

Captain Obvious: Link when Neo gets transported to a different location in the Matrix when trying to escape the Merovingian's stronghold:.Can't You Read the Sign?: A "No Brawling" sign is briefly visible in the background during the Burly Brawl sequence.Calling Your Bathroom Breaks: The Merovingian, exemplifying his Sophisticated as Hell nature and, as he notes, another example of causality.Later, Agent Thompson is very clearly shown having to reload his Desert Eagle. First, the UMP-wielding Twin runs out of ammo and decides to try the more up-close-and-personal method of getting the Keymaker. Bottomless Magazines: Two notable aversions during the freeway chase.Blatant Lies: When Smith comes to the captains' meeting looking for Neo, the door guard says he's "never heard of him." Smith doesn't believe the guard for a second, and gives him a package for Neo, which the guard hands over to Neo after he arrives moments later.Big "YES!": Link when Neo rescues Morpheus and the Keymaker from the truck collision.Big Damn Heroes: Neo coming to save Morpheus and the Keymaker at the end of the freeway sequence, i.e.: the longest action sequence in the whole trilogy.
#The matrix 2 reloaded full

How do we know that Bane is evil? Well, aside from the fact that we saw him get possessed by the Big Bad and the rumours that he sabotaged his teammates, the most compelling piece of evidence of his evil is probably the facial hair.

It is then when everything begins to unravel. They do this so thoroughly that when one tries to impose a singular religious paradigm on top of the film(s), slotting in the characters one-by-one, it seems to work only until put back within the context of the film(s). But as many have discovered, the Wachowski brothers are syncretists, pulling bits from here and there and then mixing it all together in a science fiction-martial arts stew. Religious scholars, too, have thrown their hats into the academic ring, expounding on the Gnostic, Buddhist and Christian aspects found therein. Much has been written about Larry and Andy Wachowski's film The Matrix and on practically every angle: from philosophical precedents to the realities of artificial intelligence.
