Falling Down the Rabbit Hole to 2.0: How the 1933 Alice in Wonderland Reveals the Upgrade from Linear Illusion to Oneness
The 1933 version feels especially potent for this reading, its surreal black-and-white tone, the grotesque masks, the sense of unease beneath the whimsy. It’s less sanitized than Disney’s pastel loops. It mirrors the gloomy-to-zen arc many describe in 2.0: falling through darkness, facing absurdity, emerging lighter.