La cité humaine de Sion se défend contre l'invasion massive des machines alors que Neo se bat pour mettre fin à la guerre sur un autre front tout en affrontant également l'Agent Smith.La cité humaine de Sion se défend contre l'invasion massive des machines alors que Neo se bat pour mettre fin à la guerre sur un autre front tout en affrontant également l'Agent Smith.La cité humaine de Sion se défend contre l'invasion massive des machines alors que Neo se bat pour mettre fin à la guerre sur un autre front tout en affrontant également l'Agent Smith.
- Prix
- 5 victoires et 36 nominations au total
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe street corner where Neo and Smith fight in the crater is the same corner from which Neo made his phone call at the end of La matrice (1999) - the corner of Pitt, Hunter, and O'Connell Streets in Sydney, Australia. You can see the phone booth to the right when they hit the ground.
- GaffesWhen Bane is talking to Neo while holding the knife to Trinity's throat, the blood appears and disappears on her throat.
- Citations
The Oracle: What about the others?
The Architect: ...What others?
The Oracle: The ones that want out.
The Architect: Obviously they will be freed.
The Oracle: I have your word?
The Architect: What do you think I am? Human?
- Générique farfeluThe giant robotic head is listed in the credits as "Deus ex machina" Meaning "a god from a machine." In Greek and Roman drama, deus ex machina referred to a god lowered by stage machinery to resolve a plot or extricate the protagonist from a difficult situation.
- Autres versionsWhen the film was released in theaters, the waste disposal machine shown at the end had red eyes but on the DVD release the eyes were changed to green. The making of documentary on the DVD still shows the machine with red eyes, obviously the documentary used older footage.
- ConnexionsEdited into The Matrix: Path of Neo (2005)
- Bandes originalesThe Trainman Cometh
Written by Ben Watkins and Don Davis
Produced by Juno Reactor
Co-produced by Don Davis
Performed by Juno Reactor and Don Davis
The movie it self's focus more on the humans and the battles against the machines on the planet Zion, more than they are in the phone line of Matrix. I think this was a brilliant end to a brilliant trilogy. If you didn't understand what the matrix was by the end of the film, then you're never going to get it!
Many viewers preferred Revolutions to Reloaded, thinking it was a simpler, more straight-ahead action movie. Though it may have appeared that way, nothing could be further from the truth. Revolutions was a mind-blowing layered ending that honored and respected the plot threads and themes introduced in the first two movies. The character arcs were satisfying and true to the characters introduced in The Matrix. The creators continued to challenge our understanding of the Matrix and its purpose, avoiding the temptation to serve us a bunch of "their" answers on a platter. That, to us, would have been a sellout of the vision they've been constructing, and wouldn't have been fair to us. Nor would it have been true to the spirit of the previous movies - they've never told us what things meant, they've only shown us the door.
Everything that has a beginning has an end. In this explosive final chapter of the Matrix trilogy, Neo, Morpheus and Trinity battle to defend Zion, the last real-world city, against the onslaught of the machines that have enslaved the human race. And, now as Neo learns more about his heroic powers--including the ability to see the codes of things and the people, he faces the consequences of the choice made in The Matrix Reloaded. For Neo, that means going where no human has dared - into the heart of Machine City and into a cataclysmic showdown with the exponentially more powerful renegade program Smith. The revolution is now: The Matrix Revolutions.
I wish they made more films about the Matrix. The fighting, story and the conspiracy theories that emerged from these movies created a new world for millions of people out there. Some of the conspiracy theories even created a new "religion", the CGI was at the time freaking impressive, the fighting in slow-mo were even more epic and the story itself captured a lot of hearts. Just saying to all who think this movie (and/or the first two) sucked balls,- you are a minority. Movie is great, second one being the best in the trilogy. It is my second favorite film in the trilogy because it ends the story and answers what happened with Neo (Keanu Reeves), he saved Whole planet and defeat Smith (Hugo Weaving) on the end of the movie. This movie may not be the best in storyline, but hell it knows how to make action! That end fight and emotional ending leaving behind a plot for sequel ...Second really expanded the meaning of matrix and the whole idea so I don't understand the hate.
There is a lot of memorable moments the Smith vs Neo climax rain scene is one of my favorite movies scenes of all time. Anyway I love this movie it is not good as the greatest or the best movie or that good, but it is still a worthy sequel to watch and a good end to the trilogy. It is one of my personal Keanue Reeves favorite movies and I love this movie to death. I am giving this 9/10 and only because one of the characters dies in this movie not telling which one.
- ivo-cobra8
- 14 nov. 2015
- Lien permanent
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Sites officiels
- Langues
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- The Matrix Revolutions
- Lieux de tournage
- sociétés de production
- Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Budget
- 150 000 000 $ US (estimation)
- Brut – États-Unis et Canada
- 139 313 948 $ US
- Fin de semaine d'ouverture – États-Unis et Canada
- 48 475 154 $ US
- 9 nov. 2003
- Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
- 427 344 325 $ US
- Durée2 heures 9 minutes
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 2.39 : 1