IMDb RATING
7.1/10
5.5K
YOUR RATING
An athlete, Dan, breaks out of the matrix through a feat of strength and gets a brief glimse of the real world outside his existance.An athlete, Dan, breaks out of the matrix through a feat of strength and gets a brief glimse of the real world outside his existance.An athlete, Dan, breaks out of the matrix through a feat of strength and gets a brief glimse of the real world outside his existance.
Victor Williams
- Dan
- (voice)
John Wesley
- Dan's Dad
- (voice)
Alex Fernandez
- Tom
- (voice)
Allison Smith
- Reporter
- (voice)
Tara Strong
- Nurse
- (voice)
Matt McKenzie
- Agent #1
- (voice)
Kevin Michael Richardson
- Agent #2
- (voice)
- (as Kevin N. Richardson)
Julia Fletcher
- Narrator
- (voice)
Featured reviews
This short film takes the Matrix universe and goes in a new and interesting direction. If the free people can bend the Matrix just through sheer will, couldn't the people who are already stuck in it? World Record follows a determined athlete who does just that. The animation style really brings that to life.
This is the eighth part of 'The Animatrix', a collection of animated short movies that tell us a little more about the world of 'The Matrix'. Again with a new style in animation. We see how an athlete frees himself from the matrix during a 100m. run. Although the premise is very good the short itself was a little disappointing. Still entertaining though.
On the Animatrix disc, this is the sixth short. I'm sorry to say, but this is my least favorite. I can appreciate that the animation is interesting and different. The concept is definitely deserving of attention. The voice acting is very good. However, with all the time spent on back-story, and an execution that just did not grab me(which I am willing to grant may have more to do with personal tastes), this just doesn't seem that great, especially considering what the other ones are like. This just comes off as having wasted a lot of potential. The visual style is like a grotesque caricature, and it is similar to Aeon Flux. Strangely hypnotic. It is unpleasant to watch, one bit in particular, and I would say that that is intentional. This is almost nine minutes long. The story-telling utilizes a non-linear time-line, and you have to pay attention to follow it. The DVD holds a making of, seven and a half minutes, and it, along with the commentary(not in English but with subtitles), are worth taking in. I recommend this to fans of The Matrix universe and/or science fiction. 5/10
When I heard the title "World Record" as part of a collection of short movies in the matrix universe, I was quite enthralled. There is a lot of potential here. Could it be about an outsider like Neo & friends achieving a world record for fun? Could it be about a person who loses their perspective of reality and does impossible things? What is it about?
The answer is something close to the latter. It's about an athlete who gets too focused on his desire to achieve a record. Or something. Quite frankly, the story is poorly told, interwoven, trying to be very clever and ending up being awkward. The animation shows craftsmanship, but at the same time, it looks surprisingly ugly and basic. But the real crux is the story - admittedly, I would not have understood it without watching a making of or a directors commentary or whatever it was, explaining a few of the final scenes. The movie, perhaps like the athlete's life, or at least his run, is a blur.
The sad thing is all the wasted potential. Where "Beyond" takes a simple idea - a glitch in the matrix producing a haunted house - and turns it into something truly special, this short movie takes a special idea - an athlete breaking the laws of the matrix by sheer willpower - and turns it into something so convoluted it's disappointingly boring.
5/10
The answer is something close to the latter. It's about an athlete who gets too focused on his desire to achieve a record. Or something. Quite frankly, the story is poorly told, interwoven, trying to be very clever and ending up being awkward. The animation shows craftsmanship, but at the same time, it looks surprisingly ugly and basic. But the real crux is the story - admittedly, I would not have understood it without watching a making of or a directors commentary or whatever it was, explaining a few of the final scenes. The movie, perhaps like the athlete's life, or at least his run, is a blur.
The sad thing is all the wasted potential. Where "Beyond" takes a simple idea - a glitch in the matrix producing a haunted house - and turns it into something truly special, this short movie takes a special idea - an athlete breaking the laws of the matrix by sheer willpower - and turns it into something so convoluted it's disappointingly boring.
5/10
Really ?
After all the good stories, this just felt a bit overkill and simplistic. Sorry, I don't think it is good.
Visually, it was good like the other episodes,
I didn't like this part...
After all the good stories, this just felt a bit overkill and simplistic. Sorry, I don't think it is good.
Visually, it was good like the other episodes,
I didn't like this part...
Did you know
- ConnectionsEdited into The Animatrix (2003)
- SoundtracksVIRUS
Written by Satoshi Tomiie
Performed by Satoshi Tomiie
Courtesy of Saw Recordings, Inc.
(segment "World Record")
Details
- Runtime
- 10m
- Color
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