Warning: This post contains spoilers for Everything Everywhere All at Once.As a genre-bending take on the multiverse narrative, Everything Everywhere All at Once is crammed full of Easter eggs and pop culture references for observant viewers to discover. While Marvel and DC use the multiverse to connect previous versions of superheroes, Everything Everywhere All at Once is an original concept with more freedom to explore the possibilities of a multiverse. In fact, Everything Everywhere All at Once took home 7 of its historic 11 Oscar nominations in 2023, including Best Picture, Best Achievement in Directing, and Best Original Screenplay. This is thanks in part to how the Everything Everywhere All At Once Easter eggs actually contribute to the overarching narrative.
True to its name, Everything Everywhere All At Once has a broad range of inspirations. Along with references to martial arts movies, there are nods to iconic science fiction films and TV shows, animation, video games, music, and even some meta-references to the cast themselves. With a relentless pace and chaotic action that crosses space and time, Everything Everywhere All at Once contains a lot of content to unpack. Repeat viewings can reveal hidden details unseen in the first watch, particularly for those with a broad knowledge of pop culture. Here is every Easter egg and reference in Everything Everywhere All at Once.
1 The Matrix Parallels
In Everything Everywhere All at Once, the unlikely hero Evelyn Wang (Michelle Yeoh) can access abilities developed by alternate versions of herself in the multiverse. While her consciousness travels to other universes to learn these abilities, her physical body remains in place in her own world. One of the more relevant but low-key Everything Everywhere All at Once Easter eggs, this actually resembles the way characters are able to abilities in The Matrix, and how Neo quickly learns kung-fu. Evelyn also learns kung-fu, but does so by traveling to a universe in which she became a martial arts movie star, much like Michelle Yeoh is in real life.
2 Michelle Yeoh’s Career
Yeoh began her career doing her own stunts after being discovered by Jackie Chan in the early 1980s, just like the career path shown for Evelyn in one of the universes. One of the more obvious Everything Everywhere All at Once Easter eggs, the movie even utilizes footage from Yeoh's real-life public appearances, including archival recordings of Michelle Yeoh’s actual movie star career, such as red carpet footage from the premiere of Crazy Rich Asians. Although Evelyn is a poor laundromat owner with none of the same wealth in Everything Everywhere All at Once, she is also an overbearing and judgmental mother, like Yeoh's character in Crazy Rich Asians.
3 Paprika’s Meta Ending
In movie star Evelyn’s universe, the audience witnesses moments from a movie premiere of the star’s latest film, which has the Daniels listed as the directors in the end credits. Having Daniels credited as the director of the movie-within-the-movie continues to blend the lines between reality and fiction. Similarly, the 2006 Japanese animated film Paprika ends with a sequence in which Detective Toshimi Konakawa (Akio Ohtsuka) goes to the theaters to watch a movie he is the star of. The movie has the same name as an unfinished film by Paprika’s director, Satoshi Kon. The theater also has posters up for every other one of Kon’s films.
4 Projectionist Gag From Sherlock Jr.
In Everything Everywhere All At Once, Evelyn inadvertently travels to various universes in quick succession. In each of these universes, Evelyn learns new skills for her battles against Jobu Tupaki, and a wide variety are shown to illustrate the limitless possibilities. The shifting of Evelyn from location to location, while she remains in the same position, recalls a gag used by Buster Keaton in Sherlock Jr. Keaton plays a movie theater projectionist who has a dream that can walk right into the movie screen and enter the film. When the movie switches to various scenes, the projectionist remains in the same spot and is transported from scene to scene, just like Evelyn.
5 Ratatouille Or Raccacoonie?
Inarguably the most beloved of all the Everything Everywhere All at Once Easter eggs, Evelyn repeatedly refers to the movie Ratatouille with the name "Raccacoonie," describing a film with the same plot as Pixar’s animated movie but with a raccoon instead of a rat. Although perceived as a mental slip initially, this may be an indicator that Evelyn was subconsciously aware of facts from the parallel universes. In the universe in which Evelyn is a chef, she witnesses her colleague Chad (Harry Shum Jr.) being controlled by a raccoon on his head. From its introduction to how its mini-plot was wrapped up, Raccacoonie remains one of the best running gags in the history of Oscar-winning films.
6 2001: A Space Odyssey
Some of the universes contain larger variations from what Evelyn knows, including one in which humans evolved with hot dog fingers. Though details about the anatomy of the fingers are unclear, this change results in humans becoming more adept with their feet. The beginnings of this evolutionary deviation are shown in a parody of the ape sequence from the science fiction classic, 2001: A Space Odyssey. It plays out similarly to Stanley Kubrick’s film, except the apes have hot dog fingers. This one is certainly among the strangest Everything Everywhere All at Once Easter eggs.
7 Data’s Gadget Belt In The Goonies
Evelyn’s good-natured husband Waymond is played by Ke Huy Quan in his first role since retiring from acting in 2002. Along with playing Short Round in Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom, Quan is best known for playing Richard "Data" Wang in The Goonies, a character with an outfit equipped with countless inventions. Among these was a belt containing a suction cup. Although Waymond isn’t an inventor, he does also wear a secret weapon around his waist. Waymond often uses unconventional items in his environment as weapons, most notably his fanny pack. It's just one of the many Everything Everywhere All at Once Easter eggs that reward Gen X viewers.
8 Rick and Morty Marital Woes
Multiverses have played a significant role in the storylines of Rick and Morty since season 1. Rick and Morty’s interdimensional cable episodes lightheartedly use the concept of multiverses for endless television program options, first introduced in “Rixty Minutes.” The relationship between Morty’s parents Jerry and Beth is on the verge of collapse, much like the marriage between Waymond and Evelyn. In "Rixty Minutes," Beth begins to question her life choices after Rick gives them goggles to view the lives of their alternate universe counterparts. In Everything Everywhere All at Once, Evelyn and Waymond use earpieces to transport to alternate universes.
9 In the Mood for Love Homage
In a universe where Evelyn didn’t choose to marry Waymond, they are both extremely successful but lonely. When they run into each other years later, the scene is stylishly shot to resemble Wong Kar-wai’s In the Mood for Love. In one of the most heartbreaking Everything Everywhere All at Once Easter eggs, Evelyn and Waymond speak to each other longingly in an alley, as she describes the life they share in her universe. Adding to the significance of this reference is the fact that, before Quan starred in this homage to In the Mood for Love, he worked as an assistant director on Wong Kar-wai’s follow-up film, 2046.
10 Nine Days' “Absolutely (Story of a Girl)”
Some Everything Everywhere All at Once Easter eggs reveal just how hilarious the Daniels truly are - and bits about their personal music preferences. When a Waymond from another universe takes over the body of Evelyn’s Waymond to warn her of an imminent threat to the universe, he explains the multiverse by quoting the Nine Days song “Absolutely (Story of a Girl).” Waymond tells Evelyn “Your clothes never wear as well the next day, your hair never falls in quite the same way,” which may seem coincidental until the song appears on the soundtrack multiple times throughout the film.