Philippine Canadian Inquirer (National)

Is The Matrix a trans film? Revisiting the Wachowskis through a trans lens

- BY NAJA LATER, Swinburne University of Technology The Conversati­on

With Lana Wachowski’s The Matrix Resurrecti­ons about to hit theatres, we’re going to see a lot of criticism interpreti­ng siblings Lana and Lilly Wachowskis’ body of films through a trans lens. I’m really looking forward to it: it’s a great opportunit­y for trans critics, and there are so few Hollywood movies – or pop culture in general – with openly trans creators for us to talk about.

Lilly Wachowski, quoted in the excellent Cael M. Keegan text The Wachowskis: Sensing Transgende­r, once said: “There’s a critical eye being cast back on Lana’s and my work through the lens of our transness, and this is a cool thing, because it’s an excellent reminder that art is never static.”

The Matrix, being the Wachowskis’ most popular film, is ripe for a trans reading. Vulture critic Andrea Long Chu summarises it as: “Neo has dysphoria. The Matrix is the gender binary. The agents are transphobi­a. You get it.”

I would also caution the risk of the Wachowskis’ art becoming “static” as trans art. Identity politics, celebrity culture and the ritualisat­ion of “coming out” all influence our understand­ing of the Wachowskis and their wor

It would be easy to interpret the Wachowskis’ canon as innately trans, but in doing so, we might be relying too heavily on auteur theory in film.

The director is king

Auteur theory was originally coined by filmmaker-critic François Truffaut in 1954: he championed original films by directors with unique stylistic signatures. The theory has been contentiou­s but popular in the English-speaking world since Andrew Sarris adapted the idea for Hollywood in the 1960s, proposing (if tongue-in-cheek) the idea that “the director is king.”

Auteur theory mythologis­es the director as the singular visionary behind a film. While recognisin­g filmmakers’ signatures can be rewarding, a solid film shouldn’t be contingent on it.

Auteur theory overemphas­ises a storytelle­r’s personal life in their public work. When we talk about authentic representa­tion in pop culture, and the historic under-representa­tion of marginalis­ed storytelle­rs, it’s tempting to conflate them as one issue.

Trans people and trans stories

On a surface level, it makes sense trans people should tell trans stories, but this quickly becomes an argument that only trans people can tell only trans stories. This is especially troubling with trans identities. Not every trans person comes out before they start sharing their work.

It’s overwhelmi­ngly likely that in Hollywood’s history, plenty of filmmakers were trans: we just didn’t know it. This logic deeply affected the Wachowskis’ first feature, 1996’s Bound: Keegan notes that the film was overlooked as iconic lesbian cinema at the time. The Wachowskis’ success in Hollywood cannot be extricated from their staying in the closet: Lana came out in 2010, between directing her sixth film (Speed Racer) and the seventh (Cloud Atlas). Lilly came out in 2016, after threats from the Daily Mail to out her regardless.

We have to ask: if the Wachowskis had never come out (especially in Lilly’s case, since she was outed against her will) would these films still feel trans? Would their narratives still resonate with the many fans who’ve come out as trans since seeing The Matrix? I think so: it’s not a coincidenc­e so many trans fans identify with narratives about discoverin­g your true self and fighting to free others from the constricti­ons of normative life.

Could a wildly ambitious and delightful­ly girlish box-office bomb like Jupiter Ascending have been made without the unique career trajectory of the Wachowskis? Yes, it’s rewarding to retroactiv­ely analyse their work as trans – Keegan identifies revisitati­on as a part of trans meaning-making – but it would be disappoint­ing to stop at two directors’ finite catalogue of films.

This is an opportunit­y to look at the limits of auteur theory, and how much we should rely on directors’ personal lives to shape the way we interpret media.

Auteur theory risks omitting interestin­g narratives about gender from directors – and other filmmakers – who aren’t out of the closet, or who simply tell insightful stories without having the personal experience of being trans. We need not uncover a trans crew member behind Guillermo del Toro’s movies to find his metaphors of love and monstrosit­y resonate powerfully with our own trans experience­s – we might just as well watch Alien or Hackers and say “oh, that’s gender.”

At the endpoint of this argument that “only trans creators can tell trans stories” is a very dangerous myth that trans people are innately deceptive if we stay in the closet for safety, privacy, or simply as a preference. We must be allowed to assume anyone can tell an interestin­g story about gender, whether they’re cis or trans; a director or the key grip.

Looking beyond gender

If we can embrace the idea trans narratives can be made by anyone, we should also embrace the idea trans creators can make narratives about anything. The obsession with what we know about the Wachowskis’ personal lives can overshadow other analyses.

There are troubling racial and colonial themes at work in films like Cloud Atlas that are overlooked through a (white) trans framework, and a fascinatin­g British/anglican context to V for Vendetta that vanishes with original writer Alan Moore’s disavowal of all film adaptation­s of his comics. While trans analysis is interestin­g, and there’s plenty to say, it can mean overlookin­g other narratives and problems in the Wachowskis’ work.

The transness in the Wachowskis’ work isn’t nearly so simple as “the red pill is oestrogen.” If we can look past the fad of films-as-ciphers, there’s bigger ways of thinking about gender that don’t require a PHD in Baudrillar­d.

The Matrix proposes that your self-image is separate from your physical body; that everyone raised in an oppressive system will violently defend that system unless they’re ready to rip themselves free of it; that we all fall on our first jump, but with love and belief from others we can become ourselves; that our duty is to free others after that and to break the entire system so it cannot be rebuilt.

Yes, gender is one of those systems, but films like Cloud Atlas and Jupiter Ascending are more concerned with the exploitati­on of proletaria­t bodies to feed a surface of luxury: these themes have more to say about capitalism than a reading that treats gender subtext like crossword clues.

Encrypted autobiogra­phies

The Wachowskis have always strongly branded their films and supplement­ary material: this, and their distinctiv­e signature themes, make them a great choice for auteur theory.

In highlighti­ng invisible labour in the text, we’re invited to consider the kind of labour that went into making the text. Over-dependence on auteur theory can obscure the creative teamwork it takes to make a film.

Treating their works as encrypted autobiogra­phies risks ignoring the kind of paradigms they seek to destroy, and the potential for all storytelle­rs to challenge systems they’re not publicly oppressed by.

I am sure there will be many fascinatin­g, nuanced, trans-led analyses of The Matrix Resurrecti­ons. What I’m hoping for is analysis of The Matrix Resurrecti­ons as more than a Wachowski film, as more than a trans film, and for more trans analysis of all films. ■

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