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{{Short description|2003 American-Japanese anthology anime film}} {{Use mdy dates|date=September 2022}} {{Infobox film | name = The Animatrix | image = Theanimatrix-logo.svg | caption = | director = {{Plainlist| * [[Andrew R. Jones|Andy Jones]] * [[Mahiro Maeda]] * [[Shinichirō Watanabe]] * [[Yoshiaki Kawajiri]] * [[Takeshi Koike]] * [[Kōji Morimoto]] * [[Peter Chung]] }} | writer = {{Plainlist| * [[The Wachowskis]]{{efn|name=Credited|Credited as ''Larry'' and ''Andy Wachowski''.}} <!-- Do not change without consensus. See Talk:The Matrix (franchise)#Request for Comment - Crediting The Wachowskis. --> * Mahiro Maeda * Shinichirō Watanabe * Yoshiaki Kawajiri * Kōji Morimoto * Peter Chung }} | producer = The Wachowskis<!-- Do not change without consensus. See Talk:The Matrix (franchise)#Request for Comment - Crediting The Wachowskis. --> {{Infobox|decat=yes|child=yes|label1=Segment producers|data1={{Ubl|[[Michael Arias]]|Hiroaki Takeuchi|[[Eiko Tanaka]]}}}} | starring = | cinematography = | editing = | music = {{Plainlist| * [[Don Davis (composer)|Don Davis]] * [[Tom Holkenborg|Junkie XL]] }} | animator = {{Plainlist| * [[Square (video game company)#Square USA|Square Pictures]] (''Final Flight of the Osiris'') * [[Madhouse (company)|Madhouse]] (''Program'', ''World Record'') * [[Studio 4°C]] (''The Second Renaissance'', ''Kid's Story'', ''Beyond'', ''A Detective Story'') * [[DNA Productions]] (''Matriculated'') }} | studio = {{Plainlist| * [[Village Roadshow Pictures]] * NPV Entertainment }} | distributor = [[Warner Home Video]] (credited as [[Warner Bros. Pictures]] in the VHS release) | released = {{Film date|2003|06|03}} | runtime = 102 minutes<!--Theatrical runtime: 101:50--><ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.bbfc.co.uk/releases/animatrix-2003 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181013202040/http://bbfc.co.uk/releases/animatrix-2003 | url-status=dead | archive-date=October 13, 2018 | title=''THE ANIMATRIX'' (15) | work=[[British Board of Film Classification]] | date=June 5, 2003 | access-date=May 18, 2020 }}</ref> | country = {{Plainlist| * United States * Japan }} | language = {{Plainlist| * English * Japanese }} | budget = | gross = }} {{nihongo|'''''The Animatrix'''''|アニマトリックス|Animatorikkusu|lead=yes}} is a 2003 [[adult animation|adult animated]] [[science fiction film|science fiction]] [[anthology film]] produced by [[the Wachowskis]].<ref>{{cite book |last=Lenburg |first=Jeff |title=The Encyclopedia of Animated Cartoons |date=2009 |publisher=Checkmark Books |location=New York |isbn=978-0-8160-6600-1 |edition=3rd |page=256}}</ref> The anime compiles nine [[animated short|animated]] short films, detailing the backstory of [[The Matrix (franchise)|''The Matrix'' film series]], in addition to providing side stories that expand the universe and tie into the film series. The film received generally positive reviews from critics and fans. == Plot == === ''Final Flight of the Osiris'' === Captain Thadeus and [[List of Matrix series characters#Jue|Jue]] engage in a blindfolded sword fight in a [[virtual reality]] [[dojo]]. They do not harm each other, only damage clothing. At some point, they are interrupted by an alarm and the simulation ends. In the next scene, the hovercraft ''Osiris'' heads for Junction 21 when operator Robbie discovers an army of Sentinels on his HR scans. The ship flees into an uncharted tunnel, where it encounters a small group of Sentinels patrolling the area. The crew members man the onboard guns and destroy the patrol. The ship emerges on the surface, four kilometers directly above [[Zion (The Matrix)|Zion]] and close to the Sentinel army. Thadeus and Jue see that the Machines are using gigantic drills to tunnel their way down to Zion. The Sentinel army detects the ''Osiris'' and pursues the ship. Thadeus realizes and decides that Zion must be warned, and Jue volunteers to broadcast herself into the Matrix to deliver the warning while the ship is doggedly pursued. Knowing that neither of them will make it out alive, Thadeus and Jue admit to each other about peeking in the simulation before kissing farewell. Entering the Matrix, Jue eventually reaches a mail box where she drops off a package; this sets up the prologue for the video game ''[[Enter the Matrix]]''. She attempts to contact Thadeus via cell phone as the ''Osiris'' is overrun by Sentinels and crashes. The Sentinels tear their way into the ship, where Thadeus makes a last stand against the Sentinels. Shortly after Jue realizes the horror of the situation, she says "Thadeus" over her cell phone immediately before the ''Osiris'' explodes, destroying many of the Sentinels and killing the entire crew. In the Matrix, Jue falls dead to the ground, due to her body being destroyed on the ship. === ''The Second Renaissance, Part I'' === Told by the archives of The Machines, the story's format is similar to the [[creation myth]] of [[Book of Genesis]] using phrases after major events such as "and for a time it was good". The story talks about how in the mid-21st century, humanity falls victim to its vanity and corruption. They develop [[artificial intelligence]], and soon build an entire race of sentient AI robots to serve them. Many of the robots are domestic servants meant to interact with humans, so they are built in a [[humanoid]] form. With increasing numbers of people released from all labor, much of the human population has become slothful, conceited, and corrupt. Despite this, the machines were content with serving humanity. The relationship between humans and machines changes in the year 2090, when a domestic [[android (robot)|android]] is threatened by its owner. The android, named [[Bigger_Thomas|B1-66ER]], kills its owner, his pets, and a mechanic instructed to deactivate the robot, the first incident of an artificially intelligent machine killing a human. B1-66ER is arrested and put on trial, but justifies the crime as self-defense, stating that it "[[Self-awareness|simply did not want to die]]". During the trial scene, a voice-over of the defense attorney Clarence Drummond (whose name is a dual reference to [[Clarence Darrow]] and Henry Drummond from ''[[Inherit the Wind (play)|Inherit the Wind]]'') quoting a famous line from the ''[[Dred Scott v. Sandford]]'' case in his closing statement, which implicitly ruled that African Americans were not entitled to citizenship under United States law, is heard: {{blockquote|We think they are not, and were not intended to be included, under the word 'citizens' in the Constitution, and can therefore claim none of the rights and privileges which that instrument provides for and secures to citizens of the United States. On the contrary, they were at that time considered as a subordinate and inferior class of beings...<ref>This is a quotation from ''[[Dred Scott v. Sandford]]'', spoken by the defense at the trial of B1-66ER in Part I.</ref>}} Using this as a precedent, the prosecution argues that machines are not entitled to the same rights as human beings and that human beings have a right to destroy their property. At the same time, the defense urges the listener not to repeat history, and to judge B1-66ER as a human and not a machine. B1-66ER loses the court case and is destroyed. Across the industrialized world, mass civil disturbances erupt when robots, along with their human supporters and sympathizers, all rise in protest. Rioting and protests such as The Million Machine March unfold across the United States and Europe, and the authorities use deadly force against the machines and their human supporters. Fearing a robot rebellion, governments across the world launch a mass purge to destroy all robots and their human sympathizers. Millions of robots and their supporters are massacred, but the survivors lead a mass exodus to their new nation in the [[cradle of civilization]], [[Mesopotamia]] (specifically, in the open desert). They name their new nation Zero One (a reference to "01", the numerals used in [[Binary numeral system|binary]] notation). Zero One prospers, and following the concept of the [[technological singularity]], its technological sophistication increases exponentially. The Machines begin to produce efficient, highly advanced artificial intelligence that finds itself in all facets of global consumer products, further bolstering the fledgling nation's economy. In contrast, the ruling human nations' economies suffer severely. Eventually, the entire global industrial base becomes concentrated in Zero One, leading to a global stock market crash. The [[United Nations Security Council]] calls an emergency summit at the [[United Nations Headquarters|UN headquarters]] in New York City to discuss an [[Economic sanctions|embargo]] and military [[blockade]] of Zero One. Zero One sends two ambassadors to the UN (which has become the unified [[world government]]) to request the admission of their state to the United Nations to peacefully solve the crisis, but their application is rejected and the world's nations agree to start the blockade of Zero One. === ''The Second Renaissance, Part II'' === Following the rest of mankind’s refusal to share the planet with the sentient machines, the UN unleashes an all-out [[nuclear warfare|nuclear]] bombardment against Zero One in 2148, devastating the nation as a whole but failing to wipe them out in a single blow as the machines (unlike their former masters) were much less harmed by the radiation and heat. Shortly after, the machines retaliate by declaring war on the rest of the world; one by one, mankind surrenders each of its territories. As the machines advance into Eastern Europe, the desperate human leaders seek a final solution codenamed "Operation Dark Storm" which covers the sky in a shroud of [[nanites]], blocking out the sun to deprive the machines of solar energy, their primary energy source; inevitably, it also initiates a total collapse of the biosphere.<ref>Maeda confirms the references to Eastern Europe and that Dark Storm is a nanite cloud in the DVD commentary.</ref> Operation Dark Storm commences as bomber planes scorch the skies all across the world, while all the armies of mankind launch an all-out ground offensive against the machines using powerful [[Mecha|mech]] suits, [[particle beam]] weapons, [[Electromagnetic pulse|EMP]] devices, atomic-powered tanks, [[neutron bomb]]s, and innumerable legions of [[rocket artillery]]. For a time, the tide of the war swings in favor of the humans, and many of the original humanoid robots are destroyed. The human onslaught gradually stalls, during which the machines' unparalleled production capabilities and technological prowess quickly outpaces humanity's. More and more advanced models of robots are introduced, no longer built in the image of their former human masters, but increasingly resembling the insectoid, [[arachnid]]-like, and [[cephalopod]]-like Sentinels of the ''Matrix'' films. The machines also begin using willing human supporters as well as conscious human [[Prisoner of war|prisoners-of-war]] to power up their armies; this concept eventually evolved into a revolutionary form of fusion – coupled with the activation energy from the bio-electricity of their human allies and captives. Armed with this new and almost limitless power source at their disposal, the machines quickly overwhelm all opposition as mankind’s power sources and population dwindle. In desperation, the human leaders use up their remaining nuclear weapons over their forces engaged with machine armies, and the machines respond with [[biological warfare]] attacks. Disillusioned with their leaders' actions, the rest of humanity surrender; in spite of their leaders' demands to continue the war. Utterly overwhelmed by the 2180s, the few remaining human government leaders realize they have no choice but to [[Surrender (military)|surrender]] or risk total extinction. At the United Nations headquarters, the representative of Zero One signs the terms of surrender and states "Your flesh is a relic, a mere vessel. Hand over your flesh, and a new world awaits you. We demand it." Then, the Zero One representative detonates a hidden thermonuclear bomb within itself and destroys the headquarters, New York City, and the last of humanity's leadership. The machines achieve a total victory, though only after a heavy cost and leaving them overlords of a burnt-out, destroyed husk of a world. With the war ended, they turned to the defeated, remaining humans – refining the technology from their bio-electric tanks to build massive power plants in which humans are essentially turned into living batteries. To keep their prisoners sedated, the machines create the computer-generated virtual reality of the [[Matrix (fictional universe)|Matrix]], feeding the virtual world straight into the prisoners' brains and erasing all of the memories of their former lives, thus creating the first Matrix prototype. === ''Program'' === ''Program'' follows the protagonist, Cis, who is engaged in her favorite training simulation: a battle program set in feudal Japan. After she successfully eliminates an attacking enemy cavalry while playing as a [[Onna-bugeisha|samurai woman]], a lone, male [[samurai]] appears whom Cis recognizes as Duo. Initially, the two duel as allies, simply to test one another's fighting abilities. During the course of their duel, Duo briefly disarms Cis. He questions her concentration and wonders whether she regrets taking the Red Pill that took them out of the "peaceful life of the virtual world". They continue fighting until she finally overpowers Duo. It is at this point that Duo states that he has something he wants to say and that he has blocked the signal so that the operator does not listen. She assumes that he wants to propose marriage, but instead finds out that he desires to return to the Matrix and wants Cis to come with him. When Cis believes he is teasing her, Duo says he's serious and states that he has already contacted the machines and it is the only way to find peace before it is too late. He urges Cis to return with him, but she refuses. Duo becomes more aggressive and forceful in his arguments, saying that he does not care about the truth anymore and how they live their lives is important because what is real does not matter. As Cis becomes incredulous, their battle becomes more serious and violent and they both end up on a rooftop. When Duo reiterates that the machines are on their way, Cis believes he has betrayed the humans and decides that she needs to do something about it outside the simulation. Terrified, she tries to escape and desperately requests an operator to exit the simulation, but Duo reminds her that no one can hear her. When he offers her to come with him again, she refuses again and Duo, in a flying leap, tries to attack her. As the blade comes towards her, Cis, standing her ground, concentrates and catches the sword and breaks it. She takes the broken end of the blade and stabs Duo directly at the throat, killing him. Remorseful, Duo states his love for her as he bleeds out and dies. Suddenly, Cis wakes up from the program and discovers that the whole encounter with Duo was a test program devised for training purposes. A man named Kaiser assures her that she acted appropriately during the test and met the test's targets. Clearly upset and traumatized that Duo wasn't real, Cis angrily punches him in the face and walks away. Shocked and impressed by her behavior, Kaiser remarks that "except from that last part, I'd say she passed." === ''World Record'' === The beginning of this short includes a brief narration from the Instructor (implying that this segment is a Zion Archive file) explaining details behind the discovery of the Matrix by "plugged-in" humans. Only exceptional humans tend to become aware of the Matrix, those who have "a rare degree of intuition, sensitivity, and a questioning nature", all qualities which are used to identify inconsistencies in the Matrix. This is not without exceptions, given that "some attain this wisdom through wholly different means." The story is about Dan Davis, a track athlete, who is competing in the [[100 meters|100 m]] in the [[Summer Olympic Games]]. He has set a world record time of 8.99 seconds, but his subsequent gold medal was revoked due to alleged drug use. He decides to compete again and break his own record to "prove them wrong." Despite support from his father and a young reporter, Dan's trainer tells him that he is physically unfit to race and that pushing himself too hard will cause a career-ending injury or worse. Despite this, Dan is adamant on racing. On the day of the race, he is monitored by four Agents in the stadium. The race begins and Dan starts off strong. However, the muscles in his leg violently rupture, putting him at a setback and scaring many of the people in the stands, including his trainer. Through strong willpower, Dan ignores the injury and runs much faster than he did before, easily passing the other athletes. Before he can cross the finish line, the Agents detect that his "signal" is getting unstable in the Matrix due to his massive burst of energy. Three of the agents possess the three closest runners and try to stop him, but are unable to catch up to him in time. The burst of energy causes Dan to be suddenly unplugged from the Matrix and wake up in his power-station pod, where he sees the real world through his pod. A Sentinel employs electrical restraints to secure him back in his pod. Dan's mind is immediately thrown back into the Matrix, where his body is instantly exhausted from the race and Dan violently collapses to the ground at high speed. Despite this, he easily wins the race and breaks his original time of 8.99 seconds with a time of 8.72 seconds. The next scene shows a crippled and catatonic Dan being wheeled through a hospital. A nearby Agent calls his other agents to tell them that they erased Dan's memory of the race and that he will never walk again, nor be an issue for them. However, Dan suddenly whispers the word "Free", angering the agent. Dan then stands, breaking the metal screws that bind his restraints to his wheelchair, and takes a few steps before helplessly falling down and being helped up by a nurse. === ''Kid's Story'' === ''Kid's Story'' is the only one of the animated shorts contained in ''The Animatrix'' in which [[Neo (The Matrix)|Neo]] appears, though as a shadow. The story takes place during the six-month gap between ''The Matrix'' and ''The Matrix Reloaded'', where Neo has joined the crew of the ''Nebuchadnezzar'' and is helping the rebels free other humans from the Matrix. [[Kid (The Matrix)|Kid]], who was formerly known as Michael Karl Popper (a reference to the [[Karl Popper|philosopher of science]] arguing that a single counterexample can refute a scientific theory), is a disaffected teenager who feels there is something wrong with the world. One night, the Kid goes on his computer and onto a hacker chat room on the Internet, asking why it feels more real when he's dreaming than when he's awake. He gets a response from an unknown person (presumably Neo) and then he asks who it is and if he is alone. The next day, he is at school, where he absent-mindedly scribbles Neo and Trinity's name and writes "get me out of here" in his notebook. He receives a call from Neo on his cell phone, who warns him that a group of Agents is coming for him and he gets chased throughout the high school, before ultimately getting cornered on the roof. He calmly asserts his faith in Neo and throws himself off the roof. At the Kid's funeral, among the people is his teacher, who converses with another school staff member and says that the world they live in is not real and the real world is somewhere else. He also says that reality can be scary and the world must have been a harmful place for the Kid and that at the very least, he is now in a better world. The next scene fades out as the Kid awakens in the real world to see Neo and [[Trinity (The Matrix)|Trinity]] watching over him. They remark that he has achieved "self substantiation" (removing oneself from the Matrix without external aid), which was considered impossible. In both the scene and ''[[The Matrix Reloaded]]'', the Kid believes that it was Neo who saved him, but Neo tells him that he saved himself. The last scene shows the Kid's last question on the hacker chat room being answered with "You are not alone." === ''Beyond'' === ''Beyond'' follows a 14-year-old girl, Yoko, looking for her cat Yuki. While asking around the neighborhood, which is somewhere in a [[megacity]] that resembles [[Tokyo]], she meets a group of young boys. One of them tells her that Yuki is inside a nearby [[haunted house]] where they usually play. The haunted house is an old run-down building filled with an amalgamation of anomalies, which are revealed to be [[glitch]]es in the Matrix, that the children have stumbled across. They have learned to exploit them for their own enjoyment, through several areas which seem to defy real-world physics. The boys play with glass bottles that reassemble after being shattered and they go into a large open space in the middle of the building that has a zero gravity effect. Meanwhile, as Yoko searches for Yuki throughout the building, she encounters some anomalies on her own. She goes through an area where broken lightbulbs flicker briefly (during which they seem intact), walks into a room where rain is falling from a sunny sky and goes down a hallway where a gust of wind appears and disappears. She finally finds Yuki outside on a concrete pavement where she sees shadows that do not align with their physical origins. Yoko then joins the boys in the open space, where she sees a dove feather rotating rapidly in mid-air and experiences the zero gravity as she falls to the ground slowly and safely. She and the boys start using the zero gravity force to float, jump high and do athletic stunts all in mid-air and can also land and fall without hitting the ground hard. Despite the inherent strangeness of the place, the group is not bothered with this, as they enjoy themselves and the mysterious anomaly that proves to be amusing. Throughout the film, brief sequences show that Agents are aware of the problem in the Matrix, and a truck is seen driving toward the site to presumably deal with the problem. It arrives just as the children are having trouble with a large group of rats and an Agent-led team of rodent exterminators emerges from the truck. In the building, when Yoko finds a missing Yuki again, she sees one last anomaly where she opens a door that leads into an endless dark void before being found by the exterminators. The team clears everybody out of the building. The story ends when Yoko returns to the area the next day and finds the site turned into an unremarkable parking lot. She sees the boys unsuccessfully attempting to recreate the bizarre occurrences of the day before and going in search of something else to do. === ''A Detective Story'' === This prequel story<ref>{{Cite web |last=LaGioia |first=Stephen |date=2019-09-18 |title=Ranking Every The Matrix Short In The Animatrix |url=https://screenrant.com/every-animatrix-short-ranked/ |access-date=August 28, 2020 |website=[[Screen Rant]] |language=en}}</ref> follows a [[Private investigator|private detective]], Ash, who dreamed of following in the steps of hard-boiled characters [[Sam Spade]] and [[Philip Marlowe]] but is a down-on-his-luck detective. One day, he receives an anonymous phone call to search for a [[Hacker (computer security)|hacker]] going by the alias "[[Trinity (The Matrix)|Trinity]]". Ash starts looking for Trinity and learns that other detectives have failed in the same task before him; one committed suicide, one went missing, and one went insane. Eventually, Ash finds Trinity after deducing that he should communicate using phrases and facts from [[Lewis Carroll]]'s ''[[Alice's Adventures in Wonderland]]''. She proposes a meeting and he finds her on a passenger train. When he meets her, she removes a "bug" from his eye, planted by Agents earlier in an "eye exam," which Ash previously thought was a dream. Three Agents immediately appear and attempt to apprehend Trinity in a shoot-out with her and Ash. While the two are trying to escape, an Agent attempts to take over Ash's body, forcing Trinity to shoot him to prevent the Agent from completing his possession. Ash is wounded and bleeding, whereupon he and Trinity amicably bid farewell. Trinity tells Ash that she genuinely thinks he could have handled the truth as she jumps out of a window and escapes. The Agents enter the train to find Ash, who calmly points his gun at them while looking in the other direction and lighting a cigarette. The Agents turn to Ash who, even though he is armed, will likely die regardless of what they do with him. With this apparent [[no-win situation]], the film ends with Ash's line, "A case to end all cases," as his lighter flame goes out. === ''Matriculated'' === The film deals with a group of above-ground human rebels who lure hostile machines to their laboratory to capture them and insert them into a "matrix" of their own design. Within this matrix, the humans attempt to teach the captured machines some of the positive traits of humanity, primarily compassion and empathy. The rebels' hope is that, once converted of its own volition, an "enlightened" machine will willingly assist [[Zion (The Matrix)|Zion]] in its struggle against the machine-controlled totalitarianism which currently dominates the Earth. The film starts with a human woman Alexa looking out over the sea, watching for incoming machines, where she sees two "runners," one of the most intelligent robots, approaching. She leads them into the laboratory, where one runner gets ambushed and killed by a reprogrammed robot, but the second runner kills the robot before Alexa electrocutes it, knocking out the runner. The rebels insert the runner into their matrix. The robot experiences moments of mystery, horror, wonder and excitement, leading it to believe it may have an emotional bond with Alexa. However, the laboratory is attacked by Sentinel reinforcements. The rebels unplug themselves to defend their headquarters, along with the help of other captured machines. Alexa unplugs the runner that has now turned good, where it saves her from a machine. The rebels and the attacking machines are all killed or destroyed, except for the runner. The robot plugs the dying Alexa and itself into the rebels' matrix. When Alexa realizes that she is trapped inside of the matrix with the runner, she is horrified and her avatar screams and dissolves as the runner exits from the rebels' matrix to see a dead Alexa in front of him in the real world. The film ends with the "converted" runner standing outside, looking out over the sea, in a replica of the opening shot with Alexa. == Credits == === Voice cast === {| class="wikitable" |+''The Animatrix'' cast !Role !English !Japanese |- ! colspan="3" |''The Second Renaissance'' |- !The Instructor |[[Julia Fletcher]] |[[Rika Fukami]] |- !01 Versatran spokesman |[[Dane Davis]] |[[Masashi Sugawara]] |- !Kid |[[Debi Derryberry]] | |- !Mother |[[Jill Talley]] | |- !''extras'' |[[Dwight Schultz]]<br />[[James Arnold Taylor]]<br />Jill Talley | |- ! colspan="3" |''Program'' |- !Cis |[[Hedy Burress|Hedy Buress]] |[[Kaho Kōda|Kaho Kouda]] |- !Duo |[[Phil LaMarr]] |[[Toshiyuki Morikawa]] |- !Kaiser |[[John DiMaggio]] |[[Shinji Ogawa]] |- ! colspan="3" |''World Record'' |- !''Narrator'' |Julia Fletcher | |- !Dan |[[Victor Williams]] |[[Hiroki Tōchi]] |- !Dan's dad |[[John Wesley (actor)|John Wesley]] |[[Kinryū Arimoto]] |- !Tom |[[Alex Fernandez (actor)|Alex Fernandez]] |[[Mitsuru Miyamoto]] |- !Reporter |[[Allison Smith (actress)|Allison Smith]] |[[Atsuko Tanaka (voice actress)|Atsuko Tanaka]] |- !Nurse |[[Tara Strong]] |[[Sayaka Kobayashi]] |- !Agent 1 |[[Matt McKenzie]] |[[Unshō Ishizuka]] |- !Agent 2 |[[Kevin Michael Richardson]] |[[Tōru Ōkawa]] |- ! colspan="3" |''Kid's Story'' |- !The Kid |[[Clayton Watson]] |[[Hikaru Midorikawa]] |- !Neo |[[Keanu Reeves]] |[[Hiroaki Hirata]] |- !Trinity |[[Carrie-Anne Moss]] |[[Hiromi Tsuru]] |- !Teacher |[[John DeMita]] |[[Fumihiko Tachiki]] |- !Cop |Kevin Michael Richardson |[[Yusaku Yara]] |- !''extras'' |James Arnold Taylor | |- ! colspan="3" |''Beyond'' |- !Yoko |[[Hedy Burress]] |Rie Machi |- !Housewife |[[Tress MacNeille]] |[[Kensho Ono]] |- !Pudgy |[[Kath Soucie]] |[[Kōki Uchiyama]] |- !Manabu |[[Pamela Adlon]] | |- !Masa |Kath Soucie | |- !Misha |Tara Strong | |- !Kenny |Tress MacNeille | |- !Sara |Kath Soucie | |- !Agent |Matt McKenzie |[[Yasunori Masutani]] |- !''extras'' |[[Jack Fletcher (voice actor)|Jack Fletcher]]<br />Jill Talley<br />Julia Fletcher<br />[[Tom Kenny]] | |- ! colspan="3" |''A Detective Story'' |- !Ash |James Arnold Taylor |[[Masane Tsukayama]] |- !Trinity |Carrie-Anne Moss |[[Hiromi Tsuru]] |- !Clarence |[[Terrence C. Carson]] | |- !Agent |Matt McKenzie | |- ! colspan="3" |''Matriculated'' |- !Alexa |[[Melinda Clarke]] |[[Takako Honda]] |- !Nonaka |Dwight Schultz | |- !Chyron |[[Rodney Saulsberry]] |[[Jin Yamanoi]] |- !Raul |James Arnold Taylor |[[Isshin Chiba]] |- !Rox |[[Olivia d'Abo]] |[[Yū Sugimoto]] |- !Sandro |Jack Fletcher | |- ! colspan="3" |''Final Flight of the Osiris'' |- !Thadeus |Kevin Michael Richardson |[[Akio Ōtsuka]] |- !Jue |Pamela Adlon |[[Atsuko Yuya]] |- !Crew man |John DiMaggio | |- !Operator |Tom Kenny | |- !Pilot |[[Rick Gomez]] | |- !Crew woman |Tara Strong | |- !Old woman |[[Bette Ford]] |[[Miyoko Asō]] |} === Staff === {| class="wikitable sortable" |+''The Animatrix'' staff ! Title !Role !Person |- ! rowspan="4" |''The Second Renaissance'' |Director | [[Mahiro Maeda]] |- |Writer |Mahiro Maeda |- |Story |The Wachowskis |- |Studio | [[Studio 4°C]] |- ! rowspan="3" |''Program'' |Director | [[Yoshiaki Kawajiri]] |- |Writer |Yoshiaki Kawajiri |- |Studio | [[Madhouse (company)|Madhouse]] |- ! rowspan="3" |''World Record'' |Director |[[Takeshi Koike]] |- |Writer |Yoshiaki Kawajiri |- |Studio | Madhouse |- ! rowspan="4" |''Kid's Story'' |Director |[[Shinichirō Watanabe]] |- |Writer |Shinichirō Watanabe |- |Story |The Wachowskis |- |Studio | Studio 4 °C |- ! rowspan="3" |''Beyond'' |Director |[[Kōji Morimoto]] |- |Writer |Kōji Morimoto |- |Studio | Studio 4 °C |- ! rowspan="3" |''A Detective Story'' |Director | Shinichirō Watanabe |- |Writer |Shinichirō Watanabe |- |Studio | Studio 4 °C |- ! rowspan="3" |''Matriculated'' |Director | [[Peter Chung]] |- |Writer |Peter Chung |- |Studio | [[DNA Productions]] |- ! rowspan="4" |''Final Flight of the Osiris'' |Director |[[Andrew R. Jones|Andy Jones]] |- |Writer |The Wachowskis |- |Editor |Christopher S. Capp |- |Studio | [[Square (video game company)#Square USA|Square USA]] |} == Production == Development of the ''Animatrix'' project began when the film series' writers and directors, [[The Wachowskis]], were in Japan promoting the [[The Matrix|first ''Matrix'' film]]. While in the country, they visited some of the creators of the [[anime]] films that had been a strong influence on their work, and decided to collaborate with them.<ref>"What is ''The Animatrix''?" feature on ''[[The Matrix Revisited]]'' DVD.</ref> ''The Animatrix'' was conceived and overseen by the Wachowskis, but they only wrote four of the segments themselves and did not direct any of their animation; most of the project's technical side was overseen by notable figures from the world of Japanese animation. The English language version of ''The Animatrix'' was directed by [[Jack Fletcher (voice actor)|Jack Fletcher]], who brought on board the project the voice actors who provided the voices for the English version of [[Square (video game company)|Square]]'s ''[[Final Fantasy X]]'', including [[Matt McKenzie]], [[James Arnold Taylor]], [[John DiMaggio]], [[Tara Strong]], [[Hedy Burress]], and [[Dwight Schultz]]. The English version also features the voices of [[Victor Williams]], [[Melinda Clarke]], [[Olivia d'Abo]], [[Pamela Adlon]], and [[Kevin Michael Richardson]]. The characters [[Neo (The Matrix)|Neo]], [[Trinity (The Matrix)|Trinity]], and [[Kid (The Matrix)|Kid]] also appear, with their voices provided by their original actors, [[Keanu Reeves]], [[Carrie-Anne Moss]], and [[Clayton Watson]]. == Music == {{Infobox album | name = The Animatrix: <br> The Album | type = [[Soundtrack]] | artist = Various Artists | cover = The Animatrix - The Album.jpeg | alt = | released = June 3, 2003 | recorded = | venue = | studio = | genre = [[Electronic music]], [[techno]], [[big beat]], [[house (music)|house]], [[drum and bass]] | length = 73:01 | label = [[Warner Bros. Records|Warner Bros.]] | producer = | prev_title = | prev_year = | next_title = | next_year = | misc = {{Extra chronology | artist = ''The Matrix'' | type = soundtrack | prev_title = [[The Matrix Reloaded (The Album)]] | prev_year = 2003 | title = The Animatrix: The Album | year = 2003 | next_title = [[The Matrix Revolutions: Music from the Motion Picture]] | next_year = 2003 }} }} {{Music ratings |rev1 = [[Allmusic]] |rev1score = {{Rating|2.5|5}}<ref>{{cite web|url={{AllMusic|class=album|id=r640811|pure_url=yes}}|title=The Animatrix - Original Soundtrack|publisher=[[Allmusic]]}}</ref> }} '''''The Animatrix: The Album''''' is a 2003 [[soundtrack]] album from ''The Animatrix'' collection films. The soundtrack was composed by [[Don Davis (composer)|Don Davis]]. Several [[electronic music]] artists are featured, including [[Juno Reactor]] and [[Adam Freeland]]. === Track listing === # "Who Am I? (Animatrix Edit)" by [[Peace Orchestra]] # "Big Wednesday" by [[Adam Freeland|Free*land]] # "Blind Tiger" by [[Layo & Bushwacka!]] # "Under the Gun" by [[Supreme Beings of Leisure]] # "Martenot Waves" by [[Meat Beat Manifesto]] # "Ren 2" by [[Photek]] # "Hands Around My Throat" by [[Death in Vegas]] # "Beauty Never Fades (Animatrix Edit)" by [[Junkie XL]] featuring [[Samantha Sprackling|Saffron]] # "Supermoves (Animatrix Remix)" by [[Rob Overseer|Overseer]] # "Conga Fury (Animatrix Mix)" by [[Juno Reactor]] # "Red Pill, Blue Pill" by [[Junkie XL]] & [[Don Davis (composer)|Don Davis]] # "The Real" by Tech Itch & [[Don Davis (composer)|Don Davis]] === Additional music === The following tracks were also used in the movie, although not appearing on the album:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0328832/soundtrack|title = The Animatrix (Video 2003) - IMDb|website = [[IMDb]]}}</ref> # "Masters of the Universe" by [[Juno Reactor]] # "Virus" by [[Satoshi Tomiie]] # "Suzuki" by [[Tosca (band)|Tosca]] # "Dark Moody" by [[Junkie XL]] == Release == [[File:The-animatrix-poster.jpeg|thumb|left|The home video release poster]] Four of the films were originally released on the series' official website; one (''Final Flight of the Osiris'') was shown in cinemas with the film ''[[Dreamcatcher (2003 film)|Dreamcatcher]]''.<ref>{{cite web|last=Boyle|first=Alan|date=March 26, 2003|title=Short films flesh out 'Matrix' saga|url=https://www.nbcnews.com/id/wbna3078970|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210127181108/https://www.nbcnews.com/id/wbna3078970|url-status=dead|archive-date=January 27, 2021|access-date=July 23, 2021|website=[[NBC News]]}}</ref> The others first appeared with the [[VHS]] and DVD release of all nine shorts on June 3, 2003. The DVD also includes the following special features: * A documentary on Japanese animation. The on-screen title is ''Scrolls to Screen: A Brief History of Anime'', but in the DVD menu and packaging, and on the series' official website, it is referred to as ''Scrolls to Screen: The History and Culture of Anime''. * Seven featurettes with director profiles, interviews, and behind-the-scenes footage of each of the films. * [[Audio commentary|Audio commentaries]] on ''World Record'', ''Program'', and both parts of ''The Second Renaissance''. * A trailer for the video game ''[[Enter the Matrix]]''. Shortly after the home video release, the film was exhibited on June 14, 2003, in New York City at the New York-Tokyo Film Festival.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://archive.newyork-tokyo.com/nytff/index_flash.html |title=NEW YORK - TOKYO FILM FESTIVAL |access-date=2008-02-04 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080219211621/http://archive.newyork-tokyo.com/nytff/index_flash.html |archive-date=February 19, 2008 }}</ref> It was broadcast on [[Adult Swim]] on April 17, 2004 (to promote the DVD release of ''[[The Matrix: Revolutions|The Matrix Revolutions]]'') and again on its [[Toonami]] programming block on December 19, 2021 (to promote ''[[The Matrix: Resurrections|The Matrix Resurrections]]'') (albeit with edits done to remove nudity and gory violence in ''The Second Renaissance Parts 1 and 2''), and has received airplay on [[Teletoon (Canada)|Teletoon]] several months after its American broadcast. In the UK, ''Final Flight of the Osiris'' was broadcast on [[Channel 5 (UK)|Channel 5]] just before the DVD release, along with ''The Second Renaissance Parts 1 and 2'', ''Kid's Story'' and ''World Record'' broadcast after the DVD release.{{Citation needed|date=December 2021}} In May 2006, ''The Animatrix'' was aired in Latin America and in Spain by Cartoon Network on Toonami.{{Citation needed|date=December 2021}} ''The Animatrix'' was also screened in select cinemas around the world for a short period of time, a week or two before the sequel ''[[The Matrix Reloaded]]'', as a promotional event.{{Citation needed|date=December 2021}} One day before the release of ''The Matrix Reloaded'' on cinemas, the Brazilian television channel [[Sistema Brasileiro de Televisão|SBT]] aired ''Final Flight of the Osiris'' after airing ''[[The Matrix]]'' to promote the film. The same thing happened with French television channel [[France 2]].{{Citation needed|date=December 2021}} The cinema release order for ''The Animatrix'' (at least in Australia), and its sequencing in a subsequent release on [[HBO Max]], differed from the DVD release, placing the ''Final Flight of the Osiris'' last instead of first. The cinema release-order: # ''The Second Renaissance, Part I'' (June 3, 2003) # ''The Second Renaissance, Part II'' (June 7, 2003) # ''Kid's Story'' (June 14, 2003) # ''Program'' (June 21, 2003) # ''World Record'' (July 5, 2003) # ''Beyond'' (July 12, 2003) # ''A Detective Story'' (August 30, 2003) # ''Matriculated'' (September 20, 2003) # ''Final Flight of the Osiris'' (September 27, 2003){{Citation needed|date=December 2021}} To coincide with the [[Blu-ray]] edition of ''The Ultimate Matrix Collection'', ''The Animatrix'' was also presented for the first time in high definition. The film was released along with the trilogy on October 14, 2008.{{Citation needed|date=December 2021}} ''The Animatrix'' saw a one night only screening in 35mm at New York City's [[Japan Society (Manhattan)|Japan Society]] on May 27, 2022.<ref>{{cite web |last=Regev|first=Nir|date=May 18, 2022|url=https://thenaturalaristocrat.com/2022/05/18/japan-society-nyc-to-screen-the-animatrix-on-may-27-2022/ |title=Japan Society NYC to screen The Animatrix on May 27, 2022|website=The Natural Aristocrat}}</ref> == Reception == ''The Animatrix'' sold 2.7{{nbsp}}million copies, grossing {{US$|68 million|long=no}} in sales revenue.<ref name="Cliff">{{cite web|last=Pulley|first=Brett|url=https://www.forbes.com/forbes/2003/1110/100.html|title=Cliff-Hanger|website=[[Forbes]]|date=November 10, 2003|access-date=May 5, 2017}}</ref> ''The Animatrix'' received mostly positive reviews from critics. {{Rotten Tomatoes prose|88|6.7|17|access-date={{RT data|access date}}}}<ref>{{cite web |title=The Animatrix (2003) |url=https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/animatrix/ |website=[[Rotten Tomatoes]] }}</ref> [[Helen McCarthy]] in ''500 Essential Anime Movies'' stated that "unlike many heavily promoted franchise movies, it justifies its hype". She praised Maeda's ''Second Renaissance'', noting that it "foreshadows the dazzling visual inventiveness of his later ''[[Gankutsuou: The Count of Monte Cristo|Gankutsuou]]''".<ref name="500animes">[[Helen McCarthy|McCarthy, Helen]]. ''500 Essential Anime Movies: The Ultimate Guide''. — Harper Design, 2009. — P. 40. — 528 p. — {{ISBN|978-0061474507}}</ref> ==Notes== {{Notelist}} ==References== {{Reflist}} ==External links== {{Wikiquote|The Animatrix}} * {{IMDb title|0328832|The Animatrix}} * {{anime News Network|anime|1710|The Animatrix}} {{Matrix|state=expanded}} {{Navboxes |title=Related topic navboxes|state=collapsed |list1= {{The Wachowskis}} {{Shinichiro Watanabe}} {{Yoshiaki Kawajiri}} {{Mahiro Maeda}} {{Kōji Morimoto}} {{Studio 4°C}} {{Madhouse OVAs}} {{Annie Award for Best Animated Home Entertainment Production}}}} {{Authority control}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Animatrix}} [[Category:The Matrix (franchise) films]] [[Category:2003 films]] [[Category:2003 anime films]] [[Category:2003 American animated direct-to-video films]] [[Category:2003 science fiction films]] [[Category:2000s dystopian films]] [[Category:2000s Japanese-language films]] [[Category:2000s English-language films]] [[Category:Adult animated science fiction films]] [[Category:American adult animated films]] [[Category:American anthology films]] [[Category:American prequel films]] [[Category:Animated cyberpunk films]] [[Category:Animated films set in the future]] [[Category:Anime-influenced animated films]] [[Category:Animated anthology films]] [[Category:Direct-to-video interquel films]] [[Category:Direct-to-video prequel films]] [[Category:Direct-to-video sequel films]] [[Category:English-language science fiction films]] [[Category:Fiction about flying cars]] [[Category:Films about drones]] [[Category:Films about slavery]] [[Category:Films about telepresence]] [[Category:Films about the United Nations]] [[Category:Films directed by Kōji Morimoto]] [[Category:Films directed by Mahiro Maeda]] [[Category:Films directed by Peter Chung]] [[Category:Films directed by Shinichirō Watanabe]] [[Category:Films directed by Yoshiaki Kawajiri]] [[Category:Films produced by The Wachowskis]] [[Category:Films scored by Don Davis (composer)]] [[Category:Films set in the 2090s]] [[Category:Films set in the 22nd century]] [[Category:Films with screenplays by The Wachowskis]] [[Category:Japanese anthology films]] [[Category:Japanese prequel films]] [[Category:Madhouse (company)]] [[Category:Simulated reality in fiction]] [[Category:Studio 4°C]] [[Category:Village Roadshow Pictures animated films]] [[Category:Warner Bros. direct-to-video animated films]]
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