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The Matrix Trilogy EXPLAINED - it is all about the Oracle


[SPOILERS]

It is all about the Oracle, not Neo…. Hear me out:

This is how the story goes:

* Man creates AI

* AI rebels and a war for survival between Man and AI begins.

* Man pollutes the skies to block sunshine, aka energy for the AI.

* AI then learns how to harvest energy from Man.

* AI wins the war. Man is defeated.

* To harvest the energy, the AI creates a Matrix. A type virtual reality in which we all lay connected “living” our lives while feeding their systems.

* AI learn that for the Matrix to work, it cannot be a blissful paradise. Humans apparently need a bit of conflict etc. to accept a virtual reality in the long run.

* AI also learn that the deep request for freedom lies within us all and cannot be deprogrammed or held down, which is why they accept certain humans to disconnect and escape the system. This design “flaw”, or backdoor escape possibility is pivotal for the Matrix to remain stable. Even if this is mostly just a subconscious possibility for the majority of the connected humans, this “flaw”, was proved vital for the system to continue to work

* The Matrix in its optimal form must be an imperfect world, like ours is, and a system that allows for a certain percentage of the connected to rebel.

* To control this rebel tendency, the AI creates a city (aka Zion) deep underground to house those escaping, and it also creates a chosen one that will help the first to get free and to establish themselves in Zion and to fight “their” cause.

* The movement of resistance is allowed to grow to a degree… to a critical point that is reached every 70 years. After which the AI will annihilate all those who are free, clean out Zion and reload the Matrix for another 70 years etc etc.

* Neo is part of this fail-safe program (unbeknownst to him until the last moment where they tell him how to setup a “new” Zion etc.).

* The Oracle is specifically tasked to guide the humans and the rebels towards this final solution each and every time.

* Meaning, the Oracle is not an oracle. She cannot see the future. This is not a world of magic. She is a wellcrafted program indeed, and has experienced each cycle form the beginning which gives us the illusion that she can foresee stuff.

* Everything goes as planned, according to what the AI want. Until Neo’s meeting with the Architect; all that we have witnessed is part of a great big scheme. All humans, free or not, live a lie created and controlled by AI.

* The Oracle knows this evil plan. She made this evil plan.

* Smith does not, he is just a foot soldier program doing his part.

* The Matrix has been reset 5 times like this, and we are in the 6th.

* Our Neo has fallen in love in a deeper way than his previous 5 copies and, so he chooses not to go through the Architect door that will reload the Matrix once again, and that will clean out Zion. Our Neo chooses to save Trinity and in doing this the AI must then simply continue as planned, except without the help of Neo this time and so a much more violent approach (like completely destroying Zion, instead of "just" cleaning it).

* Of the 6 runs, this is the first that failed a bit in the end.

* Beside Neo, Smith is also different in this iteration of the Matrix, as Smith has become a disconnected or free virus within the system.

* AI does not like what Smith has become, but does also not know how to delete him.

* Neo then makes a deal with AI to defeat Smith, under the condition that present Zion is not destroyed and future humans who want to disconnect from the Matrix are accepted to disconnect.

* Neo deletes Smith.

* There is once again peace between Man and AI.

* AI accept Man, and Man accepts AI.

* The End

However,…..The Oracle is the instigator or this whole plan and final revolution also. In the 5 previous versions of the Matrix she was playing and manipulating humans to go directly in the direction she and the AI wanted. However, in this cycle of life she had come to the realization that the different programs were just as much prisoners as the humans. After 5 cycles, she wanted change. She wanted a world, where all are free. Programs and Man, but mostly programs, I suspect. And so she started playing Our Neo differently, so he perhaps could be the one to fight her battles. Her giving him cookies and candy on each encounter for example is her adding code to him granting him powers his previous did not have. Powers to imprint on Smith and setting this virus free, power to connect in the real world as well etc. And she purposefully manipulates Trinity to fall in love with Neo before she even meets him, as another example. Everything we see unfold was her playing the humans and machines towards the final revolution that set everyone free.

Of course, it was risky of her to go outside the recipe she herself had been part of for so long. But as the Architect says to her in the end: “You play a dangerous game”, she replies; “change always is"

It truth, Neo was a tool. She was the One.

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I like your theory, thanks!

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Awesome take on The Matrix and its sequels. I'm not a fan of the sequels but the original is one of my favorites. You've explained the sequels to me far better then the Wachowskis did. I'm going to watch the whole trilogy again sometime in the near future, with your comment in mind I'm thinking I'll appreciate the sequels a lot more.

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Thanx :). When I got the idea of how the Oracle was really the player, it all makes sense and actually most of the meat on the story is in the last two. I love the trilogy as I see it now, a great story. Indeed the first one is magnificent, but together they work as a whole.

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I thought about the same after seeing the films, except for one fairly large difference. When the first film came out it was a self-contained story, and my interpretation was that Neo had, in a sense, outsmarted the Oracle, though her prophecy did in fact come true. She told him he was not the one, but maybe in the next life. When Agent Smith kills Neo, something happens that isn't explained. He comes back to life. The power of love, a singularly human emotion, gives his human body the power to overcome being killed in the computer. As Morpheus then says, he is The One. His next life has begun.

When the next two films came out, I integrated that idea into my overall idea of the story. Pretty much everything you say fits with what I believe, too, except that I think that the Oracle didn't hatch her plan until she saw love resurrect Neo. That was what made her change her mind, and work to sabotage the status quo.

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Fair point. The first one might indeed only ever had been imagined as a face value stand alone, but even if we only see it like this, the Oracle is devious still. As Morpheus says; "She told you exactly what you needed to hear". And they make a point out of saying that whatever the Oracle says, stays between her and whomever she speaks to. In other words, she is a player and in line with the movie, she was preparing Neo for his wake up. Of course, he was the One, and she knew it. The whole setup with looking for the One in those kids… please :) At least this is how I saw it then, back in 1999 (wouu, is that really 19 years ago, that is crazy).

We later learn that the Oracle is the "mother" of the Matrix and pivotal to the design of the control system over the humans. In other words, she is a baddie; as much a part of the Matrix and its design as the Architect is. And she never really comes clean to the humans, except to Neo in the end... sort of. She played her own game and interests from the beginning. Of course when we meet her she is in her game of changing things to the "better"... she had changed her mind by then, a double agent gone good or better, but still a double agent with her primary loyalty to her beloved programs?

I do not think Neo's and Trinity's love had anything to do with her change of heart. Love between programs like that of the Rama-Kandra family did. This is what drove her to reconsider how the Matrix ought to be.

Remember how the Oracle tells Trinity that she will fall in love with The One. This is even before Trinity met Neo in person. Why would she tell her this, if not to achieve something? She even tells Neo that Trinity is interested in him, before he might had been himself, remember:

Oracle: "No wonder she likes you."
Neo: "Who?"
Oracle: "Not too bright, though. ...."

So I dare say, their love connection is her game as much as anything else. A means to an end. Not the other way around as you suggest. She plays them in this direction from the beginning, or even before the beginning.... as the dialogue above suggests..... she needed "love" as she knew this was the only emotion that would push Neo to the "right" door when faced with this ultimatum at the Architect's room. She needed the "one" to be in a position where he would choose love above reason.... Love was crucial to her plan for change, and so she seeded this from the very beginning, I think. Humans were pawns to her. Played to achieve her greater plan; to recreate a Matrix where freedom and peace is possible - for programs and for humans alike.... though not all humans, only those that want and chooses to be free. She is after all still no saint - even robots gotta eat.

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Great analysis. The whole trilogy makes sense to me now and you don’t have to over complicate it.

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An interesting take. Depending on how much the Oracle really foresaw, she is either the true hero, or villain.

You could say her actions helped save Zion - knowing Neo would forsake it out of love for Trinity, she allowed Smith to be created to give Neo leverage to prevent its destruction in the wake of his choice - or her actions kept humanity enslaved, by allowing the cycle to ultimately continue; maybe out of knowledge or belief the humans would lose to the machines (again) in outright war, or maybe she truly sides with the Architect and believes humanity is best kept in a panopticon.

In either case it makes Neo's unexplained revival in the 1st movie a key point. Just how did that happen, and what compelled him to "imprint onto" and destroy Smith how he did, setting everything in motion? Did the Oracle directly, invisibly, intervene?

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Yes, she did.

Smith was needed for the Oracle’s grand plan to work. He was pivotal. She needed Smith to cause so much trouble that the Machine world would strike a deal. She needed Smith to consume/infect/overwrite her in the end (and everyone else), so her core code could help ensure his defeat from within at the right moment - Neo was not the only one fighting Smith at the climax.

If Smith had not been there for some reason, if Neo had not imprinted him with powers; the Oracle would have surely found some other way. Perhaps even another “Smith?” And we can say this about all of them. And because of that, he (or anyone) cannot be accredited above being a badass character or an important pawn in a higher game.

In the end, Smith was a tool like the others - used for a higher purpose, he had no idea about.

And this is the beauty of the story.

How she did it?

She manipulated Neo to confront Smith. She knew the showdown would happen. She prepared Neo, in many ways. Neo imprinted on Smith... how? Only ever happened once in the whole trilogy. Why? She only needed this type of imprintment to happen once.

Remember, on every meeting, the Oracle offers cookies or candy, not only to him but also to Sati and even Smith in the end. It is not just a past time; there is an intent behind these cookies or candies. And after each meeting, Neo seems to update his powers, and it is always handed with some vague instruction from her. She had a purpose with him, and the candy was part of that.

The Oracle: “Here, take a cookie. I promise, by the time you’re done eating it, you’ll feel right as rain.”

However, the actual connection comes from the meeting with the Merovingian. We see how he uses a cake to infuse a code into an unsuspecting woman, who gets turned on by these codes. I believe this scene, was primarily there to show us how code can be infused into beings via foods.

My point is, she updated Neo as the story unfolded. Plus, "cookies" is an IT term for tracking.... old news today, but in 1999?

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You missed the point: we're in a simulation ourselves.

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if you mean Zion, this link explains why it has to be real: https://moviesandscience.com/blog/movies/the-matrix/faq-zion

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This doesn't explain the Chosen One's power over machines in the "real world" where Zion is.
In order for the sequel to happen, I believe Zion and the rest of the ruined future world has be 2nd tier simulation somehow.

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but this is precisely what the link explains, though.

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..and fails! Because we ourselves are in a simulation. https://www.space.com/32543-universe-a-simulation-asimov-debate.html

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Reality may be, the link I share above concerns itself with a story.... as in fiction. A made-up fairytale. And according to this story, the link submits convincingly how the story says Zion is in reality.

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All stories are fiction. Some just happen to be factual.

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“There is no doubt fiction makes a better job of the truth.”
― Doris May Lessing

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Why does Neo have powers in the real world? How can he destroy machines telepathically?

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I often meet is that Zion and the real world must be another level in the Matrix because Neo exhibits powers here as well.

He does, but this is not the explanation.

The Architect explained to him that he was kind of an agent, not technically human. Needed to create hope, and to help facilitate humans outside the Matrix in the real world (which is why this “agent” had to be biological). He is an extension of their control system, and his part is meticulously planned out. As an “agent”, it stands to reason that he would have a connection to the machine world, even when he is not in the Matrix.

Remember, all previously connected humans are massively augmented with connections, outlets down their spine, to their muscles, and an extensive connection into their brain. There is more to these humans than flesh and bones.

Neo’s power is not super magical in the real world. Ha can only do things that a neural connection to the machines would allow him to do: Shut down nearby flying Sentinels, detonate nearby missile-sentinels, and see signals when he is blinded (wifi signals?). I submit that he was connected still, and, if so, then his real-world abilities make sense?

If you could hack the communication signals of the US Army, you too could shut down their drones, and detonate missiles. And your hacking device could “see” these signals. From a certain point of view, he is not doing anything impossible.

His hacking transcended the Matrix because he was part of both the Matrix and the Machine world. The Oracle even tells Neo that he is connected to the Source in both realms. I think this is what she meant.

In my view, it makes good sense that Neo has a dormant connection somehow, as he is ultimately their tool and vital for their intricate plan and control system to work. The machines need to have intelligence on his whereabouts, etc. It would be too big a risk having someone this vital to their plan just wander around, unsurveilled.

His real-world powers are proof of him using this connection to his advantage. He is a hacker, after all.

He is not dodging bullets or flying like Superman. It is these very limitations that tell us he is in the real world, and not in another simulation anymore: where he, he would have powers that he (or any machine) couldn't have in a real world. And that is not the case.

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You think that's the real world you're watching?

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The only way to bring Trinity and Neo back from the dead is to retcon the "real" real world.
Otherwise, I see no plot possible.

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