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Vol. 2, No. 3, 20
The Matrix Cult - A Film Review
Reviewed by:
Vladimir Tumanov, Ph.D.
University of Western Ontario, London, Canada
Much of the semiotic discussion around
the deeper structures of The
Matrix has tended to
center around positive ethical and philosophical systems. Thus,
numerous critics have pointed out the Christian subtext in the film with
Neo as Christ and Morpheus as John the Baptist (James L. Ford: 8). The
Garden of Eden story has been superimposed on
The
Matrix as well with the
implication that just as Adam's and Eve's awakening to knowledge makes
Christianity possible, so too, Neo's awakening will lead to the
salvation of humanity by a Christ-like figure (cf. James S. Spiegel:
13). Others have picked out connections with Joseph Campbell's monomyth
concept where the hero must depart from the familiar world, go into a
netherworld and return morally transformed (A. Samuel Kimball: 176,
198). There is also the Platonic interpretation where the passage
toward the light from the famous cave allegory is read into the
awakening process of The
Matrix: "The theme of
appearance versus reality is as old as Plato’s
Republic. And while perhaps
no writer or artist has improved upon his cave allegory in presenting
this theme, the Wachowski brothers’
The Matrix might be as effective an attempt as any since
Plato, in cinematic history anyway" (James S. Spiegel: 9). Buddhism and
its notion that reality is illusion appears as an equally convincing
model for reading The
Matrix (James L. Ford: 10). Even Gnosticism has been used as an
interesting semiotic framework for the film (Frances Flannery-Dailey and
Rachel Wagner: 10-12).
However, most of the authors mentioned
above sooner or later end up dealing with the issue of violence in the
Wachowski brothers' film. This violence seems to be at odds with the
ethical principles inherent in the Christian, Buddhist or Gnostic
interpretative models. In fact, the martial arts and bloodshed in
The
Matrix and in
The Matrix Reloaded might
move some viewers to discount whatever philosophical message(s) the
films might seek to convey. If one is still bent on applying a
positive semiotic model to the film, one may be tempted to make the
argument that in the cyberworld of the Matrix the violence is as unreal
as the residual images of the characters. This desire for moral
consistency is undoubtedly what motivated the film's special effects
supervisor John Gaeta and editor Zach Staenberg to make the following
remark in the scene-by-scene commentary accompanying the DVD version of
The
Matrix: "Nobody actually
dies. All these people are virtual. [...] [It's] a cathartic
experience" (The Matrix
DVD: Feature Length Audio Commentary). They are referring to the scene
where numerous government security men are killed by Neo and Trinity as
the two rebels try to rescue Morpheus. However, this attempt to pretend
the violence is not real within the logic of the story does not stand up
to scrutiny.
As Morpheus trains Neo in a virtual
reality program that resembles the Matrix, he explains the relationship
that the rebels have with the inhabitants of the evil cyberworld: "The
Matrix is a system, Neo. That system is our enemy. [...] [The people
we're trying to save] are a part of that system, and that makes them our
enemy. [...] Anyone we haven't unplugged is potentially an agent" (The
Matrix DVD: The
Gatekeepers). Therefore, apart from the agents, the people with whom
the rebels interact in the Matrix are computerized projections of those
imprisoned in the pods, i.e., each individual within the Matrix is
linked to a specific existing physical body that lives in the power
plant. Neo is a case-in-point since his virtual self is not merely a
bunch of numbers in a computer (as would be the case in a video game for
example), but rather a bunch of numbers that represent a real person in
a pod. Thus, the dwellers of the Matrix are virtual and real at the same
time.
What makes the reality of these people
indisputable is that the death of a computerized self in the Matrix
means the death of the body to which it corresponds. This is evidenced
by the death of Mouse at the hands of government security men who are
pursuing the rebels. Mouse's virtual self is shot by virtual bullets
within the Matrix, and then we immediately see his
real body inside the
hovercraft (i.e., in the real world) writhe in agony and bleed profusely
out of the mouth. The same applies to Neo whose physical body in the
Nebuchadnezzar dies (before his Christ-like resurrection) after his
residual image is shot within the Matrix. Therefore, Zach Staenberg
and John Gaeta are wrong in their assumption that "all these people are
virtual" and so "nobody actually dies" (see above). If the real Mouse
dies after being shot, then so do the real bodies of all the security
men shot by Neo and Trinity in the government building.
In this connection Frances
Flannery-Dailey and Rachel Wagner wonder why the Wachowski brothers make
the violence so real in the film:
Indeed, the "violence" which takes place
in the Niko Hotel could still be portrayed, with the reassuring belief
that any "deaths" which occur there are simply computer blips. The fact
that the writers so purposefully insist that actual human beings die
(i.e. die also within the power plant) while serving as involuntary
"vessels" for the agents strongly argues for
The Matrix’s direct
association of violence with the knowledge required for salvation (53;
also see Peter X Feng: 151).
I would suggest that a shift in semiotic
perspective occurs when we read The
Matrix in this light. Instead of seeing the cyberworld as
analogous to the Buddhist samsara
— a world of illusion that every human must strive to overcome in order
to access a higher reality (Frances Flannery-Dailey and Rachel Wagner:
26), instead of interpreting Morpheus's rebels as the enlightened ones
of Mahayana Buddhism who give of themselves in order to guide the
"blind" out of samsara
and toward enlightenment (Frances Flannery-Dailey and Rachel Wagner:
30), I would propose the model of a modern aggressive, violent cult.
The story of destructive fringe
religious movements begins with the Book of Revelation in the New
Testament. The author, John of Patmos, offers a reading of the
Roman Empire not as a
sociopolitical network that offered peace and relative prosperity to
most of the world for the first time in human history. Instead,
feeling disenfranchised as a member of a new religious movement that did
not fit into any religious system of the times, John presents the entire
world as an instrument of cosmic evil slated for destruction (cf., Adela
Yarbro Collins: 141-142). The only exception is a small group of
"saints" that follow John's understanding of Christianity. The method
for legitimizing this stance is the projection of the social conflict in
question to the transcendental plane where the in-group (John's
Christians) are agents in the hands of God while the out-group (the rest
of humanity) are representatives in the hands of Satan (cf. Adela Yarbro
Collins: 148-150). This model went on to inspire various millenarian
sects throughout the Middle Ages and the early Renaissance, e.g., the
Anabaptists. As Norman Cohn points out,
one can recognize the paradigm of what
was to become and to remain the central fantasy of revolutionary
eschatology. The world is dominated by an evil, tyrannous power [ ...
] until suddenly the hour will strike when the Saints of God are able
to rise up and overthrow it. Then the Saints themselves, the chosen,
holy people who hitherto have groaned under the oppressor's heel,
shall in their turn inherit dominion over the whole earth (4).
The pattern of social turmoil which
emerged as a result of this thinking worked as follows:
- A marginalized group (often
consisting of peasants that flocked to medieval cities but could find
no work or a social niche) dealt with its frustration by isolating
itself from mainstream society exactly as John demands in Revelation.
- The group argued that society was
part of a cosmically evil enemy deserving of utter destruction.
- Often violent acts (including the
massacre of local Jews [Norman Cohn: 49-50, 61-2]) would be committed
against society on the assumption that a divine agent would intervene
and usher in the end of the unjust world (cf. Norman Cohn: 29-32, 253,
314).
When we consider modern cults, the same
logic appears to be operating time and time again, with Jim Jones's
People's Temple in Guyana or David Koresh's Branch Davidians in Waco
being two striking examples (cf. David G. Bromley and Edward D. Silver:
58). John W. Morehead points out that the cosmic struggle element is
standard in today's aggressive religious sects (article), and so is the
need to refer to a sacred text:
Their role in battle is symbolized by
various scriptural or authoritative imagery that confirms for them the
nature of the divine struggle. The ideology then provides the
appropriate moral justification for violent acts against civilians who
would not ordinarily be seen as combatants and appropriate targets for
destruction.
Let us recall in this connection the
above-cited passage from The Matrix
where Morpheus tells Neo that
everyone in the out-group is the enemy. The scriptural
equivalent in this war is the prophecy that drives Morpheus. Since
there was a godlike individual who woke up from the Matrix and predicted
his own return in the guise of The One (Neo), the struggle of the rebels
in the Wachowski film shifts from the political sphere to the
transcendental/cosmic one. Thus, anyone standing in the way of the
rebels is preventing something sacred from being accomplished, which
justifies all violent acts against innocent people in the out-group.
Two attitudes toward the out-group seem
to be combined in The Matrix.
On the one hand, the unawakened population of the Matrix is the
unquestionable enemy, a threat that must be dealt with decisively.
This would be epitomized by Neo's well-known request that Tank provide
him and Trinity with "guns, lots of guns." Such a position corresponds
to that of the Japanese Aum cult, for example, regarding which John. W.
Morehead writes:
From within the mindset of terrorist
“cultures of violence” the world is already a hostile place, and the
groups themselves, and those they represent, are the ones under
attack. What those on the outside view as terrorism and unprovoked
aggression, those perpetrating the acts consider self-defense.
This difference of perspective is well
illustrated by agent Smith who asks Neo to help in bringing "a
well-known terrorist to justice." To Smith, Morpheus is a terrorist
while to the rebel group Morpheus is a heroic liberator.
The other attitude toward mainstream
society is a paradox inherent not only in aggressive religious cults but
also in many 19th and 20th century revolutionary movements. This is
well illustrated by the lyrics of the Russian version of the Communist
International: "The whole world of violence shall be destroyed by us
down to its foundations, and then we shall build our own world..." (my
translation:
http://www.funet.fi/pub/culture/russian/html_pages/internatsional.html).
As Herbert L. Rosedale indicates with respect to the Aum cult,
In a recent work dealing with Aum
Shinrikyo, Robert Lifton has commented on how the view of that cult
was manifested in the apocalyptic goal of “destroying the world in
order to save it,” and the group’s action in killing innocent
non-believers was viewed as altruistic murder that benefited both the
victims and their perpetrators.
Morpheus's position is similar in that
he too seeks to save the deluded population of the Matrix but considers
every sleeping individual as a foe at the same time (see above).
The disdain with which the out-group is
viewed by the rebels in The Matrix
is suggested by the term "coppertop." This is how Switch calls Neo in
the car when she points a gun at him and tells him to lift up his shirt
for debugging. Unawakened humans are treated like batteries by the
machines, and the evil of that attitude is indisputable. But Switch
seems to share in this dehumanization, demonstrating not compassion for
the enslaved but a sense of haughty superiority. This social
exclusivism can be traced back from the modern cult to the Book of
Revelation. To quote Adela Yarbro Collins, "The dualist division of
humanity in the Apocalypse is a failure in love. [ ... ] One's enemies,
including large numbers of unknown people with whom one supposes oneself
to be in disagreement, are given a simple label, associated with demonic
beings, and thus denied their full humanity" (170). After the events of
9/11 this assessment rings more true than ever:
In-group morality [in Al Qaeda] was
emphasized; there is no moral obligation to those outside the Ummah,
or indeed to other Muslims outside the group. [...] Secularists and
disbelievers are not even considered living. Mahmud Abouhalima,
involved in the first
World Trade Center bombing, described non-religious individuals as
moving “dead bodies” (Christopher M. Centner).
Neo and Trinity have a stone-faced
attitude toward murdering innocent security men in
The Matrix. They kill as
if they were part of an action cartoon with no emotion, no regret, no
sense that (and this might have been somewhat mitigating) this murder is
a horrible necessity. Trinity especially tends to move like a machine
as she shoots people at pointblank range, puts knives in their foreheads
and mutilates men who are convinced they are fighting dangerous
terrorists the way real-life police officers would risk their lives to
protect innocent civilians from... Al Qaeda! In
The Matrix Reloaded the same
approach to murdering unknowing security people is observed. After
captain Niobe attacks and neutralizes a couple of policemen, her head
shoots up in a jerky motion as if to stress the idea of a superhero's
job well-done. Equally disturbing is the way in which a power plant
is blown up right in the middle of a city in
The Matrix Reloaded; the
implicit countless civilian victims within the explosion radius are
discounted by the film as not even worth thinking about.
Christopher M. Centner's above-cited
reference to "in-group morality," which amounts to the willingness to
"trash" anyone in the out-group, is a position typical of aggressive
cults and terrorist organizations with cult-like elements. This can be
linked to Lawrence Kohlberg's discussion of moral development stages
across cultures. Kohlberg outlines six stages through which a human
being can progress in his or her conception of what is right and
wrong. The first two stages are pre-social in that they make the
creation of stable social units impossible and characterize mainly young
children or psychopaths. Thus, stage one is about the simple avoidance
of punishment while stage two is the conception of other people only in
terms of what they can give in exchange for something (Lawrence
Kohlberg: 17). It is only with stage three that a rudimentary social
structure can emerge — on the basis of in-group and out-group morality.
The in-group tends to be a smaller interest group, like a tribe, where
justice is defined in terms of approval from the in-group. Such a
position makes the creation of larger social structures problematic
because the members of the in-group identify with a narrow range of
goals rather than a broad social system that incorporates many interest
groups or "tribes." (cf. Lawrence Kohlberg, p. 18-21)
The members of Morpheus's rebel group
appear to function at the level of Lawrence Kohlberg's third stage, and
in this connection the parallels with cultic thinking appear very
prominent. Since this morality violates that of mainstream society and
age-old traditions, cults tend to focus on the figure of a charismatic
leader in order to bolster their shaky ethical systems. In fact this
goes back to medieval millenarian sects that normally centered around a
prophet-like person or propheta
(Cohn 43). Such a leader declared all conventional norms invalid and
sanctioned violence meant to usher in the Millennium. Modern cultic
leaders function the same way, e.g., Jim Jones and David Koresh claimed
divine status and absolute trust as well as the absolute right to rule
the in-group as they saw fit (cf. David G. Bromley and Edward D. Silver
44: 58).
In
The Matrix Morpheus is undoubtedly a prophet-like leader
modeled on John the Baptist (see above). His superhuman nature is
suggested in a scene from The Matrix
Reloaded where the ship's operator Link appears fearful of
what is to come. The situation seems to be such that Morpheus's
actions imperil the rebel group and all of awakened humanity. Instead
of justifying his position by logical reasoning, Morpheus simply tells
Link: "Trust me." In other words, Morpheus's authority is
inspired/divine rather than human and open to questioning. To follow
Morpheus is to believe in him. In fact reliance on belief, rather than
logic, is what characterizes Morpheus and his relationship with the
other rebels. Morpheus repeatedly talks not about what he knows or
has experienced, but what he
believes to be true. And the suspension of critical
thinking is a sine qua non in the relationship between a modern cult's
membership and its leader.
Morpheus's special status is illustrated
by the lobby shooting spree and the rooftop rescue in
The Matrix. How does Neo
justify the murder of many innocent people in the office tower during
his attempt to save Morpheus? Morpheus knows the codes for accessing
Zion, and, as Tank tells
Neo, in the interests of awakened humanity, Morpheus's body should be
disconnected and therefore killed before the agents pry the information
out of his residual image. Therefore, the willingness to use "guns,
lots of guns" against the security men cannot be justified even in terms
of the rebel's practical goals. The justification for the ruthless
rescue rests on Morpheus's special, semi-divine nature so typical of
modern and medieval cult leaders. The welfare of the divine individual
is by definition greater than that of ordinary humans (awakened or
not). After all, the policemen killed by Neo and Trinity are just a
bunch of coppertops whose value pales in comparison to that of a
prophet.
None of this is to suggest that the
cultic model appears as an intentional semiotic structure of
The Matrix and
The Matrix Reloaded. Many
critics have pointed out that the Wachowski brothers were very
deliberate in imbuing the film with Buddhist and other traditionally
positive religious overtones. For example, this is how the directors sum
up the film's implications in an interview:
We’re interested in mythology,
theology and, to a certain extent, higher-level mathematics. All are
ways human beings try to answer bigger questions, as well as The Big
Question. If you’re going to do epic stories, you should concern
yourself with those issues. People might not understand all the
allusions in the movie, but they understand the important ideas. We
wanted to make people think, engage their minds a bit (Quoted in James
L. Ford, 22).
And indeed, it would be absolutely wrong
to suggest that the Wachowskis fail in their attempt to convey such
philosophic ideas. The obvious presence of the intended message
explains the interest that this "action" film has aroused in the
academic and philosophic community. The problem appears to be that
the unintended cultic subtext is there at the same time as the intended
subtext. And the result is a mix of discourses which amounts to a
cacophony of values. Jim Jones, Bruce Lee and Buddha appear together on
the same stage and inevitably sing out of tune. There is no denying
that the bad guys are absolutely bad in
The Matrix and in
The Matrix Reloaded. The
problem is that that the good guys are not good enough.
Works Cited
Bromley,
David G. and Edward D. Silver. "The Davidian Tradition: From Paternal
Clan to Prophetic Movement." In Stuart A. Wright Ed.
Critical Perspectives on the Branch
Davidian Conflict. Chicago and London: The
University of Chicago Press, 1995, 43-72.
Centner,
Christopher M. "Cults and Terrorism: Similarities and Differences."
Cultic Studies Review 2.2
(2003): http://www.cultsandsociety.com/csr_issues/csr_toc2003.2.htm (no
paragraph numeration).
Cohn,
Norman. The Pursuit of
the Millennium. New York: Harper and Row, 1961.
Collins,
Adela Yarbro. Crisis and Catharsis:
The Power of the Apocalypse. Philadelphia: The
Westminster Press, 1984.
Feng,
Peter X. "False Double Consciousness: Race, Virtual Reality and the
Assimilation of Hong Kong Action Cinema in
The Matrix." In Ziauddin
Sardar and Sean Cubitt Eds. Aliens
R Us: The Other in Science Fiction Cinema.
London: Pluto Press, 2002: 149-163.
Flannery-Dailey, Frances and Rachel Wagner. "Wake up!
Gnosticism and Buddhism in The
Matrix." Journal of
Religion and Film 5. 2 (2001):
http://www.unomaha.edu/~wwwjrf/gnostic.htm (references to paragraph
numbers).
Ford,
James L. "Buddhism, Christianity, and
The Matrix: The Dialectic of
Myth-Making in Contemporary Cinema."
Journal of Religion and Film
4.2 (2000): http://www.unomaha.edu/~wwwjrf/thematrix.htm (references to
paragraph numbers).
Kimball,
Samuel A. "Not Begetting the Future: Technological Autochtony, Sexual
Reproduction and the Mythic Structure of
the Matrix."
Journal Of Popular Culture,
35.3 (2001): 175-203.
Kohlberg,
Lawrence. The Philosophy of Moral
Development. New York: Harper and Row, 1981.
Morehead,
John W. "Terror in the Name of God: The Rise of Religious Terrorism"
Cultic Studies Review 1.3
(2002): http://www.cultsandsociety.com/csr_issues/csr_toc2002.3.htm (no
paragraph numeration).
Rosedale, Herbert L. "Perspectives on Cults as Affected by the September
11th Tragedy." Cultic Studies Review. 2. 1, 2003:
http://www.cultsandsociety.com/csr_issues/csr_toc2003.1.htm (no
paragraph numeration).
Spiegel,
James S. "Cinematic Illustrations in Christian Theology."
Journal of Religion and Film
6.2 (2002): http://www.unomaha.edu/~wwwjrf/cinematic.htm (references to
paragraph numbers).
Wachowski,
Larry and Andy Wachowski. The
Matrix DVD Video. Village Roadshow Pictures. Warner Bros.
Inc., 1999.
Wachowski,
Larry and Andy Wachowski. The
Matrix Reloaded. Village Roadshow Pictures. Warner Bros.
Inc. 2003.
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