Anonymous ID: 5a5f10 Aug. 31, 2018, 10:43 p.m. No.2829107   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>9118 >>9159 >>9179

>>2829084

I see you trying Autist.

Now I'm really gonna blow your mind.

Obviously Alice in Wonderland was always a metaphor for something, but what?

 

I'll start you off. What do chessboards and playing cards represent to Occultist.

 

But pretend you haven't read Q. Just think Occult.

Anonymous ID: 5a5f10 Aug. 31, 2018, 10:51 p.m. No.2829172   🗄️.is đź”—kun

>>2829145

Kek, right, exactly It's right there in the fucking movie but people who never read think white rabbits and choosing between one "pill" or the other originated with the movie.

 

Another sad effect of our education system.

 

By repeating the word “rabbit” and including “Wonderland” and “rabbit hole,” the viewers draw on their personal experience of their knowledge of Alice in Wonderland and subconsciously compare Neo’s journey to that of Alice. Even as Morpheus holds out the two pills in separate hands, the idea that “one will make you forget, and one will make you see the truth” compares to “one will make you bigger and one will make you smaller,” when Alice meets the caterpillar. This point in the story of The Matrix signifies Neo entering a strange and unfamiliar world. Although Alice eventually wakes up from her dream in Wonderland, when Neo wakes up, there is little that is familiar to comfort him. Instead, for Neo, Wonderland is the real world. This technique of parallel editing enables the viewers to draw from personal experiences to help convey the message of the movie to each viewer. The effect of paralleling The Matrix to Lewis Carroll’s Through the Looking Glass and Alice in Wonderland is that the viewers question reality as definite instead of indefinite; The Matrix compels the viewers to consider “Wonderland” as a reality we’re not supposed to wake up from.

 

https://evenmoremoviereviews.weebly.com/blog/the-matrix-and-alice-in-wonderland-parallels