(IMPORTANT
NOTE: Keep in mind the following is an example of
a minitheme on the film The Matrix. When writing minithemes
for written texts, you must use PAGE NUMBERS & WORD-FOR-WORD
QUOTATIONS to support your argument.)
Name:
John Jacob Jingleheimer Schmidt
Date: January 1, 2008
Title: "Neo's Evolution: Mirrors, Death, and
Growth"
Thesis
Statement
The
Matrix is preoccupied with how mirrors appear to signal growth in
Neo's life. One sees mirrors, or mirrored surfaces, on:
Textual
Support
Morpheus's sunglasses. Morpheus is the only one who wears "mirrorshades."
The Agents wear a more common variety of sunglasses that are not
mirrored.
The pill case that Morpheus twirls in his hand during his and
Neo's first meeting.
The spoon at the Oracle's apartment. Later Neo states, "There
is no spoon," as he and Trinity begin their attack on the
Agents.
The doorknob on the Oracle's door.
The mirror following Neo's ingestion of the red pill.
Interpretation
What
is clear about all these instances is that they go hand in hand
with steps in Neo's evolution from nihilism. At each point that
we see a mirror, we see Neo make a choice, accept a challenge, and
take a position. This taking a position slowly weans him away from
his state of nihilism. When Neo accepts the red pill, he is faced
with the shiny pill case and Morpheus's glasses. Much of the film
is taken up with a series of tests: Neo fighting Morpheus, jumping
from a building, or taking on the Agents. In the background or foreground
of all of these actions are Morpheus and his glasses. Incidentally,
most of these tests involve death. It is as if Neo has to face death
to change. In a sense, the entire film, by portraying the environmental
disaster from humanity's creation of dangerous machines (AIs), is
trying to make us face death. And, by facing, death, we will take
action and leave our nihilism behind.
Questions
and/or Suggestions
Two
suggestions: 1) The mirror symbolizes Neo's need to be introspective,
to rethink who he is. This need leads to his evolution away from
nihilism towards Belief and is driven by his constant facing of
death. 2) All of the mirrors in the film are external and fixed
to more mature or enlightened individuals. Perhaps their maturity
in some way is what leads to a reevaluation of Neo's own life; he
considers himself in light of them and doesn't like what he sees.