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In the 1999 film “The Matrix,” Morpheus gives Neo the choice of a blue pill or red pill. The blue pill offered the chance to remain in his comfortable fantasy world, believing whatever he ...
When Matrix came out, all of this was a dream--the ability to change the perceived reality with a pill. Remember when Morpheus opened his palms to offer Neo a choice: Take the blue pill, upon ...
Thinking about the Matrix movies takes us back to the early 2000s – the introduction of gravity-defying moves, the red pill-blue pill metaphor, leather-clad kung fu fighters and more in the ...
Those pesky red and blue pills are back in a new website teaser for The Matrix Resurrections, the long-awaited fourth installment in the sci-fi series. The website features both a red pill and a ...
The red pill, of course, is the same pill that Neo chooses. In the film, his decision symbolises his rejection of received wisdom, and his brave determination to reject comforting illusions and ...
Red-pillers feel like the owners of secret knowledge and so enjoy being fantastically condescending to anyone they disagree with, who by definition must be taking the blue pill. Blue-pillers don ...
Then occasionally you just pray for that blue pill," says Moss, 54, as Reeves, 57, agrees. "Man, I really do be praying for that blue pill, Carrie-Anne," replies Pinkett Smith. "Just give me a few ...
But have you ever wondered how things would have turned out if Neo had taken the “Blue Pill” instead of the “Red Pill” Morphius offered him back in Part 1?
In the 1999 film "The Matrix," Morpheus gives Neo the choice of a blue pill or red pill: continue to live in a fantasy world or wake up to confront brutish reality. President Biden will soon ...
The red pill, of course, is the same pill that Neo chooses. In the film, his decision symbolises his rejection of received wisdom, and his brave determination to reject comforting illusions and ...