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The film was written and directed by the Wachowski brothers, who also directed the 1996 film Bound. It was released simultaneously worldwide on November 5th, 2003, the first film to do so. The Wachowski brothers were present in Tokyo at the opening of the movie, as were stars Keanu Reeves and Jada Pinkett Smith.
Despite poor reviews and a weaker opening than its predecessor, The Matrix Revolutions broke box-office records for its opening weekend. Its earnings dropped over 70% in the sophomore week which is considered a sign of poor audience satisfaction. The Matrix Revolutions grossed $48.5 million in its first five days of release in the US, $139 million dollars at the US box office altogether and $456 million worldwide. This is roughly half of the The Matrix Reloaded box-office total. The Matrix Revolutions did extremely well in DVD and VHS rentals and sales in April of 20042004 is a leap year starting on Thursday (the link is to a full 2004 calendar), and has also been designated the: International Year of Rice International Year to Commemorate the Struggle against Slavery and its Abolition Elections are to be held in 73 co.
We pick up where The Matrix Reloaded left off, and are treated to a few new characters as the action winds up. Bane, who has been taken over by Agent Smith, is still unconscious after prematurely emitting the EMP blast at the end of the last film, which led to the death of several other ships' crews. Morpheus is noticeably depressed after the destruction of the NebuchadnezzarNebuchadnezzar or Nevuchadnetzar Standard Hebrew Nvuadnear Tiberian Hebrew Nuanar Akkadian origin Nabu-kudurri-uur "Nabu, defend my boundary marker. was the name of several kings of Babylonia. The best known of these kings was Nebuchadnezzar II of Babylon. Agent Smith's program is progressively copying itself through more and more people, and threatens not only the entire world of the Matrix, but the real world and the source. And hundreds of thousands of Sentinels are hours away from drilling through Zion's defenses.
Morpheus suspects that Neo is connected to the Matrix in his coma-like state, but a search for Neo in the Matrix shows nothing. Morpheus is not very far off the mark, however; Neo seems to be stuck in a limboThis article is about Catholic theology. For other uses of the term, see Limbo (disambiguation). In Catholic theology, limbo describes the temporary status of the souls of good persons who died before the Resurrection of Jesus Christ, and the permanent st area (Mobil Avenue subway station, Mobil being an anagram for limbo) between the matrix and the "real world." At the station, Neo engages in a conversation with a "family" of software programs, who tell him about the Architect, the Trainman (builder and operator of the Mobil Avenue Station), and why bad things happen to good programs.
Meanwhile, Seraph - "guardian angel" of the OracleIn complexity theory and computability theory, an oracle is a black box that computes a function in a single step. This could be a function solving an NP-complete problem such as the subset sum problem. It could even be a non-computable function like the - attempts to contact Morpheus and Trinity, in order to guide them to said Mobil Avenue Station. When the Trainman comes to the station to pick up the family of software programs, Neo attempts to escape with them, but is overpowered by the Trainman (who, as the creator of the train and station, wields the ultimate power over it). Seraph then takes Morpheus and Trinity to see the OracleIn complexity theory and computability theory, an oracle is a black box that computes a function in a single step. This could be a function solving an NP-complete problem such as the subset sum problem. It could even be a non-computable function like the, but neither of them recognize her at first, because she has been forced to change bodies (behind the scenes note: the actress who originally played the Oracle passed away before filming on Revolutions began). She dispatches them to go find the MerovingianFor other uses of the name 'Merovingian', see Merovingian (disambiguation). The Merovingian is a character (played by Lambert Wilson) in the movies The Matrix Reloaded and The Matrix Revolutions''. His persona is that of a snobby, overly-mannered French g at Club Hel (behind the scenes note: the MerovingianFor other uses of the term 'Merovingian', see Merovingian (disambiguation). The Merovingians were a dynasty of Frankish kings who ruled a (frequently fluctuating) area in parts of present-day France and Germany from the 5th to 8th century AD. They were so Dynasty is the name of the line of the first royal house of France, and are rumored to have been descendants of Christ). After a series of obstacles, Trinity forces a gargantuan Mexican standoff and forces the Merovingian, with a gun to his forehead, make the Trainman release Neo.
Neo, though free to return to the real world, is troubled by images he's been seeing since waking up in the station. He goes to see the Oracle one last time. She tells him he "has the Sight" and explains that Agent Smith is his exact opposite, as well as revealing that his special powers in the real world are because he is now connected to the Source ever since seeing the Architect. The conflict between the Architect and the Oracle is one of the former trying to "balance the equation" and the latter trying to "unbalance the equation." (Tellingly, each of them ejects an exasperated "Please!" when Neo asks one about the other one.) She also reminds him that the war is about to end, one way or another, and that "everything that has a beginning has an end." Shortly after Neo leaves, an army of Agent Smiths arrives and assimilates Sati (the young daughter of the "software family" at the subway station) and - seemingly - Seraph. They then enter the Oracle's apartment and taunt her for a bit, and he implies that she created him. Finally he assimilates her as well, and it seems now that nothing in the Matrix can resist him.
The ship that rescued the Nebuchadnezzar