Review: Even Keanu Reeves' Neo can't save the remixed results of 'The Matrix Resurrections'
![Portrait of Brian Truitt](https://cdn.statically.io/img/www.usatoday.com/gcdn/-mm-/44e6e0dadeda60cf062700769fffe91dd2dca166/c=35-7-570-542/local/-/media/2019/03/13/USATODAY/USATODAY/636880721296148052-Brian-Truitt.jpg?width=48&height=48&fit=crop&format=pjpg&auto=webp)
âThe Matrixâ innovated. âThe Matrix Reloadedâ intrigued. âThe Matrix Revolutionsâ failed. And âThe Matrix Resurrectionsâ is, for better and for worse, the remix.
Itâs been 18 years since the last âMatrixâ movie, so the fourth installment in the sci-fi action franchise tries very hard to remind everybody in the blockbuster community that, hey, itâs the film series with whiz-bang âbullet timeâ gunfights, gravity-defying kung fu, and Keanu Reeves and Carrie-Anne Moss as mankind-saving lovebirds in black leather dusters and sunglasses. Directed by original filmmaker Lana Wachowski, âResurrectionsâ (â â out of four; rated R; in theaters and streaming on HBO Max Wednesday) is very earnest, slightly nonsensical and rather romantic, though underwhelms when compared to the 1999 film that became a pop-culture classic.
New 'Matrix':Carrie-Anne Moss rises again in 'Resurrections' to make a 46-story leap with Keanu Reeves
Reeves returns as Neo, the hacker known as âThe Oneâ who learns in the original trilogy that his "reality" is actually a simulation created by machines in a dystopian future where people are essentially used as batteries. And last time we saw him, our hero sacrificed himself to save the world.
The opening of âResurrectionsâ brings back Reeves in an extremely meta fashion. Thomas Anderson is the award-winning creator of the popular âMatrixâ video games but also a very troubled dude living in San Francisco. Heâs not pleased he's assigned to do another "Matrix" game, but more importantly, he doesnât remember his past as Neo. When he meets old flame Trinity (Moss) â now Tiffany, who has a husband and kids â in a coffee shop, neither of them recognize each other.
Need a break? Play the USA TODAY Daily Crossword Puzzle.
'Am I crazy?':'The Matrix Resurrections' trailer is here with a kung fu-tastic Keanu Reeves
The Matrix is still a thing, though, and itâs been upgraded. A new human freedom fighter named Bugs (Jessica Henwick) and a revamped Morpheus (Yahya Abdul-Mateen II instead of OG star Laurence Fishburne) find and reintroduce this older Neo to the familiar predicament, though instead of the larger stakes of the first films, this time Neoâs main mission is to free his great love Trinity from a captive state.
While âResurrectionsâ is maybe not the best starting point for a "Matrix" neophyte, key moments from the original film are replayed here. The scene of Morpheus 2.0 having Neo choose between a red pill (for the truth) or a blue pill (for the charade) features a clip of the same bit in the 1999 movie playing in the background, a reminder that it was cooler the first time.
'The Matrix':Five ways the original film and Keanu Reeves will still blow your mind, 20 years later
Reeves returns with added anxiety and aged gravitas layered onto Neo's zen-ness. Heâs still fun to watch with Moss, whose Trinity really sparkles here once she gets the spotlight. Fishburneâs absence is notable, though: Abdul-Mateen gives Morpheus a lot of style and is in some ways a different take, but heâs such a great actor that originating a character would have been a better fit for him. That definitely works for Henwick, the filmâs secret weapon: Changing up the usual black-on-black âMatrixâ color palette with blue hair, Bugs is a kind of parkouring warrior we havenât seen before, part of a precocious generation raised on the legend of Neo.
Priyanka Chopra Jonas plays the wise Sati, a grown-up version of a little girl who appeared in 2003âs âRevolutions,â and Jonathan Groff winningly reimagines Hugo Weavingâs villainous Agent Smith as a smarmy tech dudebro. After the rocky start and a dip into the mythology that waylaid âReloadedâ and especially âRevolutions,â Groff and Neil Patrick Harris (as The Analyst, Neoâs therapist) ignite a really interesting and explosive âResurrectionsâ third act.
'It can get exhausting':Yahya Abdul-Mateen II on Black trauma porn and importance of Black joy
âThe Matrixâ was renowned for its action, although the new film arrives to find a much higher bar, thanks to "John Wick,â âMad Max: Fury Roadâ and many superhero movies. The martial-arts melees and firefights are just OK until the big finale when Wachowski lets loose and gets creative. But âResurrectionsâ overall tends toward the philosophical, focusing on legacy and emotion where the original trilogy emphasized free will versus destiny.
The new "Matrix" tries to reprogram a beloved piece of cinema. However, itâs quite a few fixes short of a full upgrade.