

The latest trailer for Resurrections doesn’t offer much in the way of plot specifics, although there’s plenty of sci-fi action and the stakes certainly seem high when Trinity suggests Neo has a life-altering choice to make, but he can’t even make it. After re-awakening to the truth, Neo and Carrie-Anne Moss’ Trinity are finally able to reunite, and they join up with a new group of hackers/revolutionaries working to take down the Matrix.

The new film finds Keanu Reeves’ Neo back in his manicured life as Thomas Anderson in the simulated world of the Matrix until he’s once again offered the red pill. It’s good to see that tattoo got a reboot too here, literally on the lyric “white rabbit.Neo and Trinity are back for one more fight over the fate of reality itself in the second trailer for The Matrix Resurrections, the long-awaited fourth installment in The Matrix series. From visionary filmmaker Lana Wachowski comes THE MATRIX RESURRECTIONS, the long-awaited fourth film in the groundbreaking franchise that redefined a genre. The first chapter of Lewis Carroll’s 1865 novel is called “Down the Rabbit-Hole.” The White Rabbit appears on page one, just as he cameoed as a woman’s tattoo in the original The Matrix in 1999. Trailer for The Matrix Resurrections, starring Keanu Reeves, Jessica Henwick, Yahya Abdul-Mateen II, Christina Ricci and Carrie-Anne Moss. Just like the song, which features hookah smoking caterpillars, Red Queens, White Knights, and some kind of mushroom. There’s gonna be a lot of Alice in this movie. The Matrix Resurrections trailer is finally here, and if you’re experiencing déja vu, don’t worry, it’s not a glitch in the matrix. The Matrix 4 trailer flashes on the cover of Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland. It evokes stranger things in the first episode of Stranger Things, playing as Eleven flees a diner. Gonzo (Benicio Del Toro) wants to die in Terry Gilliam’s Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas. When Charlie Sheen’s Chris Taylor takes his first hit of pot in Oliver Stone’s Platoon, “White Rabbit” brings him out of the battle zone. “White Rabbit” is one of the defining songs of the counterculture. According to the publication, the trailer for The Matrix: Resurrections includes Neil Patrick Harris as a therapist talking to Keanu Reeves’ Neo, a man who discovers that humanity is trapped.

To this day, I don’t think most people realize the song was aimed at parents who drank and told their kids not to do drugs.” The trailer for The Matrix Resurrections was finally released, giving audiences a long-awaited first look at the some of the franchises newest characters, some of which are reimaginings of more familiar figures, including Morpheus and Agent Smith. “I’d sing the words slowly and precisely, so the people who needed to hear them wouldn’t miss the point. “I always felt like a good-looking schoolteacher singing ‘White Rabbit,’” Slick said in the 2016 book Anatomy of a Song. “We are the people our parents warned us about,” Grace Slick promised audiences during shows. Slick joined Jefferson Airplane to replace Signe Toly Anderson, who left the band after the birth of her child One of Grace. “White Rabbit” was initially released while she was still in the San Francisco raga-folk band the Great Society. Now he is and, in the first trailer for The Matrix Resurrections, it seems that when the Matrix was rebooted at the end of 2003’s middling third instalment, the Neo we once knew also seems to. It was the group’s second hit single, along with “Somebody to Love,” which Slick had brought from her former band. The album got its name from the Grateful Dead’s Jerry Garcia, who gets a credit as “musical and spiritual advisor.” It was released as a single and peaked at number eight on the Billboard Hot 100. “White Rabbit” song was on most copies of Jefferson Airplane’s 1967 album, Surrealistic Pillow. This inspired the Spanish march feel of Ravel’s “Bolero,” which propels the music.

Slick wrote it in late 1965 or early 1966, reportedly after listening to Miles Davis’ 1960 album, Sketches of Spain, for 24 hours straight during an acid trip. Dropped like a tab of acid during 1967’s Summer of Love, the song closed Jefferson Airplane’s set at Woodstock in 1969. Written by Grace Slick, “White Rabbit,” has been wresting reality from surrealistic pillows since it first came out.
