The Animatrix: The Second Renaissance Part II
With the robot city isolated and it's ambassadors ejected form the United Nations, a trade war begins to protect the human economy from superior products. When the trade war escalates into w... Read allWith the robot city isolated and it's ambassadors ejected form the United Nations, a trade war begins to protect the human economy from superior products. When the trade war escalates into war the machines begin a seemingly unstoppable march across the globe. With solutions runni... Read allWith the robot city isolated and it's ambassadors ejected form the United Nations, a trade war begins to protect the human economy from superior products. When the trade war escalates into war the machines begin a seemingly unstoppable march across the globe. With solutions running out man darkens the sky to try and shut out the machine's main energy source, but the m... Read all
- The Instructor
- (voice)
- 01 Versatran Spokesman
- (voice)
- (as Dane Davis)
- Kid
- (voice)
- Mother
- (voice)
- …
Featured reviews
The second half of the second renaissance explained! After the machines take over huge parts of the world, the humans plan to fight back.
What I like about this short is its explanation, to most of, why the machines are doing what they are doing in the Matrix movies. We are told a lot of interesting lore and shown how mankind was more or less their own killers from the get go. The idea that humans come up with seem smart, but it is also to show the hubris of humans by us thinking well always get the upper hand.
Like the short before it, this short has a lot of real world parallels, this time with focus on the near religiousness of war. It is a sad statement that rings true even to this day.
The animation is pretty good here but uses a lot of different styles. The previous part did that too, but here it feels more noticeable and distracting. It doesn't change some of the iconic imagery spawned from this short, such as the machine riding on the machine horse or the closing frames. Very strong visuals there
The action is pretty good here but take up too much of the short. This makes part 2 seem less impactful than part 1, and it doesn't have as much to say, sadly.
While I still like this short, it seems a bit too numbing compared to the predecessor. While it has some really strong parts, it just left me a bit more emotionless.
The second part of the history of the Matrix leaves aside the civil unrest and political build up and launches straight into the war for earth. Where part 1 used fictional news footage to good effect, here the main use is cameras belonging to the human soldiers. The violence, terror and speed of the war is well brought out and I found myself unable to look away as it was really gripping. Some of it is very gory but the overall impression is that man was overcome by sheer weight of numbers.
As a sister to the films this works very well. You don't need to have seen this short to understand the film but it enriches your experience. Unlike some of the other shorts that you do need to see to understand the films (or bits of them anyway). The animation is very frantic and very slick and the thing is pure style with the strong substance.
Overall it is easy to dismiss this but it does have enough style of it's own to justify it's existence as a short in it's own right. It suggests that (unlike many blockbusters) this trilogy (for all it's flaws) was established in a world that was planned rather than one which was expanded when the box office suggested that it would be a good idea to try to do so.
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe first Machines mown down in the war scene are the most humanoid, and by the end of the battle only the most alien designs are left standing. This ties in to a backstory point mentioned in "The Art of the Matrix": by the time of The Matrix, the Machines are meant to have developed a bigotry against humanoid shapes, with the most human robots falling in to the lowest "caste".
- Quotes
The Instructor: May there be mercy on man and machine for their sins.
- ConnectionsEdited into The Animatrix (2003)
- SoundtracksBig Wednesday
Written by Adam Freedman, Jamie Stevens and Frank Xavier
Performed by Free*land
Courtesy of Marine Parade
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- The Animatrix: The Second Renaissance Part 2
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime10 minutes
- Color