What movies layout the NWO agenda?

I’ll start.
Escape from LA
>Snake (main character) is poisoned with a deadly virus that turns out just to be the flu
>The main bad guy at one point says, “ we are russia!”
>the major threat in the movie is a weapon that can turn off all electronics
>at the end of the movie the main character turns off all the power, he reaches for a pack of cigarettes labeled American Spirit, and he smokes the last one. (Pretty obvious symbolism)
> last thing you see is a close up of Snakes face and who only has one eye visible (wears an eye patch)

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youtube.com/watch?v=3HQTNZRmJdg
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You still thinking there is someone controlling everything from the shadows..... No one is in control user.
Sorry.

Predictive programming by homosexual jews such as this one:

Same effeminate theme of OY VEY, SHUT IT DOWN as Fight Club (written by a literal gay jew).

John Carpenter isn’t a Jew dipshit.

Everything blacked.com makes

here's for you

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Most movies and tv really sucks, realized that when i was young, you see the propaganda just jump out at you and say "hey stupid, put this pile of dogshit in your brain while i teach your kids to suck eggs". It's Infuriating and when you turn off, everyone else is still pluged in. Walking around becoming living comercials, buying and consuming, feeding the corporate swine. They no longer need what God gave us to feed ourselves, they eat artifical trash from factories and outwardly their bodies reflect it. The TV worshippers have lost their soul, sucked out to power the towering beast that dangles heros in capes before their very eyes like mobiles for their warped infantile minds. You get tired of all this shit, so you say fuck it and isolate, maybe try to find others like you, but one day you wake up and you realize since you were very young, your actions and notions of reality have been planted like a seed deep in your mind waiting to pounce once encountered in reality. You were never really you, I was never really me. This world is fake and gay.

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Found the glowie

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Your glow is hurting my eyeballs

youtube.com/watch?v=3HQTNZRmJdg

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Rollerball.

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That's the movie that was inspired by Metal Gear Solid?

google.com/url?sa=t&source=web&rct=j&url=https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=wxgVMOmSldA&ved=2ahUKEwjg672K7L_2AhWXSmwGHYGGD48QwqsBegQIBxAB&sqi=2&usg=AOvVaw0VRA0x1UufzadV8_VEcDg0

I’m pretty sure the movies were released before the games

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All the films explaining their religious doctrine, a kabbalistic pervesion of the greek gnosis :
- matrix
- blade runner 2049
- jupiter ascending
- the 5th element
- tales of arise (vidya, but that's the most detailed "game movie" you'll ever find if you wanna understand their vision of the gnosis)
That's the movies the jews give a special attention to, they often are very good movies too (which is rare enough to be mentionned) and excellent photography. That's their crown jewels, reserved to the initiated and (((they))) don't produce many of them.

The movies literally detailling how the Janus Project will unfold :
- no time to die (the last 007)
- children of men
- resident evil
- i am a legend
- V for vendetta
- etc...
Often relatively trash movies, there are countless of them, because they don't carry the doctrine, they simply are here to predictive programming you.

The common ground i found to all these productions is (((they))) always place themselves in the position of the antagonist, whereas the protagonist is incarnated by an idealized goy with a destiny to fulfill (the hero think himself as a normie at first and simply stand for what is right while being surrounded by an apaphetic mass of gentiles, but in truth, as the plot evolve, he discover only him could have done this task, either it be due to his bloodline of inherited unique capacities).

I find it interesting the jews and masons acknowlege they fulfill the roles of the "baddies' in every movie they produce, and they try to motivate the spectator to call to their inner strenght and believe in what is right and just to elevate themselves and fight to death the evil the jewish/masonic order represent. They are desperately calling for the user who will fight against them and eventually defeat them in order to allow the new order to emerge.

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(((Carpenter)))?

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It’s how they fool naive people into working for them, they invented absurd narratives and try to enforce them via stalking.

this

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This was released 4 days before covid was declared a pandemic. You’ve got to be kidding me

That doesn't make any sense in light of what i just said.
Actually, your sentence doesn't make any sense whatsoever.

...genitalia

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Plot
Two teenagers, Stella Grant (Haley Lu Richardson) and Will Newman (Cole Sprouse) both have a genetic disease known as Cystic Fibrosis (CF). Two people with CF must not get closer than six feet to prevent cross-infection. Stella, determined to make it out of the hospital one day, is strict with her medication. Will prefers to slack off and avoid his responsibilities, angering her. Will, who has contracted B. Cepacia, is part of a new drug trial, and does not have a lung transplant for him, while Stella has been on the transplant list for a long time. She later finds out that Will is not doing his treatments, and tries to help him. In return, Will only asks her for permission to draw a picture of her. Over time, they begin doing their treatments together. Will and Stella fall in love, but can't get closer than six feet of each other.

Stella's G-tube later gets infected and she has to undergo surgery to get it replaced. Stella's sister, Abby, who was normally with Stella during surgery, died from a botched daredevil stunt. This has left Stella with severe survivor's guilt, who now faces surgery alone. Will, having learned about Abby's death, goes to accompany Stella and sings her the song Abby would always sing her before surgery.

As Will leaves Stella's surgical prep room, he is caught by a nurse named Barb. Barb tells him a story about two people with CF who fell in love with each other; both of whom died from being near each other and cross contracting each other's bacteria. Will does not want to hurt Stella, so he says he can not see her anymore. Stella becomes upset and angry. She later plans an attempt to meet Will. She decides to take back one foot that CF had stolen from her. She carries around a pool stick which measures exactly five feet; keeping her and Will five feet apart at all times.

On Will's birthday, Stella's best friend Poe, another CF patient, dies. As an act of rebellion to CF, the two decide to leave the hospital to visit the lights that she could see from her hospital room, which Stella has always wanted to do before.

While away from the hospital, Stella receives a text that her lung transplant is en route, which she promptly ignores. Stella falls through the ice of a frozen pond as she and Will leave to go back to the hospital.

Will reaches into the water and pulls out a nearly dead Stella. Even though saliva contact is the worst for two people with CF, he gives her CPR to save her life. Stella survives and Will and Stella are brought back to the hospital. Because of the CPR he had given her, Will fears that she has now contracted B. Cepacia. Stella is given her lung transplant which goes all according to plan and, miraculously, she has not contracted B. Cepacia.

Meanwhile, Will finds out that the drug trial he has been on has not been working for him. After her transplant, while under anesthesia, her parents, Will's mother, and the nurses and doctors all agree to help Will set up the lights outside of Stella's room.

After realizing the he will likely infect her after her transplant is complete, Will decides to say a final goodbye to Stella, confessing his love for her. Before he leaves, she is given his sketchbook of drawings he had done of her and her friends during their stay in the hospital.

Of course, Hideo "La Creatividad" Kojima invented the camera too

Cast
Haley Lu Richardson as Stella Grant
Cole Sprouse as William "Will" Newman
Moisés Arias as Poe Ramirez
Kimberly Hébert Gregory as Nurse Barbara
Parminder Nagra as Dr. Hamid
Claire Forlani as Meredith Newman
Emily Baldoni as Nurse Julie
Cynthia Evans as Erin Grant
Gary Weeks as Tom Grant
Sophia Bernard as Abby Grant
Cecilia Leal as Camila

Production
In January 2017, Tobias Iaconis and Mikki Daughtry sold their untitled screenplay to CBS Films for Justin Baldoni to produce and direct.[7]

Baldoni first became involved with cystic fibrosis when he directed the documentary My Last Days. He met YouTuber Claire Wineland and subsequently hired her as a consultant for the film, before she died from complications of a lung transplant for CF.[8]

In January 2018, Cole Sprouse was cast to star in the film, titled Five Feet Apart.[9][10] In April of that year, Haley Lu Richardson was also set to star, and Moisés Arias joined in a supporting role.[11][12] Principal production began a month later on May 25 in New Orleans,[13][14] and concluded another month later on June 26.[15]

The film's title refers to the "six foot rule", a guideline from the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation which states that cystic fibrosis patients should be kept at least six feet (1.8 m) apart from each other, to lower the risk of cross-infection. In 2020, about a year after the movie's release, a similar guideline for social distancing, would become universal, to help slow the spread of COVID-19, during the pandemic.[16]

A novelization of the same name by Rachael Lippincott was published in November 2018.[17]

Brian Tyler and Breton Vivian composed the score. The soundtrack was released on Lakeshore Records.

The lego movie

Reception
Box office
Five Feet Apart grossed $45.7 million in the United States and Canada, and $34.4 million in other territories, for a worldwide total of $80.1 million, against a production budget of $7 million.[4]

In the United States and Canada, Five Feet Apart was released alongside Captive State and Wonder Park, and was projected to gross $6–10 million from 2,600 theaters in its opening weekend.[20][3] The film made $5.4 million on its first day, including $715,000 from Thursday night previews. It went on to debut to $13.1 million, finishing third, behind Captain Marvel and Wonder Park.[19] The film fell 35% in its second weekend, grossing $8.5 million, and just 27% in its third to $6.3 million.[21][22]

Critical response
On Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 53% based on 128 reviews, with an average rating of 5.7/10. The website's critical consensus reads, "Elevated considerably by Haley Lu Richardson's performance but bogged down by clichés, Five Feet Apart doesn't tug at the heartstrings quite as deftly as it should."[23] On Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 53 out of 100, based on 26 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews".[24] Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "A" on an A+ to F scale, while filmgoers at PostTrak gave it 3+1⁄2 out of 5 stars.[19]

Andrew Barker of Variety praised the performance of Richardson, which he called "a star turn," though described the film as an "otherwise formulaic teen romance."[25] Katie Walsh of the Los Angeles Times acclaimed Richardson for the depth and range of her performance.[26] Caroline Siede of The A.V. Club commended the lead performances, but said "In the end... even Richardson and Sprouse can't fully overcome the clumsy mawkishness around them."[27]

Response from cystic fibrosis community
Responses from the cystic fibrosis community were mixed. The Cystic Fibrosis Foundation welcomed the opportunity to raise awareness about the struggle many patients experience with the disease,[28] while others found fault with the film's depiction of medically dangerous behavior.[29] Others voiced concern about a terminal illness being romanticized and trivialized as a Hollywood teen love plot device.[30]

The film was promoted using Instagram, where the studio paid influencers to post about hardships involving love and physical distance.[30] Many of the posts discussed family members who lived far away; the promotion was perceived as tone-deaf and trivializing a fatal disease.[31] After the ensuing backlash, the campaign was pulled and the studio apologized.[31]

Five Feet Apart is a 2019 American romantic drama film directed by Justin Baldoni (in his directorial debut)[5] and written by Mikki Daughtry and Tobias Iaconis. The film was inspired by Claire Wineland, who suffered from cystic fibrosis.[6] Haley Lu Richardson and Cole Sprouse play two young patients with cystic fibrosis, who try to have a relationship despite always being forced to stay a certain distance (5 ft) away from each other. It was released in the United States on March 15, 2019 by CBS Films via Lionsgate.[1] The film received mixed reviews from critics and has grossed over $91 million worldwide.

Escape from New York (1981) inspired Metal Gear Solid (1987).
Escape from LA (1996) was the sequel.

wikipedia

Terminators are real life tech.

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Have you watched the intro to Road Warrior lately?

Lmfao what the fuck did I just read

not a movie but...yeah

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I thought you understood.

It's business, that's all it is.

You still don't get it.

There ain't no countries anymore.

They're running the whole show.

They own the whole planet.

They can do whatever they want.

We can have it good for a change.

If we help them, they'll leave us

alone to make some money.

You can have a taste of the good life.

It's what everybody wants.

What's the threat?

We all sell out every day,

might as well be on the winning team.

See you, boys.

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