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  • Most movie audiences head to the theater to see a story exactly as its told, without looking

  • too closely at the plots, characters, or lines of dialogue. But for the diehard fans always

  • searching for added meaning, some twists, names, or confusing quotes can make even a

  • classic movie twice as much fun to watch. Here are Screen Rant's 10 Hidden Messages

  • in Popular Movies.

  • The Matrix

  • There's plenty of symbolism in this sci-fi series, but younger fans probably missed one

  • clever reference. When Neo has gone as far down the rabbit hole as possible, and is fleeing

  • from enemy agents, he makes a strange demand of his operator outside of the system. The

  • line is lifted from an old cartoon series starring Tooter Turtle, whose adventures in

  • different time periods would always go wrong - only his friend, Mr. Wizard could save the

  • day. Apparently the show also existed in the Matrix's artificial reality. Either that,

  • or Keanu Reeves felt a kinship with the monotone turtle.

  • Jurassic Park

  • It's hard to believe Jurassic Park was originally NOT going to use CG dinosaurs, but Steven

  • Spielberg spent months working with stop motion guru Phil Tippett to create his dinosaurs

  • with the same technique used to bring the Imperial Walkers and Tauntauns to life in

  • The Empire Strikes Back. When the director asked ILM to show him what a computerized

  • dinosaur could look like, the decision was clear. When Tippett learned he'd been beaten

  • out by newer tech, he told the director that "he'd just became extinct." Luckily, that

  • wasn't the case - but Spielberg made sure to put that very line into the movie.

  • Jackie Brown

  • Every fan of Quentin Tarantino knows that the director likes to connect his films into

  • one universe, with characters living in the same world, or some films existing as movies

  • for those characters to see in a theater. But what about a movie that reveals it's just

  • a movie in its own story? That's what some fans claim about Jackie Brown. When a character

  • walks out of a movie theater to the sound of its credits score, the music is what's

  • expected of Tarantino. But viewers will eventually realize that it's the same music that plays

  • over the movie's own end credits. A shared universe wasn't enough: the director had to

  • hint that Jackie Brown was already playing in theaters while the cast was still living

  • through it.

  • Die Hard

  • Now known as one of the greatest action movies of all time, it's easy to forget the softer

  • side of hero John McClane. When the New York cop flies to Los Angeles to spend Christmas

  • with his family, he brings a gift with him: a large stuffed bear, complete with a red

  • ribbon tied around its neck. If the movie followed the novel it was based on, that bear

  • should have made it to John's daughter, but director John McTiernan never got to show

  • that scene. Apparently, nothing said fatherly love to the director like a teddy bear, since

  • his next movie The Hunt For Red October doubled down on the idea. When Jack Ryan had saved

  • the day and headed home to his wife and daughter, he did what any good dad would do: picked

  • up a teddy bear f his own, red ribbon and all.

  • Dodgeball: A True Underdog Story

  • It doesn't usually pay to look below the surface of a movie based on grown men getting hit

  • in the face with inflatable balls, but this is one exception. When the team at Average

  • Joe's Gym goes up against the cocky, well-funded, testosterone-fuelled Purple Cobras, it's a

  • battle of David vs. Goliath. But viewers might not realize that seeing the "Joes" vs. "Cobra"

  • is one big nod to G.I. Joe and their greatest enemies. With that in mind, audiences should

  • have realized that the Joes would always come out on top.

  • Harry Potter

  • A good witch or wizard needs a trusty pet, and for Harry Potter, Hedwig the Owl went

  • above and beyond the call of duty. The bird's dedication to the boy wizard made her a hit

  • with fans, and broke their hearts when she sacrificed her life to protect Harry. A righteous

  • death for the boy she loved should have been expected. In the books, Hedwig takes her name

  • from a medieval witch or wizard. But in the real world, Hedwig is the patron saint of

  • orphaned and abandoned children - making her the perfect guardian for the movie's hero.

  • Ant Man

  • Marvel's Avengers universe is based on fantastic figures, science, and otherworldly adventures,

  • but they're apparently even hard to believe for the everyday characters inside the films

  • themselves. When Ant-Man villain Darren Cross references the old stories of a miniature

  • superhero working in secret, he claims they're nothing but "propaganda, Tales to Astonish."

  • He's not wrong, either. Ant-Man's unbelievable powers actually debuted in the comic "Tales

  • to Astonish", making this one of the most meta moments Marvel has included, and a major

  • statement about the hero's entire story for the viewers who manage to catch it.

  • Ferris Bueller's Day Off

  • Director John Hughes had a knack for churning out classic movies in the 1980s, and decided

  • to remind audiences of that fact in as subtle a way as possible. The license plate of Cameron's

  • father's Ferrari reading "nervous" fits his character, but it's the rest of the cars that

  • deliver the nods to the director's previous movies: the plate on Ferris' mother's car

  • refers to Vacation which he wrote, his dad's to Mr. Mom, and the principal's plate clearly

  • made for Ferris Bueller's Day Off.

  • Avatar

  • From the moment Avatar hit theaters, it was clear that James Cameron had filled the movie

  • with tons of political messages. From deforestation, over-aggressive military, to the destruction

  • of Native peoples and the discovery of the New World - you name it. It didn't take long

  • for people to notice that there was one country in particular that the director was singling

  • out. When the movie's villain is explaining the risks of the planet to his new recruits,

  • it's hard to miss the stripes of the American flag shining behind him - once you see it,

  • it's not even that subtle.

  • The Matrix

  • Aside from pop culture references, the Wachowskis also managed to include one massive hint that

  • most fans probably never noticed. When Neo finally confronts the Architect of the Matrix

  • in the first sequel, he learns that the creator of the system has been following him his entire

  • life (or lives) - and the first movie already offered proof. When Neo is first captured

  • by enemy Agents, a bank of surveillance monitors shows him being interrogated. The exact same

  • monitors the Architect is surrounded by in the next movie. Critics may claim the directors

  • never planned on more than one film to start, but some of the bigger ideas were clearly

  • there right from the start.

  • So what do you think of our list? Did we miss any hidden messages or secret meanings in

  • your favorite films? Be sure to share them in the comments, and subscribe to our YouTube

  • channel if you want more great Movie and TV easter eggs, hidden clues, mistakes and fun

  • facts!

Most movie audiences head to the theater to see a story exactly as its told, without looking

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