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Kubrick's 2001, Plus a Few Truth-dropping Films You've Probably Never Seen . . .



For those who have eyes to see and ears to hear, we are in a war between truth and propaganda like never before seem in our times as the Kali Yuga winds down kicking and screaming like a wild Archon-possessed banshee. The so-called prize of this battle may be the very minds and souls of humanity. Mass media today is nothing but half-truths, deception, manipulation, and outright lies. The very nature of our ever-changing reality is up for grabs. Mad Mask World is in full swing, absolute chaos mode thrown right into our collective face, and the madness only appears to be getting worse. Every movie or documentary produced by Netflix appears to have some blatant trans-humanist or other propaganda-based agenda, it is painfully clear. The old Hollywood, which was always to a large degree manipulated if not outright controlled by the Inteligencia Deep State agenda by the way, appears to be dead.


But back in the 1960s through perhaps the late 70s/early 80s (pre Matrix) there were a surprising number of films dropping some major truth and feeding us untold predictive programming while offering some rather interesting hypotheses regarding the fate of mankind. Few and far between these days, there have been a mere handful of watchable films since the 2000s.




1) Stanley Kubrick's 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968)


An epic drama of adventure and exploration. Sure it is. Or perhaps the ultimate truth bomb of all time. 2001 is nothing short of the New World Order agenda laid out in a brilliant panorama displaying Stanley Kubrick's pure visionary genius. The Big Boy Club has a plan. And you ain't part of it, peon. Thank you, again, George Carlin.



Jay Weidner and Jay Dyer analyze 2001:





More on the Fritz Lang-Werner Von Braun-Disney-Stanley Kubrick-George Lucas connection:








2) Stanley Kubrick's Clockwork Orange (1972)


Based on the 1962 novel by Anthony Burgess of the same name, Clockwork Orange presents a brutal, chaotic apathetic society and the nasty little droogs it produces. Sound familiar, anyone? Also a telling tale of government mind control gone horribly wrong, but not necessarily for the State.






"Get your paws off me, you damned dirty Archons! . . ."


3) Planet of the Apes (1968)


A trio of astronauts crash lands on a primitive planet and is captured by the mostly brutal inhabitants of talking, highly intelligent apes who rule the planet. The cagey Taylor (Charlton Heston) manages to escape only to find out . . . Well, if you don't know by now, watch for yourself . . .







4) West World (1973)


A futuristic adult theme park goes haywire and creepy killer robot Yul Brynner is coming to get you.

Written by Michael Crichton, another visionary, or a Deep State minion deeply tapped into the system.


The updated West World HBO series is another must-see. The omniscient West World Super Computer knows you better than you know yourself.


"Winning doesn't mean anything unless someone else loses. Which means you're here to be the loser . ."




5) Soylent Green (1973)

Also starring Charlton Heston. What in the world are those people eating?






6) A Boy and His Dog (1975)


Based on Harlan Ellison's 1969 novela and starring the seemingly ageless Don Johnson, this was likely the inspiration for the iconic apocalyptic Mad Max series. A cagey but clueless, young horndog and his telepathic pooch get lured into a creepy subterranean world of strange and desperate Apocalypse survivors.





7) Capricorn One (1978)


A truth drop on the fake moon landings.




8) Stalker (1979)


A cinematic vision of the 1972 novel, Roadside Picnic, Andrei Tarkovsky's (the Russian Stanley Kubrick?) Apocalyptic masterpiece.




9) The Omega Man (1971)


Based on Richard Matheson's I Am Legend, also starring Charlton Heston. Fighting off Apocalypse vampires in this one, Heston was a busy, busy boy back in the day.






10) Dark City (1998)


A pre-Matrix nightmare of the Archon Beast System so-called reality.






11) THX 1138 (1971)


George Lucas's feature film debut, starring Robert Duvall, a Brave New World controlled by android police and mandatory emotion-suppressing drugs.




"Wake up! Time to die . . ."


12) Blade Runner (1982)


What does it mean to be more human than human? Have you ever been tested to see if you are a Replicant yourself, Mr. Deckard? Based on Philip K. Dick's "Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?" . . .



Blade Runner decoded by Jay Dyer:




Here's an interesting analysis by Nightmare Masterclass:





13) The Andromeda Strain (1971)


Also written by Michael Crichton along with the novel of the same title, a team of scientists investigate the outbreak of a deadly alien virus in Arizona.








14) Ghost Dog: The Way of the Samurai (1999)


Nobility is dead. But it may live on, in the Samurai spirit of the Ghost Dog.








15) The Ninth Configuration (Twinkle Twinkle, Killer Kane) (1980)


A loco band of Vietnam War vets suffering from PTSD. Hints of MK-Ultra. Scary stuff on the Moon. An insane astronaut. A spooky Dracula's castle insane asylum (relocated from Europe brick by brick) in the Pacific Northwest. Mysterious phone calls from the Illuminati. A brutal Mad Max-like biker gang. Shadows of Hamlet. This one drops some subtle truth bombs in the first five minutes alone. Starring Stacy Keach, this film was directed by deep state insider William Peter Blatty (The Exorcist) and based on his novel, which possesses an interesting link to the Exorcist and its sequels.


Here's a review of the novel:





16) Moon (2009)


A lonesome astronaut (Sam Rockwell) has a strange time on the final days of his 3-year solo stint on the Moon. Who in the world wouldn't go crazy stuck alone with a smarmy ass Kevin Spacey computer?






17) Donnie Darko (2001)


Donnie Darko is a truly Hermetic, truth-dropping film about a young man's dark awakening to the true nature of his reality. And a little bit about time travel . . ..


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