Tuesday, 25 June 2013

The Hunger Games





The Hunger Games is much better than I expected. I don't usually watch Hollywood but this production caught my eye as it was interpreted by the conspiracy crowd as an indicator of what's in store for those who survive depopulation, chemtrails and a long list of wickedness the power elite have lined up for us. It's a movie for those of us with the audacity to survive whatever extinction level event we don't have invitation tickets to loiter with the VIP's in Deep Underground  Military Bases (DUMBS) while the cataclysm takes place overhead.

I don't actually buy all of the above but it's worth knowing why it caught my eye. My feeling is the potential breakdown of society could be longer and messier than expected or completely unexpected if at all. Natural events seem to be the more likely than engineered events.

Someone I care about loves this movie so I watched it to show solidarity and so for me it was good and thought provoking entertainment. I understand it's based on a trilogy of books which were inspired by an earlier Japanese book called Battle Royale which was made into a movie.

The authenticity of the movie worked well. It rarely goes over the top and if so only in tiny details that most Americans would never notice. In fact most people wouldn't notice but I'm super sensitive to the cliches of Hollywood production and this film doesn't take liberties.

The film explores the Society of the Spectacle whereby what is viewed becomes more important than what actually is. Guy Debord's work on this subject is as important now as ever it was as we hurtle into a Truman Show of them watching us watching them watching us in a recursive loop of fear and privacy intrusion that may imprison humanity in that special way that many have yet to grasp.

Interestingly for Hollywood, the celebrities are the creeps in this movie with cartoonesque qualities that draw on archetypes as deep as one can find in the Wizard of Oz and Alice in Wonderland. Celebrities portrayed as creeps is so rare these days that is must be applauded. Actors are by their nature good at lying. That's what they do.

I can only throw in one morsel of observation which is that the top of the control pyramid in this movie is played by an amiably-possesed white haired gentleman who is clipping his roses in a garden while debating life and death for entertainment.  I wanted to share where I've seen this before. It's the Spielberg film Munich where the shadowy transnational figures who run the world are headed by a similar white haired gentleman clipping his roses.


Same character clipping roses in The Hunger Games



And hopefully you'll appreciate the resonance of a Mr Rothschild's recorded interview below at Exbury Gardens in Hampshire, England cutting his roses as a conspiracy researcher asks him questions. I'm not asking you to draw conclusions. I'm just pointing out the synchronicity.

NSA Blackmailing Obama, Petraeus, Lawyers & Judges?




The mainstream media are ignoring Russ Tice because he is revealing information that gets to the heart of the matter. We all knew the Borg was watching everything we do on the internet, we all knew London and the US are spying on everyone and cheating at everything during G8 summits but not everyone knew that the NSA has a budget seven times larger than the CIA because they have the ability to blackmail everyone. This machine can run a planet if the planet doesn't rise up and claim their humanity. This is clear.

Monday, 24 June 2013

Rainer Werner Fassbinder - Berlin Alexanderplatz

 



I'm in to Rainer Werner Fassbinder's work now after spending fifteen hours watching this 1980 production. My only hope is I will get a chance to watch it again as it works unlike any other piece of art I have experienced. The two hour epilogue above is untypical of the first thirteen parts  and is a spoiler too so don't watch it unless like me you have a poor memory.

There's so much I could write about this including some very heavy synchronicity with people who I know in real life but there's an excellent review over here that if you're too impoverished to watch all of it, at least makes up for an intelligent essay by Ian Baruma. If you can't do the fifteen hours then the fifteen minutes is the least you can do to digest this wonderful piece of work.