![]() We get a shot of a bunch of people in an elevator staring at their phones while Neo stares upwards, obviously disturbed. Keanu Reeves in Matrix Resurrections Warner Bros. They may be just a symbol of Neo trying to escape his depressing reality (and perhaps a commentary on our reliance on prescription medications) or these may literally be the pills that keep him from remembering what happened when he left the Matrix, whether he knows that’s what they’re doing or not. The red pill would take him further down the “rabbit hole,” and reveal the truth of his existence. The blue pill would return him to his normal life in the Matrix and help him forget he was living in a simulation. Even the most casual Matrix fan will recall that in the first movie Morpheus (played by Laurence Fishburne) offers Neo a blue pill and a red pill. From this trailer alone, it seems Wachowski, who is co-writing and directing Resurrections, is interested in exploring themes like how technology has gained an even greater hold over us since the original trilogy debuted.Īnd here come the pills. They’re almost certainly making a larger philosophical point. But knowing filmmaker Lana Wachowski, co-creator of the original Matrix trilogy along with Lilly Wachowski, the parallels between the two movies don’t just exist for the sake of fan service. To that end, it looks like we will get new riffs on the iconic red pill/blue pill scene and the dojo scene, among other nods to the original film.įans are already excited by the prospect of returning to many of the most famous moments from the original film. He will need to journey back down the rabbit hole again. If this is the same Neo from the original trilogy, he seems to have forgotten that he is the chosen one. More curious still, Neo and Trinity both seem to have aged, while other characters in the film look to be younger versions of the characters we met in the original trilogy. Considering that both of these characters died in the third film, why they are still alive or whether these are even the same characters we met back in 1999 is up for debate. In the trailer, we find out that Keanu Reeves‘ Neo and Carrie-Anne Moss’ Trinity are back inside the Matrix. What we do know is that Resurrections parallels the original Matrix film in many ways. All the better that the plot remain a mystery before the film’s premiere in December. The first trailer for The Matrix Resurrections, the much anticipated fourth entry in the seminal series, dropped on Thursday, and in classic Matrix fashion, it raises more questions than it offers answers. The concept originally came from Lewis Carroll’s 1865 children’s tale Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland, in which the heroine experiences her own drastic perspective shift when she grows gigantic after eating a cake marked “Eat Me” and shrinks to nearly nothing by drinking a potion labeled “Drink Me.We’re finally returning to the Matrix. The whole “red pill/blue pill” analogy has been seized as a metaphor for any life-altering awakening-and its use (or misuse) was famously dissed by original Matrix co-creator Lilly Wachowski when Elon Musk and Ivanka Trump tried to appropriate it. Now they are the keys to understanding what we’re seeing 22 years later in the new trailer for the followup film The Matrix Resurrections. The words Laurence Fishburne’s Morpheus spoke to Keanu Reeve’s Neo in The Matrix were a prologue to pulling back the digital curtain on a vast simulation that had captured humanity. You take the red pill, you stay in Wonderland, and I show you how deep the rabbit hole goes.” You wake up in your bed and believe whatever you want to believe.
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