Whoa! Deja Vu!
Repeative Themes & Concepts
In "The Matrix"
Author: Dew
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Calla: "There are quite a few hidden messages in the
movie that I notice the more I watch it. Can you tell
me about how many there are?
The Wachowski Brother's Answer: "There are more than
you'll ever know."
---From The
Official Matrix Website
Sleeping/Dreaming
In artwork, particularly paintings, sleep is usually representative of the unconsciousness, the imagination, vulnerability, human weakness, laziness, or death.
In the movie, dreams (or dreaming) usually refer
to life in the Matrix. In that sense, dreams
represent
control as well as a lack of
knowledge/truth.
While humans are
sleeping
or dwelling in the Matrix, they are functioning on an
unconscious level. Their conscious minds and physical
bodies are resting.
Even the word "spoon" has a connection to sleep. When one person sleeps so closely behind another that they are touching and both facing the same direction (since they are both resting on the same sides of their bodies) it is often referred to as "spooning" or the Spoon sleep position.
Sleep also used as a way to escape the real world
and avoid its problems. Cypher wants to go back to the matrix (go to sleep permanently). Neo passes out when faced with the knowledge of what the matrix is and the first thing he asks Morpheus is, "Can I go back [to the matrix]?"
Another example of this is when Neo falls in the jump program. Upon being
brought out of the contruct, Neo is shocked to
realize that he in pain and Morpheus confirms Neo's
fears: if you die in the matrix, you die in the real
world. Immediately afterwards, the scene changes to
that of a sleeping Neo.
The first image that we have
of Neo is of him sleeping in front of his computer
(inside the matrix). It is Trinity who awakens him
when she begins typing a message for him on the
screen.
Immediately after Neo is bugged by the agents, he
wakes up and finds himself in bed. It isn't until
Trinity removes the bug that he realizes that it
wasn't a dream.
The night that Neo goes with Dujour
and Choi to the club he oversleeps and he is late for
work.
In Greek Mythology, Morpheus is the God of
dreams.
In the Bible, a prophet named Daniel interpretes
a disturbing dream of King Nebuchadnezzar's. As it
turns out, the dream accurately reveals what will
happen in the future regarding Nebechadnezzer's
kingdom as well as those that follow it. In "The
Matrix," the name of Morpheus's ship is the
Nebuchadnezzar.
Neo [to Choi]: "You ever have that feeling where
you're not sure if you're awake or still
dreaming?"
Trinity [to Neo]: "Wake up, Neo."
Trinity [to Neo]: "I know why you hardly
sleep..."
Morpheus [to Neo]: "You have the look of a man
who accepts what he sees because he is expecting to
wake up. Ironically, this not far from the truth."
Morpheus [to Neo]: "You take the blue pill, the
story ends, you wake up in your bed and believe
whatever you want to believe."
Morpheus [to Neo]: "Have you ever had a dream,
Neo, that you were so sure was real? What if you were
unable to wake from that dream? How would you know
the difference between the dream world and the real
world?"
Morpheus [to Neo]: "You've been living in a dream
world, Neo."
Morpheus [to Neo]: "The matrix is a computer
generated dream word built to keep us under control
in order to change a human being into this."
Tank [to Neo]: "Morning, did you sleep? (Neo
shakes his head no.) Well, you will tonight, I
guarantee it."
Cypher [to Neo]: "Sweet dreams."
Cypher [to Trinity]: "You know, for a
long time I thought I was in love with you. I used to
dream about you."
Cypher [to Trinity]: "They're going to reinsert
my body. I go to sleep, and when I wake up, I won't
remember a God-damn thing."
Awake/Awakening
Throughout the movie, the concept of becoming
"awake" or "waking up" is also prevalent. In the
dictionary there are many definitions for the word
"awake." They include:
"To rouse from sleep."
Morpheus and his crew wake Neo up in the matrix
pod.
"To emerge from
sleep."
"To become conscious or aware
of something." Once Neo physically awakens and is
taken out of the matrix, his mind then becomes aware
of what the matrix is--he gains
knowledge.
By
the way, the word "awakening" (a form of the word
"awake") is often times used in reference to "a
renewal of interest in religion." This definition is
particularly significant because of all the religious
symbolism in this movie.
Going Upwards
In dreams, going upward is a symbol for the
gaining of or a desire for a more spiritual
perspective.
It may also symbolize the fact that something is,
or wants to rise, from your unconsciousness into your
conscious mind. In the movie, this would translate
into the fact that the Neb Crew--while in the
matrix--are constantly trying to escape the
agents/the unconsciousness of the matrix and wake
*up* in the real world (consciousness).
This upward motion is repeated over and over in
the matrix. Here are some examples:
Trinity runs up to the roof of the Heart O' The
City Hotel trying to get to her exit (the
phone booth) and
to escape from the agents.
Neo and Morpheus take an elevator to see the
Oracle.
Trinity and Neo use an elevator/elevator shaft
get to the roof of the government building where
Morpheus is being held.
Morpheus tries to get Neo to use the scaffold to
get to the roof of the MetaCortex building (to escape
the agents).
Neo uses the fire escape to climb up to the third
floor of the Heart O' The City Hotel. Neo is trying
to reach a phone there so he can escape from the
agents/matrix.
Trinity flies the helicopter up and away to get
Morpheus and Neo to safety--and they all end up on
the roof of another building.
Neo flies up into the air at the end of the
movie.
In the Lafayette Hotel, the crew takes the stairs
to the eighth floor trying to escape the agents.
Later on, Trinity is seen coming up from a
manhole.
Trinity [to herself]: "Get up, Trinity. Just get
up. Get up."
Neo: "Morpheus, get up. Get up, get up..."
Trinity [to Neo]: "You hear me? I love you...
Now, get up."
Falling
Falling is symbolic of fear as well as of
uncertainity. When Neo is flushed out of the matrix pod, he travels down a narrow tunnel. At this point, Neo has no idea where he is exactly or what is about to happen.
Falling is also representive of doubt in yourself
or your abilities.
Morpheus [to Neo as he is about to
jump off of a building]: "You have to let it all go,
Neo, fear, doubt, and disbelief. Free your
mind."
Of course, Neo falls because he is still is doubtful and afraid, just as he was when he attempted to reach
the scaffold outside of his office building.
Doubting that they could outfight
the agents, the Neb group manages to avoid capture by
crawling down the narrow vertical space between the
walls. The
one person in the group who decides not to fall down
the wall (run away) though is Morpheus. Instead, he
stands up to his own personal doubt and fears of
death, breaking through the wall in order to fight an
agent and protect Neo.
Morpheus [to Neo]: "I imagine you feel a bit like
Alice, tumbling down the rabbit hole?"
Cypher: "Everybody falls the first time. Right,
Trin?"
Trinity [to Neo]: "Neo, I'm not afraid anymore.
The Oracle told me that I would fall in
love..."
In
this case, it was falling in love--not off of a
building-- that was symbolic of fear and uncertainity. However, at the end of the movie, Trinity faces her
fears. Having faith in herself and Neo, she takes the
plunge (confesses her love) and is
rewarded.
Flying
Flying represents a sense of immortality. In the
final scene of the movie, Neo (who has just died and
come back to life in the matrix) is seen flying up
into the sky. (BTW, the sky in dreams stands for
consciousness, the mind, endless possibilities, and
spirituality.)
Humans flying unaided (or as in the case of "The
Matrix," being able to jump farther than humanly
possible or stopping bullets) is also symbolic of
freedom and the defiance of popular
beliefs or rules.
Neo flying up into the sky at the end of the movie was also paying homage to the comic book super hero, Superman. There were other subtle Superman connections as well: the heroes of "The Matrix" wore long coats that resembled capes, entered phones booths, and had the ability to "jump tall buildings in a single bound."
Choi [to Neo]: "Mmm, all the
time, man. It's called Mescaline. It's the only way
to fly."
Mr. Rhineheart [to Neo]: "You
believe
that you are special, that somehow the rules do not
apply to you. Obviously you are mistaken."
Morpheus [to Neo]: "This is a
sparring program, similar to the programmed reality
of the matrix. It has the same basic rules, rules
like gravity. What you must learn is that these
rules are no different that the rules of a computer
system. Some of them can bent, others can be broken."
Trinity [to Neo]: "I've never seen anyone move
that fast."
What is "real" and "reality"?
The word "real" has many definitions and layers
of meaning. It refers to what
is: "actual rather than
imaginary, ideal, or
ficititous."
"true, not merely
ostensible, normal or apparent"
"existent as opposed to
nonexistent"
"actual as opposed to
possible and
potential"
In Buddhism, the way to enlightenment involves following the Eightfold "Path." The first two points of this path are the ones from which the others flow. They are the Right Understanding (the realization that the universe is impermanent/illusory and that the "I" or self does not exist) and the Right Thought (one must give up all attachment to the desires and thoughts of our illusory selves).
Spoon Boy: "Instead, only try to realize the truth [...] there is no spoon."
Morpheus: "You have to let it all go, Neo. Fear, doubt, and disbelief. Free your mind."
In "The Matrix," the characters are forced to ponder the definitions of reality. Furthermore, Neo's struggles allow us to see what
factors help shape our views of reality and truth.
According to Agent Smith, "human beings define their
reality through misery and suffering."
Agent Jones: "The informant is
real."
Neo: "Jesus Christ, that
thing's [the bug] real!
Neo: "This can't
be...
Morpheus: "Be what? Be
real?"
Neo: "This...isn't real?!
Morpheus: "What is real? How do you define real?
If you're talking about what you can feel, what you
smell, what you can taste and see, then real is
simply elecrical signals interpreted by your
brain."
Morpheus: "This is the world
as it exists today....Welcome to the Desert of the
Real."
Neo: "I thought it [the
sparring program] wasn't real.
Morpheus: "Your
mind makes it real."
Trinity: "The
Matrix isn't real."
Cypher: "I disagree, Trinity.
I think the matrix can be more real than this
world."
Cypher: "Welcome to the real
world, huh, baby?"
Believing/Beliefs
The word "believe" is also used over and over
again in "The Matrix." To believe is "to have
confidence [or to trust] in the truth, existence,
reliability, or value of something"--even "something
not immediately susceptible to rigorous
proof."
In simplest terms, to believe
is "to hold an opinion or
conviction."
The word "believe" can
also refer to a religious faith or creed.
Throughout "The Matrix," the characters
in it are forced to reexamine their deeply rooted
beliefs (opinions) and they are tested many times. In
many cases, they change or are redefined.
Furthermore, we are able to see just how much a
character's beliefs (as well as our own) are based on
one's version of reality.
Trinity: "It doesn't matter what I believe."
Morpheus [to Neo]: "You take the blue pill, the
story ends, you wake up in your bed and believe
whatever you want to believe."
Mr. Rhineheart: "You believe that
you are special, that somehow the rules do not apply
to you."
Agent Smith: "My colleagues believe I am wasting
my time with you but I believe that you wish to do
the right thing."
Morpheus: "You believe it's the year 1999 when in
fact it's closer to 2199."
Morpheus: "Is it really so hard to believe [that
you are in a computer program]?"
Morpheus: "For the longest time I wouldn't
believe it and then I saw the fields with my own
eyes."
Neo: "Don't touch me. Stay way
from me. I don't believe it. I don't believe it. I
don't belive it."
Morpheus: "Do you
believe that my being stronger or faster has anything
to do with my muscles in this
place?"
Mouse [seeing Neo nearly
punching Morpheus in the sparring program]: I don't
believe it."
Trinity: "Don't tell me
you're a believer now."
Morpheus:
"Do you believe in fate, Neo?"
The
Oracle: "As soon as you step outside that door,
you'll start feeling better. You'll remember you
don't believe in any of this fate
crap."
Morpheus: "I did what I did
because I believe that search is
over."
The Oracle: "Morpheus believes
in you, Neo....He believes it so blindly that he is
he's going to sacrifice his life to save
yours."
Cypher [after seeing that
Tank is still alive and holding the gun]: "I don't
believe it."
Tank: "Believe it or not, you piece
of shit. You're still gonna burn."
Trinity: "Morpheus believes he is the
One."
Neo: "Stop! I don't believe this is
happening."
Neo: "Morpheus did what
he did because he believed I am something I'm
not.....Morpheus believed something and he was ready
to give his life for what he
believed."
Neo [why he wants to go
back into matrix]: "Because I believe in something. I
belive I can bring him
back."
Trinity: "Let me tell I
believe. I belive that Morpheus means more to me that
he does to you. I believe if you're really serious
about saving him you are going to need my help. And
since I am the ranking officer on this ship if you
don't like it, I believe you can go to
hell."
Morpheus: "Do you believe it
now, Trinity?"
Morpheus: "He's begining
to believe."
Agent Smith: "Some
believed that we lacked the programming language to
describe your perfect world. But I believe that as a
species, human beings define their reality through
misery and suffering."
The Truth
Realizing What
The Matrix Is
In the book "The Compact Guide to World Religion," there is a chart entitled "Theories Of Truth." It reveals how we can be mislead to believe something is true when in fact it is not (or simply a piece of the truth) because we are only looking at the world from one view point. Here are the examples listed:
Pragmatic Theory--"Truth is what works."
Empiricist Theory--"Truth is what we can experience or observe."
Rationalist Theory--"Truth is what can be proved by reason."
Coherence Theory--"Truth is harmony among a set of ideas."
Emotivist Theory--"Truth is what I feel."
In addition, to these definitions, my dictionary states that truth is "the true or actual state of a matter."
According to "the Compact Guide to World Religions" the truth is "...a reality that does in fact exist independently of our beliefs."
In this movie, Neo learns one overwhelming truth: that the world he thinks he's been living in is actually an illusion/false reality called the matrix. Even though Neo at first rejects this truth by saying, "I don't believe it," his belief (at that point in time) didn't make the matrix any less true.
Trinity: "Morpheus believes he is the One."
Cypher: "Do you?
Trinity: "It doesn't matter what I believe."
By learning a fact (the truth about the matrix), Neo
gained knowledge and insight. However, knowing truth
has a price--he can no longer hide behind a cloak of
ignorance.
The truth as presented in"The Matrix" is
shocking, terrifying, and yet liberating (physically
and mentally) as well. Note the saying "The truth
shall set you free."
Knowing the
truth also represents power in "The Matrix." After
all, only by knowing the truth and the true nature of
things can the humans go about changing anything.
Morpheus: "Remember, all I'm offering
is the truth, nothing more."
Morpheus: "I didn't say it would be easy, Neo. I
just said it would be the
truth."
Cypher: "If you'da told us
the truth, we woulda told you to shove that red pill
right up your ass."
Morpheus: "And
standing there, facing the pure horrifying precision,
I came to realize the obviousness of the truth. What
is the matrix?
Control."
Prophesy
The word "prophesy" refers
to "the foretelling of prediction of what is to
come."
In the movie, the Oracle
prophesies several future events. (Whether she is
really *seeing* the future or just manipulating
others to carry out what she predicts is up for
debate.) Overall, her predictions come true except
for a few key elements, which should come about in
the sequels.
Morpheus: "When the matrix was first built, there
was a man born inside who had the ability to change
whatever he wanted, to remake the matrix as he saw
fit. It was he who freed the first of us.....After he
died, the Oracle prophesized his return and that his
coming would hail the destruction of the matrix, end
the war, bring freedom to our people. That is why
there are those of us who have spent our entire lives
looking for him. I did what I did because I believe
that search is over." [This much sought after man is
referred to as "The One.]
Cypher: "Did you tell why he did it? Why you're
here? Jesus! What a mind job. So you're here to save
the world."
Morpheus: "She [the Oracle] is a guide, Neo. She
can help you to find the path."
Neo: What did she [the Oracle] tell
you?
Morpheus: That I would find the
One.
The Oracle: "I'd ask you to sit down, but you're
not going to anyway. And don't worry about the
vase....Oh, what is going to bake your noodle later
on is, would you have still broken it if I hadn't
said anything."
The Oracle: "Sorry, kid. You got the gift, but it
looks like you're waiting for something....your next
life maybe, who know?"
The Oracle: "He believes it so blindly that he's
going to sacrifice his life to save
yours."
The Oracle: "You're going to have to make a
choice...One of you [either Morpheus or Neo] is going
to die. Which one will be up to you."
The Oracle: "As soon as you step outside of that
door, you'll start feeling better. You'll remember
you don't believe in any of this fate crap. You're in
control of you own life, remember?"
Cypher: "If Morpheus is right, then there's no
way I can pull this plug. I mean, if Neo's the One,
then there'd have to be some kind of a miracle to
stop me. Right? I mean how can he be the One if he's
dead?"
Morpheus: "She [the Oracle] told you exactly what
you needed to hear, that's all. Neo, sooner or later
you're going to realize, just as I did, there's a
different between knowing the path and walking the
path."
Trinity: "Neo, I want to tell you something, but
I'm afraid of what it could mean if I do. Everything
the Oracle has told me has come true. Everything but
this."
Trinity: "Neo, I'm not afraid anymore. The Oracle
told me that I would fall in love, and that man, the
man that I loved would be the One. So you see, you
can't be dead. You can't be, because I love you. You
hear me? I love you."
Trinity [to a dead Neo]: "The Oracle told me that
I would fall in
love, and that man, the man who I loved would be the
One. So you see, you can't be dead. You can't be
because I love you."
Note also this quote's connection to a Biblical reference, 1 Corinthians 13: "And now these three remain: faith, hope, and love. But the greatest of these is love." Of the three left on the Nebuchadnezzar at the very end of the movie, Tank possessed the hope ("...I'm fairly excited to see what you're capable of, if Morpheus is right and all [...] but if you are...it's a very exciting time."), Morpheus had the faith ("I don't have to hope, Trinity. I know it."), and it was Trinity who felt the love. It was her love (the "greatest" of these three things) that helped bring Neo back to life.
Choi: "Hallelujah. You're may savior, man. My own
personal Jesus Christ."
Morpheus: "You are the One, Neo. You see, you may
have spent the last few years looking for me, but
I've spent my entire life looking for you."
Tank: "I knew it. He is the
One."
Deja Vu Moments
In addition to forshadowing or prophesy-filling scenes, there were several moments that were repeated or duplicated in some matter that made one think "Didn't I just see that before?"
Deja Vu refers to "the illusion of having previously experienced something actually encountered for the first time."Below are a few scenes that possessed that "deja vu" connection:
In the lobby, Neo and Trinity are standing side by side. Suddenly, they turn to look at each other (at the same time) and then they race off in opposite directions. Agent Brown and Agent Jones did this exact move right after Agent Brown exploded.
There are two moments in the movie where it appears as if we are moving through the holes in a telephone mouth piece.
Two times in the movie Trinity enters a phone booth while being closely chased by the agents. Both times, she places her outstretched hand on the glass of the booth while picking up the phone in the other.
Neo and Morpheus talk in the LaFayette hotel when sitting in two red chairs; these same chairs appear again when Morpheus and Neo are in the construct and they have another important conversation.
We heard the window washers making squeaking sounds on the glass--later on we hear that same sound as Neo is being flushed from the matrix pod.
Neo outside of his office building on the ledge; Neo in the matrix jump program. Both times Neo looks over the edge.
Neo touches his mouth after leaving the jump program and 1st bullet hits and both times he looks down at the blood on his fingers.
The most straight forward deja vu moment would of course have to be the black cat scene in which Neo sees the same black cat twice. As it turns out, Neo was actually seeing the same moment twice.
Freedom
In the dictionary, the word "free" means
"enjoying personal right or liberty, as one who is
not in slavery or confinement" as well as the ability
to "able to do something at will" and to be "exempt
from external authority, interference, or
restriction."
While in the matrix,
humans beings are being enslaved by the machines and
it is people like Morpheus who are rescuing them.
Unfortunately, some of them are not ready or want to
be unplugged. As Morpheus puts it, "the mind has
trouble letting go."
Morpheus: "You have to let it
all go, Neo. Fear, doubt, and disbelief. Free your
mind."
Morpheus: "I'm trying to free
your mind, Neo."
Morpheus: "We never
free a mind once its reached a certain
age."
Morpheus: "It was he who freed
the first of us, taught us the truth. As long as the
matrix exists, the human race will never be free.
After he died, the Oracle prophesized his return and
that his coming would hail the destruction of the
matrix, end the war, bring freedom to your
people."
Tank: "Me and my brother,
Dozer, we're both one hundred percent pure, old
fashioned, home-grown human, born free, right here in
the real world."
Trinity: "That's not true, Cypher. He set us
free."
Cypher: "You call this free? All I do is what he tells me to do."
Agent Smith: "I must get out of here. I must get
free and in this mind is the key, my
key."
Nihilism
In movie, Neo uses a book as a safe. The title of
the book is called "Simulacra & Simulation" by Jean
Baudrillard, who was a progressive French literary
theorist. For the most part, the book deals with the
author's ideas concerning reality verus unreality. In
fact, the quote "Welcome to the Desert of the Real"
is from this book.
Furthermore, when Neo opens the book (to retrieve
a bootleg disk that is hidden inside) we can see
the heading for a chapter called "Nihilism. In the
dictionary, the word "Nihilism" has several meanings
and many of them are underlining themes in "The
Matrix."
The first definition refers to "a
total rejection of established laws and institutions."
This theme is prevalent in "The Matrix" as Neo learns
that that the rules inside the the matrix system can
be "bent, sometimes broken"--even laws of gravity.
Examples of this "rejection of established laws"
include: Trinity's superjump, Neo stopping bullets,
Neo flying through the air, and Neo/Trinity breaking
computer laws as hackers.
Mr. Rhineheart: "You have a
problem with authority. Mr. Anderson. You believe
that you are special, that somehow the rules do no
apply to you."
Morpheus: "Yet their
strength and their speed are still based in a world
that is built on rules. Because of that, they will
never be as strong as fast as you can be."
The word "Nihilism" also refers to "anarachy,
terrorism, or other revolutionary activity." This
definition stems from a 19th century Russian
political philosophy that "advocates the violent
destruction of social and political institutions to
make way for a new society."
In this case,
the matrix is the institution that the freed humans
(with the exception of Cypher) want to see destroyed.
Neo and Trinity storming into the military controlled
building to save Morpheus is one of the greatest
"revolutionary" or "terrorism" acts in this movie as
well.
Trinity: "Neo, no
one has ever done anything like this.
Neo: "That's
why it's going to work."
Agent Brown:
"I think they're trying to save
you."
Another meaning for Nihilism is the "belief that all existence is senseless and that there is no
objective basis for truth." In the book, "Philosophy
For Dummies" by Tom Morris, Ph.D., it states: "The
nihilist's answer to the question of whether life has
meaning is a simple and emphatic No. Life itself has
no meaning. Your life has no meaning. My life has no
meaning. Existence is without meaning of any
kind....There is no purpose to life. No plan. No
reason."
Overall, I think that in the
beginning of the movie, Neo agrees with this
statement. He feels like his life is without purpose
or meaning. This is why he is searching for Morpheus
and the answer to a question--he hopes that the
answer will give his life direction and
meaning.
Nihilism also refers to "nothingness or
nonexistence." In fact, the word is a form of the
word "nil," which means "nothing; naught; zero;
having no value or
existence."
Choi [to
Neo]: "This never happened. You don't
exist."
Spoon Boy: "There is no
spoon."
Cypher's name is a form of
Cipher which means zero or nothing of
value.
The number 0 (zero) is used
throughout the movie. (See the "Name & Numbers" page
for more information.) In fact, the first scene of
the movie is the matrix code. The nummber that we are
pulled through is the number "0." It is as if this is warning that what is about to take place isn't going to make "sense" until later.
Cypher: "I
don't want to remember nothing. Nothing. You
understand?"
Computer lingo
There are many references to the cyberworld in "The Matrix." Many of them -- such as Switch, Agent, Matrix, Mouse, Cypher, and artificial intelligence -- have already been discussed in my "Names And Numbers" article. Here are a few that haven't been discussed in depth yet.
Cookie is a piece of information that a website server puts on a user's hard disk so that the site can remember something about the user at a later time. In the movie, the Oracle offer Neo a cookie to eat. (Personally, I think it was so that the matrix system would "remember" Neo when he died and later came back.)
A virus has many definitions. A computer virus refers to a "malicious program made up of self-replicating code that infects a computer system or network and causes it to malfunction or shut down."
The red pill contains a computer virus. It is "part of a trace program. It's designed to disrupt your input/putput carrier signal so we can pinpoint our location."
At the end of the movie, Neo has the power of a virus--he can manipulate the matrix code "as he sees fit."
In addition, a "virus" also refers to "an ultramicroscopic metabolically inert, infectious AGENT that replicates only within the cells of living hosts..." Often times, a disease that is caused by a virus is called a virus as well.
In one of his speeches to Morpheus, Agent Smith compares human being to viruses saying that we "move to an area and you multiply and multiply until every natural resource is consumed." He goes on further to say that "human beings are a disease, a cancer of this planet. You are a plague, and we are the cure." Ironically, it is the agents who fit the definition of "virus" since they are able to enter the body of a human in the matrix and completely take it over.
A hacker is a slang term for a person who is extrememly knowledgable about computers. Some would say that a hacker also refers to a person who uses his/her computer knowledge and skills to carry out illegal activites, like breaking into another person's computer system in order to steal informaion or to disrupt the system.
Agent Smith [to Neo]: "[Your] other life is lived in computers, where you go by the hacker alias Neo and are guilty of virtually every computer crime we have a law for."
Trinity is a hacker. She cracked the IRS d-base and built the system that brought Neo out of the pod.
Neo sells a bootleg disk to Choi for $2,000.
Neo: "What are they doing to him?" Tank: "Breaking into his mind. It's like hacking into a computer, all it takes is time."
Metaphysics/Ontology
"Metaphysics is a field of study that empasses pyschology, philosophy, theology, physics, and science. It is a branch of philosophy that deals with cosmology (it is the study of the origin and structure of the universe) and ontology (it is concerned with the fundamental nature of existence and reality and attempts to determine what entities exist). Overall, it attempts explain the entities discovered through ontology and cosmology."
According to Aristotle, metaphysics was "the science of mental phenomena and of the laws of the mind." Note that meta means to "transcend" (to go beyond ordinary limits) while and physics refers to the "study of matter and energy."
Often times, ontology is loosely refered to as "metaphysics" since their meanings are so similar and they are often times interchanged or intertwined with one another.
On "The Matrix" score CD, instrumental piece number 9 is titled "Ontological Shock." It plays during the scene when Neo wills Morpheus to get up. On "The Matrix" DVD audio commentary, composer Don Davis explains that ontological shock is "the term for when a prophet realizes his destiny and transcends the mortal life into the life of a deity, which is what exactly happens to Neo during this sequence."
Overall, the entire movie, as well as its "What is the matrix?" theme, deals with metaphysics.
The name of company that Neo works for is "Metacortex". The word cortex could refer to the brain's "celebral cortex", therefore, the word "metacortex" could logically mean "going beyond the ordinary limits of what the brain is capable of doing." This explains exactly what the One (Neo) is able to do while in the matrix.
Sources include: "A Dictionary
Of Dream Symbols" by Eric Ackroyd, "The Illustrated
Book Of Signs & Symbols" by Miranda Bruce-Mitford,
"The Secret Language of
Dreams" by David Fontana, "Random House Webster's
College Dictionary--1997 Edition" and "Philosophy
For Dummies" by Tom Morris, Ph.D, and "The Compact Guide To World Religions" by Dean C. Halverson
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