The Matrix Reloaded - actors, characters and roles

All actors and their roles in the film "The Matrix Reloaded"
The Matrix Reloaded (2003)
Timing: 2:18 (138 min)
The Matrix Reloaded - TMDB rating
7.071/10
11840
The Matrix Reloaded - Kinopoisk rating
7.743/10
289852
The Matrix Reloaded - IMDB rating
7.2/10
668000

Actors and characters

Photo Hugo Weaving #10160Photo Hugo Weaving #10161Photo Hugo Weaving #10162Photo Hugo Weaving #10163

Hugo Weaving

Hugo Weaving
Character Agent Smith
Photo Gloria Foster #19394

Gloria Foster

Gloria Foster
Character The Oracle
Photo Monica Bellucci #13638Photo Monica Bellucci #13639Photo Monica Bellucci #13640Photo Monica Bellucci #13641

Monica Bellucci

Monica Bellucci
Character Persephone
Photo Harry Lennix #18165

Harry Lennix

Harry Lennix
Character Commander Lock
Photo Lambert Wilson #7374Photo Lambert Wilson #7375Photo Lambert Wilson #7376Photo Lambert Wilson #7377

Lambert Wilson

Lambert Wilson
Character The Merovingian
Photo Randall Duk Kim #24545Photo Randall Duk Kim #24546

Randall Duk Kim

Randall Duk Kim
Character Keymaker
Photo Nona Gaye #19215Photo Nona Gaye #19216

Nona Gaye

Nona Gaye
Character Zee
Photo Anthony Zerbe #38542Photo Anthony Zerbe #38543Photo Anthony Zerbe #71394

Anthony Zerbe

Anthony Zerbe
Character Councillor Hamann
Photo Daniel Bernhardt #10554Photo Daniel Bernhardt #10555Photo Daniel Bernhardt #10556Photo Daniel Bernhardt #327429

Daniel Bernhardt

Daniel Bernhardt
Character Agent Johnson
Photo Helmut Bakaitis #18905

Helmut Bakaitis

Helmut Bakaitis
Character The Architect
Photo David Kilde #32024

David Kilde

David Kilde
Character Agent Jackson
Photo Matt McColm #15692

Matt McColm

Matt McColm
Character Agent Thompson
Photo Collin Chou #38539Photo Collin Chou #38540Photo Collin Chou #38541

Collin Chou

Collin Chou
Character Seraph
Photo Neil Rayment #209110Photo Neil Rayment #209111Photo Neil Rayment #209112
Neil Rayment
Character Twin #1
Photo Adrian Rayment #209113Photo Adrian Rayment #209114Photo Adrian Rayment #209115
Adrian Rayment
Character Twin #2
Photo Don Battee #88831
Don Battee
Character Vector
Photo Valerie Berry #107394

Valerie Berry

Valerie Berry
Character Priestess
Photo Steve Bastoni #114725Photo Steve Bastoni #114726

Steve Bastoni

Steve Bastoni
Character Soren
Photo Ian Bliss #24826
Ian Bliss
Character Bane
Liliana Bogatko
Character Old Woman at Zion
Photo Michael Budd #112660
Michael Budd
Character Zion Controller
Stoney Burke
Character Bike Carrier Driver
Kelly Butler
Character Ice
Photo Josephine Byrnes #209116Photo Josephine Byrnes #209117Photo Josephine Byrnes #209118

Josephine Byrnes

Josephine Byrnes
Character Zion Virtual Control Operator
Noris Campos
Character Woman with Groceries
Paul Cotter
Character Corrupt
Photo Marlene Cummins #209119Photo Marlene Cummins #209120Photo Marlene Cummins #209121
Marlene Cummins
Character Another Old Woman at Zion
Attila Davidhazy
Character Young Thomas Anderson (12)
Photo Montaño Rain #209128Photo Montaño Rain #209129Photo Montaño Rain #209130
Montaño Rain
Character Young Thomas Anderson (8)
Austin Galuppo
Character Young Thomas Anderson (4)
Nicandro Thomas
Character Young Thomas Anderson (2)
Photo Essie Davis #38547Photo Essie Davis #38548

Essie Davis

Essie Davis
Character Maggie
Terrell Dixon
Character Wurm
Photo Nash Edgerton #11910

Nash Edgerton

Nash Edgerton
Character Security Guard #5
Photo David Franklin #103757
David Franklin
Character Maitre D'
Photo Daryl Heath #209122Photo Daryl Heath #209123Photo Daryl Heath #209124
Daryl Heath
Character A.P.U. Escort
Photo Roy Jones Jr. #37896
Roy Jones Jr.
Character Ballard
Peter Lamb
Character Colt
Photo Nathaniel Lees #22069Photo Nathaniel Lees #22070
Nathaniel Lees
Character Mifune
Tony Lynch
Character Computer Room Technician
Alima Ashton-Sheibu
Character Girl (Link's Niece)
Joshua Mbakwe
Character Boy (Link's Nephew)
Chris Mitchell
Character Power Station Guard
Ray Anthony
Character Power Station Guard
Steve Morris
Character Computer Room Guard
Photo Tory Mussett #62733Photo Tory Mussett #62734
Tory Mussett
Character Beautiful Woman at Le Vrai
Photo Rene Naufahu #38552
Rene Naufahu
Character Zion Gate Operator
Photo Robyn Nevin #38553
Robyn Nevin
Character Councillor Dillard
Photo David William No #16015
David William No
Character Cain
Photo Genevieve OPhoto Genevieve O

Genevieve O'Reilly

Genevieve O'Reilly
Character Officer Wirtz
Photo Socratis Otto #82994
Socratis Otto
Character Operator (Vigilant)
Photo Rupert Reid #38556
Rupert Reid
Character Lock's Lieutenant
Photo Cornel West #38565Photo Cornel West #38566

Cornel West

Cornel West
Character Councillor West
Photo David Roberts #38557

David Roberts

David Roberts
Character Roland
Photo Shane C. Rodrigo #334025
Shane C. Rodrigo
Character Ajax
Photo Nick Scoggin #124481

Nick Scoggin

Nick Scoggin
Character "Gidim" Truck Driver
Photo Kevin Scott #5554

Kevin Scott

Kevin Scott
Character 18 Wheel Trucker
Tahei Simpson
Character Binary
Photo Frankie Stevens #209131Photo Frankie Stevens #209132Photo Frankie Stevens #209133
Frankie Stevens
Character Tirant
Photo Gina Torres #38559Photo Gina Torres #38560Photo Gina Torres #38561Photo Gina Torres #38562

Gina Torres

Gina Torres
Character Cas
Andrew Valli
Character Police #1
Photo Andy Arness #44445

Andy Arness

Andy Arness
Character Police #2
Photo Steve Vella #209134Photo Steve Vella #209135Photo Steve Vella #209136Photo Steve Vella #209137
Steve Vella
Character Malachi
Photo Bernard White #38567

Bernard White

Bernard White
Character Rama-Kandra
Photo John Walton #9392
John Walton
Character Security Bunker Guard
Scott McLean
Character Security Bunker Guard #2
Photo Rick Shuster #11286

Rick Shuster

Rick Shuster
Character Pilot (uncredited)
Photo Tiger Hu Chen #85899

Tiger Hu Chen

Tiger Hu Chen
Character Merovingian's Thug (uncredited)
Photo Marcus Young #31536Photo Marcus Young #31537Photo Marcus Young #31538

Marcus Young

Marcus Young
Character Merovingian's Thug (uncredited)
Photo David Leitch #14541Photo David Leitch #14542Photo David Leitch #307370Photo David Leitch #319967

David Leitch

David Leitch
Character Merovingian's Thug (uncredited)
Photo Lachy Hulme #38549

Lachy Hulme

Lachy Hulme
Character Sparks (uncredited)

What's left behind the scenes

  • The film was banned in Egypt because it "incites belief in the religions on which it is based."
  • The film was entered into the Guinness Book of World Records as the "most widely released film," as it was released with 8,517 copies.
  • The actors' martial arts training began in November 2000 and lasted for 8 months.
  • The name Merovingian actually refers to the ruling elite of 7th-century France. It is also the name of one branch of the Gnostic church, as well as the supposed descendants of Jesus and Mary Magdalene, a name given to them by the Knights Templar.
  • The credits listing the film's creators and actors contain 1,943 names.
  • According to the contract, the Wachowskis were not to give any interviews to the media while working on the two sequels to "The Matrix".
  • During the production of the film, actress Carrie-Anne Moss broke her leg, Laurence Fishburne – his arm, and Hugo Weaving injured his cervical vertebra.
  • General Motors donated 300 vehicles for use in filming, and by the end, all 300 were wrecked.
  • The Zion fleet consisted of 12 ships, 10 of which are mentioned in the three Matrix films and the computer game "Enter the Matrix," and another 2 in conceptual artwork.
  • The fast-flowing green glyphs (characters) on computer screens are modified letters and numbers from the Japanese script "katakana".
  • Gloria Foster, the actress who played the Oracle in the first "Matrix," died of diabetes on September 29, 2001. By this time, almost all scenes with her participation for "The Matrix 2" had been filmed, however, material for "The Matrix 3" had not been shot, so she was replaced by Mary Alice.
  • Following the death of singer Aaliyah in a plane crash, who was supposed to play Zee, Link's wife, Nona Gaye – Marvin Gaye's daughter – was invited to take her place.
  • For his participation in the two sequels to "The Matrix," Keanu Reeves receives $30 million by contract, or 15% of the revenue from both installments.
  • The film was released in Russia on May 22, 2003, simultaneously in 157 cinemas.
  • Officially, the film premiered in Russia on May 22, 2003, but on the 21st, the film was shown for free at a presentation in Moscow and St. Petersburg of the new "Microsoft Windows Server 2003" server.
  • Lana and Lilly Wachowski’s fee – the directors and screenwriters of the film – was $10 million plus an unspecified share of the revenue from the two films.
  • ‘The Matrix Reloaded’ and ‘The Matrix Revolutions’ and, concurrently, the computer game ‘Enter the Matrix’ were created simultaneously between March 2001 and August 21, 2002.
  • The film was shot in the cities of Sydney and Redfern (Australia), as well as in Oakland (USA, California).
  • Lara Dutta was offered a role in two ‘Matrix’ sequels, but she declined because she did not like the script.
  • Keanu Reeves waived his share of ticket sales, amounting to approximately $38 million, after producers doubted the film would ever recoup the costs of the special effects.
  • The cost of special effects was $100 million.
  • The two highways mentioned in the film are numbered 101 and 303. The same numbers were used for Neo's apartment and the hotel room, respectively, in 'The Matrix' (1999).
  • Lana and Lilly Wachowski were offered the chance to direct 'Batman Begins' (2005), but they declined in order to make sequels to 'The Matrix'.
  • Since the Cadillac Escalade EXT had not yet been launched into production at the time of filming, General Motors was forced to add Cadillac fiberglass body parts to a Chevrolet Avalanche prototype to create the twins' car in the film.
  • During filming in downtown Oakland, all red and blue colors had to be removed, so all curbs along the sidewalks were repainted. Also, greenery or any other vegetation was not supposed to appear in the frame, so filming took place in winter before the trees sprouted leaves.
  • The role of Seraph was specifically written for Jet Li. After he declined the offer, the role was rewritten for Michelle Yeoh, but she also refused.
  • Laurence Fishburne, Jada Pinkett Smith, and Anthony Wong agreed to star in the film without reading the script.
  • The monitors in the Architect's room are identical to the monitors in the interrogation room in 'The Matrix' (1999).
  • Persephone's pistol is a COP .357. The same weapon is used by Leon Kowalski (Bryon James) in 'Blade Runner' (1982).
  • The Wachowskis offered the role of Persephone to Monica Bellucci after seeing 'Malèna' (2000).
  • In the fight scene between Neo and three Agents at the beginning of the film, Neo throws one of the Agents into a lamppost made by "Darrow Industries," which is a reference to the film's storyboard artist, Jeffrey Darrow.
  • Originally, the creators wanted to release "The Matrix Reloaded" and "The Matrix Revolutions" in theaters with a gap of weeks, not months.
  • As of January 1, 2009, "The Matrix Reloaded" was the highest-grossing R-rated film internationally, with $735,000,000 in box office revenue.
  • Samsung produced 10,000 mobile phones identical to the one in the film (model SPH-N270), which sold out quickly.
  • Sean Connery was initially slated to play the Architect, but he declined because he couldn't understand the concept of the film.
  • "Smith" literally means "blacksmith." The vehicle registration number of the car Smith drives to the meeting place of the rebels (the "I'm looking for Neo" scene) is IS5416, which seemingly references a quote from the Book of Isaiah, chapter 54, verse 16: "See, I have created the smith who blows the fire of coal and produces a weapon for its work—and I have created the destroyer to bring ruin."
  • The scene of Neo's fight with numerous copies of Agent Smith took 27 days to film. It involved both live actors and computer-generated imagery.
  • The 17-minute fight scene with Merovingian's entourage and the Twins' chase cost around $40 million. This includes the construction of a 1.4-mile, three-lane highway for the chase scene (after three months of filming the chase scene, the highway was demolished).
  • During filming in Australia, all traffic in Sydney was blocked for 4 hours with the agreement of local authorities. This was done to ensure safety during the filming of a scene with a helicopter flying over the city at an extremely low altitude. Not only was traffic blocked, but people were also evacuated from some skyscrapers.
  • The car in which Morpheus, Trinity, and Keymaker travel during the highway chase scene has the license plate number “DA 203.” In the Book of Daniel (Dan. 2:3), chapter 2, verse 3, we read: "And the king said to them, 'I had a dream, and my spirit is troubled; I desire to know the dream."
  • Filming of the car chase on the highway lasted about three months.
  • When Trinity hacks the computer at the power plant, she enters the password Z1ON0101. The hack is shown very realistically. Trinity uses a real existing program, Nmap version 2.54BETA25, designed for scanning remote access ports. At the address 10.2.22, the utility finds an open port used by the SSH service. Moreover, Trinity uses a real and quite well-known vulnerability of the SSH service, CRC32, for the attack. However, Trinity attacks the vulnerability with the sshnuke exploit, which is already a product of the director's imagination.
  • The red chair in which Morpheus sits, explaining the plan to access the Source, is the same chair in which Morpheus explained to Neo what the Matrix was in the first film.
  • The truck used in the car chase scene has “Big Endian Eggs” written on it, which is a reference to “Gulliver’s Travels”.
  • The film contains many references to the number 101.
  • In the underground garage where the film's heroes choose a car, many Cadillacs can be noticed, including a 1950s El Dorado and a 2004 XLR prototype.
  • Carrie-Anne Moss herself drove the motorcycle in some scenes during the highway chase.
  • It took Carrie-Anne Moss six months to achieve the perfect execution of the scorpion kick at the beginning of the film.
  • Lamberto Wilson's French accent, playing Merovingian, was deliberately exaggerated. Wilson speaks excellent English, but at the request of the directors, he spoke with a very strong French accent in the film.
  • When Neo fights the Smith clones, several unusual sound effects were used: at one point, you can hear the sound of falling dominoes; at the end of the fight, when Neo throws Smith into a crowd of his clones, you can hear the sound of a bowling ball knocking down pins.
  • During the fight between Neo and the Smith clones, there are four fully computer-generated scenes that did not involve a single live actor. The filmmakers used Sony HDR-900 High Definition cameras to scan images of Neo and Smith for the fight scene.
  • The Twins’ weapons are dangerous straight razors that have long fallen out of use.
  • Laurence Fishburne suggested that his character remove his glasses for the fight scene between Morpheus and the Agent on the roof of the truck, on the one hand, to remind viewers of Morpheus's confrontation with Agent Smith in the first film, and on the other – to more vividly emphasize his character’s vulnerability.
  • Initially, the car chase was planned to be filmed on the highway in Akron, Ohio. However, the filmmakers subsequently had to abandon this idea, as it would have taken at least an hour to stop traffic on the highway.
  • The film playing on TV, in the scene where Persephone shoots one of the Merovingian’s men, is “The Brides of Dracula” (1960). Monica Bellucci, who played Persephone, also played the Bride of Dracula in “Dracula” (1992), which also starred Keanu Reeves.
  • The viewer cannot hear Neo's alter ego's monologue on the monitors in the Architect's room, however, if you turn on the subtitles on the DVD, you can hear the following shouts: "You can't control me! I'll smear you into tiny pieces! I'll kill you! You can't make me, you old white bastard!"
  • Commander Locke is the only rebel with a name in the real world.
  • The idea that all programs are 'born' from the Source, an entity of pure light, and return to it after they have fulfilled their purpose is based on the Indian god Brahma.
  • In the Architect's room, scenes from "Barracks" (1992) are playing on many of the monitors.
  • During the highway chase scene, it is clearly visible that the cars flipping and crashing lack not only drivers but also some interior details.
  • At the 2-minute mark of the film, the guards are in a locker room with metal lockers lined up against the wall. In the next shot, the guards are already exiting a glass booth.
  • At the 2-minute mark of the film, Trinity jumps off a motorcycle mid-air and flies over lampposts, but in the next shot, after landing, the lampposts are in front of her.
  • At the 3-minute mark of the film, when Trinity jumps out of the window and starts shooting at the agent, her hair is neatly combed back. When she is hit by the agent’s bullet during the fall, her hair is already completely disheveled.
  • At the 11-minute mark of the film, when Neo kicks the agent into a lamppost, you can notice the agent covering his face with his hands in anticipation of the falling shade.
  • At the 28-minute mark of the film, when Neo apologizes and steps aside to greet Trinity, you can notice a decorative stone wall swaying behind him.
  • At the 42nd minute of the film, when Neo fights with Seraph, and their fight moves to a table, they knock a glass with chopsticks to the floor. When they jump to the next table, the glass with chopsticks reappears on the first table. Also, Neo and Seraph knock the glass off the second table twice.
  • At the 51st minute of the film, when Neo is sitting on a bench next to the Oracle, you can notice the word "One" painted on the fence opposite. When Agent Smith walks towards Neo in the next scene, this inscription is no longer on the wall.
  • At the 52nd minute of the film, when Neo is talking to Agent Smith, you can see the filming studio and studio lighting with a diffuser reflected in Smith's glasses.
  • During the fight between Neo and the copies of Agent Smith, which begins at the 54th minute of the film, it can be noticed that the actor Hugo Weaving is often replaced by stunt doubles wearing wigs. Also, after pushes and kicks, wigs fly off the heads of some of the doubles.
  • At the 56th minute of the film, a woman drops a grocery bag and transforms into an agent. When the bag falls to the ground, tomatoes and a box fall out. When, in the next scene, Smith turns the agent into his copy, and they walk towards the fight, stepping on one of the tomatoes, the box is already inside the bag.
  • At the 57th minute of the film, when Neo rips a metal pipe from the ground, a "No Smoking" sign hangs on the wall behind him. In the next scene, as he takes to the air, the sign disappears from the wall.
  • At the 106th minute of the film, when Agent Smith blocks the path of Neo, Morpheus, and Keymaker in the corridor, a reflection in his glasses reveals that no one is in the corridor except Smith.
  • For participating in two sequels to "The Matrix," Keanu Reeves receives $30 million or 15% of the box office takings for both films under his contract.
  • The fee for Lana and Lilly Wachowski – the directors and screenwriters of the films – is $10 million, plus an unspecified share of the revenue from the two movies.
  • "The Matrix Reloaded" and "The Matrix Revolutions," along with the computer game "Enter the Matrix," were created simultaneously between March 2001 and August 21, 2002.
  • Lara Dutta was offered a role in the two "Matrix" sequels, but she declined as she did not like the script.
  • The two highways mentioned in the film are numbered 101 and 303. These were the same numbers as Neo's apartment and hotel room, respectively, in "The Matrix" (1999).
  • Lana and Lilly Wachowski were offered the opportunity to direct "Batman Begins" (2005), but they declined to make the sequels to "The Matrix".
  • The monitors in the Architect's room are identical to the monitors in the interrogation room in "The Matrix" (1999).
  • Persephone's pistol is a COP .357. The same weapon is used by Leon Kowalski (Bryon James) in "Blade Runner" (1982).
  • The Wachowskis offered the role of Persephone to Monica Bellucci after watching "Malèna" (2000).
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