The Matrix
SYNOPSIS
There are two realities: one that consists of the life we live every day - and one that lies behind it.
One is a dream. The other is The Matrix.
"Have you ever had a dream, Neo, that you were so sure was real? What if you were unable to wake from that dream, Neo? How would you know the difterence between the dream world and the real world?"
Neo (KEANU REEVES) is desperately seeking the truth about The Matrix - something he's heard of only in whispers - something mysterious and unknown - something, Neo is certain, that has unimaginable and sinister control over his life.
What is The Matrix?
Neo believes that Morpheus (LAURENCE FISHBURNE), a person he knows only through legend, an elusive figure considered to be the most dangerous man alive, can give him the answer.
All I am offering is the Truth.
One night, Neo is contacted by Trinity (CARRIE-ANNE MOSS), a beautiful stranger who leads him into another world, an underworld where at last he meets Morpheus and learns for himself the truth about The Matrix.
No one can be told what the Matrix is. You have to see it for yourself.
There, Neo faces another question, as startling as the first:
Is he The One?
Before he even understands what that means, Neo is certain the answer is "no." Some, like Morpheus' colleague Cypher (JOE PANTOLIANO), agree. Others are not so sure.
There are also those who protect The Matrix. Led by the relentless and literally indomitable Agent Smith (HUGO WEAVING), they have methods of gathering information that astound and terrify.
What good is a phone call if you are unable to speak?
Neo, Morpheus and Trinity must battle brutally for their lives against this viciously powerful cadre to find the answers they seek, to understand their own roles in the epic drama unfolding around them, to learn their true power and to recognize their destinies.
Guns. Lots of guns.
Every move, every second, every thought is crucial if they are to free themselves from The Matrix and the existence it represents.
Free your mind.
Every move, every second, every thought is crucial once Neo learns the truth about The Matrix.
It is a truth that could cost Neo something more precious than his life.
MOVIE MISTAKES
Mistake #1:
In the scene where Agent Smith is interrogating Neo, after Smith has sealed Neo's mouth shut and he is backed into the corner, when the camera cuts back to Smith you can clearly see a reflection in his glasses of Neo still sitting down in the chair.
Mistake #2:
When Neo is going to open the door to enter the Oracle's house, you can clearly see a camera on the doorknob. There's a sheet over it painted to look like the wall behind it, with a representation of Morpheus' tie too, because he's blocked by the camera.
Mistake #3:
Neo and Trinity kill all those soldiers on the roof before the agent comes to fight them. The agent shoots at Neo and during the whole dodging bullets scene every single corpse is gone. More to the point, Trinity's disappeared too!
Mistake #4:
When Neo is out on the scaffolding and loses his phone, in one shot you see the phone falling towards an empty street, then you cut to Neo, and then back to the falling phone. This time the street is filled with people and a big parade.
Mistake #5:
In the scene 'Rooftop Rescue', when Morpheus is hanging from Neo's arm (who is hanging from the helicopter), a safety wire is visible running out of Morpheus' sleeve and into Neo's hand.
MOVIE QUOTES
"What is the Matrix?"--Neo (Keanu Reeves) to Trinity (Carrie-Anne Moss)
"Unfortunately, no one can be told what the Matrix is. You have to see it for yourself."--Morpheus (Laurence Fishburne) to Neo
"I know kung fu."--Neo to Morpheus and Tank (Marcus Chong)
"Have you ever had a dream, Neo, that you were so sure was real? What if you were unable to wake from that dream? How would you know the difference between the dream world and the real world?"--Morpheus to Neo
"Human beings are a disease, a cancer of this planet. You are a plague, and we are the cure."--Agent Smith (Hugo Weaving) to Morpheus
"The Matrix is the world that has been pulled over your eyes to blind you from the truth."--Morpheus to Neo
"The answer is out there, Neo, it’s looking for you. And it will find you, if you want it to."--Trinity to Neo
"Welcome to the real world."--Morpheus to Neo
"Whoa."--Neo upon seeing Morpheus make a gravity-defying leap
PRODUCTION NOTES
The comic-book and graphic-novel culture has long examined the dramatic possibilities of alternate realities – places where the laws of physics, biology or time are made to be broken. Larry and Andy Wachowski grew up exploring ideas that challenge the current perceptions of reality, and they began their writing careers developing those ideas. "The Matrix" grew out of the unconventional literature that they read and wrote, as well as their long-time interest in and knowledge of classic mythology and legend. Say the brothers, "We believe passionately in the importance of mythology and the way it informs culture."
Their ideas were further refined through their exploration of the developing world of the Internet. For writers and filmmakers who have come of age after the emergence of personal computers, the online universe is both an exciting and fertile new avenue of creative expression, and a ubiquitous and somewhat sinister element of contemporary life. The Wachowskis explored both sides of the technological revolution when they created The Matrix. Say the Wachowskis, "We began with the premise that every single thing we believe in today and every single physical item is actually a total fabrication created by an electronic universe." The brothers developed this disturbing thought into an intricate story that blends action, stylish imagery and a complex consideration of what actually constitutes reality.
The Wachowskis continue, "Throughout history there have been people who have sought deeper meaning from life and have come to astonishing revelations. In this story we wanted to show what happens to a small group of people who ask questions that have very shocking answers. We wanted their discoveries to be the beginning of the story, not the end; what interested us is what those people would do once their awareness was expanded by what they had learned."
Although the Wachowski brothers first gained widespread attention and critical accolades when they wrote and directed the dark romantic heist thriller, "Bound," they had already written "The Matrix" before they began working on "Bound." They sent their completed script to producer Joel Silver, who has explored alternative futures in such hit movies as "Predator" and "Demolition Man." He was immediately fascinated and acquired the property.
Explains Silver, "'The Matrix' is a very complex story; it takes place in the future but it is told in the present. Larry and Andy have spent years fine-tuning the script so the audience can accept and understand this story. Very rarely do you find filmmakers who know so exactly what they want and are as decisive as these two guys."
The filmmakers' plan for the movie was to combine their provocative dramatic premise with images, effects and action that would truly astound audiences, and fight scenes using Asian cinematic techniques of wire fighting that would break new ground with their intensity and style. Further, the Wachowskis sought out cutting-edge camera techniques to enable them to render entire sequences in ways that action films have never been seen before. -- © Warner Bros.
OTHER NOTES
Theatrical release date: April 2, 1999.
THE MATRIX won three Academy Awards: Achievement in Film Editing, Sound, and Visual Effects (beating out STAR WARS EPISODE 1: THE PHANTOM MENACE). In each category, the winners quoted a line from the film.
The Wachowski brothers got their start at Marvel Comics, where they wrote dialogue for Clive Barker's HELLRAISER.
The official website, www.whatisthematrix.com, features a revolving showcase of comic book writers.
The actors initially thought combat training would take a few weeks. They eventually trained for more than five months (October 1997-March 1998), primarily because the actors and the Wachowskis wanted to limit the use of stunt doubles in the picture; the directors wanted the audience to see that the actual actors were performing the stunts.
Each actor had their own kung fu master on the set.
Neo is an anagram for "One."
The Wachowskis named Neo’s alter ego Thomas, for the biblical Doubting Thomas.
SIMULACRA AND SIMULATION, Jean Baudrillard’s theoretical text concerning culture, reality, and simulation, is the title of the book Neo uses to keep his contraband.
Carrie-Anne Moss sprained her ankle during the filming of the federal lobby scene but told no one at the time, even though she was unable to walk the next day.
Moss appeared in the 1993 television show MATRIX, about a hit man working for the underworld.
A musical theater piece by the Live Bait Theater group in Chicago (the Wachowski brothers’ hometown) called NEO: A MATRIX MUSICAL ran in May 2000.
Producer Joel Silver called THE MATRIX "the first film of the new millennium."
Talking about the making of the film, Fishburne compared the brothers Wachowski to the Brothers Grimm in their ability to tell fairy tales.
Weapons expert Rock Galotti taught the cast how to realistically hold and shoot all the weapons in the film.
The Matrix Reloaded
SYNOPSIS
What if the Prophecy is true?
What if tomorrow this war could be over? Isn’t that worth fighting for? Isn’t that worth dying for?
Thomas “Neo” Anderson (KEANU REEVES) made a costly decision when he chose to ask the question that Morpheus (LAURENCE FISHBURNE) and Trinity (CARRIE-ANNE MOSS) had asked before him. To seek and accept the truth. To free his mind from the Matrix.
Everything begins with choice.
Now, in the second chapter of the Matrix trilogy, Neo assumes greater command of his extraordinary powers as Zion falls under siege to the Machine Army. Only a matter of hours separates the last human enclave on Earth from 250,000 Sentinels programmed to destroy mankind. But the citizens of Zion, emboldened by Morpheus’s conviction that the One will fulfill the Oracle’s Prophecy and end the war with the Machines, rest all manner of hope and expectation on Neo, who finds himself stalled by disturbing visions as he searches for a course of action.
We can never see past a choice we don’t understand.
Strengthened by their love for each other and their belief in themselves, Neo and Trinity choose to return to the Matrix with Morpheus and unleash their arsenal of extraordinary skills and weaponry against the systematic forces of repression and exploitation. But there exist powerful figures within the Matrix who refute the artifice of choice, evading the responsibility it brings as they feed on the emotional truths of others.
Choice is an illusion created between those with power and those without.
Meanwhile, there are exiles like Agent Smith (HUGO WEAVING), whose inexorable connection to Neo compels him to disobey the system that has called for his deletion. Driven by the humanity he once despised, Smith will consume everything in his path on his quest for revenge.
What do all men with power want? More power.
On his treacherous journey toward further insight into the construct of the Matrix and his pivotal role in the fate of mankind, Neo will confront greater resistance, an even greater truth and a more impossible choice than he ever imagined.
You didn’t come here to make the choice. You’ve already made it. You’re here to try to understand why you made it.
At the confluence of love and truth, faith and knowledge, purpose and reason, Neo must follow the course he has chosen. “What if I can’t?” he asks. “What if I fail?”
Then Zion will fall.
Warner Bros. Pictures presents, in association with Village Roadshow Pictures and NPV Entertainment, a Silver Pictures production, The Matrix Reloaded, starring KEANU REEVES, LAURENCE FISHBURNE and CARRIE-ANNE MOSS. The film also stars HUGO WEAVING, JADA PINKETT SMITH and GLORIA FOSTER.
The Matrix Reloaded is written and directed by THE WACHOWSKI BROTHERS and produced by JOEL SILVER. The executive producers are ANDY WACHOWSKI, LARRY WACHOWSKI, GRANT HILL, ANDREW MASON and BRUCE BERMAN. The director of photography is BILL POPE, A.S.C.; the production designer is OWEN PATERSON; the editor is ZACH STAENBERG, A.C.E.; the music is composed by DON DAVIS; the visual effects supervisor is JOHN GAETA; and the costume designer is KYM BARRETT.
The Matrix Reloaded will be released worldwide by Warner Bros. Pictures, a Warner Bros. Entertainment Company, and in select territories by Village Roadshow Pictures.
The Matrix Reloaded has been rated “R” by the MPAA for “sci-fi violence and some sexuality.”
MOVIE MISTAKES
Mistake #1:
During the scene where Neo is talking to Agent Smith in the park area where Neo was talking to the Oracle, there is a close-up on Agent Smith's face. In his sunglasses you can see a bright white screen to reflect the light onto the faces of the actors. This isn't visible in any non-reflected angles.
Mistake #2:
In the freeway chase scene when one of the agents jumps onto the hood of the first car then jumps off, the car flips, then a second later as the car is still flipping you can see the gas tank has been removed.
Mistake #3:
During the freeway scenes, the katana Morpheus used as a foot hold to grab the keymaker keeps moving. It was at arm's length from the top when he inserted it; when Morpheus was standing on it, the sword was a whole body length below the top; when Morpheus took the sword out in his fight against the agent, it was back in its original position.
Mistake #4:
In the car chase scene, when Trinity is driving the cadillac, the Agent in the cop car slams into the driver's side of Trinity's car and the driver's side mirror is bent inwards. When Trinity drives the cadillac onto the exit ramp, the driver's side mirror is back in its normal position.
Mistake #5:
In the scene where Morpheus is sitting in the chair near the end of the movie giving his "War and fate" speech you can see the microphone and camera in his sunglasses. This is repeatedly seen during the whole scene.
PRODUCTION NOTES
CHAPTER TWO: FURTHER DOWN THE RABBIT HOLE
Neo peers into the coded curtain folds of the Matrix, sensing something hidden just beyond his sight.
In 1999, the Wachowski Brothers and producer Joel Silver unveiled The Matrix, a visionary fusion of staggeringly powerful action and densely-layered storytelling. Inspired by stylistic Japanese animé films like Akira and Ghost in the Shell, the questions posed at the intersection of philosophy, mythology, religion and mathematics, the hyper-kinetic illustrations of comic book artist Geof Darrow and the science fiction of authors such as William Gibson, Philip K. Dick and Lewis Carroll, the brothers conceived an epic story that explores themes of technological alienation, free will, the cost of ignorance and the price of knowledge.
Ultimately, the filmmakers not only electrified audiences with audacious visual innovations that have since been imitated in countless commercials, music videos and movies, they created a provocative action film that ponders the essence of reality and identity, illuminating the choices we must make and the strengths and weaknesses that compel us to make them.
The Wachowskis had always envisioned the sprawling saga they unleashed in The Matrix as a trilogy, and the success of that film allowed the writer-directors to tunnel deeper into a mythology that they had only begun to reveal. They approached the production of the trilogy’s second and third installments, The Matrix Reloaded and The Matrix Revolutions, as a single film that would be presented in two parts.
The result is a revolution in and of itself. The visual benchmarks set by the trilogy, such as the groundbreaking technique invented to capture the animé-inspired conceptual state of “Bullet Time” in The Matrix or the pioneering of the Universal Capture process to produce photo-realistic virtual humans for Reloaded and Revolutions, continue to redefine what is cinematically possible. A film trilogy that tells a story of the horrors that may happen if we push technology too far has pushed technology exponentially further in the telling of it.
The Matrix films also bulldoze boundaries in the physical construction of their furious action sequences. Simultaneously brutal and elegant, they combine elements of classic Kung Fu films with Western gun-slinging action, Eastern martial arts and wire work. In the Hong Kong cinematic tradition of directors such as John Woo and Yuen Wo Ping, the lead actors perform their own fight sequences. This method allows for greater storytelling through action – the fights propel the narrative, rather than serving as an entertaining detour from it. In this way, every minute of the film can offer something substantial and meaningful to the audience.
Perhaps part of what makes the Matrix films so intriguing is that their density inspires limitless interpretations – while most films endeavor to provide the audience with answers, The Matrix is one giant open-ended question. Casual references serve as conduits to entire forests of thought; interwoven themes of mythology, philosophy, emerging technology, evolutionary psychology, literature such as Alice in Wonderland, and theological references (Christianity and Gnosticism exist comfortably alongside Zen Buddhist and Taoist thought) all free the mind to consider a multiplicity of truths. The films’ strength lies not in what they are capable of telling us, but rather in our own capacity to take the ideas they present and run with them.
The Wachowskis’ cinematic synthesis of philosophy and technology has inspired several books (including The Philosophy of The Matrix, edited by William Irwin; Exploring the Matrix: Visions of the Cyber Present, edited by Karen Haber; and Taking the Red Pill: Science, Philosophy & Religion in The Matrix, edited by Glenn Yeffeth) and numerous college courses ranging in theme from philosophy to science fiction, computer-mediated communication, religion and contemporary culture. The vast amount of thought devoted to the examination of their work is evidence of the extent to which they have been able to hack into the collective consciousness with their provocative and challenging filmmaking.
“What Larry and Andrew are trying to achieve in their storytelling, the physical action they present, the elements of new cinema and technology they have invented to create images, is unparalleled,” says Keanu Reeves, who, at the brothers’ request, read such books as Jean Baudrillard’s Simulacra and Simulation and Kevin Kelly’s Out of Control while preparing for his role of Neo, the computer hacker who assumes his destiny through his search for truth in The Matrix.
“The Wachowskis are incredibly well-versed in everything from philosophy to mythology to comic books, and the themes running through these films reflect their perception of the timeless questions that have driven man’s quest for knowledge and understanding,” says Joel Silver, producer of the Matrix trilogy. “They’ve created an epic story, told it in a visionary way that revolutionized entertainment, and created a thinking person’s action picture. You can enjoy the films on a purely visceral level, and if you want to go deeper, there are some very profound ideas to consider.”
Those fans who dare not seek the truth themselves can live vicariously through the choices made by Neo, Morpheus and Trinity; those who choose to explore the philosophical, literary, mythological, theological and technological themes that inform the Wachowskis’ cinematic universe can go as deep into the rabbit hole as they dare.
“The truth is often terrifying, which I think is one of the motifs of Larry and Andrew’s cinema,” Reeves observes. “The cost of knowledge is an important theme. In the second and third films, they explore the consequences of Neo’s choice to know the truth. They’ve made Reloaded and Revolutions even more dense and provocative and entertaining than the first film. It’s a beautiful, beautiful story.”
In The Matrix Reloaded, Neo continues the shocking journey he began when he chose the red pill in The Matrix. Having made the decision to believe in himself and accept his role as the One, Neo assumes greater command of his extraordinary powers. But being the One brings unexpected responsibilities, not only toward fulfilling what Morpheus believes to be Neo’s destiny – to end the War with the Machines – but in living up to the expectations of those whose lives depend on the choices he has made.
As the rebels brace themselves to protect Zion, the last enclave of humanity, from extinction by the Machine Army boring down on them, Neo finds himself searching for a course of action. “The second film is really a personal quest for Neo,” says Reeves. “He’s going through a process of trying to come to terms with what he’s been asked to do. He’s on a further quest for the truth, and this means he has to fight harder than before and confront visions of the future.”
Meanwhile, having completed his lifelong mission to find the One, Morpheus finds himself driven to defiance by his convictions. “In the first film, Morpheus is a teacher,” comments Laurence Fishburne. “In Reloaded, he becomes more of a spiritual leader. His belief in Neo and the Oracle’s Prophecy is absolute, and he brings great strength and passion to his increasingly important role in the fight to save Zion. But the truths he encounters along his path put his faith to the test.”
Perhaps the only two people in which Trinity has absolute faith are Morpheus and Neo. Her love for and belief in Neo infuses her with incalculable resolve and “she becomes even more of a warrior than she was in the first film,” says Carrie-Anne Moss. “The world that Neo and Trinity fight in is so dismal and so horrific that by contrast their love is really pure and beautiful. It softens her, but it also gives her strength.”
Hugo Weaving’s role as the indefatigable Agent Smith is complicated by the character’s escalating ability to consume the essence of other beings in the Matrix – plus an upgrade called ego. “In The Matrix, Smith starts off as being a very rigid character with a very strong, defined mission that he has to accomplish,” Weaving describes. “During that journey, he starts to feel human feelings. He starts to feel anger and jealousy. He starts to smell things and he starts to have a hint of what it’s like to have humanity inside him. And he hates that. He sees it as a weakness. In Reloaded, he’s accepted these powerful feelings more and more and I think he actually starts to relish them. His ego has expanded and he’s quite literally been liberated.”
Reloaded also introduces new characters to the story, both in Zion and in the Matrix. A crucial member of the Zion resistance, Niobe is the captain of the Logos, the smallest and fastest hovercraft in the rebel fleet. The filmmakers selected Jada Pinkett Smith to portray Niobe, a central figure in the films as well as in the video game Enter the Matrix, another of the trilogy’s storytelling components.
“Niobe doesn’t have faith; she doesn’t believe in anything but herself,” Pinkett Smith says. “Her ego is a beast and she’s extremely arrogant. The only thing she’s connected to is her heart as a soldier. She knows what she has to do and she’s really good at it. I feel I’m very much like Niobe in that once she’s got her mind set on something, you’re not going to change it.”
“Jada is just as focused and tenacious as Niobe,” Silver adds. “She made a total commitment to the films and the video game, from the training to the fighting to the stunt and motion capture work the productions demanded. Her sheer stamina – not to mention the strength and spirit she brings to her character – is truly impressive.”
In contrast to Niobe’s fierce tenacity is the Merovingian, a perversely indulgent Matrix power broker who is endlessly flanked by his alluring wife Persephone and a cabal of bodyguards, including ghostly, razor-wielding Twins. “He’s the personification of all forms of indulgence in the voluptuousness of life,” says Lambert Wilson of his voracious character. “What he lacks, and therefore what he likes to indulge in, is emotion.”
“The Merovingian and Persephone are like vampires in that way,” says Monica Bellucci, who plays the manipulative trophy wife. “They want to provoke emotion in other people so they can feed on it. Persephone is very elegant, very sophisticated, but also very corrupt, and she’ll use her power to get what she wants – which is to feel.”
Rounding out the main cast of The Matrix Reloaded are Gloria Foster as the Oracle; Harold Perrineau as Link, the Nebuchadnezzar’s new operator; Randall Duk Kim as the Key Maker; Neil and Adrian Rayment as the Merovingian’s ethereal bodyguards, the Twins; Nona Gaye as Link’s girlfriend Zee; Harry Lennix as Commander Lock; Collin Chou as Seraph, the Oracle’s bodyguard; Anthony Wong as Ghost, Niobe’s first mate aboard the Logos; Anthony Zerbe as Councillor Hamman; Cornel West as Councillor West; and boxing champion Roy Jones, Jr. as Captain Ballard.
ICE IS YOUR FRIEND: NOT-SO-BASIC TRAINING
You do not truly know someone until you fight them.
In preparation for The Matrix, Keanu Reeves, Carrie-Anne Moss, Laurence Fishburne and Hugo Weaving spent four solid months during the winter of 1997-98 training with master martial artist and wire work specialist Yuen Wo Ping to learn the Kung Fu and wire skills they would need to perform the film’s complex and demanding fight scenes.
While the cast embraced this unprecedented approach to Western action filmmaking – in which they would execute fight scenes typically handled entirely by stunt performers – they were somewhat unprepared for the grueling experience that lay ahead. Tenacity, perseverance and the desire to bring the Wachowski Brothers’ vision to life inspired the cast and martial arts team to accomplish what had never been done before in an incredibly short period of time. “We wanted to be able to achieve the extraordinary,” says Keanu Reeves.
When the actors returned to training for Reloaded and Revolutions in November 2000, they were ready. “The cast arrived in much better shape, much fitter, with a far greater understanding of the demands we would place on them,” Wo Ping says.
“Training for these two films was probably three times harder than preparing for the first,” Reeves admits. “Neo’s Kung Fu elements and wire work are more sophisticated – there are more movements in one particular fight in Reloaded than there are in the whole of the first Matrix.”
Daily training sessions were held in a Santa Monica airplane hangar during an exceptionally cold and rainy winter. “We’d arrive in the morning and they’d have to vacuum up the water from the rain that had fallen the night before,” recalls Laurence Fishburne. The stunt team had almost tripled in size since The Matrix – in part to include twelve stunt men to play multiple Agent Smiths – and they shared the training space with the production’s sizeable motion capture stage.
Reeves devoted at least seven hours a day to Kung Fu work. While training for and filming The Matrix, he was recovering from neck surgery, which restricted his movements, and Wo Ping accommodated his injury by choreographing routines that featured more hand-to-hand combat than kicking. This time around, Reeves had no such limitations. “The more I could do, the more they pushed me,” recalls the dedicated actor. “So when I could do one thing well, that was the day they’d ask me if I could do two things. Then when we were shooting, the brothers would ask me if I could do seven things! It was all very good fun, but very hard work as well. And painful – ice is your friend.” (During training, Reeves was known to sit in a bathtub full of ice.)
“Keanu is exceptional,” compliments Wo Ping. “He is a super perfectionist, always dissatisfied with his own performance, even when I think it’s very good! I tried my best to match the level that he was looking for. In the first Matrix, Neo uses his single hand to fight with the Agents. But in Reloaded, Neo finds out that the Agents have been upgraded, and so he must upgrade himself. From there I had to add a lot of movements for Neo to tackle the Agents with that are very, very difficult, but Keanu did it all with great style.”
Reeves worked with twelve stunt men for nine weeks perfecting a five-and-a-half-minute routine comprised of over 500 moves. Such ambitious training was the only way to reach the level of technical acuity necessary to achieve the brothers’ vision for the film’s awe-inspiring action. “Wo Ping, Larry and Andy want the fights to be as spectacular as possible,” he says. “They love spectacle and they want to entertain. They’re interested in physical contact in both its positive and negative light, in the same way that fire can be destructive and it can also give warmth – that’s what they want from an action sequence.”
Joel Silver believes the master fight choreographer has been invaluable in achieving the Wachowskis’ grand vision for the story arc of the Matrix trilogy. “Wo Ping’s style meshes exceptionally well with the brothers’ philosophy in terms of storytelling,” says the producer. “Beyond the obvious antagonist and protagonist combating in a test of physical will, he illustrates the characters’ development through the fights. It was in the Dojo Fight in The Matrix that Neo first began to explore his potential, and in Reloaded’s Burly Brawl, he is so challenged by the onslaught that he has to elevate himself to a whole new level.”
The exhilarating fight scenes result from a powerful synthesis between the choreographer, the filmmakers and the cast. “The concept for all the fight scenes originates with the brothers,” Wo Ping explains. “I base the scenes on their ideas and then build on them. The Burly Brawl was difficult because Neo has to fight 100 Agent Smiths simultaneously, and Keanu had to learn an incredible series of dense, frequent moves. Then I had to ask each individual Smith stunt double to watch Hugo’s movements and then imitate them exactly. The choreography was based on all these people being able to execute it perfectly.”
Wo Ping’s choreography for the Teahouse Fight, in which Neo is put to the test by Seraph, the Oracle’s bodyguard, demanded a high level of martial mastery from Reeves. “Neo and Seraph are both connected to the Oracle on the same level,” Wo Ping explains, “and therefore their Kung Fu standard should be at the same level. But Collin Chou, who plays Seraph, is an Eastern actor who has been training in martial arts for many years. Compared to someone who’s been training for 10 years, Keanu is at an elementary level, and therefore I had to get the very best from him so that they were on the same level when they fought. Thanks once again to Keanu’s perseverance, we were able to achieve that balance.”
Wo Ping’s style of integrating myriad elements into his fights increases their intensity and makes them incredibly fascinating to watch. “The more you change the variables in a scene, the more interesting it becomes,” he says. “In Reloaded’s opening fight sequence, I improvised, using helmets as a kind of weapon, and Carrie-Anne uses those weapons very powerfully. I also designed an extremely fast, powerful kick for her, which we called the Scorpion Kick. I trained her for over six months just for that one kick. She performed it very, very powerfully, with great precision.”
“Trinity is all about the Scorpion Kick and the chop,” says Carrie-Anne Moss. “Once again, Wo Ping was such a great teacher. I’ll never forget the audience’s response to the first fight I had in the Matrix, so I hope that people are just as excited by my fight in the opening sequence of Reloaded. It’s pretty powerful.”
“Carrie-Anne is very, very good and I always encouraged her to feel more confident about her ability,” says Wo Ping. “For Carrie-Anne, as for everyone, the fighting and the training were far more intense than for the first film, but the more we encouraged her, the more confident she became.”
Although her performance doesn’t betray it, not all went well for Moss during training. “I trained for six or seven weeks before we even officially began, to be in great shape so I could really, really, really kick some ass,” she says. “And then I landed wrong during training, and basically, my thigh broke my knee. And I broke it right then and there, but I went into total shock and denial, and decided to drive myself home and then drive myself back to work the next day. It was brutal, because all I could think of at the time was, ‘Oh my God, I’m not gonna be able to do the movie!’”
“Carrie-Anne and I escaped injury on the first film, so we were due,” Fishburne muses. “We both got injured this time. She broke her leg and I severely hyperextended my wrist, which put me in a soft cast for about six weeks and slowed me down.” But Fishburne’s judicious training method helped him to stay on schedule despite his injury. “I approached training a little smarter this time, and since the trainers understood what we were capable of and we understood what was going to be required of us, we were able to pace ourselves a lot better. Because maintaining a particular kind of shape for two years is a lot harder than maintaining it for nine months.”
“Laurence is very smart and he learns things very easily and quickly,” says Wo Ping. “His body language and flexibility are good, and he can kick very well. In his training, we emphasized the power of his punch and his kick.”
One new component thrown into the mix for Fishburne was mastering the art of war with a samurai sword. “I wouldn’t dare think that I could master it, but a samurai sword is not that difficult a weapon to wield,” Fishburne says. “But I found it did require a particular strength in the forearm area that I had to develop quickly. The sequence in the film where Morpheus uses the sword is one of the shining moments for me in my performance. I will always, always have wonderful memories of that.”
In addition to training Fishburne and the other actors to use a cache of new weapons, Wo Ping also choreographed a daunting fight sequence that unfolds atop a racing eighteen-wheeler. “This was very difficult, because the truck is speeding so you have to focus on balance,” explains Wo Ping. “The choreography in this scene shows how Morpheus experiences a moment of crisis and uses Kung Fu to regain his balance.”
Fishburne trained for the big rig battle atop a scaffold that was built to match the dimensions of the top of the truck. “The truck-top fight is a brilliant piece of choreography,” Fishburne raves. “It’s pretty staggering. Just the size of those vehicles is so daunting, let alone performing a Kung Fu fight on top of them. It blows my mind.”
Like Fishburne, Hugo Weaving took a smarter approach to his training for Reloaded and Revolutions. “I basically looked after my body a lot better than I had done the first time round,” explains Weaving, “and trained well but carefully, because I was mindful of what could happen – I tried not to push myself to achieve the physical perfection within too short a period of time.”
“Hugo had a lot of injuries on the first one, and in this one he came back and really, really pushed himself in training,” says martial arts stunt coordinator Chad Stahelski. “When you see the scenes, you’ve got to remember that it’s the real Hugo mixed in with twelve of the best martial arts stunt guys around, and he’s holding his own.”
Jada Pinkett Smith began training before the official sessions even started. “The script made a reference to Niobe’s muscles bulging as she steered her ship, so I figured I’d better get some muscles,” says Pinkett Smith, who adopted her character’s mindset toward training. “Niobe would focus very strongly on her body because her body is her temple, her body is her tool. She would be into the hardcore training because it strengthens your mind as much or even more than your physical body. It creates heart. It creates that soldier mentality, and for Niobe it’s all about strength. So I started by doing weight lifting, then I went on to the martial arts training. And eventually I got to kick a little ass, which was a lot of fun.”
Pinkett Smith, who gave birth to daughter Willow shortly before her training commenced, quickly became familiar with the blood, sweat and tears that were regularly wrung from the cast during the intense process. “I remember early on in training I saw Keanu soaking in a tub of ice, and I looked at him like ‘What are you doing that for?’” she recalls. “And he said ‘One day you’ll know.’ And I swear, after I did my first fight scene and my joints were swollen, my legs felt like concrete boulders and every part of my body was aching, then I knew what that ice was for! I don’t know how Keanu and Carrie-Anne did it time and time again, I really don’t.”
Neil and Adrian Rayment, internationally renowned Black Belt Shotokan Karate instructors, were honored to bring their considerable martial arts experience under the aegis of Wo Ping. “We started doing karate when we were about sixteen,” says Neil. “We grew up watching Kung Fu films from Hong Kong, and Wo Ping has always been one of our heroes, not just for his ability as a martial artist, but also as a director.”
“To find ourselves suddenly training with him was very intimidating – we’re not that worthy!” Adrian exclaims. “We worked really hard, and every now and again he’d just grin at us out of the blue, which was wonderful – it felt like he’d patted us on the head!”
Like his fellow actors, Fishburne has great appreciation for the master choreographer’s powerful artistry. “I think Wo Ping and his crew have to be applauded for the way in which they entered into this whole enterprise, stayed away from home for years and made us look brilliant,” says Fishburne. “You can’t put a price on what their expertise, their experience and creativity has brought to these films. The Matrix would not be what it is without their influence.”
BEYOND BULLET TIME: CREATING VIRTUAL CINEMA
What do all men with power want? More power.
The visual effects process for The Matrix Reloaded and The Matrix Revolutions began in March 2000 at the production’s in-house visual effects division, ESC (pronounced “Escape”), where John Gaeta, visual effects supervisor of the Matrix trilogy, has supervised the creation of over 1,000 virtual effects shots for Reloaded alone – dwarfing in size and scope the 412 VFX shots created for The Matrix.
Gaeta’s primary innovation for The Matrix has come to be known as “Bullet Time,” a revolutionary technique for depicting cinematic action in the style of Japanese animation known as animé. Bullet Time refers to a conceptual state of being inside the virtual reality of the Matrix, in which a character – primarily Neo – obtains a “mind-over-Matrix” capability. The creative process for bringing Bullet Time to the screen is called “virtual cinematography,” a digital solution developed by Gaeta and the Matrix filmmakers to depict these “mind-over-Matrix” moments in slow-motion, as seen by a camera moving at regular speed.
To execute the impossible, the Matrix VFX team painstakingly arranged 120 Nikon still cameras along a path mapped by a computer tracking system, fired the cameras in sequence around the unfolding action and scanned the images into the computer. After the computer interpolated between the scanned frames, the completed series of images was combined with a digital background. The result allowed Gaeta’s team to manipulate the imagery at any given speed without losing clarity.
But this initial version of virtual cinematography was deemed inadequate – “almost arcane,” as Gaeta sees it – for rendering the super-human events the Wachowski Brothers envisioned for Reloaded and Revolutions. Their ambitious scripts called for Neo to battle 100 Agent Smiths at once and fly at 2000 miles per hour over the Matrix megacity (a sprawling metropolis over ten times the size of New York). Gaeta also had to find a way to show 250,000 Sentinels snaking through a massive tunnel, and then ignite a scorching fourteen- minute freeway chase that involves two high-velocity martial arts battles, a motorcycle pursuit into oncoming traffic, characters leaping impossibly between moving vehicles, and a spectacular ballet of crashes, explosions and virtual destruction.
“It was evident that we couldn’t go any further by utilizing the technology from the first Bullet Time shots,” says Gaeta, who won an Academy Award for Visual Effects for The Matrix. “It was too restrictive and too labor intensive. The concept of Bullet Time needed to graduate to the true technology it suggested.”
In other words, realizing Reloaded and Revolutions’ visionary action sequences required technology that didn’t exist yet. Familiar territory for Gaeta and the Wachowskis, but this time around, the filmmakers took their ambitious plan to advance virtual cinematography exponentially further than one can imagine. “They decided to create images that no one could copy,” says producer Joel Silver. “That takes a lot of time, a lot of money and a lot of talent. And the results are staggering. These guys didn’t just raise the bar for action filmmaking, for visionary storytelling, for what is visually possible – they obliterated it.”
The centerpiece of Gaeta and Company’s answer to the first phase of virtual cinematography is their creation of virtual, three-dimensional depictions of the main characters for the purpose of enacting their impossible super-human feats at a level of realism never seen before. To create virtual humans, the VFX team utilized motion capture (“mocap”), a technique involving sophisticated cameras that recorded precise motion data from reflective bodysuits worn by the main actors, Yuen Wo Ping’s martial arts team and the stunt performers as they executed the required action.
Months’ worth of motion capture data was acquired for the creation of the Burly Brawl battle between Neo and Agent Smith’s army of replicas, the Freeway Chase and other key super-human events. A special capture stage – which, at the time of production, was the largest motion capture performance stage ever created – was operated for more than four months parallel to principal photography. The data recorded for Reloaded and Revolutions, as well as for the video game Enter the Matrix, is the most motion capture ever created for a film; the amount of capture needed to produce the most versatile of video games pales in comparison.
“Working with motion capture was something very new to me,” says master martial arts choreographer Wo Ping. “It’s fantastic technology because it helps me to accomplish a lot of moves that can’t be done in real life. With motion capture, we can enforce the dynamic power and emphasize the beauty of the kicks and moves in a way that we couldn’t otherwise do.”
In editing the motion capture, Gaeta’s team literally fleshed out the virtual characters’ computer-generated bodies, adding photo-realistic muscles and wardrobe. Layering lifelike expressions onto the computer-generated cast involved another extreme innovation that the Matrix virtual artists have dubbed Universal Capture (“u-cap”). Five ultra-powerful high-resolution cameras were arranged in a semi-circle around each actor’s face. As the actor conveyed a range of emotions and expressions, the Sony HDW 900 cameras recorded the performance to the most minute detail – all the way down to down to the pores and hair follicles.
Using these five real-time recordings to extrapolate the shapes of the characters’ faces to an extremely high resolution, the VFX team then applied the dimensional facial textures to the digital characters’ bodies, resulting in the most realistic computer-generated human images rendered to date.
Once the master content of each sequence was captured and fused with intricate layers of visual elements (including virtual backgrounds, objects and computer-generated enhancements like glistening glass, bullet wakes and blood), virtual cinematography opened up infinite camera composition and editorial possibilities, resulting in what the Matrix VFX team has dubbed “virtual cinema.”
In the virtual cinema that fortifies the Burly Brawl, an unfettered camera whirls around Neo as Agent Smith and 99 of his perfectly relentless selves assail him, seamlessly accelerating and decelerating and reversing position as the action shifts between super slow motion and supersonic speed. In the Freeway Chase, virtual cinema makes it possible for two vehicles to collide and suffer the destructive consequences of surreal inertia, creating an impossible event captured at impossible camera angles.
The groundwork for this kind of hyper-reality was laid in the rippling of a hi-rise building’s surface at the crescendo of the helicopter crash sequence in The Matrix. The filmmakers discarded the rules of standard physics, because in an algorithmic world like the Matrix, visual glitches like the surreal structural swell seemed natural. Reloaded and Revolutions exceed all expectations in furthering this fantastic new form of action.
“We felt if we could pull apart the barricades of physical rule that bind most action films to gravity and other forces of material reality, then we could start from the position of entertaining our total destructive imaginations,” Gaeta says. “It’s much more fun to destroy things in movies in ways that can’t ever occur in real life then to demonstrate how to cause havoc with average ingredients acquired from a local supermarket.”
3D computer planning was used extensively in the choreography of the breathtaking live action and the virtual cinematography that propel the Freeway Chase. The planning of this scene was conducted for nearly one year prior to principal photography and involved every major designer and engineer on the film. As Gaeta describes: “Within the making of the Freeway sequence there are some incredibly impressive examples of using 3D advance planning to determine the paths and actions of high-speed vehicles and events. There were life-threatening stunts attempted throughout the scene and some major ones were mapped out to the exact mile-per-hour and footwork of all drivers in terms of near head-on and other large-scale collisions.”
In addition to the virtual humans and super-human events that intensify the Burly Brawl and the Freeway Chase, Reloaded also presents an array of spectacular visuals such as the city of Zion, a vast, cavernous enclave at the Earth’s core, and an expanded visualization of Neo’s amplified perceptual abilities. His heightened intuitive powers are conveyed in part through a dreamlike revelation of the code underpinnings of the Matrix as the camera glides through literally millions of shimmering code particles orbiting the shapes and constructions of the live action sets and characters.
In the tradition of contemporary Japanese animated movies, Reloaded presents photo-real 3D interpretations of natural phenomenon like weather, water and flame to impressionistically convey intelligence, behavior and character. Scores of Reloaded elements from lightning to explosions were given a complete rethink on design, style and execution. “The brothers obsess on hyper-graphic depictions of supernatural events,” Gaeta reveals. “At every turn we’ve been striving to balance chaos and order, like putting a picture frame around a flash flood.”
Reloaded and Revolutions also break all animation-based boundaries in rendering the action of hundreds of thousands of marauding machine creatures, robots and tunnel storming electro-magnetic hovercraft. The creatures being driven by these technologies are all based on the extreme and horrific designs of Geof Darrow (creator of ultra-detailed comic book classics like Hard Boiled). Commonly-reviewed material at visual effects headquarters during the photography stages included Darrow’s conceptual drawings and films such as Alien; 2001: A Space Odyssey; Vertigo; Apocalypse Now; Koyaanisqatsi and Powaqqatsi (highly-stylized documentaries about life on earth); IMAX’s Blue Earth; 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea; documentaries on ultimate fighting, the Hindenberg disaster, submarines from the 1800s, undersea life, Rocky Marciano and other heavyweight champions; reality TV shows about car chases and crashes; high-speed car crash research and development films; information about robotics manufacturing, glass blowing, the making of the Chunnel (the tunnel that connects France and England), artificial intelligence and a reel of footage specializing in animé explosions of all sorts and sizes.
“We’re all fans of Stanley Kubrick and Ridley Scott movies and the dark universe perfection that comes with their films,” Gaeta enthuses. “We hope to carry on their more refined, intelligent aesthetic with the most modern approaches available in this phase of computer-generated imagery. We want to scare people so badly that one day, when those damn machines smack us back, we’re ready.”
The sheer volume of virtual effects – and the time needed to render them – necessitated that Gaeta delegate a portion of the workload to additional VFX vendors, who created specific shots under his supervision. Those vendors include: BUF, creators of the Code sequences and other special perception effects; Tippett Studios, creators of the fully-digital environments and Complex Creature scenes; Sony Imageworks, creators of the Tunnel environments and large-scale events depicted within; Giant Killer Robots, creators of the Underground environments; and Animal Logic, creators of elements within the Freeway Chase and paranormal characters.
To manage the intricate processes of creating virtual cinema from pre-visualization through post-production, Gaeta’s team collaborated to design the “Zion Mainframe,” the most functional information and asset exchange engine ever created for a feature film. More then just a search engine, this new tool interlocks all departments interested in digitizing artwork, design concepts, storyboards, CAD stage plans, 3D models for concept and stage planning, high-resolution models, Quicktime movies of all shots in progress (which can be retrieved through a digital dailies and shot history system) as well as full resolution back-ups of final shots created by visual effects vendors. Material is input primarily by the Matrix art department, visual effects department and its visual effects vendors, the Enter the Matrix game vendor and the creators of the nine animé short films that comprise The Animatrix.
To date, over 500 digital artists have worked on the virtual effects elements of The Matrix Reloaded and The Matrix Revolutions.
THERE IS NO SPOON: IMPOSSIBLE STUNTS AND COMBAT
You always told me to stay off the freeway. You told me it was suicide.
Like the film’s groundbreaking virtual effects, the daring and innovative stunt work in The Matrix Reloaded transcends the extraordinary feats performed in the first film. One of the most astonishing sequences in Reloaded is the fourteen-minute breakneck Freeway Chase involving spectacular car crashes, a life-and-death struggle in a speeding Cadillac, a Kung Fu battle atop a barreling big rig, and Trinity flying against traffic on a Ducati motorcycle with the imperiled Key Maker on the back. It took seven weeks to film the chase on a mile-and-a-half-long freeway loop constructed specifically for the film at the Alameda Naval Base.
“It’s relentless,” says Fishburne of the chase. “The cars start going on the freeway, the cops are following us, there’s the communication with Link on the phone, there’s the Twins, they’re firing, they’re morphing, the Agents show up, Trinity gets on a bike, she goes the wrong way, then you look up and Morpheus is riding on the truck like he’s surfing. After I saw what happens on the freeway, I realized how crazy Morpheus truly is.”
The freeway sequence demanded a massive amount of planning from supervising stunt coordinator R.A. Rondell. “I would sit down with the brothers for an hour and just talk about speed; let’s start with something generic, 55 miles an hour for a traffic pattern. The chase vehicles are doing 80, so they’re overtaking the cars by 20 miles an hour. How fast does that look when it’s going by? I would literally take out my little toy cars and we’d position them to see how the vehicles could be placed.”
Computer generated “pre-visualization” was an indispensable tool employed by the filmmakers to map out the complex shots they needed to achieve, taking into account the logistics of the stunts going on amidst the barrage of flying vehicles. Pre-visualization is the process of blocking out a sequence on computer, applying camera moves to it, then animating the scene for a detailed preview of what the final product could look like.
“In the Freeway Chase, the camera is in places where it hasn’t been before in car chases,” says director of photography Bill Pope. “The brothers made up their dream shots and put them into a computer and spit out a synthetic version of what they could look like onscreen. Then we had to figure out how to come up with those same shots in the real world.”
The high-tech pre-planning then merged with a more tangible, hands-on approach. “We literally walked the freeway with a little rolling measuring stick,” Rondell explains, “and precisely marked the pattern that Trinity’s motorcycle and the motorcycle-mounted camera would be following, with specific marks were they would make their passes and swerves. We calculated how long it takes this vehicle to travel, how long it takes to stop. Then we’d arrange the cars accordingly in the proper positions.”
An important concern for the stunt team was achieving a sense of realism that could mask their careful planning. “We didn’t want to make the traffic patterns generic or repetitious,” Rondell points out. “What do you see every day on the freeway? Everybody isn’t exactly placed at one distance or another for a weaving pattern. We took into account camera lenses, lengths from cameras to subjects and put all those factors into motion using the most unique angles and presentation. The challenge is then to make it happen in real time – and at that point, you have to take the human factor into consideration.”
“I have a major fear of the motorbike,” Carrie-Anne Moss admits. “And it was very challenging for me to get on the bike every day and practice. I started off with a tiny little bike. Mastered my tiny little bike. Got on a little bigger bike. Mastered it. That went on for months, until I got up to the Ducati. My biggest fear about it was, I guess, dying.”
Moss’s trepidation was understandable. She would be riding a powerful motorcycle at considerable speed straight into oncoming traffic, carrying extremely precious cargo: Randall Duk Kim, who plays the Key Maker, rode behind her – and neither actor would be wearing a helmet. The actress took her responsibilities very seriously. “Right up until the day we shot the motorcycle sequence, I said to R.A., ‘I can’t promise you that I’m going to do this.’ Because it wasn’t just about me – I have Randall on the back of the bike with no helmet on, and if you fall off a bike at 50 or 60 miles an hour, you don’t just get hurt. You get really hurt, or you die. So on that day, I knew that I could not allow myself to question for one split second whether or not I could do it. Negative thinking was not allowed.”
The stunt coordinator’s expertise was a deciding factor in Moss’s decision to go ahead with the stunt. “I absolutely love R.A. and trust him,” she says. “He is very patient and encouraging. If it weren’t for him, I would never have been able to even get on the motorcycle.”
“There’s a comfort level that’s involved now,” says Rondell. “This time around, the actors came in feeling that they can trust us completely, and that’s half the battle. It was just about acting from then on.”
While Moss was considering life and death, Randall Duk Kim hung on and enjoyed the ride. “It was utterly thrilling to work with Carrie-Anne on the motorcycle,” he says. “I never dreamed I would be part of such a fantastic project as this – I felt like a little kid having a great, big, joyous adventure.”
“Doing these films teaches me so much about myself,” Moss muses. “To face a fear like that and to overcome it is quite remarkable.”
Moss’s Freeway duties also included stunt driving for the Chase sequence, in which she pilots a Cadillac through a hail of bullets as a full-scale fight erupts between her passengers. “I went to motion picture driving school twice. I have a diploma, and I framed it, and I put it on my wall. I really, really appreciated the skills that I learned there, because I was able to do some very cool stuff when it came time to shoot.”
Fishburne was impressed with Moss’s skills. “Carrie-Anne can drive her ass off. We trained to do 180 and 90 degree turns, and within two hours she was whipping the car around like she’d been doing it all her life.”
“One of my favorite things that I did in the film was my sliding 90 into the camera,” says Moss. “It’s all about the foot brake and hand brake and sliding, and hitting your mark – coming at a camera crew in a small space, if I don’t hit the right mark, I could do some serious damage. I hit it in one take, which was also awesome because it was one of the only times that I got a real hoot and holler from the brothers. There’s nothing quite like a hooray from my two boys. It feels pretty great.”
Fishburne faced the considerable challenge of fighting an upgraded Agent atop a speeding eighteen-wheeler. “In rehearsal it’s cool because the truck’s not moving,” he says. “It’s challenging enough to be in a wire harness, trying to hit your mark up in the air. But when they turn on the hydraulics and start shooting, it’s a whole different deal.”
Though the actor had initial reservations about performing the stunt, Rondell’s reassurance and professionalism made all things seem possible. “R.A. is incredible,” says Fishburne. “When I first realized what kind of stunts were going to be involved on the freeway, I went up to him and said, ‘I’m scared.’ And he said, ‘I know. I’m gonna take care of you.’ His primary concern is always that everybody involved is absolutely one hundred percent safe. There are so many fail-safes built into his stunts that you feel as if you’re just having a stroll through the park – he makes you feel like nothing can happen to you.”
Producer Joel Silver was bowled over by what the stunt team was able to create. “There’s a sequence where an Agent jumps from car to car to car, which sets off a bunch of collisions in the background,” relates Silver, who selected the Cadillac CTS and the EXT to play major roles in the Freeway Chase because he believed the innovative vehicles could handle rigorous production demands while fitting seamlessly into the hyper-stylized world of the Matrix. “The incredible thing is that the team orchestrated sixty cars flying through the air at three hundred frames a second in the same fantastic way that they designed the fights – it’s brilliant choreography.”
Events that would be featured as the main action in any other movie are simply another layer in the landscape of Reloaded. “The brothers wanted the residual action of all those cars flying around to trigger crashes in the background,” says Rondell. “We designed this image of cars bouqueting out in the background, and it really looked great on the pre-visualization. Then when we made it happen in real time, it all unfolded like a symphony.”
Another key event in Reloaded that rivals the Freeway Chase in both complexity and exhilaration is the Burly Brawl, a furious battle between Neo and an army of one hundred relentless Agent Smith replicas. The meticulously choreographed fight took 27 days to shoot. “We were doing 18-second takes with a 180-degree Steadicam, where I have over twenty-five moves,” says Reeves of the painstaking work that went into perfecting the brutal ballet. “I worked every day for six weeks with twelve incredible stunt men.”
“Keanu beats himself up on set and he has very high expectations of what the standard of work should be, but he never pressures me or the other actors,” says Hugo Weaving. “He’s a great listener – I really love working with him.”
Rondell, martial arts stunt coordinator Chad Stahelski, and fight choreographer Yuen Wo Ping auditioned around fifty stunt actors, acrobats, gymnasts and martial artists to play the core group of twelve Agent Smith doubles. “We put them through about four months of training to mimic Hugo Weaving, learn the fight choreography and develop the skills we were gonna need for this sequence,” recounts Stahelski, who also served as Keanu Reeves’ stunt double. “They had to be capable of doing everything from gymnastics, to acrobatics, to wire work, to what we call ‘Hong Kong reactions,’ big fight reactions that are gymnastic in origin.”
During the Brawl, Weaving was put in the novel and somewhat perplexing position of only being able to play one one-hundredth of his character at a time. “While they could teach Keanu the Burly Brawl choreography like a dance, they couldn’t teach it to me in its entirety because it involves at least ten of me at any given time,” he explains. “So I learned the fight as they would in Hong Kong, where the choreographer comes in on the day of filming and teaches you the moves on the spot.”
“We’ve had Hugo do more things than we ever could have hoped,” Stahelski says. “He’s fallen down stairs, he’s wrapped himself over poles, he’s been hit by the staff, he’s done a twenty-foot descender. Hugo’s all over the place in this fight.”
All of the stunt Smiths had to undergo the process of transforming themselves into replicas of the deadpan Agent as played by Weaving. “They all wanted to ape me, and I kept saying, ‘No, no, no, I’m the one who looks useless, I wanna look like you,’” recalls Weaving. “But they needed to learn to move in the way that I do and to have a sort of Smithian quality about them. He’s not particularly graceful, he’s fairly brutal.”
The closer the production got to filming, the stranger things became for the prototype actor. “They slowly started to resemble me,” says Weaving. “The shorter ones had lifts put in their shoes, and they all had their hair cut, and then the suits and ties and glasses started coming in, and then everyone had a wig, so by the time we began shooting there were twelve semi-me’s running round.”
The experience led to all sorts of self-reflection on Weaving’s part. “Well, I realize now how far my hairline’s receded,” he says. “Normally I look at myself in the mirror and I think it’s alright. But when I was looking at everyone from the side, aaagh!”
There was much more spontaneity allowed for in the fight choreography for Reloaded than there was during the shooting of The Matrix. “The first time, the fights were choreographed and we learned them like dances,” says Weaving, “and they hardly changed at all when we shot them. This time round there were quite major changes made on the day while we were fighting and we had to swing with that.”
“Wo Ping was amenable to me making some in-the-moment floor choices,” Reeves says. “Which isn’t at all to say that I disagreed with the choreography, but just in terms of having the flexibility to express my own style.”
From initial vision through preparation and execution, the level of innovation and talent put into stunt work on the Matrix films is unparalleled. “We’re all ruined,” Rondell concludes. “We’ve hit such a tremendous benchmark with these films that working on anything else is going to be a bit of a letdown. The ability and expertise of this crew makes what we are able to achieve pretty unlimited. We’ve done as many as 70 takes in one day to make it perfect, to find a magic moment. We’ve become such hyper-perfectionists now that it will be a letdown when we’re not allowed to go that extra distance.”
THE DESIGN OF THE MATRIX : CHAPTERS TWO AND THREE
They descend a wide carving stairwell that follows a natural cave that has been widened in places; pipes run everywhere, a kind of mechanized expression of flowing water. They step down onto a large metal balcony where we find, at last, the bottom of the rabbit hole – Zion.
Envisioned by the Wachowski Brothers as one epic film that would be presented to audiences as two chapters of the three-piece story arc that began with The Matrix, The Matrix Reloaded and The Matrix Revolutions were shot over a grueling 270-day production schedule. Principle photography began in Oakland, California in March 2001 and wrapped that location in June. After a brief summer hiatus, production recommenced in September in Sydney, Australia, where the entire Matrix production was filmed in 1998. Reloaded and Revolutions were shot primarily at the Fox Studios in Sydney until production wrapped in August of 2002.
In Australia alone, the two films created over 3,500 jobs, employing 80 full-time actors and hundreds of extras. “It was a massive operation,” says producer Joel Silver. “We had close to one thousand people on the payroll full-time.”
One of the first artists employed to work on the Matrix trilogy was Geof Darrow, whose illustrations for comic books like the gleefully maniacal Hard Boiled were a source of great inspiration for the brothers as they conceptualized their post-apocalyptic universe. For The Matrix, Darrow created painstakingly-drawn, almost torturously intricate designs for the films’ mechanized beings and sets. The artist designed the scavenged, jury-rigged look of the Nebuchadnezzar’s interior and the various models of robot that slither, skitter and fly through the “desert of the real.” He also brought to life the nightmarish fields where humans are grown and cultivated, and the sinister Power Plant towers where they live out their “lives” in pods. Darrow helped develop the look and aesthetic for The Matrix Reloaded and The Matrix Revolutions along with production designer Owen Paterson and a team of conceptual and storyboard artists.
To bring the Reloaded and Revolutions design concepts to life, the art department employed over 400 people at any given moment under the aegis of Owen Paterson. In contrast to the 30 sets he and his team designed for The Matrix, Paterson was responsible for creating a total of almost 150 sets for the two films, constructing approximately 70 sets for each. “That really is a huge amount of sets to build, particularly given the limited number of stages we had,” Paterson discloses. “Some of the sets weren’t used for more than a couple of days. It was an enormous logistical effort for Hugh Bateup and a team of art directors and construction people who made this possible – a real exercise in getting one set finished, shot, broken down and out of the stage to make way for the next.”
The process of creating the set for the awe-inspiring Freeway Chase paralleled the sequence in scale. Rather than close down an existing freeway for seven weeks of shooting, the filmmakers built their own mile-and-a-half-long freeway – complete with a 19-foot high wall and two overpasses – on a runway at the Alameda Naval Base.
“It was a massive undertaking,” says Paterson of the set. “For the walls, art director Mark Mansbridge and construction coordinator Butch West brought in truckloads of lumber and plywood and plastered them to look like concrete. Then they had to be weatherproofed and nailed together. We probably had 100 people working on the freeway walls alone.”
“The freeway set was good value for Warner Bros.,” notes art director Hugh Bateup. “At a cost of only $4.19 per square foot, it’s probably one of the biggest sets ever built, so we said to them, the more we build the cheaper it becomes. We were saving money all the time.”
When the production left Alameda, the freeway set was pulled apart, leaving behind a mile and a half’s worth of pristine timber and plywood; rather than scrapping it, U.S. location manager Peter Novak arranged for the lumber to be sent to Mexico, where it was used in the construction of 100 low-income family homes. The California Film Commission recognized Novak’s thoughtful resourcefulness, presenting him with a Humanitarian Award at their 7th Annual California On Location Awards.
Alameda was also home to another of the film’s sprawling sets, the Zion Temple, a natural-looking cave structure that was large enough to hold 2,000 extras. “Zion is the absolute opposite of the Matrix,” Paterson explains. “This is no high tech space; it’s located near the center of the Earth. It’s rather reminiscent of the early 20th century industrial design, very decrepit but still practical.”
Zion consists of various levels, the uppermost being a landing base at which the hovercraft dock. “The dock area looks like a large domed cistern fitted with aircraft carrier-sized landing platforms, walkways, ammo bunkers and elevators,” Paterson describes. “It’s very old and suffering from lack of materials repair, so we had to give it that rusty, aged look.”
Below the docking area is the Zion military command zone, from which a series of elevators and walkways lead down to the foundation of the city. “At the top is what Larry and Andy and Geof called the Brain: a tangle of pipes, vents, fans, and the Zion council chambers,” says Paterson. “Running from the Brain down to the bottom of the city is a huge vertical elevator core, also drawn by Geof, which looks like it’s supported by an industrial DNA chain.
“From the elevator core,” he continues, “walkways lead to the homes of Zion where 250,000 people live in little tenements with walkways going round and round, layer after layer. This echoes back to the tenement where the Burly Brawl between Neo and Smith takes place – that one’s square and rectangular, surrounded by faceless buildings where people live. And when you go down to the center of the earth in Zion, the tenements are all round, but they’re still these faceless buildings.”
Paterson’s team brought a sense of old, decaying architecture to the real-world Sewer Set, an enormous tunnel made of pipes. “It’s a threatened place with very intricate dressing that creates the feeling of a thousand years of rack and ruin,” Paterson notes. “But it somehow celebrates the human will to live life to the fullest and celebrate hope.”
Paterson’s department often had to build two or three versions of the same set to depict it in various stages of destruction. Many of the sets, such as the Merovingian’s Chateau, needed to be capable of withstanding a good deal of action. “There was a vast amount of interactivity between the sets and the effects,” says the designer. “We had lots of breakaway and collapsing set pieces; lots of shapes crashing through sets; people being blown into walls; a lot of bullet effects – we needed things to explode very safely around people, and the sets had to accommodate that.”
Paterson’s department also fashioned hundreds of rubber weapons for the film’s numerous fight sequences. “They were all quite complicated shapes that we molded and painted,” he says, “and we had to keep churning them out, because every time someone would pick up a sword they’d smash it.”
The art department also crafted a number Sentinels, but “only the dead ones,” Paterson reveals. “The live ones that fly around are all visual effects. The prop department built the first Sentinel from VFX computer files; this physical Sentinel was then cast, duplicated and painted. All the finish textures are based on this physical model. A similar thing happened with the APU [Armored Personal Unit, a piece of sophisticated machinery used by the Zion army to defend against marauding Sentinels]. A physical prop was constructed from VFX files and Geof Darrow’s concepts, then we created all the other APUs based on this reality. There was a great deal of collaboration between departments. Everyone did a great job.”
Paterson also worked closely with costume designer Kym Barrett to ensure that their color palettes worked in sync. “Basically the Matrix has a slight green hue and the real world has a blue hue,” he says. “This worked very well for both costumes and set, with the sets underscoring the costumes, the color of which often complemented the sets. I feel it all worked very well.”
“The entire production design flows from the minds of Larry and Andy,” Paterson attests. “To take something from being a written word, to a drawing on a piece of paper, to something that’s physically built is a wonderful thing. I am proud that my very talented team and I could work with them and be part of the process.”
HEMP & LATEX: OUTFITTING THE REAL WORLD AND THE MATRIX
Morpheus emerges from a long brick corridor, his sunglasses floating in the darkness like alligator eyes.
Costume designer Kym Barrett designed literally thousands of costumes for The Matrix Reloaded and The Matrix Revolutions, evolving the trilogy’s wardrobe to suit the characters’ growth while maintaining continuity between the three films. “Neo and Trinity each take a long journey in the first movie, and become different people,” observes Barrett, who gave birth twice during the course of production. “Neo is no longer concerned with whether or not he’s the One, and Trinity is certain of her love for Neo and her belief in him. We tried to reflect their new confidence in what they wear.”
Barrett’s wardrobe for Morpheus needed to reflect his growing leadership role in the rebellion against the Machines. “Everyone looks grungier in the real world than they do in the Matrix, but Morpheus always maintains poise,” Barrett notes. “He draws strength from his conviction that Neo is the One and will end the war, and that confidence radiates in the way he wears his clothes, whether he’s on the Nebudchadnezzar, in Zion or in the Matrix.”
“Kym is a creative genius,” Laurence Fishburne attests. “It’s the little things she does. For instance, the shoes she chose for Morpheus – they’re such cool shoes. I loved those shoes! They made the character.”
All the shoes worn by the principle actors, including Morpheus’ faux purple alligator boots, were designed by Barrett and handmade by Andre No. 1. Multiple pairs were crafted for each character to outfit the actor plus his or her stunt performers.
Fishburne, who says the Wachowskis describe the rebels’ clothing inside the Matrix as representative of armor, believes Morpheus’ sunglasses play a key role in his expression of the charismatic leader. In order to convey Morpheus’ vulnerability at a crucial point during the Freeway Chase, Fishburne chose not to wear the sunglasses. “When things get really hairy inside the Matrix, when Morpheus isn’t sure whether or not he’s going to get out, then they come off,” Fishburne says. “He’s got to fight with what’s inside him as opposed to what’s on the outside.”
As she did for The Matrix, Barrett had to create multiple versions of each character’s wardrobe to accommodate the demands of various scenes: duplicate clothing made with stretchier material allowed for better movement in the fighting and action sequences, and other sets of wardrobe specifically accommodated wire harnesses. Costumes for Hugo Weaving and his Agent Smith stunt doubles numbered in the hundreds.
But the single biggest challenge for Barrett and the Matrix wardrobe department was costuming the citizens of Zion – including the elaborate Temple sequence. “It was a mammoth undertaking,” Barrett admits. “We had over 1,000 extras to dress and all their clothes had to be very rusty, very simple but refined, in keeping with Zion.”
To make the task even more challenging, the costumers couldn’t use any store-bought clothing or synthetic material. “Zion is the center of the Earth and life is sustained in part by all this steam-driven machinery, so it’s very hot,” Barrett explains. “We imagined that they grow things by hydroponics because that process relies on water and heat. So we had to create clothing that could’ve been made from hemp, made from natural fibers, vegetable fibers. We researched ancient China and Mongolia and looked at a lot of the mummies that were buried in really beautifully woven natural fibers, before the advent of silks. We found shapes and textures that we thought were delicate and beautiful, but raw. And we tried to stay along that vein in our wardrobe for Zion.”
For the overall look of Zion’s citizenry, Barrett chose a palette of light colors to contrast with the dark world in which they live. She explains: “Zion is a city under siege, so the clothes made by and for the people who live there emphasize function over fashion. At the same time, they take pride in their history and their craftsmanship, and their wardrobe reflects the true utilitarian spirit of the community.”
Barrett also had to impart a sense of Zion’s structured military presence. As she sees it, “They’re under serious time constraints and under a tremendous amount of pressure, so you can feel this kind of mercenary element developing in the army. So, in the wardrobe, there’s evidence of a structured ranking system, but it’s kind of fallen a little bit by the wayside, because there are bigger issues to deal with.”
Barrett went in a completely different direction in designing for the sinister inhabitants of the Matrix. Inspired by her research into iconoclastic images of evil and fairytale characters, she tried to capture “a hard core fantasy feeling” in wardrobe for characters like the sharply affluent Merovingian and his mesmerizing wife Persephone. “I see the Merovingian and Persephone as the king and queen of hell,” enthuses Barrett. “Snow White inspired their evil-in-rubber look.”
“Kym did an amazing job with my costume – it just is Persephone,” says Monica Bellucci, who plays the woman described in the screenplay as “sex and death squeezed into a woman’s business suit made of latex.” “Whenever I put it on, I became her immediately.”
Barrett sees the Merovingian’s cadre of bodyguards as “the faces of evil. Their costumes had to be really tight, and stretch well, so that you could see their definition as they move in the air. We used period shapes to give the clothes an old world-modern mix and a lot of stretchy animal print to make them almost appear sexy.”
Of all the Merovingian’s henchmen, Barrett most enjoyed creating wardrobe for the Twins, identical albino shape-shifting fiends. “Larry and Andy described the Twins as ethereal, so we gave the their costumes a modern twist on the ghostly.
OTHER NOTES
Theatrical Release Date: May 15, 2003
The Matrix Revolutions
SYNOPSIS
Everything that has a beginning has an end.
At the stunning conclusion of The Matrix Reloaded, Neo (KEANU REEVES) took another step forward in the quest for truth that began with his journey into the real world at the outset of The Matrix - but that transformation has left him drained of his power, adrift in a no man's land between the Matrix and the Machine World. While Trinity (CARRIE-ANNE MOSS) holds vigil over Neo's comatose body, Morpheus (LAURENCE FISHBURNE) grapples with the revelation that the One in which he has invested a life's worth of faith is merely another system of control invented by the architects of the Matrix.
In The Matrix Revolutions, the final explosive chapter in the Matrix trilogy, the epic war between man and machine reaches a thundering crescendo: the Zion military, aided by courageous civilian volunteers like Zee (NONA GAYE) and the Kid (CLAYTON WATSON), desperately battles to hold back the Sentinel invasion as the Machine army bores into their stronghold. Facing total annihilation, the citizens of the last bastion of humanity fight not only for their own lives, but for the future of mankind itself.
But an unknown element poisons the ranks from within: the rogue program Smith (HUGO WEAVING) has cunningly hijacked Bane (IAN BLISS), a member of the hovercraft fleet. Growing more powerful with each passing second, Smith is beyond even the control of the Machines and now threatens to destroy their empire along with the real world and the Matrix. The Oracle (MARY ALICE) offers Neo her final words of guidance, which he accepts with the knowledge that she is a program and her words could be just another layer of falsehood in the grand scheme of the Matrix.
With the aid of Niobe (JADA PINKETT SMITH), Neo and Trinity choose to travel farther than any human has ever dared to go - a treacherous journey above ground, across the scorched surface of the earth and into the heart of the menacing Machine City. In this vast mechanized metropolis, Neo comes face to face with the ultimate power in the Machine world - the Deus Ex Machina - and strikes a bargain that is the only hope for a dying world.
The war will end tonight, with Neo's destiny and the fate of two civilizations inexorably tied to the outcome of his cataclysmic confrontation with Smith.
Warner Bros. Pictures presents, in association with Village Roadshow Pictures and NPV Entertainment, a Silver Pictures production, The Matrix Revolutions, starring KEANU REEVES, LAURENCE FISHBURNE and CARRIE-ANNE MOSS. The film also stars HUGO WEAVING and JADA PINKETT SMITH.
The Matrix Revolutions is written and directed by THE WACHOWSKI BROTHERS and produced by JOEL SILVER. The executive producers are ANDY WACHOWSKI, LARRY WACHOWSKI, GRANT HILL, ANDREW MASON and BRUCE BERMAN. The director of photography is BILL POPE, A.S.C.; the production designer is OWEN PATERSON; the editor is ZACH STAENBERG, A.C.E.; the music is composed by DON DAVIS; the visual effects supervisor is JOHN GAETA; and the costume designer is KYM BARRETT.
The Matrix Revolutions will be released worldwide by Warner Bros. Pictures, a Warner Bros. Entertainment Company, and in select territories by Village Roadshow Pictures.
This film has been rated "R" by the MPAA for "sci-fi violence and brief sexual content."
MOVIE MISTAKES
Mistake #1
In the scene where Neo is talking with the Oracle in her apartment, the Oracle sits down at the table, picks up a bracelet, and right before the shot changes, you can see that it is on her hand, almost to the thumb area. When we cut back to her a second later, the bracelet is back on the table, and she picks it up and puts it on again.
Mistake #2
When Trinity is meeting with the Frenchman, the olive in his martini changes. In the first close-up shot, he only has one green olive on the cocktail stick. From then on he has two, until he eats one.
Mistake #3
In the scene where Bane has the scalpel to Trinity's neck, the bloody mark below it keeps disappearing and reappearing. The scalpel changes positions too.
Mistake #4
As everyone is saying their goodbyes before entering the ships to go off to war, Neo's interface sockets on his spine keep appearing and disappearing during angle changes.
Mistake #5
In the scene where the "Smith infected" Bane has the scalpel to Trinity's neck, we first see Bane's head just right beside Trinity's lips (on the side). But in the next shot, Bane's head is way back near Trinity's neck still holding the scapel.
PRODUCTION NOTES
THE MATRIX REVOLUTIONS: THE FINAL CHAPTER
In 1999, the Wachowski Brothers and producer Joel Silver unveiled The Matrix, a visionary fusion of brutally elegant action and densely-layered storytelling. The filmmakers not only electrified audiences with audacious visual innovations, they created a provocative action film that ponders the essence of reality and identity, illuminating the choices we must make and the strengths and weaknesses that compel us to make them. The Wachowskis envisioned the epic story they unleashed in The Matrix as a trilogy, and approached the production of the second and third installments as a single film that would be presented in two parts.
With the May 2003 release of the second chapter, The Matrix Reloaded, the writer-directors tunneled deeper into the sprawling saga's mythology and presented revolutionary new visual effects technology that redefined what is cinematically possible. Driven by furiously breathtaking action sequences, Reloaded elaborated on the first film's themes of philosophical and technical alienation in the continuation of Neo's treacherous journey toward greater truth and understanding of his pivotal role in the fate of mankind.
To date, The Matrix Reloaded has earned over $735 million in worldwide box office, making it the highest-grossing film of 2003 and the highest-grossing R-rated film in history, both domestically and internationally. Additionally, Reloaded scored the record for the largest single week ever with $158.2 million and reached $150 million in a record-breaking six days domestically; internationally, it is the 10th highest grossing film of all-time, and is the first film in history to gross more than $100 million in a single weekend.
The staggering box office of the first two installments of the trilogy and the vast amount of thought devoted to the examination of the Wachowskis' work is evidence of the extent to which the filmmakers have hacked into the collective consciousness with their provocative and challenging filmmaking. "They've created an epic story, told it in a visionary way that revolutionized entertainment, and created a thinking person's action trilogy," observes Matrix producer Joel Silver. "You can enjoy the films on a purely visceral level, and if you want to go deeper, there are some very profound ideas to consider."
The Wachowskis believe that at the heart of the Matrix films is the hope of integration - the synthesis of our finite knowledge of what is with our infinite beliefs of what might be. "These films explore the search for truth, the cost of knowledge, the quest for understanding our lives and the sacrifices we choose to make," Keanu Reeves suggests. "Evolution is another important theme of the trilogy. In the first film, it's Machines versus humans, who are trying to free themselves from the world of the Matrix where the Machines have enslaved them. In Reloaded and Revolutions, you see the perspective of Machine-created programs trying to hide in the Matrix when they face deletion in the Machine world, while the humans face extinction by the Machines that are trying to destroy Zion. Ultimately, the Machines' survival is threatened as well, and the humans, programs and Machines have to find a way to cooperate to ensure their survival."
The visual and intellectual concepts that were introduced in The Matrix and further explored in Reloaded culminate in a tour de force of epic action and resolution in the trilogy's final explosive chapter, The Matrix Revolutions. "With Revolutions, the Brothers deliver an incredibly powerful payoff to their story," Silver says. "They've resolved Neo's journey in a way that is emotional, intelligent, humorous and fun and gives you a true sense of what this concept was all about. It's very satisfying, yet people will still be driven to analyze and discuss it."
At the cliffhanger conclusion of The Matrix Reloaded, Neo lies in a comatose state aboard the rebel hovercraft Mjolnir after using his powers to terminate several attacking Sentinels - an inexplicable feat given that he was not jacked into the Matrix during the deadly confrontation. In Revolutions, Neo learns the truth behind the source of his powers and why he is able to use them in the real world. Reeves sees Neo as "a lightning rod, a searcher and a witness. In acting out his quest, Neo makes himself available as a conduit for a very powerful energy force, which translates into these extraordinary powers."
While Neo's powers have grown exponentially, so too have those of the rapacious Agent Smith - to the point that he has become a bigger threat to the Machine world that created him than the citizens of Zion who are fighting for survival against the Machine army. Neo realizes that in order to save both Zion and the Machine world from total destruction by Smith, he will have to go farther than he ever imagined. "It's the last unknown, it's the last unanswered question in his journey," Reeves says. "He has to see his quest to the end, where it leads to, whatever it takes. That's why I love Neo. He wants peace and he's willing to do anything for it."
Laurence Fishburne recognizes a sense of commitment shared by both actor and character. "Keanu is unlike anyone I have ever met; he's a deeply sensitive, keenly intelligent guy," observes Fishburne. "He completely dedicated his life to Neo during the making of these films, and it's been a real joy to walk through this whole amazing experience with him."
As Neo follows his path to its ultimate conclusion, a disillusioned Morpheus continues to believe that his former student will find a way to end the war, despite the Architect's startling revelation in Reloaded that the Oracle's Prophecy may simply be another system of the Machines' control. "In Revolutions, even more of Morpheus' humanity comes to the surface," Fishburne reveals. "Morpheus is still the guy that you will follow because you believe in him and feel safe with him, but he's not the same formidable figure we met in the first film who seems to know everything. His belief system has been shaken, and in his struggle to come to terms, he becomes more human."
An equally fierce believer in Neo, Trinity is inspired by their profound connection to follow her own path. "One of the things that I love so much about Trinity is just her complete and total commitment to the love that she has for Neo and her belief in him, and how their love strengthens her and softens her at the same time," Carrie-Anne Moss says.
"The Wachowskis have done an incredible job of crafting Neo and Trinity's relationship," Silver adds. "Their connection is such a strong part of the trilogy, especially in Revolutions - it connects the characters, it connects the story and the films. The love they have for each other is what it's all about."
Given a second chance at life at the end of Reloaded, Trinity puts her fate into Neo's hands once again when she chooses to accompany him to the Machine City. "Trinity is very proactive, as we know," Moss says, laughing. "She isn't going to be told that she can't do something, and she's not going to sit around and wait to see what happens to Neo. So she finds a way to help him."
Another crucial member of the Zion resistance also chooses to help Neo - but Niobe's support is the hard-won result of an inner journey that begins in Reloaded and is depicted in greater detail in the video game Enter the Matrix. "When we meet Niobe in Reloaded, she doesn't have faith; she doesn't believe in anything but herself," Jada Pinkett Smith says. "Her ego is a beast and she's extremely arrogant. Over the course of the story, her faith grows in Neo and in Morpheus, and she begins to surrender to the concept that there is something beyond intellect, beyond logic, beyond her."
Though Niobe does not believe in the Oracle's Prophecy, she offers her ship to Neo when he makes his decision to travel to the Machine City in search of peace. As Pinkett Smith sees it, "Niobe respects Neo and stands by him because of the things he has done and the sacrifices he has chosen to make. She doesn't believe that he's the One, but she believes that if anyone can do it, he can."
Thrust together under life-and-death circumstances, Niobe and Morpheus find that their deep yet distant connection still rings true. "Niobe was attracted to Commander Lock because he's smart, but I think her heart is truly with Morpheus," Pinkett Smith muses. Adds Fishburne: "The way the Brothers wrote the third act of Revolutions, where Neo and Trinity are ascending while Morpheus and Niobe are descending and the world is coming to a catastrophic end, is truly beautiful and romantic."
Meanwhile, Agent Smith's appetite for destruction grows more ravenous as he becomes increasingly more powerful. "In The Matrix, Smith starts off as a very rigid character with a very strong, defined mission that he has to accomplish," Hugo Weaving describes. "During that journey, he starts to feel human feelings. He starts to feel anger and jealousy. He starts to smell things and he starts to have a hint of what it's like to have humanity inside him. And he hates that. He sees it as a weakness. In Reloaded, he's accepted these powerful feelings more and more and he starts to relish them. His ego has expanded and he's quite literally been liberated. In Revolutions, his ego runs rampant - he has evolved from wanting to be free of the Matrix to trying to take over the world."
Underneath Smith's cruel depravity, notes Weaving, "he's a very dark character but I've always thought he was funny. There were humorous elements to Smith in the first Matrix which seemed to come straight out of Larry and Andy's character and I loved that they expanded those elements in Reloaded and Revolutions. I enjoyed the experience of playing Smith immensely."
Because Smith's ego and power threaten to overwhelm both the real and Machine worlds, the Oracle chooses to help Neo - a decision that costs her dearly. As it is explained in the video game Enter the Matrix, the Oracle's appearance (or "shell") has been terminated by the vengeful Merovingian, so she takes a new form in Revolutions.
In developing the scripts for Reloaded and Revolutions, the Wachowskis discussed the idea of changing the Oracle's physical appearance, but decided instead to have actress Gloria Foster reprise her role from The Matrix in the second and third chapters of the trilogy. When Foster passed away after completing her scenes for Reloaded, the Brothers returned to their original idea for the path of the Oracle. "Gloria was a remarkably talented, charismatic woman," Silver recalls. "We are extremely proud that she will always be remembered for delivering two of her finest performances in The Matrix and The Matrix Reloaded. Fate forced the Wachowskis to alter the path of the Oracle to address Gloria's passing, but they were able to deepen the character's story as a result and I think it's very effective."
"It was wonderful to see the Brothers find a way to honor Gloria's death and continue growing the story in their changing of the script," Moss agrees.
The filmmakers cast respected stage and screen actress Mary Alice (Oz) to play the Oracle in her new form. "I'm not a big science fiction fan, but there is something in the Matrix films that I find very spiritual," says Alice, who starred opposite Foster in the Broadway play Having Our Say in 1995, playing sisters who live to be over 100. "My life has changed from being in it."
"Mary Alice came in and did an amazing job of presenting a living, breathing Oracle," says Fishburne, who portrayed Alice's son in a play they performed in together in New York when he was ten years old.
Zee, a citizen of Zion who plays a crucial role in the defense of the city against the Machines' relentless siege, has even more at stake than most: she lost both of her brothers, Tank and Dozer (key members of Morpheus' crew in The Matrix), to the war with the Machines, and her boyfriend Link has put his life on the line to serve as Morpheus' operator. "Zee is strong and determined to accomplish what needs to be done without letting fear get in her way," says Nona Gaye. "She feels very protective of Zion, and Link is all she's got left. She wants to make sure that they can have a life together."
Completing the main cast of The Matrix Revolutions are Lambert Wilson as the Merovingian; Monica Bellucci as Persephone; Harold Perrineau as Link; Harry Lennix as Commander Lock; Collin Chou as Seraph; Nathaniel Lees as Mifune, leader of the APU Corps; Clayton Watson as the Kid; Tanveer Atwal as Sati, a girl Neo encounters at the Mobil Avenue Train Station; Bernard White as Sati's father, Rama; Bruce Spence as the Trainman, who controls all travel between the Matrix and the Machine world; Ian Bliss as Bane, the treacherous hovercraft crewmember inhabited by Agent Smith; David Roberts as Roland, captain of the Mjolnir; Anthony Wong as Ghost, Niobe's first mate; and Anthony Zerbe as Councillor Hamman.
Reflecting back on the journey he began in the winter of 1997, when he started training for the role of Neo in The Matrix, Reeves appreciates the challenges posed by the Wachowskis and their ambitious story. "I love working with Larry and Andrew, I respect the opportunities they gave me and I respect the ideas and the imagination in this beautiful story," Reeves says. "Everyone involved with these films was asked to do their very best, and it was challenging, but that's what makes it really good - rolling up your sleeves and trying to realize this dream. How can you not be excited by the opportunity to hopefully do the best work that you might ever get the chance to do in your creative life?"
"For me, the experience of making these films has been transforming," says Moss. "I've learned so much about myself, about life and work. It's wonderful to be so committed to a project, and to be in a trilogy of films about conviction, having faith and fighting for what you believe in."
Jada Pinkett Smith was similarly inspired by her Matrix experience. "It's been fun because I got to play my alter ego to the hilt," she says with a laugh, "and I've really learned a lot about myself through Niobe. Working on these films has really helped me strengthen my faith. I've done a lot of research and reading in my own internal journey of trying to deepen my roots as far as faith is concerned, and these movies were a big part of that process."
When he considers his key role in the trilogy as Morpheus, the man whose unwavering faith provides the catalyst to Neo's journey as the One, "I don't think it's an accident that I'm a part of this; I think it was perhaps a part of my destiny," Fishburne says thoughtfully. "I love Morpheus. He's probably the character I will be most remembered for. And everyone that I spent time with making these films will be part of who I am for the rest of my life."
For Silver, who produced the blockbuster Die Hard and Lethal Weapon series, in addition to an impressive array of hit films, the Matrix trilogy "closes a chapter in filmmaking for me. It's been an incredible adventure. The monumental undertaking of making these pictures was as full of drama, thrills and excitement as the movies themselves. Like everyone involved, I devoted a big part of my life to this incredible saga, and I'll miss it."
REVOLUTIONARY TRAINING, COMBAT & STUNTS
After taking the unprecedented approach of training for and performing their own sophisticated Kung Fu fighting and wire work stunts for The Matrix, the principal cast - Keanu Reeves, Carrie-Anne Moss, Laurence Fishburne and Hugo Weaving - reunited with the trilogy's fight choreographer, master artist/wire work specialist Yuen Wo Ping, and his Hong Kong Kung Fu team led by Dion Lam, for five months of training and rehearsals prior to the production of The Matrix Reloaded and The Matrix Revolutions. Daily training sessions were held in a Santa Monica airplane hangar that accommodated the film's large motion capture stage in addition to a Matrix stunt team nearly triple its original size.
Having endured grueling training for four months for the first film, "the cast arrived in much better shape, much fitter, with a far greater understanding of the demands we would place on them," Wo Ping says.
"Training for these two films was probably three times harder than preparing for the first," admits Reeves, who devoted at least seven hours a day to Kung Fu. "Neo's Kung Fu elements and wire work are much more sophisticated."
While training for and filming The Matrix, Reeves was recovering from neck surgery, which restricted his movements, so Wo Ping accommodated his injury by choreographing routines that featured more hand-to-hand combat than kicking. This time around, Reeves had no such limitations. "The more I could do, the more they pushed me," recalls the dedicated actor. "So when I could do one thing well, that was the day they'd ask me if I could do two things. Then when we were shooting, the Brothers would ask me if I could do seven things! It was all very good fun, but very hard work as well. And painful - ice is your friend." (During training, Reeves was known to sit in a bathtub full of ice.)
"There is no one who is harder on themselves than Keanu," Moss observes. "There were times when I would cover my ears and eyes, worried that he was pushing himself too far, but I completely commend and applaud him for going there. He really took his fighting and physicality to a level that I don't think any American actor has ever done."
"Keanu is exceptional," compliments Wo Ping. "He is a super perfectionist, always dissatisfied with his own performance, even when I think it's very good! I tried my best to match the level that he was looking for."
Reeves feels that such ambitious training was the only way to reach the level of technical acuity necessary to achieve the Brothers' vision for the film's awe-inspiring action. "Wo Ping, Larry and Andy want the fights to be as spectacular as possible," he says. "They love spectacle and they want to entertain. They're interested in physical contact in both its positive and negative light, in the same way that fire can be destructive and it can also give warmth - that's what they want from an action sequence."
The exhilarating Revolutions fight sequences - the Club Hell Coat Check showdown, Neo's brutal fight with Bane aboard the Logos, and his do-or-die battle with Agent Smith known as the Super Burly Brawl - result from a powerful synthesis between the choreographer, the filmmakers and the cast. "Wo Ping's style meshes exceptionally well with the Brothers' philosophy in terms of storytelling," says producer Joel Silver. "Beyond the obvious antagonist and protagonist combating in a test of physical will, he illustrates the characters' development through the fights. It was in the Dojo Fight in The Matrix that Neo first began to explore his potential, and in Reloaded's Burly Brawl, he is so challenged by the onslaught of Smiths that he has to elevate himself to a whole new level. In Revolutions, Neo and Smith have increased their abilities to the point that they're equal in power, and their power is immense."
"The Brothers wanted the Super Brawl fight to convey Neo and Smith's invincibility," Wo Ping explains. "I tried to create an energy behind this sequence of these two very different fighters clashing in a battle where both must win but neither can be defeated. Thanks once again to Keanu and Hugo's perseverance, we were able to achieve that energy in the fight."
According to Silver, the cinematic payoff is extraordinary. "The Super Burly Brawl is like the ultimate comic book battle between two superheroes wreaking havoc on the world, which we've never witnessed in live action before," he describes. "It's a fantastic experience to watch how the Wachowskis have developed Neo and Smith's rivalry to this final, incredible resolution in Revolutions."
Filming the colossally ambitious Super Brawl took eight weeks and required months of preparation for the production team to develop innovative technical equipment to realize the Wachowskis' vision for the bombastic sequence. The script called for the meticulously choreographed contest of will to take place in torrential rain, beginning on a flooded street lined with Agent Smiths, and then rocketing 2,500 feet into the lightning-streaked sky, hurtling in and out of an abandoned skyscraper, and crashing into a massive crater where Neo and Smith's earth-shattering conflict is finally resolved. Devices were created to produce extra large raindrops that could be lit and seen better than typical "movie rain." Though it was impractical to heat the vast amount of water used in the sequence, it was constantly recycled and purified through the rain rigs.
"Shooting the first section of the Super Brawl, where Neo and Smith confront each other in the street in the pouring rain, was fantastic," enthuses Hugo Weaving, who says he "trained smarter" for Reloaded and Revolutions to avoid the injuries he suffered while making The Matrix. "I really love the sensation of being in the rain and I felt very invigorated and energized by it. Then when we got into the crater we were fighting in the mud as well, so it became more difficult."
Filming the blend of confrontational action and dialogue in the Crater proved to be the most challenging section of the sequence for Weaving. "The rain was so heavy that it was hard to speak without starting to have bubbles and streams of water running out of your mouth. You couldn't hear yourself speak, so finding the right tone in that scene was really difficult because I had no notion of what I sounded like."
The three-deep rows of Agent Smith spectators were simulated via a combination of actor doubles, Smith "dummies" created by the Art Department and CGI Smiths added by the VFX team. Doubles outfitted in Smith masks stood in the back row and controlled the head movements of two rows of inter-connected dummies, so that every Smith follows the fight action in synchronicity.
To create a realistic sense of weightlessness for the airborne sequence of the Brawl, the Stunt and Martial Arts teams collaborated with Visual Effects and production departments to invent the "Tuning Forks," a special rig that enabled the actors and stuntmen to simulate weightlessness while fighting. (Early testing proved it impractical to pursue the initial concept of shooting on a special NASA plane that simulates zero gravity for astronaut training.) This gravity-defying section of the battle was staged in "the Egg," a large box-like set enclosed in blue screen where the fighting was shot and later married with a VFX background of the rain-drenched Matrix cityscape.
Numerous other rigs and harnesses were used to achieve all of Revolutions' acrobatic stunts and wire work, including the versatile "Twisty Belt." Developed by Martial Arts Coordinator and Reeves' stunt double Chad Stahelski, the Twisty Belt is a harness that allows one to perform fluid multi-directional rotations, such as a back flip into a cartwheel. Another key piece of equipment was the infamous "Yak rig," so named because of the performers' tendency to vomit after working in this gyroscope-based device that simulates freefalling.
"Wire work looks easy, but it takes a lot of practice to get used to articulating your body and developing timing between you and the wire team that's pulling," notes Stahelski. "On top of all that, you need to be flexible, you need to be able to kick and punch and you still need the strength to pull your body up into the required positions."
"It was grueling work, trying to execute the Kung Fu and wire moves in the rain, but Hugo and Chad and the stunt team were incredible," Reeves says of the painstaking effort that went into perfecting the brutally balletic sequence. (In addition to his work in the Super Brawl, Reeves also performed portions of Neo's fight with Bane aboard the Logos without the benefit of sight, since the prosthetic makeup used to depict Neo's eye damage severely limited his vision.)
"Keanu beats himself up on set and he has very high expectations of what the standard of work should be, but he never pressures me or the other actors," Weaving adds. "He's a great listener - I really love working with him."
Another gravity-defying Revolutions fight sequence designed by Wo Ping takes place in the Club Hell Coat Check, where Trinity, Morpheus and Seraph infiltrate an underground nightclub in the Matrix to confront the Merovingian, who has placed a bounty on each of their heads. A track system was installed on the ceiling of the set to anchor the actors and stunt performers upside down, and the Twisty Belt again provided the range of motion needed to pull off the characters' acrobatic melee. Hundreds of squibs, explosives and breakaway set pieces had to be synchronized with the performers' complex maneuvers.
"When I walked onto the Club Hell set, it reminded me of when Keanu and I shot the Lobby sequence in The Matrix," recalls Carrie-Anne Moss, who broke her leg while training for Reloaded and Revolutions. "The pressure to get every move right and be in sync with all the squibs and the explosions was immense. I was nervous about getting back on the wire again after breaking my leg, but Chad and the wire team really helped me out. I wound up nailing a couple of big moves in one take, and got a 'Hurrah!' from the Brothers, which is really rare. Completing the Club Hell sequence was one of the highlights of this project for me."
"Carrie-Anne's attitude on these projects has been 'Just tell me what you want me to do and I'll do it,'" Reeves says admiringly. "She embodies and lives that, beautifully and inspiringly so."
"Carrie-Anne is very, very good and I always encouraged her to feel more confident about her ability," says Wo Ping. "I also designed an extremely fast, powerful kick for her, which we call the Scorpion Kick. She uses the Scorpion Kick in the opening fight of Reloaded and again in the Club Hell fight in Revolutions. I trained her for over six months just for that one kick. She performed it very, very powerfully, with great precision."
The Club Hell fight also features Trinity's signature kick, the Double Eagle, a mighty blow delivered while she's suspended in mid-air. "I had to kick this guy and he slams into a wall and gets stuck, and every time I did it I closed my eyes until they said he was okay, because I was so afraid he was going to get a concussion or hurt himself," Moss says. "But he just kept doing it and loving it. Stuntmen and stuntwomen are very, very special people."
"The Club Hell Coat Check fight takes the wire fu concept even further than the Lobby sequence in The Matrix," Silver suggests. "It's exciting to see how we were able to expand and elaborate on the artistry from the first film in this arc that culminates in Revolutions."
A special hydraulic rig was used in the filming of the Siege on Zion, in which soldiers and volunteers are attacked and eviscerated by throngs of deadly Sentinels. This "airbike," typically used to simulate a motorcycle moving in front of green screen, was adapted by the Matrix production to grab, shake and throw stunt performers as if being seized by Sentinel tentacles. (The rig was nicknamed the "PMS Machine" by the stunt crew, as in "Please Make it Stop.")
Filming scenes depicting the valiant attack waged against the Machines by volunteers Zee and Charra was even more demanding than the actresses expected. "We were jumping and running through tunnels and landing on our knees and getting cut up," says Nona Gaye, who plays Zee, a Zion citizen who chooses to fight the Machines for a chance to reunite with her husband Link, a key member of Morpheus' crew. "It was really a little more strenuous than I thought it would be, but every bruise was worth it. The Siege is incredible."
Jada Pinkett Smith exhibited her fighting skills in The Matrix Reloaded and displays her character Niobe's best-known skill in Revolutions: piloting a rebel hovercraft through a mechanical sewer line while enduring heavy attack from pulverizing Sentinels. "The script made a reference to Niobe's muscles bulging as she steered the ship, so I figured I'd better get some muscles," says Pinkett Smith, who gave birth to daughter Willow shortly before her training commenced. "I know it may not seem like it, but filming that sequence was tough. The Brothers wanted me to make it look as realistic as possible that I was steering this big, old, heavy ship and snaking it through a sewer line. That was a lot of work because of the tension that you have to hold in your body in order to seem like you're moving a ship of that size."
From initial vision through preparation and execution, the level of innovation and talent put into the wire, fighting and stunt work on the Matrix films is unparalleled. "We're all ruined," concludes Supervising Stunt Coordinator R.A. Rondell. "We've hit such a tremendous benchmark with these films that working on anything else is going to be a bit of a letdown. The ability and expertise of this crew makes what we were able to achieve pretty unlimited. We've done as many as 70 takes in one day to make it perfect, to find a magic moment. We've become such hyper-perfectionists that it will be a letdown when we're not allowed to go that extra distance."
BEYOND BULLET TIME & THE BURLY BRAWL:
CREATING REVOLUTIONARY VIRTUAL CINEMA
The visual effects process for The Matrix Reloaded and The Matrix Revolutions began in March 2000 at the production's in-house visual effects division, ESC (pronounced "Escape"), where John Gaeta, visual effects supervisor of the Matrix trilogy, has supervised the creation of over 1,300 virtual effects shots for Reloaded and approximately 800 more for Revolutions - dwarfing in size and scope the 412 VFX shots created for The Matrix.
Gaeta's primary innovation for The Matrix has come to be known as "Bullet Time," a revolutionary technique for depicting cinematic action in the style of Japanese animation known as animé. Bullet Time refers to a conceptual state of being inside the virtual reality of the Matrix, in which a character - primarily Neo - obtains a "mind-over-Matrix" capability. The creative process for bringing Bullet Time to the screen is called "virtual cinematography," a digital solution developed by Gaeta and the Matrix filmmakers to depict these "mind-over-Matrix" moments in slow-motion, as seen by a camera moving at regular speed. The result allowed Gaeta's team to manipulate imagery at any given speed without losing clarity.
But this initial version of virtual cinematography was deemed inadequate - "almost arcane," as Gaeta sees it - for rendering the super-human events the Wachowski Brothers envisioned for Reloaded and the epic action they designed for Revolutions. Not only did Gaeta have to find a way to ignite Reloaded's scorching fourteen minute freeway chase, render Neo's "Burly Brawl" battle against 100 Agent Smiths and depict Neo flying at 2000 miles per hour over the sprawling Matrix megacity, but the Wachowskis' ambitious Revolutions script called for a spectacular cascade of marauding creatures, mammoth robots controlled by men and virtual destruction that powers "the Siege," the apocalyptic battle in which the rebels mount an aggressive defense of Zion against the Machines' relentless army of Sentinels and Diggers. Gaeta also needed to bring to life the sinister Machine City, its "bio-mechanical" inhabitants and the ultimate confrontation between Neo and Agent Smith known as the "Super Burly Brawl."
"It was evident that we couldn't go any further by utilizing the technology from the first Bullet Time shots," says Gaeta, who won an Academy Award for Visual Effects for The Matrix. "It was too restrictive and too labor intensive. The concept of Bullet Time needed to graduate to the true technology it suggested."
In other words, realizing Reloaded and Revolutions' visionary action sequences required technology that didn't exist yet. Familiar territory for Gaeta and the Wachowskis, but this time around, the filmmakers took their ambitious plan to advance virtual cinematography exponentially further than one can imagine. "They decided to create images that no one could copy," says producer Joel Silver. "That takes a lot of time, a lot of money and a lot of talent. And the results are staggering. These guys didn't just raise the bar for action filmmaking, for visionary storytelling, for what is visually possible - they obliterated it."
The centerpiece of Gaeta and Company's answer to the first phase of virtual cinematography is their creation of virtual, three-dimensional depictions of the main characters for the purpose of enacting their impossible super-human feats at a level of realism never seen before. To create virtual humans, the VFX team utilized motion capture ("mocap"), a technique involving sophisticated cameras that recorded precise motion data from reflective bodysuits worn by the main actors, Yuen Wo Ping's martial arts team and the stunt performers as they executed the required action.
In addition to months' worth of motion capture data acquired for Reloaded, extensive mocap was utilized in rendering Revolutions' climactic Super Burly Brawl combat between Neo and Agent Smith. A special capture stage - which, at the time of production, was the largest motion capture performance stage ever created - was operated for more than four months parallel to principal photography. The data recorded for Reloaded and Revolutions, as well as for the video game Enter the Matrix, is the most motion capture ever created for a film; the amount of capture needed to produce the most versatile of video games pales in comparison.
"Working with motion capture was something very new to me," says master martial arts choreographer Wo Ping. "It's fantastic technology because it helps me to accomplish a lot of moves that can't be done in real life. With motion capture, we can enforce the dynamic power and emphasize the beauty of the kicks and moves in a way that we couldn't otherwise do."
In editing the motion capture data, Gaeta's team literally fleshed out the virtual characters' computer-generated bodies, adding photo-realistic muscles and wardrobe. Layering lifelike expressions onto the computer-generated cast involved another extreme innovation that the Matrix virtual artists have dubbed Universal Capture ("u-cap"). Five ultra-powerful high-resolution cameras were arranged in a semi-circle around each actor's face. As the actor conveyed a range of emotions and expressions, the Sony HDW 900 cameras recorded the performance to the most minute detail - all the way down to down to the pores and hair follicles.
Using these five real-time recordings to extrapolate the shapes of the characters' faces to an extremely high resolution, the VFX team then applied the dimensional facial textures to the digital characters' bodies, resulting in the most realistic computer-generated human images rendered to date.
Once the master content of each sequence was captured and fused with intricate layers of visual elements (including virtual backgrounds, objects and computer-generated enhancements like glistening glass, bullet wakes and blood), virtual cinematography opened up infinite camera composition and editorial possibilities, resulting in what the Matrix VFX team has dubbed "virtual cinema."
In the virtual cinema that fortifies the Super Burly Brawl, an unfettered camera follows Neo and Agent Smith as their furious battle escalates from an earth-shattering exchange of blows to a soaring sky-high smackdown. Virtual cinema also makes it possible to depict in unprecedented detail the surreal final impact of Neo's fist colliding with Agent Smith's face, creating an impossible event captured at impossible camera angles as the action shifts between super slow motion and supersonic speed. This moment aspires to be the most photo-real, dynamically moving computer generated close-up of a human face ever created to date. (To commemorate this achievement, the Wachowski Brothers and Joel Silver had three-dimensional sculptures of the dramatic final result crafted into bronze medallions, which will be given to guests at each of the three Revolutions premieres in Los Angeles, Sydney and Tokyo.)
The groundwork for this kind of hyper-reality was laid in the rippling of a hi-rise building's surface at the crescendo of the helicopter crash sequence in The Matrix. The filmmakers discarded the rules of standard physics, because in an algorithmic world like the Matrix, visual glitches like the surreal structural swell seemed natural. Reloaded and Revolutions exceed all expectations in furthering this fantastic new form of action.
In addition to the groundbreaking visual effects that intensify the Super Burly Brawl, Gaeta's team was responsible for developing state-of-the-art creature animation to realize the Wachowskis' vision for the Siege. Revolutions breaks all animation-based boundaries in rendering the devastating destruction waged by Zion's corps of rebel-manned Armored Personal Units (APUs) against the Machines' furious onslaught of Sentinels and Diggers. Through next generation "behavioral animation" and other A.I based methodologies, the VFX team also created the swarming bio-mechanical population of the Machine City. The insect-based creatures being driven by these technologies, as well as the large-scale environments of the Machine City and Zion, are all based on the singular designs of Geof Darrow, creator of ultra-detailed comic book classics like Hard Boiled.
In the tradition of contemporary Japanese animated movies, Revolutions also presents photo-real 3D interpretations of natural phenomenon like weather, water and flame to impressionistically convey intelligence, behavior and character. Scores of Revolutions elements from lightning to explosions were given a complete rethink on design, style and execution. "The brothers obsess on hyper-graphic depictions of supernatural events," Gaeta reveals. "At every turn we've been striving to balance chaos and order, like putting a picture frame around a flash flood."
Commonly-reviewed material at visual effects headquarters during the photography stages included Darrow's conceptual drawings and films such as Alien; 2001: A Space Odyssey; Vertigo; Apocalypse Now; Koyaanisqatsi and Powaqqatsi (highly-stylized documentaries about life on earth); IMAX's Blue Earth; 20,000 Leagues Unde