IMDb RATING
7.4/10
7.5K
YOUR RATING
A teenager's dreams which conclude with him falling off a building, lead him to believe that the reality he lives in, may not be so real after all.A teenager's dreams which conclude with him falling off a building, lead him to believe that the reality he lives in, may not be so real after all.A teenager's dreams which conclude with him falling off a building, lead him to believe that the reality he lives in, may not be so real after all.
Keanu Reeves
- Neo
- (voice)
Carrie-Anne Moss
- Trinity
- (voice)
John DeMita
- Teacher
- (voice)
Kevin Michael Richardson
- Cop
- (voice)
Featured reviews
I don't know what is is but the whole short was very cool. One of my favorites. Even thought it had had-draw pictures that were all wavy and stuff is was still very fun to watch. Also the sound was too notch when he was falling through the sky and past the railing.
This is the ninth and last part of 'The Animatrix', a collection of animated short movies that tell us a little more about the world of 'The Matrix'. In this part a kid knows there is something out there like Neo knew in 'The Matrix'. During a class he is contacted by Neo (Keanu Reeves) and tries to run from the agents who arrive at the school building. This short is a nice ending for 'The Animatrix' with the first and therefor only appearance by Neo.
It was interesting that it was short and animated at the same time. The Matrix is a series of movies with a very interesting subject and I love it. This one was great too. The boy in the movie was a bit annoyed to me, but his back story was interesting. Brave kid ;)
There's not much plot to this Animatrix short, but the movies overcompensated for that so it's good to have a Matrix story sold on imagery and feeling.
Remember the overeager kid from The Matrix Revolutions? This is the story of how he freed himself from un-real world and woke up. He feels alone and alienated, wondering why his dreams feel more real than his waking world.
Cowboy Beebop director Shinichirô Watanabe uses abstract, experimental animation deliver the story. It's rough and features many pencil strokes, but it's good. Not the best Animatrix short, but worth watching.
Remember the overeager kid from The Matrix Revolutions? This is the story of how he freed himself from un-real world and woke up. He feels alone and alienated, wondering why his dreams feel more real than his waking world.
Cowboy Beebop director Shinichirô Watanabe uses abstract, experimental animation deliver the story. It's rough and features many pencil strokes, but it's good. Not the best Animatrix short, but worth watching.
10dispet
some have commented that this is plot-light, and in some ways it is, but it doesnt need a plot. this episode of the animatrix is pure philosophy and lead in to a great character in the films. the key to overcoming reality in the matrix is to unlearn everything you know. if you can learn that gravity is meaningless, then it is meaningless, our minds hold total power. and if we can make ourselves believe that death is not the end....well.. brilliant philosophy, amazing, unique animation. great stuff.
Did you know
- GoofsDuring the first part of the short, where Mr. Popper is typing, his keystrokes are inconsistent with what appears of the screen.
- ConnectionsEdited into The Animatrix (2003)
- SoundtracksWHO AM I (ANIMATRIX EDIT)
Written by Peter Kruder
Performed by Peace Orchestra
Courtesy of G-Stone Recordings
Details
- Runtime
- 15m
- Color
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