Under the endless heavens, grand tales of heroes inhabit the earth, stories that go from the pinnacle of joy to the pits of despair. They represent our very dreams, what we crave to be every day and night, embodying us, and just like us, there are as many as the stars in the sky, each one unique. And in that maze of tales, we come upon two very different heroes, separated by a vast ocean of time. The first, Odysseus, hails from the age of heroes, where gods roamed the earth among men. The second, Neo, comes from a very different time, a dystopian future, where humanity is enslaved in their own mind. In order to compare these two great champions, both Odysseus and Neo will be described in detail before being compared. “Sing to me of the man, muse, the man of twists and turns / driven time and again off course, once he has plundered the hallowed heights of Troy” (Homer 77). Odysseus is an epic chronicling the return of Odysseus facing hardship again and again as he braves the wrath of Poseidon. When he finally returns, he finds his estate in ruins, his family in tears, and leeches destroying his home. Through this trouble, it is not his strength that saves him, great …show more content…
Discontented by an intuitive sense of unease, he searches for the answer to a question: What is the matrix? By taking the “red pill,” Neo abandons his illusions and faces the terrifying reality. The Matrix is a story of discovery, and in it, Neo discovers the reality of the world and himself. Neo is not particularly strong or brave, nor is he particularly cunning, yet what he has is a belief, an unwavering conviction that he will succeed. This belief, learned from Morpheus, is what powers him at the end of the movie, against all odds, saving Morpheus’s life and activates his dormant powers as “the One.” At the end of that part of the story, Neo gains the confidence needed to take the world