Story Notes for The Matrix

Nebuchadnezzar II was a biblical king. He said, "I have dreamed a dream, and my spirit was troubled to know the dream." (Daniel 2:3)

Zion is a hill in Jerusalem on which Solomon's Temple was built. In the Jewish tradition, it has come to represent the Promised Land.

The Pythia at Delphi was the most powerful oracle in Ancient Greece. She inhaled toxic fumes before delivering prophecies.

"Know Thyself" was one of the phrases carved into the temple at Delphi in Greece.

Location Notes reflected those fears and became the year's #5 box office hit.

Agent Smith is known for his calm, calculated voice. Hugo Weaving says he emulated a "50's news reader." Laurence Fishburne compared him to Walter Cronkite.

In Greek mythology, Morpheus is the god of dreams.

One of the martial arts styles Neo learns is called "Drunken Boxing." It was made famous by Jackie Chan's breakout movie, Drunken Master .

Dual-pistol shooting is a staple of Hong Kong action movie director John Woo. The Directors, the Wachowski Brothers call him a "genius".

The directors admire Hong Kong action movies for the "supernatural grace" of their wire work.

"Mr. Wizard" is a reference to an early 1960s Saturday morning cartoon called Tooter Turtle. Tooter always got into trouble and Mr. Wizard the Lizard helped him out of it.

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Pythia Greek Mythology - News


Story Notes for The Matrix
Story Notes for The Matrix

In Greek mythology, Morpheus is the god of dreams. One of the martial arts styles Neo learns is called "Drunken Boxing." It was made famous by Jackie Chan's breakout movie, Drunken Master. The Matrix was one of the first Hollywood movies to use wire




Wynter Daniels: Guest Author - Lucienne Diver

I can’t say when I first became fascinated by Apollo.  It might have been back in the fifth grade when I started taking Latin.  Along with declining verbs (which I hated), we learned an awful lot about Greek and Roman mythology and civilization (which I loved).  Apollo, interestingly, was “Apollo” in both pantheons.  It might have been later than that, perhaps in college when we got more in depth in the course I took on Greek archaeology.  Either way, I’m quite sure it started whenever it was I discovered that this Greek deity was said to have turquoise eyes and golden curls.  It’s a stunning combination, to be sure, but it wasn’t the aesthetics of it that caught my attention so much as the seeming incongruity compared to his brethren and sistren, with the exception of his twin sister Athena/Artemis.  I started wondering, which started me reading.  According to Larouse, “Some authorities believe that he came from Asia and was either a Hittite god, a Hellenic double of the Arab god Hobal, or a god of Lycia.  Others, because of his close relations with the Hyperboreans, think that he was a Nordic Divinity.”   Now, either way, my first thought was “oh cool!”  Apparently, Apollo so enticed the hearts and minds of the cultures he touched that he was not only adopted, but given over attributes of other divinities who had come before him.  By the time he was finished, he’d not only more or less taken over for the sun god, Helios, but had also become the god of music, prophecy, the harvest, archery and pastoral life.  In fact, on the tour of Delphi my family and I took earlier this year on our trip to Greece, I learned that Apollo was so powerful that supposedly at four days old he set off to found his own sanctuary and discovered the perfect spot on Mount Parnassas.  Of course, it was already dedicated to the mother-goddess, Rhea (Roman: Gaia), and guarded by the enormous Pythian serpent, which he defeated single-handedly.


Pythia Greek Mythology - Bookshelf

The Routledge handbook of Greek mythology, based on H.J. Rose's "Handbook of Greek mythology

The Routledge handbook of Greek mythology, based on H.J. Rose's "Handbook of Greek mythology

His priestess, the Pythia, would sit on it as she delivered the oracles in a trance-like state. The idea seems to have been that the holy influence of the ...

Encyclopedia of Greco-Roman mythology

Encyclopedia of Greco-Roman mythology

Pythia Greek The name given to the priestess of Apollo, his mystic bride, in his oracle at ... This story is a simple mythological analogy of the truth. ...

A Handbook of Greek Mythology

A Handbook of Greek Mythology

On it sat the Pythia, or prophetess who gave the oracles.8 Apparently the idea ... of an attempt to find a Greek equivalent for the local goddess Albunea; ...

Precautionary Risk Appraisal and Management

Precautionary Risk Appraisal and Management

Risk Class Sword of Damocles According to the Greek mythology Damocles was ... Risk Class Pythia The Greeks of the antiquity asked their oracles in cases of ...

Toward a unified platonic human psychology

Toward a unified platonic human psychology

Taylor compared the utterances of the Pythia to the New Testament practice of praying in unknown tongues.'29 In their seminal volume on Greek mythology, ...

Everyday Note Directory


Pythia - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Pythia (Greek: Πυθία), commonly known as the Oracle of Delphi, was the priestess at ... Smith's Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology notes on this ...

Pythia
The Pythia was the priestess at Apollo's oracle in Delphi. The name comes from Python, the dragon that was slain by Apollo. ...

PYTHIA, Greek Mythology Index
Custom Search. PYTHIA. ΠΥΘΙΑ. The title of the prophetic priestess of the oracle of Apollo at Delphi. Priestess (Phthia), by William-Adolphe Bouguereau ...

Pythias: Definition from Answers.com
Pythias n. A Greek who rescued his friend Damon, who stood bail for Pythias when he was condemned to ... In Greek mythology, the legend of Damon and Pythias (or Phintias) ...

Winged Sandals
Magical Flash tour of Greek gods, daring heroes, and fabulous monsters lead by Hermes the messenger god.