A re-configured multimillion-dollar settlement of sorts between Village Roadshow and Warner Bros over 2021’s The Matrix Resurrections seems prophetic and very much of the matrix in its own special way.
With the once-big-league film co-financier paying out $57 million to the likely soon-to-be David Ellison-owned studio, the words of Matrix Resurrections‘ Smith to Neo of “after all these years, to be going back to where it started,” really nail the legal tussling the past four years between WB and the now-bankrupt VR.
Which is to say, you might want to pop that red pill now.
Earlier this week, lawyers for Warner Bros Discovery pulled the plug on their own attempt to secure a previously awarded $125 million judgment from Village Roadshow. With that “without prejudice” (which means it could be resurrected) move in L.A. Superior Court, WBD attorneys revealed they had scored $57 million from VR, which filed for the Chapter 11 last year. That money was scheduled to be in WBD’s account within days — which has happened, I hear.
Warner Bros had no comment on the resolution, and lawyers for Village Roadshow did not respond to Deadline’s request Friday for comment. However, having all started when WB released the fourth film in the Wachowskis‘ franchise simultaneously in theaters and on its subscriber-hungry streamer during the last gasps of the Covid pandemic, things aren’t quite as blue pill or red pill as they seem.
For one thing, that $57 million is less a new figure in the dispute that went to court in the 2002 breach of contract lawsuit from Village Roadshow against the then-Jason Kilar-run Warners, and more some updated accounting with an appeals court thrown in. For another thing, Village Roadshow now has a zero stake in Matrix Resurrections — which is a long way from where things appeared to stand just a year ago.
Let’s jump back a bit, shall we?
Moved fairly quickly behind closed doors to arbitration, VR’s lawsuit launched on February 7, 2022, seemed to shuffle off with the company actually found on the hook for the nearly $100 million in co-financing it never actually ponied up for the Lana Wachowski-helmed Resurrections. Under appeal, the portion of that $125 million that Village Roadshow would have been paying for 50% of Matrix Resurrections was deemed an overreach. An appeals panel concluded Village Roadshow North America, who long had hit the skids financially, couldn’t be forced to purchase half of MR in the hopes of half of the waterfalled profits.
So it didn’t and didn’t have to pay for something it isn’t going to own any of, because WB owns 100% of The Matrix Resurrections now. The remaining sum, that $57 million, was reframed as damages.
Not that The Matrix isn’t still pretty valuable in many people’s eyes and spreadsheets.
Despite the less-than-stellar returns and reviews for the cash-in-vibed Matrix Resurrections, Alcon Media Group was awarded derivative rights in November to the Matrix franchise and most of the other titles it snared from Village Roadshow Entertainment Group‘s film library in summer 2025. “Alcon looks forward to working collaboratively with Warner Bros, as we have for over a quarter-century, to partner in the exploitation of the derivative rights to these many great films across multiple platforms,” AMG bosses Andrew Kosove and Broderick Johnson asserted late last year.
All of which means, under a joint Paramount-WBD umbrella or via siloed studios or whatever, Groff’s Agent Smith also had it right in Matrix Resurrections when he quipped, “That’s the thing about stories — they never really end, do they?”
Never in the matrix of Hollywood — IP, bottom line or otherwise.






