Curse of Rosemary’s Baby

Rosemarys_baby_posterWho runs the world?  What if you were told there were a coalition of Satanists, behind the scenes, masquerading as our benevolent caretakers.  Would you believe me?

Back in 1968, Paramount released “Rosemary’s Baby” (based on Ira Levin’s novel), directed by then up-and-coming film director Roman Polanski.  The movie would become a phenomenal hit, the title a catchphrase everyone understood.  Some forty-eight years later, it’s still viewed with morbid fascination.

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The Dakota Building aka “The Bramford”

Director Roman Polanski claims he doesn’t believe in the devil, yet the opening and closing sequences are shot from the devil’s point-of-view as he hovers over Manhattan.

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His wife Sharon Tate was cast as an extra in the party scene.  She was murdered while pregnant on August 9, 1969.

 The mysterious apartment building known as “the Bramford” is really “the Dakota” where John Lennon was shot to death on Dec. 8, 1980.  (Dec. 9th in Liverpool – #9.)

Book connections:  “All of Them Witches” isn’t a real book, but is used as a device to warn Rosemary.  The movie is meant to take place in 1966.  In 1999, Polanski would direct another Satanic film titled “The Ninth Gate”, about a book that is able to bring forth the devil.  1933 – 1966 – 1999.  33 degrees.

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Tony Curtis (who appeared with Tate in “Don’t Make Waves” a year earlier) does a voice-over as Donald Baumgart, an actor who goes blind from a witch’s curse.

Krzysztof Komeda vol.14.jpg  Composer Krzysztof Komeda who wrote the eerie score died a year later from a brain injury.

    Robert Redford lost the role of Guy Woodhouse due to legal reasons.  John Cassavetes was cast instead.

  Mia-Farrow-Rosemary's-Baby-1968 (4) Tuesday Weld lost the role of Rosemary Woodhouse because Paramount preferred Mia Farrow.

Image result for mia farrow, frank sinatra  Frank Sinatra divorced Mia Farrow because she refused to quit the film, so she could appear with him in “The Detective” (1968.)  She was replaced by Lee Remick.

Image result for ruth gordon Ruth Warrick was the only major Oscar winner (Best Supporting Actress.)

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Roman Polanski would go on to even greater fame for “Macbeth”, “Chinatown”, “The Tenant”, “Tess” and “The Pianist”.  (Academy Award winner for Best Director – 2002.)  He is forced to live in France because of his 1977 arrest for unlawful sexual relations with a minor.

The novel and movie alludes to a network or witches living in New York.  In the finale, the baby Adrian “the antichrist” is visited by devil-worshippers from all over the world.  The baby itself isn’t shown and his mother Rosemary seems ambivalent.  Today, he would be of age.

The mainstream media will never acknowledge the Luciferian agenda:  a New World Order born from the United Nations, i.e., a world dictatorship.

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Text (C) 2016 – ERN

Eric Reports Recommended Films

Text (C) 2014 – Eric Reports

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Suspiria – 1977

Italian giallo director Dario Argento’s masterpiece.  Girl (Jessica Harper) enrolls in a school for dance, then slowly begins to discover that it’s a cult of witches.  (Partially based on a true story.)  Blood-red Technicolor rolls off the screen.  The extreme style + beautiful camera work and direction – put current horror films to shame.

Suspiria (1976)

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Magnum Force – 1973

Second of the “Dirty Harry” film series.  Detective Harry Callahan (Clint Eastwood) uncovers a death squad of fanatical cops who execute criminals that slip through the justice system.  The absolute flip-side of the first Dirty Harry movie and every bit as good.

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Seconds – 1966

A middle-aged businessman finds a second chance for a new life.  Sound too good to be true?  Nightmarish black & white cinematography by James Wong Howe, bleak, hopeless story by David Ely and razor-sharp direction by John Frankenheimer.  Intelligent sci-fi that was way ahead of its time.

A still from Joel Frankenheimer's 1966 film "Seconds."

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Macbeth – 1971

Whoever said Shakespeare was boring, never saw this version of “Macbeth”.  Directed by Roman Polanski, a few years after his wife and unborn son were murdered by the “Manson Family” and it shows.  Bloody, bloody violence and a foreboding sense of disaster.  Polanski said he was only giving the public what was expected of him.  Rich, dynamic performance by star Jon Finch.untitled

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The Shootist – 1976

Last, best performance by John Wayne as an aging gunfighter dying of cancer.  Great all-star cast, Richard Boone is especially good.  Don Siegel directs; based on the novel by Glendon Swarthout.  Despoite the sad theme, “The Shootist” remains upbeat.  A fitting tribute to the Duke, who died from cancer three years later.

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My Name is Nobody – 1974

Comedy-western starring Henry Fonda and Terrence Hill.  Based on a idea by Sergio Leone.  Memorable music composed by Ennio Morricone.

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The Manchurian Candidate – 1962

Forget the lame 2004 remake.  Returning Korean War POWs all have the same recurring nightmare.  What’s the connection?  Set against the Cold War-McCarthy Era, this fictional story proves more true every day:  how a Communist agent could one day occupy the White House.  Frank Sinatra-Lawrence Harvey-Angela Lansbury, all excellent.  John Frankenheimer directs, based on Richard Condon’s novel.

The Manchurian Candidate’ from page to screen (twice)

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Sisters – 1973

Director Brian de Palma’s first horror-suspense film.  Story about separated Siamese twins (the Blanchion sisters) both played by Margot Kidder.  Which one is the psychotic killer?  Loud, pulsating score by the man who composed “Psycho” – Bernard Herrmann.

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