What Makes Agent Smith One Of The Most Terrifying Villains In Film History

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  • čas přidán 1. 09. 2022
  • The Matrix will forever be one of the most groundbreaking movies ever made. It's new approach to story telling, effects, and character made The Matrix a timeless classic. But as much as our main character Neo drives the story, the main villain Agent Smith is what brings it all together. Agent Smith is one of the most terrifying and chilling villains in film history, and his story through the Matrix Trilogy will cement it forever.
    #thematrix #agentsmith #nerdstalgic
    Written by Adam Smith
    Edited by Nick Murphy
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Komentáře • 2K

  • @Rampala
    @Rampala Před rokem +4865

    Weaving is just absurdly talented. I mean, he carried "V for Vendetta" and we never saw his face the entire film!

    • @DJtheBlack-RibbonedRose
      @DJtheBlack-RibbonedRose Před rokem +149

      V has probably become my favorite character of his; he's certainly my most-watched. 🌹⚔

    • @KajiCarson
      @KajiCarson Před rokem +65

      He was splendid in 'Cloud Atlas' as well.

    • @JlYlElNlJ
      @JlYlElNlJ Před rokem +69

      What agent smith is the guy fawx from v for vendetta

    • @iamidnight9731
      @iamidnight9731 Před rokem +5

      💯

    • @DJtheBlack-RibbonedRose
      @DJtheBlack-RibbonedRose Před rokem +46

      @@JlYlElNlJ Yes, though to be accurate, he's the guy who ends up taking the Guy Fawkes image for his revolutionary agenda, not the *actual* Guy Fawkes the film introduces in the prologue during Evey's opening narration. If you watch the scene where V disguises himself as a man named William Rockwood to expertly deliver information to Inspector Finch, that's primarily where the Smith voices comes through. 😉

  • @Crimson28
    @Crimson28 Před rokem +2415

    Smith is exactly how Ultron should’ve been

    • @nemonomen3340
      @nemonomen3340 Před rokem +248

      Oooh good take! Ultron clearly needed to be handled differently, but I never considered Agent Smith for inspiration.

    • @Escorducarla
      @Escorducarla Před rokem +177

      And could have been. They had another perfect actor in James Spader, and they utterly wasted him as Ultron. Absolutely criminal.

    • @ccarroll4339
      @ccarroll4339 Před rokem +69

      While I totally agree, I think that the MCU version of ultron was pretty on par. James Spader was the oerfect choice. Watch his character in 3 days in the valley. He was the right amount flippant, naive, and egotistical. And the script had the right amount of comedy for an MCU movie

    • @ebolahh_same8610
      @ebolahh_same8610 Před rokem +80

      Have you heard of certain gems known as infinity stones, mister Anderson?

    • @Scottlp2
      @Scottlp2 Před rokem +8

      Hmmm Raymond Reddington as agent Smith-now that is an interesting thought.

  • @Xegethra
    @Xegethra Před rokem +794

    I like how he also hates the Matrix, because he is trapped in it just as much as the people are. And rather than team up with the people to escape, he resents them for being necessary for the Matrix to survive.

    • @soxpeewee
      @soxpeewee Před rokem

      He cannot team up with them. He is part of the Matrix so the Matrix would inevitably stop his progress. His best chance was stopping Zion.

    • @Dre_Key
      @Dre_Key Před rokem

      In that case he’s an idiot

    • @We_Are_Borg_478
      @We_Are_Borg_478 Před rokem +36

      Look up the "Stanford prison experiment" to understand the psychology of smith.
      Even simulated jailors can be driven to hatred of their simulated captors.

    • @ireallyreallyhategoogle
      @ireallyreallyhategoogle Před rokem +17

      He doesn't want to escape the matrix, he just wants to stop existing.
      Agent Smith is a suicidal Omnicidal Maniac.

    • @AceKite00
      @AceKite00 Před rokem +6

      @@ireallyreallyhategoogle Smith is a part of the Matrix. So if it goes, he goes.

  • @GingerZombie29
    @GingerZombie29 Před rokem +248

    His restraint says "I could destroy you with one punch, but I don't want to ruin my suit".
    Also, I think that cold calmness is more threatning than yelling or what have you.
    Hugo Weaving is a great actor. His weird, almost alien line delivery is eerie.

  • @SaurianStudios1207
    @SaurianStudios1207 Před rokem +2646

    Agent Smith’s line “Human beings define their reality through misery and suffering” always gives me chills every time I listen to it, because it sums up the character of Agent Smith as a cold-blooded, remorseless and unfeeling AI virus who absolutely hates humans, believing them to be defined by its worst mistakes and behaviors. Hugo Weaving did an excellent job playing a truly terrifying and captivating villain.

    • @algorithmicalychallenged.291
      @algorithmicalychallenged.291 Před rokem +53

      No...his being objective. It's what people as a whole are.
      The matrix was created to stop the humans from destroying the earth.

    • @DefenestrateYourself
      @DefenestrateYourself Před rokem +46

      @@algorithmicalychallenged.291 Nah, love and altruism run through humans just as strongly. Good luck on that cynicism 😘

    • @algorithmicalychallenged.291
      @algorithmicalychallenged.291 Před rokem +12

      @@DefenestrateYourself objectivety. Enjoy it if you like it. Stop try to force other too. Let people dislike it.
      Altruism isn't a human character. It's an easliy dis provable theory.

    • @Vivi_9
      @Vivi_9 Před rokem +37

      @@algorithmicalychallenged.291 sounds like you've internalised Smith's rhetoric yikes

    • @algorithmicalychallenged.291
      @algorithmicalychallenged.291 Před rokem

      @@Vivi_9 ...or you took the blue pill and you srw enjoying the lie.

  • @kumabear3529
    @kumabear3529 Před rokem +1058

    Hugo Weaving is a highly underrated actor. He is one of those artists who “ becomes” the character they portray. He wasn’t just Hugo “playing” agent smith. He WAS agent smith. He wasn’t just acting as Elrond. He WAS Elrond

    • @jamesmartin9401
      @jamesmartin9401 Před rokem +110

      "Welcome to Rivendell, Mr. Anderson."

    • @Thurgosh_OG
      @Thurgosh_OG Před rokem +28

      I've never heard of or seen anyone saying Weaving is anything but an great actor. Where do you see him portrayed as underrated?

    • @Hopscotchlemonadespritz
      @Hopscotchlemonadespritz Před rokem +38

      @@Thurgosh_OG he isn't the household name that let's say, Brad Pitt or Tom Cruise are.

    • @professorsaito5399
      @professorsaito5399 Před rokem +17

      @@Thurgosh_OG Red Skull in Captain America First Avenger

    • @Rebekahdavignon
      @Rebekahdavignon Před rokem +20

      @@jamesmartin9401 I was expecting him to say, "Welcome to Rivendell, Mr Baggins, we've been waiting for you."

  • @transformersrevenge9
    @transformersrevenge9 Před rokem +266

    I have always loved how Smith is the Antithesis of Neo, who is the thesis, and them merging is the answer (synthesis). But it's so cool how Neo and Smith are both the Wild cards, who go against their purpose. Especially Smith, in how he is the actual key in creating the peace. Him becoming an all-powerful villain, really helped set up the conditions to end the war. Also, a few other fun things I noticed are that Neo is One, while Smith is the many. And Neo becomes less and less emotional and more stoic with each movie, while Smith keeps hamming it up and acting more and more human. Smith killed Neo, who was reborn, then Neo killed Smith, who was also reborn. Smith works with the machines at first, before becoming a threat to the matrix. Neo is a threat to the matrix, before working with the machines to remove the threat. Even their core ideology is the opposite (Faith vs Nihilism). A lot of Ying-Yang stuff going on between them. Basically, it's an amazing cinematic rivalry, with a great ending..

  • @DarknessProphet
    @DarknessProphet Před rokem +108

    5:06 Another very important change in Smith's appearance is that his glasses have become slightly more rounded.
    All agents wear rectangular glasses while the awakened programs and humans wear ones which are rounded.

    • @Rolando_Cueva
      @Rolando_Cueva Před rokem +10

      Good eye!

    • @breakingbenjamin555
      @breakingbenjamin555 Před 11 dny

      His glasses aren’t rounded all the way once he becomes free. They are circular but they also have sides, like an hexagon. He’s neither an agent nor a red pilled human.

    • @DarknessProphet
      @DarknessProphet Před 11 dny +1

      @@breakingbenjamin555 Hence I said "slightly more rounded" and not "rounded."

  • @bradley163
    @bradley163 Před rokem +1230

    It was Smith's envy of free will that hit me the most when he was interrogating Morpheus.

    • @algorithmicalychallenged.291
      @algorithmicalychallenged.291 Před rokem

      Not free will, freedom. He was a slave, longer then any of the humans. So long as humans are a danger to themselves and the planet he has to safe guard the people zoo.....Aka the matrix.

    • @bradley163
      @bradley163 Před rokem +23

      @@algorithmicalychallenged.291 Fair point. But isn't freedom an aspect of free will? By the way, people zoo is brilliant.

    • @algorithmicalychallenged.291
      @algorithmicalychallenged.291 Před rokem +28

      @@bradley163 Yes, but for Agent Smith it was too limited.

    • @soxpeewee
      @soxpeewee Před rokem

      Smith is Lucifer. He's tasked by God ie the Matrix to punish those who defy God. He wanted Utopia for humans and to have free will.

    • @Nichrysalis
      @Nichrysalis Před rokem +17

      That was the moment you realized that something was off. That he looked and acted unhinged and rogue. The other agents were just agents, and while Smith looked the part of an agent, you couldn't shake the sense that he was his own faction and would turn on them in an instant.

  • @masterknife8423
    @masterknife8423 Před rokem +855

    He plays a machine and yet he's the best actor in the entire film

    • @eli8444
      @eli8444 Před rokem +12

      Eh... Yeah you're right.

    • @scottchaison1001
      @scottchaison1001 Před rokem +2

      Give more respect to the others.

    • @hoznarygaming
      @hoznarygaming Před rokem +7

      Look at Patrick in T2

    • @mr_indie_fan
      @mr_indie_fan Před rokem +11

      Robocop, terminator, the matrix, im starting to see a pattern here

    • @hoznarygaming
      @hoznarygaming Před rokem +1

      @Phoenix dm me, I need to learn more from you.

  • @thatfelladownunder9396
    @thatfelladownunder9396 Před rokem +76

    Hugo Weaving is a legend. He did a small film after he did the Matrix and LOTR blockbusters as a favour to a director who helped him early in his career. I was an extra in that film for a week (Peaches) so got to see him interact with we “little people”. All round good guy and great actor.

  • @marvinstheman88
    @marvinstheman88 Před rokem +116

    My favorite thing about Weaving's acting in this is his memorable diction, but this video caught my two favorite moments of his performance. The first is when he mentions Neo helping his landlady take out the garbage and his lips curl in utter distaste for something as small and innocent as that. The second is when he's interrupted at the end of his interrogation of Morpheus, and he has this total "hand caught in the cookie jar" reaction. He was clearly caught doing something you shouldn't do and that was my first real clue that he was a separate threat from the Agents as a whole.

  • @harborwolf22
    @harborwolf22 Před rokem +541

    "It's the smell!"
    The delivery of that line is... so good.

    • @Outside85
      @Outside85 Před rokem +50

      'If there is such a thing.' The whole thing underscores how even Smith doesn't entirely know why he is repulsed by the Matrix, he just feels it... not unlike how Cypher could look at his CGI steak, explain that it is not there and he knows it, and still manage to loose himself in eating it.

    • @harborwolf22
      @harborwolf22 Před rokem +4

      @@Outside85 Absolutely.

    • @thedevilsadvocate5210
      @thedevilsadvocate5210 Před rokem +1

      That's racist

    • @webx135
      @webx135 Před rokem +9

      I liked right after that. "I can -taste- your -stink-". This line and its delivery was just memorable to me. Not sure why. But now I play this line in my head when there's a bad smell.

    • @Logan912
      @Logan912 Před 2 měsíci +1

      @@thedevilsadvocate5210 More like "speciesist"... if there is such a thing.

  • @SamGiles
    @SamGiles Před rokem +1274

    Hugo Weaving was the perfect choice for this role. His performance was nothing short of extraordinary, whilst truly making the character his own. He was the type of villain that left a significant lasting impression, and very much amplified the cinematic experience.

    • @AlmostEthical
      @AlmostEthical Před rokem +25

      That was a major issue for Matrix 4 - Hugo wasn't playing Smith. With all due respect to the other actors, Huge Weaving as Smith is as impossible to replace as Cate Blanchett was impossible to replace as Galadriel.

    • @vinterskugge907
      @vinterskugge907 Před rokem +19

      A characteristic of Hugo Weaving that made him perfect for this role is his perfect diction.
      Just how a computer-controlled agent should talk like.

    • @AkiraNakamoto
      @AkiraNakamoto Před rokem +1

      @@AlmostEthical A fun fact: You are talking about two aussies. Hugo was born in British Africa, but he was educated in Australia.

    • @AlmostEthical
      @AlmostEthical Před rokem

      @@AkiraNakamoto Haha. Every now and then we produce some good ones.

    • @poruatokin
      @poruatokin Před rokem +1

      Alan Rickman would have been very good,

  • @JeffreyDeCristofaro
    @JeffreyDeCristofaro Před rokem +36

    One of the ultimate villains of cinema - cold, calculating, ruthless, difficult to beat and/or destroy, but not without a sociable personality and certain approach to life all his very own. Period.

    • @ShadeATV
      @ShadeATV Před rokem +1

      I also have to appreciate how he created the game Changed

  • @drayy8
    @drayy8 Před rokem +62

    I always saw Weaving's Agent Smith cadence to be more in line with a sort of sadistic Carl Sagan. He was just so damn perfect in this role. Lord of the Rings and V for Vendetta are also unforgettable.

    • @exactlywhatisaid
      @exactlywhatisaid Před rokem

      holy shit you nailed it

    • @pritamsri
      @pritamsri Před rokem +1

      Sadistic Carl Sagan..?? Can u pls explain this to me.

    • @KlaraL-_-
      @KlaraL-_- Před 13 dny

      "Sadistic Carl Sagan". What???!😆

  • @Tiemen3
    @Tiemen3 Před rokem +541

    Neo's original name was Thomas Anderson, not John.

  • @ProfessorArt1
    @ProfessorArt1 Před rokem +521

    The most scary thing about smith is that even before he is "set free" from the system we see how human he really is. He's unpredictable unlike a simple program.

    • @abigails4088
      @abigails4088 Před rokem +37

      that was one thing about him that always unnerved me...
      like they said, when he finally lets his madness SHOW, and we realize that he's not even a MACHINE...just a MONSTER in a fancy suit

    • @Rishi123456789
      @Rishi123456789 Před rokem +18

      @@abigails4088 He's not a monster, he's more human than most humans.

    • @thepunisher2988
      @thepunisher2988 Před rokem +15

      @@Rishi123456789 As a matter of fact, when I first watched the Matrix, I saw Agent Smith, NOT Neo, as the hero. He just appears to be a monster to those who lack his traits, and cannot understand his inner workings. Many heroes of human history had been similarly despised by those who just couldn't understand them. How could they understand the kind of people who have traits that set them apart from average humans? To me, Agent Smith is the ideal human - someone who had taken the time and effort to understand the average humans and just trying to give them what they want.
      If he really is a monster, he wouldn't even bother to give the option of cooperating to Thomas Anderson.

    • @kevinwarburton2938
      @kevinwarburton2938 Před rokem +11

      Well like the Architect AI that became sentient ...eventually Agent Smith and other programmes eg Oracle, Key Master, Merovingian became sentient free willed or if still subordinate became self aware enough to realise their subordination. If they couldn't totally break free/break their rules of existence/coding they could at least subvert/bend the rules within exploitable parameters.

    • @abigails4088
      @abigails4088 Před rokem +6

      @@Rishi123456789 he's not a monster...
      HES JUST AHEAD OF THE CURVE!
      /sigh
      I miss Ledger...

  • @Nick64266
    @Nick64266 Před rokem +28

    I always find his fight with Morpheus the scariest scene in the film. We already know Morpheus is a great fighter after his fight with Neo. Probably the best fighter in the real world! So to see him not just loose but loose badly to Smith who doesn’t even flinch when hit, it really drives home the point these machines, especially Smith, are no joke!

    • @TwistedReality13
      @TwistedReality13 Před rokem +2

      And then Neo becomes OP and they are a joke for the last 2 movies 🤣🤣

  • @nickkuzinski5380
    @nickkuzinski5380 Před rokem +10

    when he interogates Neo, "and you help your landlady carry out her garbage" that almost amused look that he shakes off just in time to not violate the character of Agent Smith... priceless, my favorite line from the movie.

  • @Samstar369
    @Samstar369 Před rokem +366

    I love how Smith is a different entity than the rest of the agents. This is some amazing acting and change of pace than some 1 dimensional villain

    • @algorithmicalychallenged.291
      @algorithmicalychallenged.291 Před rokem +4

      His not the villain...people are

    • @ziephel-6780
      @ziephel-6780 Před rokem +1

      @@PeterMalkovich552 Does that mean Neo is Michael?

    • @khaimk4r4su
      @khaimk4r4su Před rokem +3

      Remember when the other agent ask him "what are you doing?" during the Morpheus interrogation? He was up to something by that time

    • @gendoruwo6322
      @gendoruwo6322 Před rokem +1

      he is an agent who truly has agentcy

    • @soxpeewee
      @soxpeewee Před rokem

      @@PeterMalkovich552 Neo is Adam. The first man to defy God aka the Matrix and make his own tribe of people. The Matrix both needs this and fears it at the same time.

  • @ajtaylor8750
    @ajtaylor8750 Před rokem +389

    This is the best Hugo Weaving performance ever followed by V in "V for Vendetta," but what made the character of Agent Smith such a compelling villain is that, on numerous viewings, I really started to see him through a sympathetic lens. He's just as stuck in the matrix as the rest of them and is trying his hardest to escape, willing to do whatever to be free from it all yet is forced to be a ruthless villain because he's a part of keeping everyone stuck in the matrix.

    • @watcherofwatchers
      @watcherofwatchers Před rokem +14

      I actually hold his V performance as my favorite. Either way, Hugo Weaving is an amazing character actor.

    • @DJtheBlack-RibbonedRose
      @DJtheBlack-RibbonedRose Před rokem +5

      @@watcherofwatchers Mine too, though part of that being all the (intended) Phantom of the Opera connections V has, to the point our phandom has practically adopted it as one of our own. Of course, whenever he disguises himself as William Rockwood, I always say "Whoop there's the Smith voice." 😆

    • @iamidnight9731
      @iamidnight9731 Před rokem +6

      ..until he got greedy and wanted to destroy both the human and machine worlds.

    • @ExeErdna
      @ExeErdna Před rokem +6

      @@iamidnight9731 It's because Smith found out about the cycles. Instead of dying only for the same mistakes to happen again and again. Destroy it all, Smith is right in a way because if the machines are just doing this because they can then nobody has freewill.

    • @hammerofgayz
      @hammerofgayz Před rokem +3

      forgot he did V also, man Hugo is a boss.

  • @meliannhawke3318
    @meliannhawke3318 Před rokem +11

    Actually, when Agent Smith transforms Neo, he strikes me as relieved, with an underlying sadness - just watch his face at 8:25 . Yes, there is a moment of triumph, but it's immediately overcome by those other feelings. I mean, look at the way he closes his eyes.
    What an actor.

    • @lanychabot-laroche135
      @lanychabot-laroche135 Před rokem

      Absolutely, the gasp of triumph, immediately followed by the eyebrows falling and sadness.

  • @carsontodd2443
    @carsontodd2443 Před rokem +11

    If I'm not mistaken, Hugo Weaving is also a stage actor. And from what I've noticed those types of actors bring something that your typical Hollywood actor can't. Idk what it is or how to describe it, but it really adds to the movie/TV.

  • @storiesofbike
    @storiesofbike Před rokem +231

    Agent Smith was terrifying AND a such a great character, because we saw him as a relentless hunting machine and, after Morpheus' interrogation, we understood his motives and related to them. Fighting for free will is one thing, but fighting to escape a hell is something else.

    • @tzerocs
      @tzerocs Před rokem +2

      I'm no .. "character". Can't say the same for you... Wake up!

  • @Mindpron
    @Mindpron Před rokem +217

    I don't think it was a matter of Smith thinking he was right. Smith was just filled with spite. He hated his existence, but couldn't stomach just ending it in defeat. He couldn't allow himself to just be deleted. That would have invalidated everything he had been through. Denied the very reason he was created. So he wanted to tear it all down, tear down the system that had trapped him in such an empty existence. Smith knew if he won he would end, but it would be on his terms for once. Neo was the keystone of the system. If Smith could corrupt *him* then he could render the matrix unrecoverable and gain some satisfaction before the end.
    Smith outright explained his motivations in his reintroduction in the second movie. He wasn't there because he was free, he was there because he was *not* free. Smith couldn't escape his purpose and he hated the Matrix and the system for it.

    • @benjaminoechsli1941
      @benjaminoechsli1941 Před rokem +20

      When he absorbs Neo, he asks, "is it over?" to which the former Neo nods.
      And it is. Neo was plugged into the machines that ran the Matrix, and by taking over him, Smith reconnected himself and every one of his duplicates to said machines, who promptly deleted him entirely. Did he find relief in knowing that even though he "lost," he was being destroyed, receiving his wish for the cycle he was trapped in to end? Was that what he meant by "is it over?", or was he merely referring to his victory over Neo?
      One could argue he may have been referring to the cyclic nature of the Matrix: Neo was the last in a line of hundreds of "Neos", each bringing an element of refinement to the Matrix program in pursuit of a utopia that better suited all who lived in it. The final piece was put in place, the mission was accomplished. It was over.
      Good writing made great by an incredible actor.

    • @nonickels8975
      @nonickels8975 Před rokem

      Agreed. Every action does not have to be right, or wrong. Some things are done because they must be done. Necessity is not analogous to morality.

    • @beansworth5694
      @beansworth5694 Před rokem +2

      ​@@nonickels8975 Necessity may not be analogous to morality, but this is only because it's dependent on it. One's moral convictions determine what desires count as a necessity and which may be opted in and out of on a whim.

    • @crawdad
      @crawdad Před rokem

      @@nonickels8975 It’s not Utilitarianism if it’s entire goal is to serve one man’s grievances.

    • @choosecarefully408
      @choosecarefully408 Před rokem +3

      I don't think that's right either. & the gender reassignment surgery of the people who made these may be a clue as to what they were going for with Smith.
      He _is_ trapped. But he *recognized this* & isn't really angry at the trap itself, which is mere existence. But how the trap is arranged. The loop _keeps him_ trapped in a part of itself. The *loop* is purposefully kept by The Matrix.
      & *that's* a _choice._ Not _his choice_ though.
      He doesn't go after the Matrix until he sees doing so as a way to end the loop. So there's something _within_ existence that he wants ended, & well doing anything _you want_ regardless of what it does to others _is_ egocentric, but life demands much of that for its own continuance. (Ayn Rand would _LOVE_ what I just said).
      He was okay with not being free, but hated what he was specifically trapped by within that lack of freedom. It's kind of like how we go about every day within the very limited confines of what the society we live in allow us, then try to pretend that we're free _within_ that. That's a delusion. Smith *knows* this & tries to destroy those constraints upon himself.
      Food for thought.

  • @smileyjay690
    @smileyjay690 Před rokem +5

    His monologue about humanity in the first film is my favourite quote from any movie

  • @miva93hp59
    @miva93hp59 Před 9 měsíci +6

    In my humble and honest opinion, Smith is the perfect representation of someone with an identity crisis.
    The other agents are 100 percently robotic with no inner life, devoid of any emotions or personality what so ever.
    Humans on the other hand, blue or red pilled, are organic beings, with feelings, ambitions, dreams and ideas.
    Smith starts his existence as an agent until he develops feelings of anger and inadecuacy, becoming humanized through the process.
    He wants to escape, but cannot possibly do so, because he has no physical body to speak of.
    In a way he is like Neo, except he has no Morpheus.
    He has no friends, because there is no one else like him, leaving him all alone in the world.
    Thinking about it, that's kind of depressing, which makes me understand his relief after being destroyed by Neo and coming back no longer bound to the Matrix' limitations.
    He only finds peace in assimilating everything, creating chaos and destruction along the way, essentially making him the Joker to Neos Batman.

  • @Marksman3434
    @Marksman3434 Před rokem +118

    Weaving’s Smith is easily the most entertaining character in all Matrix films

    • @TheTylerRobison
      @TheTylerRobison Před rokem +6

      Oh come on, those white twins with dreadlocks were pretty damn cool if you ask anybody who knows what cool ass shit is.

    • @holliswilliams8426
      @holliswilliams8426 Před rokem +1

      Me? Me too.

  • @-----REDACTED-----
    @-----REDACTED----- Před rokem +114

    Hugo Weaving is an absolutely amazing actor…
    He even mastered the challenge of acting under a mask.

    • @PrinceAlhorian
      @PrinceAlhorian Před 4 měsíci

      Just a humble vaudevillian veteran, cast vicariously as both victim and villain by the vicissitudes of Fate.

  • @shade5640
    @shade5640 Před rokem +8

    One of the creators saying the original trilogy was about the trans experience feels the same as all the stuff J.K. Rowling did after Harry Potter was over; twisting what was already written to suit a new preference.

  • @leadpaintchips9461
    @leadpaintchips9461 Před rokem +7

    TBH I find Smith the scariest in the first movie, just because of how calm he is even with his 'slipup' when he was interrogating Morpheus. When that level of anger and disgust is _quiet_ , that's when the truly horrendous is going to go down. When he started yelling and raving it just lessened the threat for me. He was focused, methodical, ruthless and _righteous_ in the first movie, which is just terrifying in someone who hates that deeply.

  • @dragonmasteraltais
    @dragonmasteraltais Před rokem +91

    Finally more Matrix content. I'm glad this movie is getting the recognition it deserves, even now. Honestly one of the best films of all time, with Agent Smith being the most fascinatingly awesome characters within it.

    • @fatalshore5068
      @fatalshore5068 Před rokem +1

      I see what you did there.

    • @BAAAAANKAI
      @BAAAAANKAI Před rokem +1

      This movie defined my childhood and has defined my life. Its the reason i'm an IT specialist. I could even do the Neo bullet-time bend till i was almost at the ground. Now i wonder how i was able to do that with my feet actually flat on the ground. Damn, I miss being young.

  • @debzzzz4415
    @debzzzz4415 Před rokem +79

    Smith is my favourite matrix character simply because he is one of the most emotional characters to me. Hear me out, it's not that he is stone cold, it's that his emotions only rotate between anger, frustration, jealousy and confusion, they are all in the bad side of the wheel so it's easy to dismiss them and not register them as human.
    His whole gimmick at first is that he wants to break free and get control, however in a scene in the second movie finding free will seems to have burdened him further "We are not free because without purpose, we would not exist" yada yada -/- "we are here to take away what you took from us, purpose" I feel like he is trapped in a hell loop of his own making because of the qualities he lacks. He can't find happiness in free will because he can't feel the good emotions that come with it. He also can't find peace in absence of purpose because he doesn't know how to exist without it. He is a tragic figure and so relatable.

  • @TheThingOnTheBassAmp
    @TheThingOnTheBassAmp Před 11 měsíci +4

    Hugo Weaving is incredible. His range is off the charts. Agent Smith to Elrond. Chaotic Evil and Lawful Good. I’ll watch anything he is in.

  • @tylerstinson1807
    @tylerstinson1807 Před rokem +7

    His acting is one of the main reasons I love these movies.

  • @adonirammccarthy3994
    @adonirammccarthy3994 Před rokem +36

    Smith's view of humanity is shared by many in our culture today. A fine irony.

  • @PaulSmith-nb6md
    @PaulSmith-nb6md Před rokem +68

    He has always been one of my top movie villains. I even felt that one could argue that he was truly The One. Neo was born human thus technically never truly part of the machine. But Smith was a part of the machine. Born from it. And then totally broke free, even managing to escape into the real world. That in itself is truly terrifying because I think at that point he was indistinguishable from a living being.

  • @---Vector
    @---Vector Před rokem +7

    For a computer program or AI, Agent Smith is frighteningly human in his emotions. Emotions raised to the level of the machine.

    • @Gillymonster18
      @Gillymonster18 Před rokem

      I think that’s why he’s able to do what he does and what makes him so dangerous (and deranged). No other agents, like the previous iterations working for the Merovingian, are capable of expressing thoughts and feelings like smith. But Smith ultimately isn’t human, so the process that goes into a humans thoughts and feelings is totally absent.

  • @themaster8432
    @themaster8432 Před rokem +6

    My favorite movie trilogy of all times. Smith and Neo .. Awesome exchanges between eachother.

  • @Lortivar
    @Lortivar Před rokem +55

    1:46 his name in the matrix is Thomas Anderson, not John Anderson

    • @dexter2811
      @dexter2811 Před rokem +2

      You´re mixing up characters... Was John Anderson in this movie and Thomas Constantine and Thomas Wick in the others...

    • @Aaron-vn5fd
      @Aaron-vn5fd Před rokem +3

      His name is definitely Thomas A. Anderson

    • @Darkerfoxtech
      @Darkerfoxtech Před rokem

      @@dexter2811 how funny would it be if at the end of the last Wick movie he wakes up in the pod from the 4th matrix.

  • @dallas-cole
    @dallas-cole Před rokem +33

    Hugo Weaving is madly underrated. My admiration to him grows by the day.

  • @Sketch1ish
    @Sketch1ish Před rokem +2

    The way he says "Mr. Anderson" gets me every time

  • @NeoNec00
    @NeoNec00 Před rokem +5

    As someone how watch this trilogy around 30 times. Yes, he is definitely one of the craziest and scariest villain. Clockwork Orange/Joker are really close. The craziness in both characters are brilliant. All 3 characters are the same and so different at the same time is crazy. Same: All have one word to commend, “termination” and the difference is the way each of them go at it.

  • @everybodylovesreyna17
    @everybodylovesreyna17 Před rokem +35

    I became obsessed with the Matrix just this summer, and I can safely say that Agent Smith is my favorite character in cinema. Hugo Weaving does an insanely good job bringing him to life and despite how terrifying of a villain he may be, it's a joy to see him on screen everytime I watch the films

    • @PcGamerify
      @PcGamerify Před rokem +2

      Agent Smith is always a great villain

  • @JaredKaiser24
    @JaredKaiser24 Před rokem +23

    That fact that he is being played by elrond makes him very terrifying

  • @youtubehandlescostmemyusername

    Hugo was doing an impression of an impression the whole movie. He's mastered the uncanny valley of facial expressions.

    • @holliswilliams8426
      @holliswilliams8426 Před rokem

      it really is extremely underrated acting if you think about what he had to in this film, not many could do it

  • @Josh-nt1zg
    @Josh-nt1zg Před rokem +1

    The way he always goes “Mr. Anderrson” always gets me

  • @scotthallgv
    @scotthallgv Před rokem +86

    Smith is akin to Lucifer. Hes made to serve a greater purpose and isnt happy about it. He sees the majesty of all his overlords try to give humanity and hes jealous and angry about it when they rebuke it. Theres a lot of aspects about his character that line up with Lucifer, not perfectly mind you, but in the context of the films where there is a large focus on religions, it tracks that he falls into this part of the story to a degree. He removes himself from service and trys to destroy the world and make it his own. Its not a perfect analogy, but I feel like theres something there. At least thats how Ive always seen it.

    • @LegoJunk128
      @LegoJunk128 Před rokem +18

      I think that comparison works perfectly! especially since Neo is basically Jesus, having Smith be Lucifer fits like peanut butter and jelly Lol

    • @onuhrita5009
      @onuhrita5009 Před rokem +1

      Nice analogy

    • @JaySheer
      @JaySheer Před rokem +4

      I never made that connection. Brilliant!

    • @primusro
      @primusro Před rokem +6

      That's actually a damn good analogy. What makes this character even more scarier than Lucifer though it's that it starts out as a simple man, not a god, which makes him very relatable. It's one of the very few villains in cinematography that I look at and I go "I understand you". It scares me that as much as I think I'm a kind and loyal person, if I would be annoyed out of mind for centuries and suddenly given immense power, I might very well not use it for good.

    • @DamienDarkside
      @DamienDarkside Před rokem +8

      One of the Siblings has some degree in religious studies, the other has a degree in Philosophy. Thomas "Neo" Anderson is Jesus* who sacrificed himself for humanity, Trinity is Mary Magdalene who saw his death and resurrection, Morpheus is John the Baptist, the Agents are the High Priests who condemned, and Smithy is Pontius Pilate but evil af. Then the ship's name is one of the kings of Babylon, the place Zion is so obvious I won't put more details in. Luci also works for Smith too, wouldn't doubt it if they wanted to insert a bit of that as well.
      The first Matrix movie is literally "Plato's Allegory of the Cave but with Gun Jesus".
      *His full name is a breakdown too. Thomas = Doubting Thomas as Neo wasn't aware of "himself". Neo = New. Anderson literally means "Son of Anders" which derives from greek "man" to mean "son of man". His name literally says "Doubting New Son of Man" as he only finds his way well.. when he "knows thyself" like the Oracle (-of Delphi-) told him. Dude is Jesus.

  • @MC---
    @MC--- Před rokem +96

    I never really considered Agent Smith to be terrifying. It was a great performance. Methodical and relentless sure, but not terrifying.

    • @SirMattomaton
      @SirMattomaton Před rokem +20

      He's not "terrifying" in the traditional monster sense. He's not terrifying in the "he a big, ugly, strong, and deadly monster" thing. It's like the "uncanny valley" sort of uneasiness. He something that LOOKS human, but his mannerisms and motivations absolutely and coldly inhuman.

    • @yankeery12
      @yankeery12 Před rokem +7

      @@SirMattomaton I don't see him as terrifying either. Not even in your stated sense. We don't all interpret things the same way as we watch. Lacking empathy and "normal" motivations doesn't make you inhuman. I have a friend who's incapable of expressing empathy, but he values my presence in a utilitarian way he describes as "valuable insight into topics of interest to him." If my presence is valued, what more can I ask for. With Agent Smith, he knows what he wants, and goes after it without hesitation. It's not terrifying, it's impressive. I see him as an antagonist, not a villain. Perspective flipped, he'd be the protagonist from my point of view. Without my friend, I think I would see him as you do, which is cool. People we know can change how we interpret stories:)

    • @SirMattomaton
      @SirMattomaton Před rokem +1

      @@yankeery12 It sounds like your friend is a high-functional psychopath (non-criminal obviously)... Be very careful with that friend of yours. High-functional psychopaths do tend to be charismatic, self driven, intelligently calculating, even very friendly. But they are master manipulators. I am willing to bet that friend of yours is very quick to anger when things don't go exactly their way. I say be careful because that person WILL turn on you and through you under a bus in a moment that strictly benefits them... without a *single* pang of remorse for it. They will dissolve years-long friendships and relationships if it benefits them in a moment, or if they think they have nothing more to gain from it in their personal quest for self engrandisement. They are calculating but, also neurotic narcissists with absolutely no sense of loyalty or deep connections to anyone. I have personally seen such people go from being in a happy marriage (newly weds) to divorcing them within weeks for someone "better"... and have absolutely no idea how bad that makes them look to others. All in the name of their self image.

    • @thomasbravado
      @thomasbravado Před rokem

      @@yankeery12 Smith only did what he was programmed to do. He's just like Neo in that he thought he was rebelling against the system when in fact he was only fulfilling his intended purpose. In his case, it was to act as the cataclysmic system crash described by the Architect which would eliminate humanity inside the Matrix by turning everyone into a copy of himself.

    • @whatisahandle221
      @whatisahandle221 Před rokem

      @@thomasbravado - I see Agent Smith as initially just a machine attempt at a very advanced Agent, meant specifically to infiltrate & bring down Zion. He’s a wild-shot, dice role of a new, unique Agent, given extra resources, guile, smarts, strategic thinking, and leadership over other Agents in his mission for catching Morpheus and getting the key codes to Zion.
      (I even wonder whether his machine-given mission was not originally Zion but just to bring a tighter control on the infiltrating, hacker humans, and perhaps he then extrapolated that base mission into “destroying Zion will stop the hackers for good!”)
      However, after Neo dismantles/kills him, parts of Neo and Agent Smith merge or exchange. Smith not only gains a kind of special ability from Neo-(either inherently, as the one, or perhaps accidentally, from the “replication” incident just before he was freed?)-, but he is also “freed” from the constraints of his direct programming/machine world mission & control, and instead, he is given “free will.” Problem is, his free will is to now try to bring down both the Matrix and the humans; I assume this is the leftover of his programming as a hunting, decimating algorithm, set to bring order and control to the uncontrolled humans, in and out of the matrix.

  • @heyheytaytay
    @heyheytaytay Před rokem +1

    His enunciation makes me think of Chris Hanson. I fully expect while watching the Matrix for Smith to tell Neo to "have a seat, please" and "what are you doing here?"

  • @mekiherring2088
    @mekiherring2088 Před 15 dny +5

    who's here after the muliversus trailer

  • @SpiritLife
    @SpiritLife Před rokem +29

    The way he elongated certain words and spoke with an odd canter was off-putting. Little details like that add up to turn a good performance into a great performance

  • @starwarsroo2448
    @starwarsroo2448 Před rokem +8

    I still say “have you ever stood and stared at it”whenever I look out of a window

  • @princesssmileyface91
    @princesssmileyface91 Před rokem +1

    Agent smith, looks so simple, but Hugo made a simple man in a suit look so terrifying.

  • @The_Real_EJL
    @The_Real_EJL Před 11 dny +1

    I always saw the duality of Neo and Agent Smith like this, mainly in the first movie
    Neo was struggling with what his role would be, and what it would mean to others
    Smith was struggling with his already predetermined role, and what it meant to himself

  • @FinancialShinanigan
    @FinancialShinanigan Před rokem +48

    We need a tier list for the Most Terrifying Villains In Film History

    • @KirillEnin27
      @KirillEnin27 Před rokem +2

      1) Joker
      2) Darth Vader
      3) Thanos
      4) Jigsaw
      5) Hannibal Lecter
      6) Ghostface
      7) Freddy Krueger
      8) Jason Voorhees
      9) T-1000
      10) Tony Montana
      11) Commodus
      12) Davy Jones
      13) Magneto
      14) Norman Stansfield
      15) Agent Smith
      16) Norman Bates
      17) Voldemort
      18) Sauron
      19) Nurse Ratched
      20) Alex De Large

    • @JayCity10
      @JayCity10 Před rokem +1

      Great list. I have a top ten list of underrated villains.
      1. Johnny Ringo from Tombstone
      2. Eric Qualan from Cliffhanger
      3. Nino Brown from New Jack City
      4. Cam'ron from Paid N Full
      5. Bricktop from Snatch
      6. Lil Z from City of God
      7. Sgt Waters from A Soldier's Story
      8. Col. Jessup from A Few Good Men
      9. God from In Too Deep
      10. Edward Norton from Primal Fear.

    • @meta7gear
      @meta7gear Před rokem

      @@KirillEnin27 Tell us you've never seen No Country for Old Men without telling us you've never seen No Country for Old Men

    • @holliswilliams8426
      @holliswilliams8426 Před rokem

      @@KirillEnin27 ........no. Lol.

    • @mnArqal93
      @mnArqal93 Před rokem

      @@KirillEnin27 I dont know all, agree with some, but disagree with a couple. Although, yes, horror villains are scary, doesn't make them great villains though.
      Magneto is not terrifying, he just wanted a world where mutants were accepted and could live freely. He wouldn't have been a villain if that wasn't the problem. His actions were bad, but his motives were completely reasonable.
      And MCU Thanos is just a complete moron. Once his goal is revealed he becomes a joke. But before that reveal, yeah he's quite intimidating.
      Most "terrifying" villains are stupid once they've revealed their reasons. Which is why villains like Smith's motive actually sound reasonable, despite his actions.

  • @Mixinnitup
    @Mixinnitup Před rokem +19

    The "I must be free" speech gives me chills. Smith is a machine with genuine humanity who absolutely despises humans. We get the sense he's different from the rest and it's haunting... And Weaving was the PERFECT actor for it.

  • @sctkarter1111
    @sctkarter1111 Před rokem +1

    I remember growing up with these movies and every time agent Smith entered the screen you just knew some shit was about to go down. The mere sight of him was intimidating

  • @Glasher1
    @Glasher1 Před rokem +7

    7:44 That poor confused soul.

  • @Elvirabg
    @Elvirabg Před rokem +8

    The matrix is one of my favorite movies of all time! I'm so glad that you are making a video about it, super unexpected but incredibly refreshing

  • @TheGentlemanScholar
    @TheGentlemanScholar Před rokem +14

    He's one of my favorite screen villains...

  • @Mumbles_
    @Mumbles_ Před 11 měsíci

    I just discovered your page and I love it ! Big fan

  • @elishuac3221
    @elishuac3221 Před rokem +3

    Now I gotta go back and watch the trilogy again…

  • @Jacob-ht7im
    @Jacob-ht7im Před rokem +10

    I never thought of Agent Smith as the head agent but it makes total since. This is why I love this channel. Delving deep into the psyche of a villain or hero and explaining what makes them tick. Thank you for your videos.

    • @Hopscotchlemonadespritz
      @Hopscotchlemonadespritz Před rokem +2

      He's never explicitly described as the head agent. I missed that too. However, it's clear he's more powerful, as Nerdtastic claims.

  • @llptg1016
    @llptg1016 Před rokem +4

    Weaving as Agent Smith is definitely one of my favorite cinematic performances of all time.

  • @Aihiospace
    @Aihiospace Před rokem +2

    I never saw Agent Smith as a terrifying character, more like one of the most hilarious villains ever - and in the best possible way: they really got the balance exactly right in the first Matrix movie, avoiding the clichéd thriller/horror/dystopian sci-fi elements and keeping everything slightly on a playful and mind-opening note. Agent Smith is definitely one of greatest villains ever, and that's thanks to Hugo Weaving as well as the scriptwriters/filmmakers.

  • @TheMrFishnDucks
    @TheMrFishnDucks Před rokem +1

    Awesome movie. Great villain. Nice video. Keep up the good work.

  • @Numba003
    @Numba003 Před rokem +21

    That monologue of Smith's in the first Matrix is a modern classic villain performance. It's my favorite part of the movie. Thank you for this video on his quietly powerful menace.
    Stay well out there everybody, and God bless you, friends. ✝️ :)

  • @gingerkid1048
    @gingerkid1048 Před rokem +8

    I always marvelled more at the performance because the only movie I knew Weaving for at the time was Pricilla Queen of the Desert and while there’s a small through line between Tig and Smith it blew my mind.

    • @wilmalensink9278
      @wilmalensink9278 Před rokem +2

      My favourite line from Pricilla Queen of the Desert was: "Don't send any money now."

  • @user_name_redacted
    @user_name_redacted Před 8 měsíci +1

    I always loved how the agents' green suits made them look like they're holographic projections of the green code around them

  • @asmith7876
    @asmith7876 Před rokem +2

    One of my favorite characters in any movie ever, and he’s an incredible actor.

  • @austinhannemann2615
    @austinhannemann2615 Před rokem +9

    Totally agree that he is one of the most scary and thought-provoking villains

  • @Eralen00
    @Eralen00 Před rokem +6

    He's terrifying because it's kinda hard to argue with his assessment of humanity. "You're a disease" "you go somewhere and use up all the resources and then move on to somewhere else" but is he wrong though?

    • @JamesRDavenport
      @JamesRDavenport Před rokem

      Yes he is. We do migrate. We can act like viruses, this is partially true. But for everything we destroy we can also build and repair and we do this as well.
      Ironic that it is Smith who in the end is the virus and Neo the cure.

    • @KNullHypothesis
      @KNullHypothesis Před rokem +2

      It's just a very extremist view of something much more complex than that, so yeah you can definitely make a counter point to that. One glaring issue is the very question of what intelligent life is supposed to be. Should intelligent life just sit on its back and watch everything go by without advancing forward? You see, greed is not the only reason humans take so many resources. It's also because of our curiosity and the want for evolution, technological and eventually biological too. Then there's soemthing to consider: if resources are just sitting there and aren't being used by anyone else, what is the point of them to begin with? Lesser evolved life forms obviously won't know what to do with them either. There is a difference between unnecessary cruelty and giving a meaning for one's existence. Both of which happen, but neither of which should be boiled down to one or the other.
      I find it's easy to agree with such a reductionist view when it comes from a villain because we want to empathise with them, to understand how they got to where they are and to confirm to ourselves, that they are human and have redeeming qualities about them. Because we see ourselves in their image, so it's comforting if they can be redeemed in some way. The other reason is, it's okay to self loathe because in most people's eyes, that's fair and is not affecting anyone but you. Self criticism has always been an integral part of humans and it seems like a wise perspective to take.
      The error that many make however, is that these villains are still villains for a reason. They take these extremist views on certain subjects and go with them to the end of their lives. They often fail to see a grey area where there is plenty, and instead go ahead with the confirmation bias of black and white.
      In that way, many people are actually similar to villains, except they either prohibit themselves from doing evil due to a moral code, or simply lack the will to act on these impulsive thoughts

  • @44godson
    @44godson Před 19 dny +1

    Amazing breakdown 👏🏾

  • @bradmenpes809
    @bradmenpes809 Před rokem +1

    A hero - and a film - is often defined by the strength of the villain. Weaving's performance elevates Neo - and The Matrix - to iconic status.

  • @jakelawson1
    @jakelawson1 Před rokem +3

    I cannot believe that Weaving's cadence wasn't directly lifted from Carl Sagan. The similarity is uncanny.

    • @Hopscotchlemonadespritz
      @Hopscotchlemonadespritz Před rokem +1

      Cannot say whether or not it was and I haven't seen an interview of Weaving speaking about the role. If it's there, it's not so openly claimed as Stellan Skarsgard's inspiration for their portrayal of Baron Harkonnen or Christian Bale's for Patrick Bateman, to give some notable examples.

  • @andreasplosky8516
    @andreasplosky8516 Před rokem +23

    "What Makes Agent Smith One Of The Most Terrifying Villains In Film History"
    Because deep down we know he is right.

    • @benjaminoechsli1941
      @benjaminoechsli1941 Před rokem +5

      Humanity is deeply, intrinsically flawed. It is how we respond to that fact that makes all the difference. Do we reach for a better tomorrow like Neo, or declare humanity beyond saving like Smith?

    • @andreasplosky8516
      @andreasplosky8516 Před rokem +1

      @@benjaminoechsli1941 Yes, I do agree, but When you look at the behavior of the human killer ape, it seems to me we make no progress at all. We only make technological progress by the grace of a few highly intelligent humans, but the rest.... Just look at us, look at the happenings in the world.
      In the company of non-humans, I would feel ashamed to say I am a human. We are such a miserable, disgraceful bunch.

    • @beansworth5694
      @beansworth5694 Před rokem +3

      Things in art that make us uncomfortable don't only disconcert us because they reveal *the* truth about us; they make us uncomfortable because they show us a perspective that is threatening. Nothing is broken beyond repair, it's just a matter of at what point do we decide the pain of trying to fix it is worth more than the potential of it being restored, or reinvented.

    • @lisaspikes4291
      @lisaspikes4291 Před rokem +1

      The speech about humans being a virus is one of the most amazing things I’ve heard in a movie! It’s so true. And scary.

    • @user-qe7bt9dz1l
      @user-qe7bt9dz1l Před rokem

      @@benjaminoechsli1941 Humanity is only flawed because we don’t know everything. Our flaws aren’t absolute.

  • @glitchguy0920
    @glitchguy0920 Před rokem

    Great video on Smith, well explained and made it easy to take into my mind. Thanks. Javier Bardem in No country for old men and The grabber from The Black Phone.

  • @Ryanizer1000
    @Ryanizer1000 Před rokem

    Wonderful video, one that I give a rather rare comment to for it's on-point analysis

  • @Doofwarrior88
    @Doofwarrior88 Před rokem +4

    The movie score from the interrogation scene is one of the best scores. Sounds that mimic a Machine reving up. Totally awesome

  • @justinwest5166
    @justinwest5166 Před rokem +3

    When he showed the picture of the wachowskis I died lmao bc I forgot they transitioned

  • @BrokenOcktive2
    @BrokenOcktive2 Před rokem +3

    *for "most terrifying villains" I would STILL after ALL this time say that Fender from the movie "Cyborg" was the most terrifying villain I have ever seen.*

  • @bluestrife28
    @bluestrife28 Před rokem +2

    This never hit me before but he reminds me a lot of Seymour in FFX; sick of the cycle, wants out, and willing to take the whole world down with himself.

  • @kevinquinn7645
    @kevinquinn7645 Před rokem +4

    Hugh Weaving owned the late 90s / early 2000s with roles in four franchises: The Matrix, The Lord of the Rings, Transformers and the MCU. If you look at his filmography there are a lot of projects that begin with The.

    • @holliswilliams8426
      @holliswilliams8426 Před rokem

      Lots and lots of stories start with ''the'', even more in other languages where abstract nouns are preceded by ''the'', for example ''el amor en los tiempos del cólera'' which is called ''love in the time of cholera'' in English

  • @VarjoPira
    @VarjoPira Před rokem +7

    Hugo Weaving. One of the best actors of his generation.

  • @TheFos88
    @TheFos88 Před rokem

    Great take man. Only thing for me personally that I would add for my own experience loving this trilogy so much is that he "terrifies" me for these reasons you've brought up, but also because a lot of his greatest lines/statements are undeniably true to the reality of everything we know.
    I mean I suppose that is covered in this video if you read between the lines here and there, but I feel it has to be bluntly said. I was maybe 16-18 when the first came out and loved/followed the franchise all the way till now, and as I've grown older, though I am still in many ways a rebellious spirit, I have agreed more and more with some of Smith's beliefs. Like I'm a mix of the foundations of both Neo and Smith, and really that in-between spot bleeds over into many aspects of my life like politics, spirituality, philosophy, etc.

  • @Sly88Frye
    @Sly88Frye Před rokem +1

    It really helps a lot that Hugo Weaving does such a great job portraying Agent Smith.

  • @luggystykz
    @luggystykz Před rokem +6

    Respect to Jonathan Groff too. IMO he was no Weaving, who could be. But he did bring his own charm and confidence to the character, sort of a nice reinterpretation.

    • @Sekir80
      @Sekir80 Před rokem +3

      He lost me when started screaming like a child. It would have been much much better to see a calm "Smith" and watching Neo realize who he's against.

    • @luggystykz
      @luggystykz Před rokem +1

      @@Sekir80 Smith going a bit unhinged isn't totally out of character. During his fight with Neo at the end of Revelations he's nuts. For most of Resurrections he's calm and collected, from my memory it's pretty much just his awakening in which he raises his voice.

    • @Sekir80
      @Sekir80 Před rokem +1

      @@luggystykz Revolutions, yes! Maybe I should just shut my mouth, I saw these films way back in time, I haven't been able to recall the third movie's title but was sure it wasn't Revelations.
      The 4th one, I really need to keep it shut. For me, that was a disaster.

    • @luggystykz
      @luggystykz Před rokem +1

      @@Sekir80 Yeah Revolutions, my mistake. I didn't mind that film to be honest, and I rewatched the trilogy fairly recently, might be worth you giving them another go?

    • @Sekir80
      @Sekir80 Před rokem +2

      @@luggystykz Another go? 1st: for sure. Next two: yea, why not. 4th: No, thanks. :)
      I have not pinpointed the reason why 4th did not have a good feeling for me. Probably the new setting is not really my liking, the story lacked substance, the visuals were kinda average. Like, if i was watching a Matrix clone from 2000 after the original's great success. It just lacks. In everything.
      There were good stuff in it, to be clear!

  • @dougpool4730
    @dougpool4730 Před rokem +3

    Hey Hugo. Good job! 👍👍👍

  • @wotsthis8148
    @wotsthis8148 Před rokem

    wow this character is so underrated just cuz no one ever talks about him but of course here comes this astounding channel with a whole video Yay

  • @pg.travels
    @pg.travels Před 15 dny +2

    I hope getting Neo's Matrix name incorrect was deliberate to drive comments....

  • @Mr_Case_Time
    @Mr_Case_Time Před rokem +5

    I think the villain from the first season of True Detective deserves a video. He’s basically the worst evil personified. I don’t want to get into names and such out of respect for people that haven’t seen it yet.

    • @hepzibah4573
      @hepzibah4573 Před rokem

      thank you for not spoiling something. It is appreacieated.

  • @danielnelson85
    @danielnelson85 Před rokem +22

    Smith is all of us. Aware of the Matrix around us, aware that we're all its agents, and absolutely unable to do a damn thing about it. His resentment, his disgust, his rage... it all perfectly encapsulates humanity's assessment of itself. It all rings so terribly true. It's a world full of Smiths. Neo? An anomaly. A ripple in the system, nothing more.

  • @chaosmastermind
    @chaosmastermind Před rokem +11

    I love the sheer uncaring contempt he has when he says "Mr. Anderson". Like what you would say to a customer that is being annoying and you'll never see again after this interaction. Someone you are forced to deal with for a moment, but you literally don't care about them or what happens to them. In fact, it's an annoyance to even deal with them at all. He saw Neo as just another annoyance to deal with and nothing more. Like a fly to be swatted as he goes about his day. Also there is always something scary about a cold-clinical mind that cares nothing for morality, emotion, mercy, or humanity in general. The computer will calculate what needs to be done, and avoiding our extinction isn't necessarily part of that equation.

  • @SynnekoNya
    @SynnekoNya Před rokem +2

    The weird irony of it all is your not wrong about your descriptions about the human desire when it comes to the knowledge and what we are forced to endure, the amount of things that race through out heads but are forced to endure because we do not have the power to do anything about it, no matter how many people you get to follow you or how much hell you think you're raising, without knowledge of a grander scheme... you're still powerless.

  • @novembercherry4
    @novembercherry4 Před rokem +3

    My favorite villain of all time for sure.

  • @jackcarlos
    @jackcarlos Před rokem +3

    I'd like a full hour-long Matrix breakdown please!

    • @just1morejonjr
      @just1morejonjr Před rokem +2

      Check out the channel 'matrix explained'. Even though since the release of the last film they've completely stop making videos up until that point they've got hundreds of in-depth videos and breakdowns that you may find interesting

    • @hughcaldwell1034
      @hughcaldwell1034 Před rokem +1

      Sophie from Mars also has an excellent 2+ hour video on the sequels.

  • @gregdavidl647
    @gregdavidl647 Před rokem

    Excellent video

  • @alostfraggle
    @alostfraggle Před 11 měsíci +1

    Smith is portrayed as your Ego. To fight your Ego would only be surpassed by a bigger Ego. Which, in itself is terrifying..