ANIMATRIX
STATUS
COMPLETE
EPISODES
9
RELEASE
June 3, 2003
LENGTH
10 min
DESCRIPTION
- Final Flight of the Osiris
The crew of the Osiris discover an army preparing to invade Zion. While one crew member races inside the Matrix to get the message to Zion, the others try desperately to buy her enough time while fighting off an onslaught of Sentinels they can't possibly defeat.
2-3. The Second Renaissance Part 1 and 2
Humans have created the ultimate AI, which is just as smart as they are. But complications arise when these robots and the humans try to exist peacefully, and eventually all-out war breaks out. The humans ultimately lose the war, and become trapped in the Matrix as seen in the live-action films. - Kid's Story
A young man discovers that his world isn't real, that it's a computer-generated fantasy land created by robots using humans for energy. He escapes with the help of the hacker Neo. Based on the Matrix trilogy. - Program
Cis and Duo engage in battle in a virtual recreation of Feudal Japan. - World Record
While running the fastest race in his life, a champion track star breaks free of his computer-generated world for a small period of time. When he goes back to the real world, he has no memories and is placed in a nursing home. Based on the Matrix trilogy. - Beyond
While looking for her lost pet, a young woman meets up with some kids in Tokyo to play in a "haunted house", which is really a glitch in their computer world. Based on the Matrix trilogy. - Detective Story
A detective named Ash is called upon by a mysterious organization to hunt down the notorious hacker Trinity. - Matriculated
A group of scientists capture a robot and place it in a surreal fantasy world. When the robot's friends come in and kill most of the scientists, however, the robot and the last scientist remaining face isolation in the computer-generated world. Based on the Matrix trilogy.
(Source: Anime News Network)
CAST
Trinity
Hiromi Tsuru
Cis
Kaho Kouda
Yoko
Rie Machi
Michael Karl Popper
Hikaru Midorikawa
Duo
Toshiyuki Morikawa
Dan Davis
Hiroki Touchi
Jue
Atsuko Yuya
Ash
Masane Tsukayama
Thadeus
Akio Ootsuka
Neo
Hiroaki Hirata
Miho
Risa Suzuki
Kaiser
Shinji Ogawa
Clarence
Mugihito
EPISODES
Dubbed
Not available on crunchyroll
REVIEWS
iAmApiano
61/100Worth a watch for anyone interested in The Matrix, almost 20 years later.Continue on AniListEpisode 1: The Final Flight of the Osiris (6/10)
The sword fight at the beginning was really well done. The models and animation looked really good, especially for its time. That sexy tension between opponents is so early 2000’s, and I’m absolutely here for it. However, that was the high point. The characters looked like they'd set up residence in the uncanny valley, and the dialogue was okay. I liked the plot hook they introduced in the real world, and the action sequences where the crew shoots the Sentinels was pretty neat, but the realistic movement we saw in the opening scene disappears as soon as we enter the Matrix. The animation became devoid of momentum, which was really jarring. And on top of all that, this short story is missing a resolution. It just kind of ends, and it makes me wonder how those nine minutes could have been better spent.
Episode 2-3: The Second Renaissance Parts 1-2 (8.5/10)
This was fantastic! As soon as I realized this one was about the origin of the Matrix, I was hyped. Well, it was more about how the machines came to rule the world, but still. The animation was solid (when the shots weren’t 100% CGI), the story was good and well paced (I’m glad they took two parts to tell the story), and the dramatic irony paired with symbolic imagery was the icing on the cake (I know that sounds pretentious, but it’s true). Everyone, both human and machine, acted so realistically, it was kind of scary. I totally accept this as the canon origin story of the world of The Matrix. I loved this one; it’s going to be tough to top that.
Episode 4: Kid’s Story (7/10)
Kid’s Story is how I imagine a reboot of The Matrix would go: a high school kid feels himself slowly losing his grip on reality, until he is contacted by someone from the outside world. Agents descend on him while he’s in class one day, and he makes a daring escape by skateboarding around the school. I like the idea that the same basic thing that happened to Neo was happening to a kid, and how he handled it differently. The ending was the most interesting part, as it threw me for a loop several times. I also appreciate the wild artstyle; it added to the frantic nature of it all. I definitely wish this one were longer, but maybe it would have been too similar to the story we already know.
Episode 5: Program (8/10)
I’m disappointed that this was the shortest one of them all, because it’s also one of my favourite ones. The main character looks like a cross between Major from Ghost in the Shell and Princess Mononoke, and that’s not where the similarities end. The animation feels like it was plucked straight out of the ‘90s, back when everything was painstakingly hand-drawn, and it looks beautiful. Even the CGI animation is stylish; it matches the style well, and it never overstays its welcome. The only detractor was the English voice acting. The pacing of the dialogue was weird, and the acting was only serviceable. I’m sure the Japanese voice acting was better, and if I had that audio track on my Blu-ray, I would have definitely chosen to watch it with that instead. Nevertheless, this is definitely the one I’d most like to see more of: a movie, a show, or anything longer than the great seven minutes we got.
Episode 6: World Record (5/10)
At first, I thought this one leaned into a more abstract form of storytelling, but that’s not the case. It’s just the unfortunate tale of someone who accidentally “woke up”, and the Agents stopping him. There’s no real building of tension (although, I thought it was cool how he managed to outrun the Agents), and the conclusion, while making narrative sense, isn’t very satisfying. Plus, the way they animated slow-motion running made it look very stilted. It’s not the best one of the bunch, but I guess it wasn’t that bad.
Episode 7: Beyond (6.5/10)
I liked the animation in this one as well, adopting a sort of Science Saru “cel shaded rotoscope-esque” style, and I enjoyed the idea that a haunted house is actually a bunch of glitches in the Matrix. That’s probably my favourite original idea in this anthology, in fact. Unfortunately, like many of these shorts, there’s little to no catharsis at the end, but the small moments where we see people play around in the glitches was pretty fun and cool to see. Also, I like that they called exterminators to get rid of the “bugs”. Clever.
Episode 8: Detective Story (7/10)
All these shorts have their own art style, each one noticeably different from the others, but this one really sets itself apart. Detective Story feels like it’s been ripped straight from a black-and-white Dick Tracy comic book, and the tone feels about the same as a typical, well, detective story. It’s a cool idea to get the Agents to hire a private investigator to find Trinity, presumably before the events of the first Matrix movie, and how it capitalizes on the Alice in Wonderland imagery we’ve seen in said movie. Unfortunately for our hard-boiled detective, it probably doesn’t end well for him, but the ending is slightly ambiguous about it, so who can say?
Episode 9: Matriculated (7/10)
Is this what it feels like to do drugs? If it is, I can understand what inspired some of the visuals.
The hook for this one took a while to happen, and it had the luxury of time to set itself up (being the longest of these shorts by a wide margin). Matriculated does a lot of showing with very little telling, but that’s not a bad thing. It doesn’t feel the need to hold your hand, especially if you know enough about the world of The Matrix. It’s a pretty simple but ingenious premise: what if, in order to help the machines understand humans, we built a Matrix for them? Seeing the machine learn how to be human is kind of touching, and it unravels slowly and methodically until it culminates into something the humans didn’t at all expect. It’s pretty, and even though it takes its sweet time to get going, it’s certainly a cool trip.
It's tough to give a general consensus for all nine of these short films, but if you're interested in anything related to The Matrix, this is definitely worth a watch. If you're mostly just interested in anime in general, I'd just recommend you watch The Second Renaissance, Program, Detective Story, and Matriculated. But that's just my opinion.
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SCORE
- (3.45/5)
TRAILER
MORE INFO
Ended inJune 3, 2003
Main Studio MADHOUSE
Favorited by 205 Users