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Reviewed By Greg Muskewitz Posted 05/12/04 19:58:24

"The Matrix Exhaustions." (Pretty Bad)

A disappointing close to an overall disappointing trilogy.(It is still not as disappointing as the drop-off from The Matrix to The Matrix Reloaded.) The most disappointing development of this sequel for me was to have Lambert Wilson’s part whittled down to the five-minute after-opening sequence, relieved almost entirely of lines. Once again, we’re thrown into endless convolutions and the personification of cool (“Where is this going? Where does it end?” ponders Agent Smith) with meanderingly obscure dialogue and suppositions (love equates to a dial-up connection — too bad the most of us are on cable modems now), the Wachowski brothers attempt to get hoity-toity with us over allusions to a new Christ (Neo, “the one,” duh), even giving us a crucifixion for the climax of all climaxes. When, in all honesty, it isn’t much of a noteworthy climax with all of the prior repetitious masturbation considered. Again, we get another S&M rave, and one of the reasons for the unendurable running-time could be attributed to the fact that the Wachowski brothers never pass up an opportunity for general havoc, mayhem, and excessive use of CGI. If they were to be more selective about, say, the fights they choose to pick, not only would so much of the excess and tedium be cut away, but then the full amount of energy could be placed into those scenes without seeming stretched and diluted. (That being said, the beginning of the brawl in the rain held some interest, which subsequently drained away along with the gravity.) If our reliance on machines, as shown herein, leads to such a Druid-esque existence, we deserve destruction! With Keanu Reeves, Carrie-Anne Moss, Mary Alice, Hugo Weaving, Laurence Fishburne, and Jada Pinkett-Smith.[See it if you must.]






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