Films That Are Allegedly Linked To The Illuminati

By Sughra Hafeez in Entertainment On 20th August 2017
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#1 A Clockwork Orange

As most of my fellow Watchers know, I love dissecting symbolism found in various films, music videos, and television shows. I seek to find some kind of hidden message that is placed there by the elites of Hollywood, media, or whatever corporate branch of the Illuminati is involved.

One particular director stands out as having more covert symbolism than most, and that is Stanley Kubrick. You can see my dissections of his works such as The Shining or his final film, Eyes Wide Shut (a film that arguably left him an open target for murder by the Illuminati for revealing too many secrets).Here the viewer can ‘viddy’ another of Kubrick’s masterpieces called A Clockwork Orange.The message behind the film is actually philosophical in nature; leading it to become one of the cult-classics of the 20th century. One can see various aspects of religion, politics, big government, and mind control throughout.

#2 The Matrix

In 1999, the science fiction genre was revolutionized by the release of the Wachowski brothers' film, "The Matrix." This movie not only acted as a synthesis of almost twenty years of futuristic movies but also included dazzling new CG special effects. However, when you take a much closer look at the film, so much more becomes evident. Instead of a really cool action movie about a dystopian future, you get a warning about the Illuminati and 9/11. "The Matrix" is actually a subtle attempt by Hollywood to speak to us, to tell us that it's the NWO who control everything and that we must wake up and see it.

Not only is "The Matrix" the perfect Illuminati metaphor, it's also one of many forewarnings from Hollywood about 9/11. This movie's warning can be seen towards the end when a helicopter crashes into a building, creating a massive fireball. It's more than just a simple sign of things to come but also a subtle method to communicate to the masses what such an event should look like if it were to actually happen. The two planes that flew into the Twin Towers looked very similar to the fireball that erupted from the building in "The Matrix." This was someone's attempt to tell us something, and we didn't listen.

Between the obvious metaphor about how the matrix is really our own reality and the pre-9/11 symbolism, there is no doubt that this film was a message, one telling us that we are all brainwashed slaves trapped in a false reality. To make things better, we must heed the message and "free our minds." During the first meeting between Morpheus and Neo, Morpheus offers Neo two pills (blue and red). One leads to freedom (red), the other leads to ignorance (blue). It is red that is the color of wisdom, and it's the red pill that Neo takes. You are also being offered one of two pills. This offer is coming at you every day. Will you take the blue one and continue living in this false reality, or will you take the red one and free yourself of brainwashing? We took the red one, and needless to say, we have freed our minds.

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#3 Eyes Wide Shut

Homage the “Eyes Wide Shut” – a 1999 erotic drama film directed, produced, and co-written by Stanley Kubrick. Based on Arthur Schnitzler’s 1926 novella Traumnovelle (Dream Story), the story is transferred from early 20th century Vienna to 1990s New York City. The film follows the sexually charged adventures of Dr. Bill Harford, who is shocked when his wife, Alice, reveals that she had contemplated an affair a year earlier. He embarks on a night-long adventure, during which he infiltrates a massive masked orgy of an unnamed secret society. Eyes Wide Shut was Kubrick’s last film, as he died four days after showing his final cut to Warner Bros. The Illuminati (plural of Latin Illuminatus, “enlightened”) is a name given to several groups, both real and fictitious. Historically, the name usually refers to the Bavarian Illuminati, an Enlightenment-era secret society founded on 1 May 1776. The society’s goals were to oppose superstition, obscurantism, religious influence over public life and abuses of state power. “The order of the day,” they wrote in their general statutes, “is to put an end to the machinations of the purveyors of injustice, to control them without dominating them”. The Illuminati—along with Freemasonry and other secret societies—were outlawed through edict, by the Bavarian ruler, Charles Theodore, with the encouragement of the Roman Catholic Church. In the several years following, the group was vilified by conservative and religious critics who claimed that continued underground and were responsible for the French Revolution. They are often alleged to conspire to control world affairs, by masterminding events and planting agents in government and corporations, in order to gain political power and influence and to establish a New World Order. Central to some of the most widely known and elaborate conspiracy theories, the Illuminati have been depicted as lurking in the shadows and pulling the strings and levers of power in dozens of novels, films, television shows, comics, video games, and music videos.

#4 The Devil’s Advocate

In the movie, The Devil's Advocate, based on the novel by Andrew Niederman and produced by Arnon Milchan and Arnold Kopelson, the devil (Al Pacino) tells Kevin Lomax, the ambitious lawyer played by Keanu Reeves:

"I only set the stage, free will, you pull your own strings!"

He shows Kevin that he cannot blame anyone but himself. Kevin was driven by his own egotism and venality. He abandoned his wife in her hour of greatest need, and she committed suicide. He got many guilty people acquitted because he "never loses."

Then the devil provides us with the Luciferian Manifesto: Essentially it is the belief that man is defined by his carnal appetites and desires (greed, power, lust) rather than by his soul and spiritual ideals (truth, justice, beauty.) Man serves Lucifer by giving in to these temptations, by being an accomplice in his own destruction. The Illuminati always has promoted indulging our base instincts calling this "sexual liberation" and "open marriage." This undermines the family. Their psychology always has been against "repression" (i.e. self-discipline.) This view that man is God, and his wishes are the measure of all things, is called "Secular Humanism" aka "Luciferianism".

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#5 The Omen

It’s interesting that people can never seem to get right whether or not the Illuminati are partially a society for Jesus or for Satan. In the case of The Devil’s Advocate, it would seem that people are suggesting we have no choice but to eventually follow our enlightened masters to the glory of Satan. But then with films like Rosemary’s Baby, The Exorcist, and The Omen, it seems as though people think that these are all a Jesuit ploy of mass propaganda and manipulation. And apparently, the whole point of this mass manipulation is to keep people away from the power of Satan. Though, given that the Illuminati’s main symbol is the pyramid of wealth (and love of money is the root of all evil), it’s difficult to see the Illuminati as an organization to bring us to the bosom of Jesus.

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#6 V For Vendetta

There are those out there who honestly think that V For Vendetta was shot in order to cover up the original story of Guy Fawkes and his mask (now largely used by the internet superpower Anonymous). The film version is all about overthrowing a tyrannical government, but the original story was apparently more than that. Guy Fawkes’ whole plan was to kill King James and those men who aided him in promoting Protestantism in England with his King James Bible. It was all a Catholic plot to save the power of the pope. This story even goes as deep as people believing that Pope Francis is a Jesuit soldier who is involved in UFO cover-ups. Apparently, UFOs are actually demonic beings that can travel through dimensions. See how much of this actually shows up in the film.

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#7 The Shining

Conspiracy theorists allege that Kubrick peppered his work with visual references to Masonic symbols, like the Eye of Providence. Eyes and triangles do indeed feature highly in his film, not least in The Shining: triangular chair backs, step-ladders, roofs, mountains and tapering corridor shots. The secret society eventually ki

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#8 American Psycho

It’s fascinating to listen to an author, writer, director or any creative person discuss their work. I find it so fascinating because of the “work”, whether it be a novel, a film, a song, always takes on a different meaning to different people. As consumers of culture, we pick and choose moments in the work that speaks to us. We assign our own meaning. It might be the polar opposite of what the artist intended.

The Patrick Bateman character in American Psycho is just that — a fucking psycho — but there is an almost endearing quality about his lust for murder. The murders seem to have a purpose. Bateman is reacting to the things in his life that he seems fake. In his world of money, power, high priced toys and well off people, the only thing that’s real is chopping a person up in his living to Genesis songs.

Surprisingly, the connections that American Psycho has to the Illuminati is very much based on current politics. Apparently, the author of the novel on which the film is based was a huge fan of Donald Trump and basically made him the main character of his book. Patrick Bateman was a very wealthy tycoon who could only stay connected to reality through murder. While the author didn’t give name Trump in the book, nor in the film adaptation, Bateman’s age was made to be 27 in reference to the fact that it takes 270 votes in the electoral college to become president. And, apparently, the creator of American Psycho knew that Trump was going to be president as early as the writing of the book and obviously also when the movie was being created. The Illuminati deemed it so.

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#9 Raiders Of The Lost Ark

There's nothing more 80s than Steven Spielberg, and there's nothing better 80s than Raiders of the Lost Ark. Based on the oft-referenced classic film serials, Indiana Jones is a household name. What is far from common knowledge are the profound religious and esoteric themes in the Indiana Jones films, particularly in Raiders. Written by George Lucas and Lawrence Kasdan, and directed by Spielberg, Raiders demonstrates a carefully ordered, intriguing religious progression, evident to those well-read in esoterism and in this case, so-called “traditionalism” or the “perennial philosophy.”

“I remember sitting in a theatre in the early 80’s and clearly being able to make out a “Hail Satan” and “Sa-tan” being made audible at precisely the same time a loud booming thunder crashed as the Nazi’s were opening the Ark in Raiders of the Lost Ark.” This is the sort of stuff that films have to deal with today. People hearing supposed hidden messages and then applying it to some sort of mind control ploy set up by the wealthy members of the Illuminati. Partially a religious organization and partially an elite organization of rich people who think they know what’s best for mankind, apparently the Illuminati has been working mind control in film as far back as Star Wars. And they have planted it in shows as recent as Goosebumps, Gargoyles, and even Sailor Moon.

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#10 The Wicker Man

The Wicker Man is a remarkable story of the duality between the Christian and pagan ways, set against a Scottish background. In recent years, the story of the movie itself has been used as the struggle between the old Christian establishment and the reintroduction into Western society of “pagan movies”, of which The Wicker Man was one of the most shining examples.

Now, this is a fun film. And no, this isn’t the Nicolas Cage film about him punching girls in the face, and getting suffocated in bees. No, this was the original Wicker Man, which was actually a good film. At least by comparison. However, it wouldn’t be on this list if it wasn’t for some sort of involvement with the Illuminati. It turns out that the island on which the action takes place is littered with flashes of the “eye of providence”, or the “all-seeing eye”. And the whole film is about the Islanders manipulating the main character so that they may ultimately sacrifice him for a good harvest of crops. That smells like a conspiracy to me. Apparently, the all-seeing God is always watching, and waiting for his servants to do work in his name.