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  1. Contents. The Wachowskis. Lana Wachowski (born Larry Wachowski; June 21, 1965) [1] and Lilly Wachowski (born Andy Wachowski; December 29, 1967) [2] are American film and television directors, writers and producers. [3] The sisters are both trans women.

  2. Lana Wachowski is a transgender writer, producer and director known for The Matrix, Cloud Atlas and Sense8. She is one half of the Wachowskis, a creative duo with her sister Lilly, who have made ground-breaking movies and video games.

    • January 1, 1
    • 1.79 m
    • Chicago, Illinois, USA
  3. Lilly Wachowski, 48, came out as transgender on Tuesday, saying that she feels lucky "having the support of my family." Lilly's sister Lana, directing partner for films like The Matrix...

  4. A list of 10 movies and TV shows directed or co-directed by Lana Wachowski and Lilly Wachowski, also known as the Wachowskis. The list includes classics like The Matrix, Cloud Atlas, and Sense8, as well as their latest project, The Matrix Resurrections.

  5. Mar 30, 2019 · How the 1999 sci-fi film, directed by trans sisters Lana and Lilly Wachowski, captured the feeling of being a trans person before coming out. The article explores the movie's themes of identity, transformation, and love, and its cultural legacy and controversies.

    • 'Bound'is of A Genre That’S Often Been Unkind to Queer People
    • 'Bound' Let Queer People Be The Heroes Instead of The Villains
    • 'Bound' emphasises The Importance of Community For Queer Peoples
    • 'Bound's Cinemtaography Conforms to Classic Noir Motifs
    • 'Bound' Is Full of Queer Metaphors
    • GeneratedCaptionsTabForHeroSec

    Part of what makes the Wachowski sisters and their handling of queer material so fascinating is the genres they’ve chosen to explore as filmmakers. Typically, the duo has entered terrain that has often embraced reinforcing cis-het norms and turning the norms on their head. The Matrix, for instance, was the latest in a long line of sci-fi “chosen on...

    This title is rooted in many of the visual and thematic hallmarks of classic noirs but is also conscious of subverting the default approach to gender and sexuality in these vintage titles. Conceptually, these films were supposed to reinforce the idea that subversive women were “wrong” and that all queers were evil. The Wachowskis established their ...

    One fun queer element of the Wachowski’s is the emphasis on community. Characters coded as queer have families or chosen families that provide them with love and support. Individuals that can represent queer experiences and people aren’t surviving alone, they’re surrounded by those who embrace their unique attributes rather than erase them. They al...

    Though that element bucks the trend of noir standards, the cinematography of Bound is still dripping with shadows, dark lighting, and moody framing, all visual hallmarks of the genre. Here, these details are used to quietly reinforce how the very existence of queerness is often suffocated to the point that it can only exist in the margins of societ...

    The film also establishes this directorial duo’s affinity for endearingly on-the-nose visual metaphors for queerness. The most notable example of that here comes from two separate interactions Caesar has with the film’s leading ladies. The first sees Caesar interrupting Violet’s plans to pack her bags and get out of her marriage, with Caesar stuffi...

    The Wachowskis are known for their genre-bending and queer-coded movies, from The Matrix to Sense8. But their debut film Bound was a groundbreaking noir that made gay women the heroes and subverted the genre's tropes.

    • Senior Features Writer
  6. Feb 21, 2023 · How did the Wachowskis land the sci-fi blockbuster The Matrix after their debut film Bound? Learn the truth behind the legend of how they convinced Warner Bros. to let them make their vision.