fight to save humanity.
In a less known fashion,
The Matrix also draws heavily on inspiration from David Cronenberg's 1981 sci-fi movie
Scanners. The concept of psychic fights is crucial in both movies ; and the hero in
Scanners is actually able to talk to computers, using phone booths very much like in
The Matrix . Most importantly, the black and green
Matrix source code that has become the movie's trademark are literally the same as those in the end credits for
Scanners. It is also worth noting that Agent Smith looks eerily like
Michael Ironside, and that in both movies, psychic fights between good and evil end with exhanges of bodies but not of the minds.
The Wachowski brothers have cited Japanese animation as a strong source of inspiration; producer
Joel Silver has stated that before making the first film, the Wachowskis showed him
Ghost in the Shell[Joel Silver, interviewed in "Scrolls to Screen: A Brief History of Anime" featurette on The Animatrix DVD.] and then stated "We wanna do that for real".
[Joel Silver, interviewed in "Making The Matrix" featurette on The Matrix DVD.] The title sequence, the scene late in the movie where a character hides behind a column while pieces of it are blown apart by bullets, and a chase scene in a fruit market where bullets hit and burst
watermelons, are practically identical to shots in
Ghost in the Shell. There is a
website that contains screenshots of similar scenes from both movies. Also, the movie borrows the idea of
Ghost hacking, which was featured in the
Ghost in the Shell movie.
Mitsuhisa Ishikawa of
Production I.G., which produced
Ghost in the Shell, has commented, "I think [the visuals] inspired the Wachowski brothers a lot. That's probably because cyberpunk films are very difficult to describe to a third person. I'd imagine that
The Matrix is the kind of film that was very difficult to draw up a written proposal for to take to film studios. That's one of the reasons why they used the video of
Ghost in the Shell, because our film had already gained a certain recognition in America at that time. They used it as a promotional tool because the visual quality was very high."
[Mitsuhisa Ishikawa, interviewed in The South Bank Show, episode broadcast 19 February 2006 [8]]A scene near the end of the movie, in which Neo's breathing seems to buckle the fabric of reality in the corridor around him, as well as the "
psychic children" scene in the
Oracle's waiting room are evocative of similar scenes from the
1980s anime classic
Akira.
The extremely fast martial arts seen in the fighting scenes, particularly in the massive "Burly Brawl" between Neo and the Agent Smith clones in The Matrix Reloaded are very similar to the martial arts style depicted in the Japanese anime
Dragon Ball Z.
The general concept of a computer world that exists in connection to the real world is similar to the movie
Tron as well as the anime series
Serial Experiments Lain.
The franchise's close relationship with animé continued with
The Animatrix.
Clothing
|
Trinity's style has been influential ever since, but also believed to be based originally on Molly Millions. |
Trench coats and
sunglasses play a significant role in the Matrix cinematic feel and have largely inspired a
similar subculture. This style seems to be generally influenced by the descriptions of characters in 1980s cyberpunk fiction (in which mirrorshaded lenses were an especially prominent icon), and more particularly by the iconic wardrobe of
Chow Yun-Fat in
John Woo's classic film
A Better Tomorrow. Viewers know whether a character or situation is being played out within the Matrix if central characters are wearing their characteristically dark clothing, complete with sunglasses of little use in the sunless realm of the real world. Sunglasses are worn whether it is day or night within the Matrix, adding to the sense of detachment from reality, the dark
cyber atmosphere, and also the artificial, industrial environment that the characters live in. Symbolically, this may reflect the degree of vulnerability of the characters; many characters (Morpheus, Agent Smith) lose (or even break) their sunglasses during major battles, or discard them: a symbolic disposal of the tough, emotionless image.
Not all characters within the Matrix wear glasses, but as a general rule, the rebels wear sunglasses with rounded lenses, and adversaries such as Agents wear 'evil-looking' glasses with corners or angles. Notably, Cypher, the rebel who betrays Morpheus to the Agents, wears rectangular sunglasses, thus signifying his role as a "bad guy". Agent Smith's sunglasses change after his transformation in
The Matrix Reloaded from the square Agent-style into lenses shaped similarly to the protein capsule of certain
viruses. It is also notable that Agent Smith's sunglasses and Neo's look strikingly similar except for the jagged versus curved designs. The sunglasses used in this movie were custom-made on the set, although replicas are widely available. See
the article about Agent Smith for the stylistic genealogy of the Agents.
Generally, secondary characters seem to follow the alternative fashion of the 1990s, particularly the
Indie and
Rasta subcultures. It should be noted that the Rasta look seems to be very common of the humans in Zion, if we consider the concept of
Zion to be part of the
Rastafari movement.
However, the practical reasoning behind the use of sunglasses in the filming on the movie is that the natural reaction of a person is to blink when the eye views the muzzle flash from a firearm. Sunglasses were used in the film so the audience does not see the actors blinking during gunfight scenes. The glasses also provided limited eye protection from the flying debris of the first movie's "Government Lobby" shootout.
Ethnicity
As seen in all three of the movies, the cast is multiethnic. Nonetheless, there is a particular angle to this which is interesting to explore with regard to the humans of the city of Zion. Most of the free-born people (as opposed to those who have been freed from The Matrix) here tend to be mixed-race. This aspect is rather accurate in depicting demographically what a small secluded population would be like. Racial diversity would progressively die out with inter-racial couples forming constantly. Another interesting example of this was portrayed by director
Simon Wells in the
2002 remake of the movie
The Time Machine, where the Eloi, the last surviving humans in a post-apocalyptic world, are all of a non-specific mixed-race.
Philosophy
The term Matrix represents the
Collective Unconscious and was coined as such by
Ingo Swann, a developer of Remote Viewing at Standford Research Institute.
Elements of
philosophy,
theology and
ontology are heavily present in
The Matrix. Students of
Gnosticism will notice many of its themes touched upon. There are also many references to
Hinduism,
Buddhism,
Taoism, and
Christianity, with concepts of
enlightenment,
nirvana and
rebirth. Further references to
Buddhism and
Hinduism include the
free will versus
fate debate, the use of the Hindu
mantras in the movie's soundtrack,
perception, the concept of
Maya,
Karma and various ideas about the nature of
existence. In many ways
The Matrix is about a kind of
reality enforcement,
hyperreality or, some might say, an awareness that the physical world is an illusion.
Some
Christian anarchists say the world we live in is a Matrix and the only way of escaping is through achieving
enlightenment. They say notable escapees over the years have included
Abraham,
Moses,
John the Baptist,
Jesus of Nazareth and
Muhammad. They believe the movie has many similarities to the
New Testament with Neo, Morpheus and Cypher playing the parts of Jesus, John the Baptist and Judas respectively. These Christian anarchists believe the main difference to
The Matrix is that outside our world lies
paradise rather than the dark world portrayed in the movie.
There have been several books and
websites written about the philosophy of
The Matrix. One of the major debates arising from the film is the philosophical question, is our world
reality or is it merely an
illusion which is billions of years old? Similar questions have also been raised in other
science fiction films such as
eXistenZ and
The Thirteenth Floor (both of which were released the same year as
The Matrix, receiving relatively less attention in
box office sales and ratings),
Total Recall,
The Truman Show and
Abre los ojos (remade as
Vanilla Sky). This theory had also been developed by the philosopher
Nick Bostrom,
Are you living in a computer simulation?The Matrix follows all phases of the
Campbellian monomyth arc with near-literal precision, including even minor details like the circular journey, the crucial battle happening underground, and even the three-headed immortal enemy (the three agents).
The character of the
Oracle is strongly similar to that of the
Oracle of
ancient Greek legend. In particular, her warning to Neo that he is faced with a choice between saving his own life, or Morpheus' is very reminiscent of the warning that the Oracle gave to
King Leonidas when setting out for the
Battle of Thermopylae. In the Greek legend, she warns Leonidas that either his city will be left in ruins, or that a Spartan king must die, thus Leonidas is left with the choice of his own life or the survival of his city. It could be further argued that had Neo chosen to save his own life, Smith would have gained the access codes he needed from Morpheus and the city of Zion would have fallen. Thus, ultimately, Neo's choice was the same as that of Leonidas: his own life, or the fate of a city.
The ideas behind
The Matrix have been explored in old philosophical texts on
epistemology, such as
Plato's allegory of the cave and
Descartes'
Meditations on First Philosophy. In a well-known
Solipsistic thought experiment, the
subject is a
brain in a vat of liquid; in the Matrix, Neo is a body in a vat. The idea of a choice whether or not to take the red pill and accept reality also resembles a famous thought experiment posed in the 1970s by American philosopher
Robert Nozick.
Postmodern thought plays a tangible role in the movie. In an opening scene, Neo hides an illegal
minidisk in a false copy of
Jean Baudrillard's
Simulacra and Simulation, a work that describes modern life as a
hyperreal experience of
simulation based upon simulation. Interpretations of
The Matrix often reference Baudrillard's philosophy to demonstrate that the movie is an
allegory for contemporary experience in a heavily commercialized, media-driven society, especially of the developed countries. Nevertheless, Jean Baudrillard himself rejected the assimilation of his work with the
Matrix series and refused to work with the Wachowskis[
9].
The famous quote by Morpheus
"pulled over our eyes to blind us from the truth" is a direct copy of
Charles Peirce statement[
10].
Marxism
Some
academics have argued that the Matrix series is consistent with a
Marxist analysis of society. Professor
Martin Danahay and then PhD candidate
David Rieder co-wrote a chapter of the best-selling book
The Matrix and Philosophy: Welcome to the Desert of the Real (ISBN 081269502X ) in which they argue that the movie gives a visual image of Marx's ideas, particularly in the scene where Morpheus tells new recruit Neo that the computers have reduced him to nothing more than a battery.
Being slaves to the machine, "[h]umans in The Matrix must produce electricity to run the machines that enslave them, just as workers in Marx's analysis must produce
surplus value through their work," Danahay explained. "Also, the rebels in the movie liberate Morpheus from an office, and they rescue Neo from his
white-collar job. The rebels are trying to get workers to wake up and realize they are being exploited, which is one of Marx's aims, too."[
11].
Danahy and Rider also argue that rebellion against the machines' domination is an analogy for the modern-day workplace with the evil agents dressed like corporate executives, and Neo escaping from his cubicle to escape them. When he ambushes the evil agents later in the movie, they are in an office high-rise complete with impersonal decor. (Source:
Arlington Star-Telegram, June 10, 2003).
Similarly, the
Maoist International Movement has adopted the Matrix as one of its favourite films asserting that they "could not have asked for more in a two and a half hour Hollywood movie" and views it as an exercise in
dialectics in which a new
mode of production is explored, the "battery mode of production". [
12]
The
youth wing of the
Russian Communist Party has also embraced
the Matrix and its sequels with youth wing leader Oleg Bondarenko asserting there is "no difference" between Neo and
Lenin as revolutionaries.[
13]
There are also elements of
conspiracy theories. Similar to John Carpenter's
They Live, the Matrix is presented as the 'System', which secretly controls everything and which, according to the theorists, will eventually consume everyone. In the Matrix, high positions in companies and organisations are held only by those who are part of the System (programs, like Smith or Ramakandra). The Agents are those who uphold the 'order' and keep the 'conspiracy' safe, like the
Men in Black of pop culture.
Furthermore, the city of Zion may be seen as a socialist city as it must be to allow the humans to survive. No form of money or commerce is ever seen, the public has access to food and facilities. The citizens share tasks and labor is volunteered as seen by Zee's shell making and no entity steals the labor of others. This could be seen as a form of
primitive communism.
See also: the
philosophy section of the
Official Matrix website.
Science
Although
sunlight could only dimly penetrate the atmosphere in the movie, it should be noted that the reason given in the movie for
computers enslaving humans makes no sense from a
thermodynamic (physical) point of view. The
chemical energy required to keep a human being alive is vastly greater than the bio-electric or thermal energy that could be harvested; human beings, like all living beings, are not energy
sources, but rather energy
consumers. It would be vastly more effective to
burn the
organic matter to power a conventional
electrical generator. More practical power sources available could be used, such as
nuclear power,
geothermal power,
tidal power,
fusion reactors or any other not yet imagined sources.
Some people have pointed out the possibility that the laws of thermodynamics could work differently in real life than in the Matrix (to make it harder for people to suspect they are being used as a power source), or that the machines have technology not yet imaginable by humans, and thus the known laws of science are impossible to apply in this situation (Morpheus mentions that the human power source is "combined with a form of
fusion"). Another possibility is that of the exploitation of latent electrokinetic abilities in human beings as demonstrated by Neo's destruction of a Sentinel in
The Matrix Reloaded. On the other hand, Morpheus speaks of physical laws like gravity applying both to the real world and within its simulation, and the scenes we see within the real world are certainly consistent with physical laws as we know them.
Entropy, however, can't be the machines' invention, because if it did not exist in their world, or if the direction of energy flow was sometimes concentrated instead of dissipated, the machines either could not exist, or would not require a constant source of energy to operate, mutually exclusive to the idea that humans blocked most sunlight from Earth to cut them off from their primary source of power.
In 1977,
Ilya Prigogine received a Nobel prize in chemistry. Prigogine is known best for his work on dissipative structures concentrated on thermodynamic systems far from equilibrium. His work in this field led to pioneering research in self-organizing systems, as well as philosophic inquiries into the role of time in the natural sciences. His work is seen by many as a bridge between natural sciences and social sciences. With University of Texas at Austin professor Robert Herman, he also developed the basis of the two fluid model, a traffic model for urban networks, using Bose-Einstein Condensation theory in traffic engineering. Any system which is open with its environment can freely produce more energy than the operator has to input. For clarification, this does not mean that more energy is going out than is coming in, it means that more energy is going out than the operator has to input. The rest of the input is provided from nature. Any system that is an open dissipative system is immune to the laws of therodynamic systems as in equilibrium thermodynamics. The laws of thermodynamics that apply to open systems are non-equilibrium thermodynamics. Any living organism, such as a human being portrayed in The Matrix, is an open system out of thermodynamic equilibrium and can therefore produce more energy than it has to actively consume. The rest of the input energy comes freely from oxygen, light, and other input sources that the organism does not have to "pay for". Prigogine's paper on "
Time, Space and Fluctuations" puts the notion to rest whether or not a system can produce more joules of energy than it has to actively consume.
Critical fans have speculated (see
Krypto-revisionism) that the machines were actually using the humans' brains as components in a massively
parallel neural network computer, and that the characters were simply mistaken about the purpose. A massively parallel neural network computer based on human brains might also be more energy-efficient to run than equivalent computer components, solving the thermodynamic paradox associated with the use of human bodies over conventional electrical generators. The characters' error would then be reflected in the "Zion Historical Archive" of "
The Second Renaissance". In fact, this was very close to the original explanation. Because the writers felt that non-technical viewers would have trouble understanding this explanation, they abandoned it in favor of the "human power source" explanation. The neural-network explanation, however, is presented in the film's novelization and
Neil Gaiman's short story "Goliath", featured on the Matrix website and in the first volume of The Matrix Comics.
It is also established later in the trilogy that the machines and humans are interdependent for reasons more philosophical than technological.
Matthew Kapell and
William G. Doty have an edited volume,
Jacking In to the Matrix Franchise: Cultural Reception and Interpretation, which has explored aspects of the entire Matrix franchise, including the
video games, the
comics and animated short films, as well as the film trilogy itself.
* Matrix Warrior: Being the One by Jake Horsley (Gollancz, 2003) ISBN 0575075279
*
Collective Unconscious*
Subconscious mind*
Cyberpunk fashion*
Official site for the series *
The Matrix multiple screenplays by Andy & Larry Wachowski*
The Matrix Reloaded October 27, 2001 draft screenplay by Andy & Larry Wachowski*
The Matrix Revolution October 27, 2000 draft screenplay by Andy & Larry Wachowski*
Categorized directory of links at the Open Directory Project *
The Many Meanings of The Matrix,
Larry Wachowski in a dialogue with
Ken Wilber.
*
The Matrix Narrative Chronology*
Essay: Understanding the Matrix Trilogy from a Man-machine Interface Perspective