The human and robot battle part is very unreasonable

Tiffany 2022-03-20 09:02:03

It may be that this animation has changed several directors to direct different segments, resulting in high and low levels in these animations

But I don't think the battles in the ultimate battle stand up to scrutiny

Especially in the animated movie, the robot octopus is almost killed by a human submachine gun in the front, but it is almost invulnerable to the human army in the back. Unless it is made of alien creatures, with the resources of the earth, no creature can yet. be invulnerable

There are also humans who can capture the entire earth and create a matrix, not to mention that this is impossible, I have seen a Matrix novel with screenshots of text before, this animated text version

It clearly states that there are not only robots on the earth, but also tens of thousands of colonists on the moon. Are these people controlled by robots, or are they counter-killing, but because of the earth war, the earth cannot be contacted?

I guess the director forgot about these people

It is completely unrealistic to capture the entire human beings on the earth, not to mention that any war that decides the outcome requires the accumulation of many battles, not just a handful in the movie.

Humans are not fools. After the large-scale war, there must be many resistance groups still on the earth, and it is impossible for them to be cleaned up by robots.

And robots can't use the tattered mass-production resources of the post-nuclear war to destroy the resistance of the remaining human regime.

It is written in the novel that after the robot starts to attack, it can produce more than 6,000 war machines a day. Isn't this nonsense? Where did the post-nuclear Earth come from such resources?

Relatively speaking, in the Terminator movie, there is a tug-of-war with robots and a new robot resistance force, which is a more reasonable existence.

More importantly, it is mentioned in the novel that after the robots were counterattacked by humans and retreated to the Asian region, they began to send robots to negotiate with humans, instead of going to the United Nations to negotiate at the beginning as in the animation.

After humans mastered the weakness of the robot, the robot retreated to Europe under the counterattack of the electromagnetic pulse gun, and retreated to the hometown of 01 City, which should also be in the Middle East.

Then I desperately searched for resources that could maintain City 01, accidentally caught human prisoners of war, and found that humans could be used to provide energy for City 01, one person, one minute

Then the problem comes again. City 01, which is already exhausted, relies on this human being who can only provide energy for 1 minute. Even if all the people in the occupied area are captured to generate electricity, it is only enough to maintain its own operation, let alone a counterattack.

So I think the implication of The Matrix is ​​to make humans respect each other and the contributions of robots. It can be said to be a cautionary tale, but if you look at it as a battle story movie

is relatively unqualified

In addition to the unreasonable battles and storylines, several other small stories are well made. If this animation is directed by one director instead of multiple, it may be more convincing.

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Extended Reading

The Animatrix quotes

  • Cis: Operator, please! Get me out of here right now. Operator, I need an exit!

    Duo: It's no use. I told you. I've blocked your signal.

  • The Instructor: The prolonged barrage engulfed Zero-One in the glow of a thousand suns. But unlike their former masters with their delicate flesh, the machines had little to fear of the bombs' radiation and heat. Thus did Zero-One's troops advance outwards in every direction. And one after another, mankind surrendered its territories. So the leaders of men conceived of their most desperate strategy yet. A final solution: the destruction of the sky.