Oscar History
Film Bitch History
Welcome

The Film Experience™ was created by Nathaniel R. All material herein is written by our team. (This site is not for profit but for an expression of love for cinema & adjacent artforms.)

Follow TFE on Substackd

Powered by Squarespace
Keep TFE Strong

We're looking for 500... no 390 SubscribersIf you read us daily, please be one.  

I ♥ The Film Experience

THANKS IN ADVANCE

What'cha Looking For?
Subscribe
« FYC: Ruth Negga in "Passing" | Main | Review: Scream '22 »
Friday
Jan142022

The Surprise MVP of Matrix Resurrections

by Tony Ruggio

Response to The Matrix Resurrections over the past few weeks has not been unlike response to The Last Jedi. A legion of fans loathe it for reasons of defied expectations. That's a typical response when fandom has a set idea of how a long-running tale should continue to unfold, often years later. Others love it, though, enraptured by its discursive saga and meta commentary. I fall somewhere in between, just as I did on The Last Jedi, admired and tickled by Lana Wachowski’s daring narrative excursions. She attempts to unravel and re-frame the myths and myriad cliches, but she could and should have gone even further.

The Last Jedi, for all of the belly-aching by fans, was still very much a Star Wars film beholden to black-and-white notions of good and evil, wherein the Jedi are heroes and the Sith are villains. Rian Johnson had an opportunity to dispense with such binaries and have Rey join forces with Ren to defeat both sides of the aisle. The picture waxes frequently about leaving old habits in the past, and then proceeds to follow old habits to the very end. To her credit, Lana at least one-ups that polarizing sequel by dispensing with one of the binaries central to her creation...

The great war is no longer between humans and machines, but between malevolent and benevolent machines, between wanting peace with humanity and detesting it. That being said, as screenwriter she succumbs to lazy temptation. Strip away its re-framing and reprimanding of nostalgia, and this is essentially a remake of the 1999 original, down to its final image. Some of it works, some of it doesn’t. 

What definitely works is the re-framing of the franchise’s iconic villain Agent Smith, from a suit-and-tie metaphor for strict, robotic corporate hegemony to a slicker, smarmier version of it for the 21st century. Embodied by a terrific Jonathan Groff, clearly having the time of his life, Smith is both the best thing about Resurrections and the clearest sign of its integral flaws. Groff hams it up exceptionally, digging into Smith’s devilish, chaotic energy. He’s no longer a program of the Matrix but now a virus that must be controlled like humans. When Neo is freed, so is Smith, their wish for free will mirroring one another. Smith’s purpose here is indicative of the film’s biggest flaw however: Wachowski is utilizing meta humor and narrative tricks to distract from plot holes and narrative tropes. Agent Smith is a deus ex machina in the flesh, a character whose ultimate purpose is to tip the scales a bit in Neo’s favor, but not much else. There’s a perfunctory fight or two between the two sworn enemies, and then it’s off to the races attempting to subvert our expectations. The attempt is worth applauding, even if the twisting renders the Agent Smith character more pointless beyond vague ruminations on the nature of consciousness. 

What makes it all worth it is Broadway star, former Mindhunter, and Frozen prince Groff’s enjoyably campy, committed performance. He so elevates the movie that he nearly made my personal Best Supporting Actor list! Even if you’re no Matrix luddite, if there’s one reason to watch Resurrections beyond its meta flights of fancy, it’s Jonathan Groff strutting around in sockless loafers and a slim-cut suit that says “screw everyone else, I’m getting mine.” 

How did you respond to the divisive fourth Matrix film? 

 

PrintView Printer Friendly Version

EmailEmail Article to Friend

Reader Comments (6)

Can I watch it without having seen Matrix 2 and Matrix 3? I'm a Groffer.

January 14, 2022 | Registered CommenterPeggy Sue

Can I watch it without having seen Matrix 2 and Matrix 3? I'm a Groffer.

January 14, 2022 | Registered CommenterPeggy Sue

I haven't seen The Matrix Resurrections, but I admired most of The Last Jedi, for its absolutely fantastic visual style PLUS the social commentary that finally dared to show us, a more realistic and darker view of the SW Universe (which George Lucas actually started developing in the prequels!)

January 15, 2022 | Registered CommenterJésus Alonso

Peggy -- i had zero memory of Matrix 2 & 3 (other than that i'd seen them in theaters when they were released and found them colossally boring) and it the 4th one played fine for me. I mean, i didn't understand what the hell was going on but i've always suspected it never made sense even if you did actually understand the plot machinations.

January 15, 2022 | Registered CommenterNATHANIEL R

The Last Jedi's truly beautiful visual style and social commentary that finally dared to present us with a more realistic and somber vision of the SW Universe free games are what I most loved about it, even though I haven't watched The Matrix Resurrections.

June 18, 2023 | Registered CommenterAlexander Craig

The surprise MVP of "Matrix Resurrections" is Jonathan Groff, whose portrayal of Agent Smith brings a fresh, dynamic energy to the iconic character. Groff's performance is both menacing and charismatic, seamlessly blending homage with half body sexdoll innovation, and standing out in a film full of nostalgic and groundbreaking elements.

June 23, 2024 | Registered CommenterWill LEE
Member Account Required
You must have a member account to comment. It's free so register here.. IF YOU ARE ALREADY REGISTERED, JUST LOGIN.