The Matrix Revolutions

Director: The Wachowski Brothers
Stars: Jada Pinkett Smith, Hugo Weaving, Laurence Fishburne, Carrie-Anne Moss, Keanu Reeves
Year:  2003 Running Time:  129 mins Rating: 3 out of 5 Certificate 15
The Matrix Revolutions

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The third and final part of the sci-fi trilogy that has had teens getting sweaty-palmed all over the world doesn't disappoint in an explosive climax of man versus machine.

Review

Four years down the line and we're about to find out whether Keanu's Reeves' Neo is either the new Messiah - or just a very naughty boy.

When we left him at the end of Matrix Reloaded he had vanished back into cyberspace and was cast adrift in a no man's land between The Matrix and The Machine World.

However, it's not long before the lovelorn Trinity (Anne Moss) and Morpheus (Fishburne) have hitched a ride on a cyber-subway train and brought him back.

In truth, the amount of times the time-traveling trio slip back between their home city of Zion and the other side, it's a shame they're not collecting air miles.

This time round the net-nerd gobbledegook that marred Matrix Reloaded is reined in and Neo's Gazza-chats-to-Dr Stephen Hawking-style philosophy treatises are kept to a minimum.

Instead, the Wachowski brothers do what they do best - nerve shredding action sequences beautifully rendered by state-of-the-art special effects.

Sci-fi nuts who waited in vain for the non-existent "Rise of the Machines" in T3 will be amply rewarded with some of the best sci-fi battle scenes rendered on celluloid.

Swarming like armies of angry killer bees, the swooping metallic squids trail thrashing coils as they launch a battle to the death for Zion.

Repulsing them using a souped-up version of the sort of glorified fork-lift truck Sigourney Weaver fought off the Alien, are the remnants of mankind.

Purists will be pleased to note the reappearance of Neo's nemesis Agent Smith (actually a whole city of Smiths) and a frisson is added by traitor in Zion's ranks.

OK, so the love affair between Neo and Trinity may have all the sensual resonance of a broken PlayStation, but that's not really why we're here.

We're here to watch superhumans in long, black macs and shades break wall-fulls of tiles when they're not recreating a sci-fi 633 Squadron in the derelict tunnels of the subterranean world.

Gawp open-mouthed at the cutting edge effects, swoon at some of the most beautiful computer-generated imagery committed to film¿and snigger at the dialogue.

It's slick, it's fast and it's furious - but not as furious as you'll be if you miss it.

Tim Evans

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