Wednesday, February 4, 2026

The Movie, Enter the Matrix

The Movie, Enter the Matrix


The movie, Enter the Matrix, was a new motion picture made in the 2000s. The movie was popular because it had intense kung fu fighting scenes and also spoke truth about how the world is not perfect. The movie described how in the world of the Matrix, the world was not perfect. Initially it describes individuals who do not agree with the lies and deceit of the system. (The movie may have promoted transhumanism seeing how humans needed to merge with technology to change the system. This is a blatant lie knowing that we are born with autonomy and do not need to merge with technology. However the movie does speak truth concerning how there is corruption and inequality.)

Neo, the protagonist, opposes the corrupt system and is persecuted by the agents of the system. The agents all look the same and act the same describing their lack of individuality. Agent Smith is the name of the agents. All the agents are agent Smith describing how they have renounced their uniqueness to become sycophants. The movie may be constructively criticizing socialism, sycophantry, and iniquity. The agents opposed Neo because he begins to question the false narrative of the false system.

The movie describes how there is good and evil. The movie describes how sycophants do not want others to learn the truth and oppose self learning, skepticism, independence, and autonomy. Neo questions the lies and begins to learn about the truth that the system does not want individuals to improve themselves and wants individuals to believe lies. This is so that individuals cooperate with the false system instead of fighting against it. Individuals that acknowledge that the false system is not perfect are envied and opposed by the agents (may be a constructive critique of the FBI.)

One of the good rebels decides to betray Neo by giving in to temptation. The traitor meets with an agent and describes his demands. The traitor decides to betray based on momentary comfort and describes how there is opposition and temptation. The traitor wanted an easy life. This describes how temptations are never what they seem. The traitor was found out and does not survive. In real life, the temptations are never what they appear to be. In reality, idol worship leads to destruction, and the temptations are based on lies. The temptations are meant to lead far from GOD Almighty and do not help. Instead of improving a person, they diminish individuals. This is seen with temporary wealth, false "relationships", false "friendships", and idolatry. While individuals who practice integrity and goodness may not have these temporary things, we can persevere with everything that we need. It is surprising how we get better even without the temporary things of the world. (The movie overexaggerates how individuals do not have luxuries (have to eat oatmeal only) yet is accurate in showing that the temptations do not help.) (Also the movie included gun fight scenes instead of only kung fu. This was not positive seeing how the kung fu fighting scenes were impressive. However it describes how once Neo was impressive at kung fu, defeating agent Smith, there are additional agents. Neo defeats those agents despite not fighting one versus one, and the agents began to use guns describing their inability to compete in a fair manner. Neo slows down time, dodges bullets, and keeps fighting corruption.) The Matrix describes how the fake system is not perfect and the truth is preferred to lies. There is opposition, yet we are not cowards and GOD Almighty helps us persevere.

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Spencer Churchill

  Spencer Churchill   “Success is not final, failure is not fatal; it is the courage to continue that counts.” – Winston S. Churchill   Wi...