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"Mother of the Matrix" Victorious
Posted by on December 6, 2004 at 10:46 PM   (printer friendly)

http://www.slccglobelink.com/news/2004/10/28/Entertainment/mother.Of.The.Matrix.Victorious-785067.shtml

Monday, October 4th 2004 ended a six-year dispute involving Sophia Stewart, the Wachowski Brothers, Joel Silver and Warner Brothers. Stewart's allegations, involving copyright infringement and racketeering, were received and acknowledged by the Central District of California, Judge Margaret Morrow residing.

Stewart, a New Yorker who has resided in Salt Lake City for the past five years, will recover damages from the films, The Matrix I, II and III, as well as The Terminator and its sequels. She will soon receive one of the biggest payoffs in the history of Hollywood, as the gross receipts of both films and their sequels total over 2.5 billion dollars.

Stewart filed her case in 1999, after viewing the Matrix, which she felt had been based on her manuscript, "The Third Eye," copyrighted in 1981. In the mid-eighties Stewart had submitted her manuscript to an ad placed by the Wachowski Brothers, requesting new sci-fi works.

According to court documentation, an FBI investigation discovered that more than thirty minutes had been edited from the original film, in attempt to avoid penalties for copyright infringement. The investigation also stated that "credible witnesses employed at Warner Brothers came forward, claiming that the executives and lawyers had full knowledge that the work in question did not belong to the Wachowski Brothers." These witnesses claimed to have seen Stewart's original work and that it had been "often used during preparation of the motion pictures."
The defendants tried, on several occasions, to have Stewart's case dismissed, without success.

Stewart has confronted skepticism on all sides, much of which comes from Matrix fans, who are strangely loyal to the Wachowski Brothers. One on-line forum, entitled Matrix Explained has an entire section devoted to Stewart. Some who have researched her history and writings are open to her story. Others are suspicious and mocking. "It doesn't bother me," said Stewart in a phone interview last week, "I always knew what was true."

Some fans, are unaware of the case or they question its legitimacy, due to the fact that it has received little to no media coverage. Though the case was not made public until October of 2003, Stewart has her own explanation, as quoted at daghettotymz.com:

"The reason you have not seen any of this in the media is because Warner Brothers parent company is AOL-Time Warner... this GIANT owns 95 percent of the media... let me give you a clue as to what they own in the media business... New York Times papers/magazines, LA Times papers/magazines, People Magazine, CNN news, Extra, Celebrity Justice, Entertainment Tonight, HBO, New Line Cinema, Dreamworks, Newsweek, Village Roadshow... many, many more!... They are not going to report on themselves. They have been surpressing my case for years..."

Fans who have taken Stewart's allegations seriously, have found eerie mythological parallels, which seem significant in a case that revolves around the highly metaphorical and symbolic Matrix series. Sophia, the greek goddess of wisdom has been referenced many times in speculation about Stewart. In one book about the Goddess Sophia, it reads, "The black goddess is the mistress of web creation spun in her divine matrix."

Although there have been outside implications as to racial injustice (Stewart is African American), she does not feel that this is the case. "This is all about the Benjamins," said Stewart. "It's not about money with me. It's about justice."

Stewart's future plans involve a record label, entitled Popsilk Records, and a motion picture production company, All Eyez On Me, in reference to God. "I wrote The Third Eye to wake people up, to remind them why God put them here. There's more to life than money," said Stewart. "My whole message to the world is about God and good and about choice, about spirituality prevailing over 'technocracy'."

If Stewart represents spirituality, then she truly has prevailed over the "technocracy" represented in both the Terminator and the Matrix, and now, ironically, by their supposed creators.

Stewart is currently having discussions with CBS about a possible exclusive story and has several media engagements in the near future to nationally publicize her victory.


User Comments (These do not necessarily reflect the beliefs of this site)

Smokindog  
Date: December 7, 2004 @ 7:57 AM
Now thats an eye opener! Damn, hate it for them! LOL.

djjayo1  
Date: December 7, 2004 @ 8:29 AM
Just one more reason why the courts need not give the RIAA and MPAA any more protection...

JohnCarlton02  
Date: December 7, 2004 @ 9:04 AM
The article didn't touch on the Terminator movie connections. I'm curious why she gets paid for those.

BTW, I think I'll sue the Wachowski Brothers for making such a shitty series of movies. I want my ticket money, my normal hourly pay, & punitive damages for the mental suffering inflicted during the viewing of those Matrix movies.
I'll also be suing every movie reviewer who said the Matrix movies were good.
;^)

Lachatte  
Date: December 7, 2004 @ 9:32 AM
The most important message in this article is Stewart's explanation as to why the public has been unaware of her case. People are unaware of the monopolies that control the media. Our "news" channels pick and choose what news that want us to know about and of course, offer their spin. With Michael Powell at the helm, Sinclair Broadcasting and Rupert Murdoch, among others, can continue to expand their control of all media.

ringmaster316ms  
Date: December 7, 2004 @ 10:10 AM
okay, so the story itself is hers. what else did she do?



anything?...

compmore  
Date: December 7, 2004 @ 10:44 AM
"due to the fact that it has received little to no media coverage."

No!!!! Really???

SlipperyWhenWet  
Date: December 7, 2004 @ 11:15 AM
Can someone explain how she was victorious? From the article it reads as if all that's happened is that she has filed suit.

Lachatte  
Date: December 7, 2004 @ 11:37 AM
"Mother of the Matrix" Victorious
"Monday, October 4th 2004 ended a six-year dispute involving Sophia Stewart..."
"Victorious". She won.

DiscoPunk  
Date: December 7, 2004 @ 11:38 AM
"She will soon receive one of the biggest payoffs in the history of Hollywood, as the gross receipts of both films and their sequels total over 2.5 billion dollars."

The article says she won the suit. Details are not clear - but I would be curious to learn more.

"okay, so the story itself is hers. what else did she do?"

So what? She deserves credit and compensation for her work, just like all other writers.

ringmaster316ms  
Date: December 7, 2004 @ 11:50 AM
"So what? She deserves credit and compensation for her work, just like all other writers."


absolutely. but 2.5 million plus?
what did reeves make off the matrix trilogy, for example.

kinda like the kids who sang in 'brick in the wall' coming back and suing for royalties. those little brats should be happy they werent freaking expelled, much less paid.

gdZiemann  
Date: December 7, 2004 @ 12:22 PM
Except that she submitted a story in answer to an "to an ad placed by the Wachowski Brothers, requesting new sci-fi works."

A little different from the teacher taking you over to Pink Floyd's house to sing backup.

SlipperyWhenWet  
Date: December 7, 2004 @ 12:28 PM
Ah ha! You guys trust amateur reporting too much. The lawsuit will proceed. But no decision has been reached. Titling your story "Victorious" does not make it so:

'In reference to the recent article entitled "Mother of the Matrix Victorious," some information has been deemed misleading. Ms. Sophia Stewart has not yet won her case against Joel Silver, Time Warner and the Wachowski Bros. The decision on October 4th enabled Ms. Stewart to proceed with her case, as all attempts to have it dismissed were unsuccessful. Ms. Stewart's case will proceed through the Central District Court of California.'

Thanks,
The Globe Staff

Lachatte  
Date: December 7, 2004 @ 1:44 PM
Nice follow-up, Slippery...

SlipperyWhenWet  
Date: December 7, 2004 @ 2:28 PM
Well, I do love me some Matrix movies. ;-)

shoshidge  
Date: December 7, 2004 @ 3:13 PM
I wonder if her original script inspired the Matrix sequels?

The original movie was great, the sequels were a big disappointment, they totally dropped the ball.

As for the origin of the plotline, the Warchowski brothers didn't just rip her off, that movie has elements from lots of SF stories i've read, they're almost as bad as George Lucas.

I'm still waiting for a truly original SF movie to come out, I haven't seen one since the first two Alien movies.

SlipperyWhenWet  
Date: December 7, 2004 @ 4:13 PM
Yeah, they totally ripped off the Bible too.

captdunsel  
Date: December 7, 2004 @ 8:21 PM
point is that the movie and recording industry are so high on suing people for infringement and yet they are pulling this kind of crap, then as someone said before the media industry is covering it up.

personally I hope she shoves it so far up their ass that orrin hatch pops out of their nose.

keith134  
Date: December 7, 2004 @ 8:35 PM
"an FBI investigation discovered that more than thirty minutes had been edited from the original film"

Dont the FBI have better things to do, like go after serial killers and criminal kingpins?

gdZiemann  
Date: December 7, 2004 @ 9:05 PM
Nope. They caught them all.

clickplay  
Date: December 8, 2004 @ 12:28 AM
What is interesting to me is that all of the media - non reporting may have actually helped her case , in that no one could help by jumping on the side of the 'evil doers" bandwagon thus swaying popular notions to the point of making this an incredably clouded issue to some.
But thank goodness they missed their chance.Bet that doesn't happen again.

clickplay  
Date: December 8, 2004 @ 12:29 AM
If I wasn't clear - i'm glad that truth prevailed.

ringmaster316ms  
Date: December 8, 2004 @ 9:22 AM
"Dont the FBI have better things to do, like go after serial killers and criminal kingpins?"



or stop muslim extremist psychos from stealing planes and ramming them into the sides of buildings?

independentm...  
Date: December 9, 2004 @ 12:13 PM
Nope, they caught them all. And they found all the WMD's too.