After the introduction of CG in the 80s, this only led to more and more films utilizing this technique. If the 80s were the spawn of CG in movies, 90s were the explosion. You can probably think of a few game-changing feature films that many VFX artists refer to as the reason they got into the Industry. Jurassic Park is one of them. Spielberg had a team of experts and combined CG with animatronics to create several different breathtaking sequences that gave a new look into what is possible with CG.
There were also many other advancements with CG in the 90s, including the first time motion capture technology was used in the film Total Recall, for a very short x-ray sequence. Terminator 2: Judgment Day featured many distinctive visual effects shots, as the liquid metal terminator could morph into any character. Shots like when the terminator was shattered into many different pieces and those pieces reassembled back together were just a few of the amazing VFX sequences in the film.
Of course, likely the biggest advancement in terms of CG was the first feature film created entirely in CG, which was Toy Story. This led to the success of Pixar and the spawn and popularity of many different completely 3D animated films. Not only that, but the technology used to create these films also helped to push the quality of the CG elements integrated into feature films.
The Matrix achieved numerous different innovative visual effects elements making up a large portion of the film. Of course, the bullet dodging scenes are very iconic utilizing various techniques to achieve this effect.