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Interviews with scientists and authors, animated bits, and a storyline involving a deaf photographer are used in this docudrama to illustrate the link between quantum mechanics, neurobiology, human consciousness and day-to-day reality.
CRITICS OF "What the Bleep!?: Down the Rabbit Hole"
Hollywood Reporter
While it does render scientific and philosophical principles in a highly accessible format, the film is nonetheless a real chore to sit through, especially in this version, weighing in at more than 2 1⁄2 hours.
February 10, 2006
TV Guide
The goofy use of animated, Flubber-like blobs aping Robert Palmer's Addicted to Love video (by way of illustrating the irresistibility of desire itself) makes it hard to take the science seriously, which is the Bleep problem in a nutshell.
February 03, 2006
Los Angeles CityBeat
...not a sequel but...really more of a "special edition" of the original..., with enough extra material to swell its length to nearly two and a half hours... If you possess anything within yelling distance of a rational mind, you'll giggle mightily before
March 16, 2006
Globe and Mail
... having sat through the entirety of this bulbous exercise in commerce, I did not come away uninspired.
With a schlockmeister's showmanship, the directors have simply taken the old film, cut in other footage and outtakes, and re-released it as a different picture.
February 03, 2006
Oregonian
The new footage adds almost nothing and feels like a lame, double-dipping cash-grab.
February 03, 2006
Salt Lake Tribune
Only the truest of true believers would want to sit through it again.
March 03, 2006
L.A. Weekly
Down the Rabbit Hole makes teen sex comedies, action-chick sci-fi and the other usual multiplex chum seem like high-minded discourse.