I agree it was worth seeing, very cool. I'm fascinated by it yet I realize certain flaws. First of all, the story is laughable at times. I chuckled when I heard the oracle is a) a program and b) "believes" that she/it has to cooperate with the One to survive. How can a program believe anything? Of course then we learnt the oracle was not real, just an invention but then how could Neo believe a) and b) simultaneously. The story is full of lose ends, there is no way you can put it all together and figure it out, and I appreciate that.
But the script is flawed, first of all what is all the fighting about? By now everyone, even the thickest viewer, knows that fighting does not solve anything, it just postpones any conclusion, so why do the fighting scenes when they achieve nothing? And moreover, why so many of them and so damn long? Sure it's neat to watch at times but it doesn't carry the action any further, but for a very few cases, in which a decision has to be made based on the situation which may include battle. But take the freeway scene, nothing came out of it, so it's pointless with regards to the plot.
In my opinion, the script is as ingenious as it's flawed and those balance each other. I never subscribed to the idea of "machines" being the evil force, what is a machine anyway? It's nothing, it has no power. Call it a computer, and it make a little more sense. Why is Neo cleanly shaved 24/7 and still wearing the same dirty, torn sweater? Another thing I didn't like is how Morpheus' character develops. At first he's this guy with lots of power, control and calm. Then he becomes a common man and starts fighting with the rest, I would like him to remain that greater power which does not engage in common battles and who is not vulnerable. One thing I did like was how Neo is a result of an anomaly in the system, a deviation from the global balance, that was a fine idea to me. I also thought Smith surviving that battle in the real world was interesting, I'm excited about what happens next with that.
Finally, did you see Trinity typing in a Linux/Unix prompt? Not only that, the connection was ssh. Now who will believe in the year 2xxx people still use ssh, do we still ride horses, no there are cars now. Ridiculous!
