The Matrix Resurrections is one of the most meta films ever made. Lana Wachowski returned to the franchise she originally launched with her sister Lilly with a story about someone rebooting their own creation rather than letting someone else do it.
As Obi-Wan Kenobi told Luke Skywalker, before the formation of the Empire, the Jedi Knights served as the “guardians of peace and justice in the Old Republic” for “over a thousand generations.” While the order ultimately fell apart, they had a great run but fans of the galaxy far, far away have never seen them at their peak.
With the writers’ and actors’ strikes over, TV shows can return to their regularly scheduled programs just in time for a 2024 debut.
Carrie-Anne Moss is escaping “The Matrix” for a galaxy far, far away, as the actor has joined the cast for “The Acolyte,” a new “Star Wars” series for Disney+.
Here are 20 facts you might not know about The Matrix: Resurrections unless you are The One, of course. Then you definitely know them.
Editor’s Note: The following story contains spoilers for “The Matrix Resurrections.” After Neo (Keanu Reeves) and Trinity (Carrie-Anne Moss) triumphantly leap from a building (a stunt the actors actually performed) and fly off into the horizon at the end of “The Matrix Resurrections,” you wouldn’t be wrong to start speculating about a sequel.
Carrie-Anne Moss and Keanu Reeves are forever linked by "The Matrix," respectively portraying iconic characters Trinity and Neo in every installment. But Moss is a fan of Reeves' other film franchise.
The reality-bending of “The Matrix” from 1999 has become more of a reality in 2021, with the advent of the metaverse and the merging of our digital and physical lives.
Keanu Reeves and Carrie-Anne Moss aren’t the only talents reuniting with filmmaker Lana Wachowski in “The Matrix Resurrections.” The fourth installment
There are a lot of big questions facing “The Matrix Resurrections,” including how thought-to-dead main characters Neo (Keanu Reeves) and Trinity (Carrie-Anne Moss) are back as the very-much-alive faces of the franchise.
The official trailer for “The Matrix Resurrections” is jam-packed with footage of Keanu Reeves’ Neo, Carrie-Anne Moss’ Trinity, and gravity-defying action scenes, but what’s missing is driving the most conversation.
Neo and Trinity meet in the simulated reality of the Matrix, but the truth is just a red pill away
Salma Hayek virtually had her turn at the red table Tuesday (June 22). Jada Pinkett Smith, Adrienne Banfield-Norris (Gammy) and Willow Smith welcomed Hayek to Red Table Talk, and Jada couldn't have been more excited.
In 1999, “The Matrix” felt like as big of a movie event as we had seen. Maybe it was all the parodies. Maybe it’s the fact it was truly a huge smash. Then, the sequels came and weren’t as well received.
Representation matters, and for so long, women in science fiction were portrayed as damsels in distress, always waiting for the male hero to step in and save the day.
When it comes to a fight in film, these ladies never back down. There's just something about a woman who loves a good fight. For far too long women have been typecast in action films as damsels-in-distress — someone always in need of saving.
With "Geostorm" poised to lay waste to multiplexes this Friday, now's as good a time as any to ask why we love watching the utter obliteration of vehicles, buildings, cities, continents and whole planets.
Get the latest news and rumors, customized to your favorite sports and teams. Emailed daily. Always free!