Sunday, May 5, 2013

Dialectics: Good versus Evil in "The Matrix"

Yeah, I know already. Good versus evil is an incredibly cliché and generic subject that has been done twenty billion times by every movie, book, work of art, or story since the dawn of language and literature and all that great stuff. I mean, one of the first written stories, "The Epic of Gilgamesh" was pretty much a tale of good versus evil along with a bunch of prostitutes, ogre-monster guardians, and an epic friendship between Gilgamesh and Enkidu, the original Bros. How much better can it get? But seriously, I know that this topic has been done time and time again. What I think is interesting is how "The Matrix" chose to do it.

Good versus evil can be done in tons of different ways. It can be very clean and clear cut, like in superhero movies like "Batman", where we know off the bat that the Joker is the evil villain and Batman is the awesome hero who has to save the day. It can be like the Mario games, where you have a series of evil henchmen that you have to beat before you get to the ultimate villain, Bowser. It can be less direct, like in "Hannibal", where he isn't known to be evil and is trusted by the "good guys" to help track down the evil killers. Basically, one evil is fighting another evil with good while doing evil things outside of their knowledge. Those are only three examples of thousands of ways that people have used good versus evil.

Memories...

So now we get to "The Matrix". When the movie starts off, we have no idea what's going on. There are a bunch of rapidly changing green characters flashing across a completely black screen which dissolve into the title sequence. Then green source code appears as what seems to be a telephone conversation carries on in the background. The source code then rapidly changes into green numbers that fly across the screen at breakneck speed. A code seems to be being broken. Someone's relieving someone from a duty. A man named Morpheus is mentioned, someone seems worried that the line isn't safe, et cetera. We've all seen the movie.

Anyways, after this title sequence, cops go into a room and chase down a strangely dressed woman. Our attention is drawn to her here. At this point, we are already trying to figure out if she is the good guy or the bad guy--it is our nature as action movie and Hollywood fans to want to know who we should be rooting for throughout the film. But it is early in the film yet, so we shift our attention elsewhere, knowing that we will find out who the good guy is and who the bad guy is very soon. We're Americans--we don't wait. We'll get the hero spoon fed to us eventually.

'MURICA!

 So eventually we meet Neo/Mistah Anderson, and we know that he is our protagonist. Most people generally associate protagonist with good and antagonist with bad, but that is not always the case. So on goes the movie, and suddenly we get to the blue pill/red pill scene. Neo chooses the red pill, he goes through his metaphorical rebirth, and then the real story of good and evil begins. The entire time that Neo is in the "real world" with Morpheus and Trinity and the rest of the gang, we as an audience are told that where Neo came from is called the Matrix and that machines are controlling us and using our bodies as source fuel for them. It is here that we meet our "bad guys". We then classify the movie into this: The good guys and our protagonist Neo are fighting against the evil robots that are controlling our minds. But wait--there's a double agent. And a bunch of actual Agents. Are they good or evil? 

The Agents, the Mr. Smiths, seem evil to us. They want to wipe out the human race with information from Morpheus so that we won't be a nuisance anymore, but they are doing it so that they can leave the Matrix because they hate it there. Morpheus tore Neo, Trinity, and two others out of their hibernating state of bliss to show them the "true" world. Though this seems like an act of bravery and liberty, how to Trinity, Neo, and creepy goatee guy feel about it? Creepy goatee guy obviously hates it since he tries to return to that state of ignorance. Morpheus himself is kind of shady. He's recruiting all these people to save the human race because that's what he thinks is right. But what if we shouldn't be saved? Wouldn't that make him evil?

Agent Elrond is all I saw the whole time

Throughout the movie, we can't be clear who is evil and who is good. We want to classify them, but it isn't clear enough. Everyone has double motives from the creepy goatee guy, to Morpheus, to the Agents. Good guys are evil and bad guys are good. We can't really distinguish evil from good due to the pure amount of subject matter present in the movie. That is why I think that "The Matrix" was an interesting movie with a different kind of good versus evil--it reads as a simple sci-fi/action adventure, but the good and evil struggle is actually what we are watching the whole time. 


GIFs of the Day





2 comments:

  1. Emily,
    I came to your blog once more to complete my Blogging Around and it's for good reasons. Your blogs are easy to read and extremely comical. I think you are a great blog writer and you appeal to a large audience due to your quick sense of humor. So I am here once again, mesmerized by the gifs and images, and amused by your writing.
    I digress.
    Besides the obvious duality of good and evil in the Matrix, you touch on the deeper level of comprehension. Are the agents bad people? I do not know which pill I would have taken if I was faced with the decision. But I know that my decision will let me choose which side I wanted. But let’s look at both sides of the equation.
    Morpheus’s plan sounds sound. HAHAHAHAHAH PUN INTENDED. The humans are obviously enslaved by the cyborgs and the humans are actually living in pods. I get it. Morpheus wants to find the ONE, liberate the human race, kill off the cyborgs, and rebuild human civilization. Sounds like a nice thing to do, no? But what would they accomplish? The real world Morpheus building sucks and there is no guarantee that the world after the cyborgs are gone will be a wonderful world. I think Morpheus is trying to accomplish a task so great and overwhelming. I get it, he wants to be the George Washington of a new human civilization. But…… the world in 2199 sucks. Just because I knew the truth does not mean my life will be happy and cheery.
    The agents’ plans are simple. They just want to protect the Matrix and prevent any weird glitches. The Matrix is supposedly the “real” world we live in. The Matrix is NOT a bad place. IT has happiness, love, hardships, and the normal aspects of life. There is no harm in living in the Matrix. Just because people are ignorant and insecure in the Matrix, it does not mean that they are not happy. The People in the matrix are happy and enjoying life. There is a reason why Cypher wanted to go back. He hated that he chose the red pill. Knowing the truth did not do him any good and he missed the Matrix despite its “computer program generated” ideals.
    So what do we learn from this? IF there was such a battle between humans and cyborgs, I won’t take a side. It’s too complicated. I am just going to sit back, bring out my bowl of popcorn, and watch the freak show unfold.

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  2. First of all, your GIFs of the Day totally made my night! Second, I'm a fan of your Dialectics: Good versus Evil blog. When I think of Good vs Evil, the first thing that always comes to mind is Mario and Bowser, which is actually one of the examples you used. It's a classic example that every gamer adores. Yet, now we have watched The Matrix, and our ideas of Good and Evil are a little jumbled up. To me, The Matrix creates a scenario of Good and Evil that movie watchers would typically get from a horror movie. It's where you can't fully understand who is who until the very end, like in the movie Psycho. I guess that sort of confusion is what makes The Matrix such an entertaining and captivating movie.

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