"The Animatrix" Kid's Story (TV Episode 2003) Poster

(TV Series)

(2003)

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7/10
A nice ending
rbverhoef25 October 2003
This is the ninth and last part of 'The Animatrix', a collection of animated short movies that tell us a little more about the world of 'The Matrix'. In this part a kid knows there is something out there like Neo knew in 'The Matrix'. During a class he is contacted by Neo (Keanu Reeves) and tries to run from the agents who arrive at the school building. This short is a nice ending for 'The Animatrix' with the first and therefor only appearance by Neo.
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7/10
See? He doesn't have to be annoying
TBJCSKCNRRQTreviews12 April 2009
The fourth of the Animatrix shorts, this is one of those of them that ties closely into the trilogy, specifically, the sequels. This provides the background for The Kid, seen in the second two movies, and he's genuinely not irritating in this(no, seriously). The concept is highly interesting, although, for obvious reasons, this should not be seen by anyone too likely to imitate it, anyone whose behavior is that easily influenced. The animation is well-done and quite interesting, with a style of limited motion in the drawings, and the camera being responsible for a lot of the movement, in a way that feels reminiscent of regular, live-action films. The atmosphere is impeccable, and the pace is spot-on throughout. The voice acting is great, Watson does well with what few lines he has, as do Anne-Moss and Reeves. The idea and execution of this are excellent, and this is a remarkable addition to the overall universe. This has a making of, shared with Detective Story, which is well-done and informative. It's 9 and a half minutes, same as the short itself. This has one disturbing aspect, nothing objectionable beyond that. I recommend this to any fan of The Matrix franchise and/or science fiction in general. 7/10
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7/10
raging against the machines
willsgb21 November 2008
Warning: Spoilers
one of two of the nine Animatrix shorts connected directly to the first movie sequel Reloaded, this explains what the kid pestering Neo in Zion was on about. It reveals his escape from the matrix, which involves him asking questions on his computer and getting a cryptic reply, black screen, green typing, like Neo's white rabbit chat in the Matrix. at school, his phone rings, and his teacher confronts him when he is told off but it rings a second time and he answers.

he is warned to escape, which he does, with some interesting slippery animation depicting him skateboarding through his school, chased by his teacher and a whole bunch of agents. he is cornered and climbs out of a window to the roof. the short began with the kid dreaming of a suicidal jump from a rooftop, which the kid performs after asserting his belief in Neo.

his funeral is attended by his teacher who talks of delusions and of the real world being a scary place to the kid. then the kid wakes in the real world as Neo and Trinity discuss his self substantiation and Neo tells the kid he saved himself when the kid tells Neo he saved him, something annoyingly repeated in Reloaded and Revolutions.

Keanu and Carrie voicing their characters add a welcome authenticity to the short, and the animation by Studio 4°C combines rubbery pencils and colours with seemingly real world, photo-realistic backgrounds, a dualistic reference to the distinction between the real world and the matrix, surely a consciously chosen style of animation for that purpose, if not then an interesting coincidence. Shinichiro Watanabe of cowboy bebop fame directs this worthy effort and matrix enthusiasts should enjoy the escapist fiction and revel in the truth of the kid's story.
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10/10
Impressive
dispet26 January 2004
some have commented that this is plot-light, and in some ways it is, but it doesnt need a plot. this episode of the animatrix is pure philosophy and lead in to a great character in the films. the key to overcoming reality in the matrix is to unlearn everything you know. if you can learn that gravity is meaningless, then it is meaningless, our minds hold total power. and if we can make ourselves believe that death is not the end....well.. brilliant philosophy, amazing, unique animation. great stuff.
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The best Animatrix short by far - absolutely stunning!
PlanecrazyIkarus12 June 2003
The Animatrix is a very entertaining, very interesting experience. But of all the short movies, this is simply the best.

What makes it so obviously superior? Is it the swishy-swooshy animation that is incredibly alive and dynamic? Is it the constant mood of bewilderment that seeps through the entire movie? Is it the subtle, yet suitable score? Or is it the story about the most exceptional character in the matrix universe so far?

Yup, thats what the story is about - in my eyes. It's not about Neo or Morpheus or Trinity or any of the other cool people we already know (though Neo and Trinity cameo) - it's about the least likely character, the annoying side kick from Reloaded who made some of the Zion scenes so awkward. Watch "Reloaded" without seeing this first, and you may not like his character, or his very presence in the movie, one little bit (I did not). Yet this touching short movie shows a totally different side to him, and hints quite strongly at a powerful relevance for the matrix universe - even if that is not capitalized upon in Reloaded or Revolutions, this character and his unique story have the potential of an own spin-off. Why? Well I won't spoil it, but the ending of the short is quite powerful, creating the ideal finale for a perfect short animated movie.

Stunning, absolutely stunning, and easily the best matrix-related merchandise you are likely to see this year!

10/10
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10/10
The only reason to watch "the Animatrix", is right here.
aptrapani18 January 2006
This animated short is genius, plain and simple. Personally, I find this to be one of the few anime cartoons that actually shows a high degree of talent, style, and originality. Honestly now, anime has become a copy of a copy, of a copy. But this, ladies and gentleman, pushes the limits of reality, looking quite real until they move at high speeds, where their bodies flow like wind and sway to whatever direction they moved. I really must say, I cannot find much wrong with this animation, even the voice acting was quite amazing (and I just loved it when the teacher said, "Mr. Popper").Just, I wish that a full animated English feature would be made in this art style, please, someone, anyone?
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6/10
No kidding.
CuriosityKilledShawn16 February 2012
There's not much plot to this Animatrix short, but the movies overcompensated for that so it's good to have a Matrix story sold on imagery and feeling.

Remember the overeager kid from The Matrix Revolutions? This is the story of how he freed himself from un-real world and woke up. He feels alone and alienated, wondering why his dreams feel more real than his waking world.

Cowboy Beebop director Shinichirô Watanabe uses abstract, experimental animation deliver the story. It's rough and features many pencil strokes, but it's good. Not the best Animatrix short, but worth watching.
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8/10
To rise you must fall Warning: Spoilers
I love the animation style and moody yet cool feel of Kid's Story. All of the human body movements look so beautifully realistic. Almost rotoscoped at times. It may be a tiny not relevant to the tiny plot thing, but a little detail that I really loved is the few seconds where the kid is eating his toast! It's such a charmingly ordinary mannerism in a situation which is far from that. There's not a whole lot to this short but it does add a touch of depth to the wide-eyed puppydog from the sequels, of which I much prefer to the arsy first one. I don't know if any Kid depthness was wanted, but it's still very interesting and one of the best Animatricees. I never found the character annoying, just weird. Unlike a few others, or so it would seem, I didn't find the leap of faith at the end to be grim. It was quite uplifting, to me. He's simultaneously ascending as he's descending. There's a quaint little paradox there. I thought it was a really powerful and well done concept. It brings to my mind the dream where you're falling and you wake up just as you land in your body. I don't get how the Kid could have left a body behind to be buried. Shouldn't he have just disappeared when he, "died?" And it contradicts the rule that says if you die in the Matrix it's for real. Of course, he may have been so focused on his belief that he was somehow able to transcend all that. It makes you wonder if anyone who commits suicide in the Matrix wakes up in the real world. Hmm...how terribly enthralling.
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7/10
Plunge
Polaris_DiB30 November 2008
Warning: Spoilers
This is a bizarre one. The animation, especially of the fall, is intensely surreal though not necessarily to a dream-like effect. It's hard in some places to get one's bearings while viewing the movie, but that's kind of the point and a lot of the character design and movement is purposefully chaotic and fractured.

It's been a while since I watched the Matrix sequels, but I'm pretty sure "Popper" is the kid who appears as Neo's little fanboy in the movies. If that's the case, it's neat to see his story, and bizarre to think about how it may have come to place. On the other hand, I can't help but get giggles thinking that some extreme Matrix fans with no sense of reality could use this story as direction and try to jump off of high buildings to escape the virtual world. On a more serious note, I'm glad that hasn't happened, because it's not like we need another reason to blame movies for stupid people's actions.

Enough of what isn't. What is is that this animation is a really neat speculation on alternative ways people can come to escape The Matrix, alongside of the other short featured in somewhat of the same style, "The World Record." --PolarisDiB --PolarisDiB
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8/10
The Annoying Kid :)
jack_o_hasanov_imdb19 December 2021
It was interesting that it was short and animated at the same time. The Matrix is a series of movies with a very interesting subject and I love it. This one was great too. The boy in the movie was a bit annoyed to me, but his back story was interesting. Brave kid ;)
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6/10
you are not alone
mickeythechamp20 November 2023
Kid's story is a good short that sadly doesn't have a lot going for it. It's completely fine in its own married and an interesting idea in terms of exploring themes, but it doesn't really have more than that. Top that off with a pretty weird art style, and you overall have a short that speaks to me on some levels and not on others.

A kid is trying to find out what's wrong with his dreams. A mysterious person called Neo is alluring him.

I don't know if I like the animation here. The way people look and move here dosn´t look good to me. It's a bit too wild. At the same time, the drawn feel of the short is interesting, but it clashes with the backgrounds too much. The mixture of art styles once again affect my enjoyment of the Animatrx shorts.

This is a great short about mental health and I guess a hit against Matrix extremist. The short follows a kid that clearly has some issues and are looking for a way out or some sort of higher reason in a meaningless world. I wish the short used more time on the kid and his backstory to really make the story stronger. Course, there isn't a lot going on here. Except for a cool action sequence towards the end, not much happens here.

While it can feel a bit eventless and the art style did not land with me, Kid's story is still a great short with some great subjects and a grim yet uplifting finale depending on how you read it.
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6/10
Better than the rest
Horst_In_Translation14 July 2015
Warning: Spoilers
This is one of the most popular segments of the Animatrix and this may be due to the fact that several actors from the live action movies do voice acting in here. The protagonist is a boy who seems to feel that something isn't right. Before he gets killed, he manages to get out of the Matrix. There are quite a few parallels here between Neo very early in the first Matrix film and our hero here. Just like the other Animatrix segments, this was written by the Wachowskis and the director here is Shinichirô Watanabe. I do not think the 15 minutes stated here are correct, this was certainly closer, maybe around 9 minutes. I enjoyed watching this one because it actually had a real connection to the live action "Matrix" films unlike most of the others. One of my favorites from the series and I recommend it.
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5/10
Stylish if insensitive
briancham199415 June 2020
The best part of this short film was the sketchy and unstable art style that makes everything seem shimmering and flying by. It really adds to the atmosphere of uncertainty. But as for "insensitive", I am referring to the idea that suicide was the answer. And by the rules of the series, wouldn't that have killed him in the real world as well?
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Stylish but plot-light
bob the moo15 June 2003
A teenager has dreams of falling that feel more real than his actual life. He turns to the internet for answers and receives some cryptic replies via his PC. In school his mobile phone rings despite being turned off, he answers to be told by Neo that `they know you know and are coming for you'. The kid looks out the window to see men in dark suits coming for him and immediately flees on his skateboard.

In Reloaded there is a scene where Neo and Trinty return to Zion and are greeted by an eager kid who offers to carry Neo's stuff because Neo `saved his life'. I didn't understand who this was when I saw the film and it add to the appearance of a film with lots of loose ends it doesn't tie up. Only later did I see this short and realise that the `loose end' was actually a connection to this short. This is an interesting way to build a wider world around a film but when watching Reloaded I only felt it weakened the actual film. Anyway – the short.

The film is stylish and interesting. Plot wise it is similar to the discovery of Neo in the first film but it is done on miniature here. The main attraction is the visual design. The skateboard escape is all blurs and speed while the falling is nicely done and beautifully animated. It may not win any points for having a gripping plot but visually it worked for me.

The novelty of having Reeves and Moss supply the voices to their characters is just that – a novelty, they only have a few lines and I wouldn't have known it was them but for the cast list.

Overall this is an stylish if wafer thin short that is interesting because it supports the Matrix Reloaded. Before I saw this I had taken this strand of the story to be another area left unanswered by the film, having seen this I understand what it was about and am only left in doubt about the wisdom of doing it this way.
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5/10
Pushing the envelope?
TheOtherFool4 August 2004
If the original Matrix got any criticism at all it was because of it's violence. After the shooting at Littleton, things only got worse (but then again, who wasn't blamed?). Kid's Story, one of the 9 animatrices, to me is more dangerous though.

We follow the likes of 'the kid', who finds out the truth about The Matrix (via Neo). He escapes his classroom like Neo his booth, but finds too many agents in his way, so he... jumps...

The next scene is at the funeral of the boy, and I was just thinking what a great self-reflecting movie this was (don't believe anything in the movies?), but in the end we find out the matrix really does exist and the boy is still alive in the real world.

Sure it's just a cartoon, but committing suicide to escape from the so called real world... edgy... 5/10.
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Not the best, not the worst
antialias1111 November 2003
Warning: Spoilers
This is not the best of the animatrix series. The artwork is sub par and the story is quite thin. What saves it is the believable feeling of paranoia and the end scene in the graveyard.

*SPOILER*

When one teacher says to another (from memory):"Some kids are so insecure they need to make up some safe place where they can escape to" <looks towards the sky/heaven>. "but he will be better of where he is now". That comment and the nice rendering of how the adult was completely unaware what he was saying about his own religious beliefs really enthralled me. I had to replay the scene multiple times before going on.
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very cool
katanacow2327 August 2003
I don't know what is is but the whole short was very cool. One of my favorites. Even thought it had had-draw pictures that were all wavy and stuff is was still very fun to watch. Also the sound was too notch when he was falling through the sky and past the railing.
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I enjoyed this short, but...
bones27219 August 2003
I enjoyed this short, the method of the animation gave it a surreal quality, which helped to convey how this kid felt about his initial question regarding dreams and reality.

But after reading several comments here, I beg to differ that this kid in the animae short is the same kid that followed Neo around like a lost puppy.

The kid in Reload was actually in the first movie, except that he was much younger. Remember the child Neo saw playing with the spoon as they both waited to see the Oracle? I believe those two are one in the same.

As for the problem of age - who is to say that just because you are 24 years old in real life, that your representation within the Matrix is also 24 years old? You could very well be younger or older.
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