Reminds me of the "grey men" from Michael Ende's book "Momo" rather than The Matrix. The suitcases and the the "watches" concept (the grey men are time thieves!) seem to fit much better here. Besides, their suits are GREY. Agent Smith wears BLACK.
So, you would argue that the "black" ties are in fact - what? "Darker than Black?" Am I still "allowed" to interpret obviously black areas as BLACK when there are also obviously GREY areas in the picture to contrast them with? Besides, how exactly does an artist of "some art" depict grey clothing?
And someone removed my "Momo" reference tags. Don't complain about people not adding precise sources and influences when the only purpose those tags serve is deletion by nerds who don't know that there are, in fact, other media beyond the one mainly featuring flat-chested, under-aged girls getting raped by tentacles.
gun_nut said: And someone removed my "Momo" reference tags. Don't complain about people not adding precise sources and influences when the only purpose those tags serve is deletion by nerds who don't know that there are, in fact, other media beyond the one mainly featuring flat-chested, under-aged girls getting raped by tentacles.
The similarity to your "source" is a coincidence. The tags on the image make no reference to Momo, but they do make reference to Agent Smith from the Matrix.
Evangeline_A.K._McDowell said: The similarity to your "source" is a coincidence. The tags on the image make no reference to Momo, but they do make reference to Agent Smith from the Matrix.
And to clarify, I mean the Pixiv tags from the image's source, obviously not the danbooru tags.
The only thing that bothers me is that these guys just can't be Agent Smith itself. I'd understand the use of such a tag or description - how many Agents do you know by name? - but I want a thorough analysis of which Agent, of those we know, this/these would most be.