redfiona99: (Default)
[personal profile] redfiona99
The case for the prosecution:

I am probably the wrong person to talk about the Matrix series.

As I sci-fi fan, I was already used to the concept of machines being in charge and other civilisations using humans, so I didn't get the shock of a new concept, which some people did. And my Nan was huge kung-fu film fan so I was used to wire work, so I didn't get the wow of new concept from that either.

Don't get me wrong, the first film used the concept and the wire work really well, but it meant I wasn't as sold as a lot of my friends were. But at least that meant I wasn't as disappointed by the sequels.

I think I've made my dislike of pseudo-mystic stuff quite clear, and oh boy do the sequels ever suffer from that. But if they'd been better, I don't think I would have minded as much, because the first film has that too but styled its way out of it. Style only takes you so far.

For me, the major failing of the two later films was an excess of CGI to create their shock and awe. In the first one, most of the really cool stunts, the ones that look spectacular, the ones you remember, were done using a mixture of practical effects, including wire work and camera trickery. In the others, most of that was replaced by CGI. And the problem was that CGI still hadn't quite progressed to the point where it was capable of rendering reality. Which should be fine, because, hey, they're in the Matrix for most of it, but it just feels flat. There's a lack of danger to the fight scenes, not to the actors and stuntcrew but to the characters.

The scene itself:



Why the scene is so good:

It's the glory of simplicity. Just two characters going at it, no huge armies or anything. Hand to hand, not oodles of weaponry. And it's all done with practical effects. And it's so well done.

It's the only fight scene from the last two films I remember, because it stands out because of this.

Date: 2017-04-30 01:01 am (UTC)
lilacsigil: 12 Apostles rocks, text "Rock On" (12 Apostles)
From: [personal profile] lilacsigil
I ran out of interest about 90% of the way into the first movie when they wanted "Guns. Lots of guns." You can do anything but you want the most predictable weapon to fight a reality-bending AI? So I never got into the sequels and from what everyone says, that's a good thing.

Date: 2017-04-30 01:15 am (UTC)
st_aurafina: Rainbow DNA (Default)
From: [personal profile] st_aurafina
That scene is amazing, and I can see why it's memorable - it's not just the simplicity, I think it's the organic nature of the set, too. Like in the LOTR movies, where you don't know that every article has been handstitched/carved/built, but it all adds up to a reality that CGI just can't touch. I'd much rather hear the thunk of something hitting a wooden table than the whoosh-bang of a big CGI effect.

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