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Illuminati & Secret Society Symbolism In Blade Runner

richardthomas

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I wrote this back in 2009 after seeing Ridley Scott's Blade Runner on blu-ray for the first time. I'd be interested in hearing any information readers have about Philip K. Dick.

Blade Runner: Electronic Owls and Illuminati Symbolism

One of only two science-fiction films made by Hollywood visionary Ridley Scott, (the other, of course, being Alien) Blade Runner is about far more than Harrison Ford hunting down and "retiring" rebel replicants. The first Philip K. Dick big screen adaptation the film is an undisputed cult classic and stands today as arguably the best sci-fi movie ever. Its dark, post-apocalyptic and even post-organic urban setting providing one of the few really believable sci-fi backdrops in all of cinema history.

Combined with larger questions about the nature of reality and what it really means to be human it's this convincing and well thought out sci-fi world Scott creates that invites five cuts and frequent re-watching. Almost more like a novel than a film, noticing something new with each visit. Ridley Scott's vision of a future Los Angeles couldn't be much more different to the city we know today (though it's a lot closer now than it was in 1982). With its colossal skyscrapers, heavy pollution and torrential downpours looking more like a darker New York or even DC Comics' Gotham City. Like Alien before it, the film presents a "used future" only this time it's nature itself that's falling apart not just a spaceship. Climatic change apparently wiping out most animal life to the point where artificial copies are far more common and affordable and humans (those who can afford it) are forced to retreat to the "off-world colonies."

Perhaps the strangest thing about Scott's future LA, though, is that it seems completely riddled with Illuminati imagery and symbolism. Perhaps the most obvious example of this parapolitical iconography has to be the "All Seeing Eye."

Blade Runner opens with an extreme close-up of Harrison Ford's character Rick Deckard's eye and there are numerous other eye shots throughout the film. Eyes being important to the plot because they're the only way to tell the difference between replicants (artificial humans) and real humans. Replicant eyes involuntary glowing in certain scenes. However, is this really the All Seeing Eye of the Illuminati?

Interestingly, in his DVD commentary for The Final Cut Scott did admit that the eye imagery was meant to be reminiscent of George Orwell's dystopian Nineteen Eighty-Four and that it was meant to imply that the world of Blade Runner isn't that far removed from the totalitarian regime of the classic novel. Orwell's Nineteen Eighty-Four, of course, being a favourite tool of conspiracy theorists for explaining the kind of New World Order that the Illuminati are covertly constructing around us. Some researchers even speculating that Orwell (a former officer in the Indian Imperial Police) might have even based his novel largely on insider knowledge rather than being simply fiction. But let's get back to Blade Runner.

In his commentary, Scott explains that he and the writers (again echoing Orwell and Alien) envisioned Blade Runner as a future completely economically, technologically and politically dominated by three or less mega-corporations. In effect, it is a world caught in the iron grip of total corporatism: a situation disturbingly close to today but still a somewhat novel idea back in 1982 (unless you were a conspiracy buff, of course).

The largest and most powerful of these new inter-planetary superpowers, of course, is the Tyrell Corporation. Named after its founder and almost God-like creator of the Nexus-6 series replicants: Dr. Eldon Tyrell. A mega-genius with (like Dr. Frankenstein and the Illuminati before him) little or no qualms about the morality of his experiments. Creating (artificial) men and women with at least equal intelligence to their genetic designers ... only to live a mere four years max as nothing more than off-world slaves before they "retire."

Tyrell's favourite motto "More human than human" can't help but ring some alarm bells for anyone who has ever seen Alex Jones' parapolitical blockbuster Endgame. In the documentary film, Jones chronicles the secret elites plans to wipe out a staggering 80% of mankind and replace the species with what they believe is the next stage in human evolution: the post or transhuman. This "being" would be the perfect blending of man with machine, with cybernetics and genetic engineering at their zenith point, in other words, the partly organic "More human than human" replicants of Blade Runner.

However. it's the Tyrell Corporation's taste in architecture and wild life that really sounds the Illuminati alarm. The Tyrell Headquarters are a gigantic seven hundred stories tall pyramided shaped skyscraper. Perhaps resembling an Aztec or Ancient Egyptian pyramid.

A classic symbol associated with the Illuminati, the pyramid has always been an icon of authoritarianism and higher power. A meeting place between Heaven and Earth where great Kings and High Priests became gods in their peoples' eyes. Ridley Scott couldn't have picked a better design for the HQ of his replicants' post-modern father/maker and corporate dictator Tyrell.

In a documentary (Dangerous Days: The Making of Blade Runner) accompanying the DVD release of The Final Cut it's explained that a pyramid was chosen because in an older script Tyrell was exposed to be a replicant copy. The real Tyrell having died and been cryogenically preserved in a giant glass sarcophagus at the centre of the pyramided complex. Tyrell HQ, in effect, then was originally envisioned as being a kind of tomb like the pyramids of the Pharaohs. Be that as it may, perhaps there is a better reason for the strange choice of 2019 architecture.

As well as power and authority, the pyramid is also the perfect physical representation of compartmentalisation: the Illuminati system of control. It exists as a dumbed-down humanity at the base with a tiny enlightened capstone elite ruling on top, i.e. exactly the kind of Orwellian society seemingly reflected in Blade Runner.

Finally, if all this Illuminati imagery and symbolism (the All Seeing Eye, the Pyramid of Compartmentalisation, never mind the Orwellian and transhumanist overtones) wasn't enough, when Deckard (Harrison Ford) first visits Tyrell HQ he is greeted by a replicant owl. The owl (according to Ridley Scott) being Tyrell's official mascot and emblem. Yet another, be it much less well known, Illuminati symbol.

In the film that really put him on the map, Dark Secrets Inside Bohemian Grove, Alex Jones exposed how the "global elite" meet in secret each year to take part in a strange and bizarre ceremony called the "Cremation of Care." This is an event which, as outlandish as it sounds, involves the worship and even mock human sacrifice of an infant to a deity they call the Great Owl of Bohemia (a giant 45 foot stone owl god complete with almost demonic style horns). The horns particularly are most worrying because they're very reminiscent of the ancient Canaanite horned ideal Moloch, who, according to the Bible at least, really did have children sacrificed to it.

Did Ridley Scott really pick the owl as Tyrell's personal emblem and mascot because of its ancient association and meaning of wisdom, as most would argue? Or is there perhaps a double much darker meaning? When you put it all together: the owl, the pyramid, all the eye imagery, not to mention the fact that the only other animal replicant in the film is a snake, another Illuminati icon, it leaves little to no doubt that Scott and the writers must have done at least some research into Illuminati symbolism and imagery. Whether they believed in any of the conspiracy theories or not, is debatable and probably something we will never really know, but they must have been aware of them.

Some speculate that Philip K. Dick used remote viewing or other psycic means to write his books. Given that Hollywood celebrities like Arnold Swarchenegger have attended the bizarre Bohemian Grove, perhaps it's just possible Scott became intrigued that way. Whatever the truth, the Illuminati imagery adds a fascinating extra layer and realism to Scott's dystopian future that most people will sadly miss but still somehow know they're missing ... pulling them back again and again ... which is the genius of Ridley Scott.

http://binnallofamerica.com/rr7.18.9.html
 
There are a couple of PKD threads in Fortean Culture if you want to do a search there...
 
All this speculation.
Has anybody actually asked Ridley Scott about this?

I am very much a fan of Blade Runner. It was the first SF film I came away from in a dazed state; I went in the cinema just because the title sounded cool, and was pleasantly surprised and wowed by what I saw.
Since then, I have the film on DVD and Blu-Ray, and have a copy of the script on my laptop.
 
Not at all nerdy then. :lol:
 
Hang on, I was quite into my Illuminati stuff in my younger days and read RAW, the illuminiods, Darual, etc and many more and I can't remember much about snakes.

I think Ridley Scott choose the Owl because they are fairly epic animals. It would not have had the same effect if it was a hamster.

I'm all for a good conspiracy theory but I don't think Adam W or the old man of the mountains was high on the list when Ridley was making the film.
 
Dick was completely and marvellously paranoid. If Ridley Scott was aware of this he may have deliberately included paranoid imagery in this masterwork of a film.

Incidentally Dick was working on a book called The Owl in Daylight when he died.
 
We can clearly see in Ridley Scott's earlier work a clear defining of the New World Order and how things are meant to be. The use of children working under harsh conditions for a ruthless master, a noteworthy soundtrack to underpin our misery, and a cinematic filter to make our lives seem less wearisome when it comes down to the historical recordings.
Why this man wasn't fingered as an enemy of the human freedom and its spirit long ago will remain a mystery while we, shackled, yet together, dig scones from the bare earth for our Masters.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CFLBvLxLJMI
 
jimv1 said:
we, shackled, yet together, dig scones from the bare earth for our Masters.

Tell you what, I'll get my mum to bake you some. :lol:
 
Joke on the Adam and Joe Christmas show this morning: Did you hear about Ridley Scott's brother who did nothing with his life? He's called Diddley Scott.
 
gncxx said:
Joke on the Adam and Joe Christmas show this morning: Did you hear about Ridley Scott's brother who did nothing with his life? He's called Diddley Scott.
I thought his name was Tony...

Boom! Take that, you talentless hack.

Seriously, it's interesting that Ridley has done so many good films, and Tony has made so many crap ones. And they have completely different styles. Not that I think they should be identical, it's just a particularly stark contrast.
 
gncxx said:
Joke on the Adam and Joe Christmas show this morning: Did you hear about Ridley Scott's brother who did nothing with his life? He's called Diddley Scott.

There's also another little-known brother from North of the Border who's always drunk. He's called Widdley Scott.
 
A Pyramid (this time on Mars) was also in Total Recall, another film based on PKD’s writings. Don’t know how significant that is, but thought it worth mentioning.
 
My favourite Dick book isn't SF; it is Confessions of a Crap Artist, the story of a guy with Aspergers who gets drawn into a UFO/End-of-the-World cult. Dick tells the story in a most amusing way, and includes some well-rounded characters. Dick seems to have been very aware of the absurdities of paranoid delusion, despite being prey to them himself at least some of the time.
 
Watch this, "Did Philip K. Dick Disclose the Existence of "the Matrix" in 1977?" http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QGPB_isG-Ik

To be fair, the Doctor Who story The Deadly Assassin, which aired from 30 October to 20 November 1976 had the premise of a virtual reality matrix called, um, the matrix.

Also the earlier story The Pyramids of Mars, aired October 25 to November 15 1976, had a premise needing no explanation :lol: which could just as well be the inspiration for the movie of Total Recall
 
Thought I'd post this again.

richardthomas said:
I wrote this back in 2009 after seeing Ridley Scott's Blade Runner on blu-ray for the first time. I'd be interested in hearing any information readers have about Philip K. Dick.

Blade Runner: Electronic Owls and Illuminati Symbolism

One of only two science-fiction films made by Hollywood visionary Ridley Scott, (the other, of course, being Alien) Blade Runner is about far more than Harrison Ford hunting down and "retiring" rebel replicants. The first Philip K. Dick big screen adaptation the film is an undisputed cult classic and stands today as arguably the best sci-fi movie ever. Its dark, post-apocalyptic and even post-organic urban setting providing one of the few really believable sci-fi backdrops in all of cinema history.

Combined with larger questions about the nature of reality and what it really means to be human it's this convincing and well thought out sci-fi world Scott creates that invites five cuts and frequent re-watching. Almost more like a novel than a film, noticing something new with each visit. Ridley Scott's vision of a future Los Angeles couldn't be much more different to the city we know today (though it's a lot closer now than it was in 1982). With its colossal skyscrapers, heavy pollution and torrential downpours looking more like a darker New York or even DC Comics' Gotham City. Like Alien before it, the film presents a "used future" only this time it's nature itself that's falling apart not just a spaceship. Climatic change apparently wiping out most animal life to the point where artificial copies are far more common and affordable and humans (those who can afford it) are forced to retreat to the "off-world colonies."

Perhaps the strangest thing about Scott's future LA, though, is that it seems completely riddled with Illuminati imagery and symbolism. Perhaps the most obvious example of this parapolitical iconography has to be the "All Seeing Eye."

Blade Runner opens with an extreme close-up of Harrison Ford's character Rick Deckard's eye and there are numerous other eye shots throughout the film. Eyes being important to the plot because they're the only way to tell the difference between replicants (artificial humans) and real humans. Replicant eyes involuntary glowing in certain scenes. However, is this really the All Seeing Eye of the Illuminati?

Interestingly, in his DVD commentary for The Final Cut Scott did admit that the eye imagery was meant to be reminiscent of George Orwell's dystopian Nineteen Eighty-Four and that it was meant to imply that the world of Blade Runner isn't that far removed from the totalitarian regime of the classic novel. Orwell's Nineteen Eighty-Four, of course, being a favourite tool of conspiracy theorists for explaining the kind of New World Order that the Illuminati are covertly constructing around us. Some researchers even speculating that Orwell (a former officer in the Indian Imperial Police) might have even based his novel largely on insider knowledge rather than being simply fiction. But let's get back to Blade Runner.

In his commentary, Scott explains that he and the writers (again echoing Orwell and Alien) envisioned Blade Runner as a future completely economically, technologically and politically dominated by three or less mega-corporations. In effect, it is a world caught in the iron grip of total corporatism: a situation disturbingly close to today but still a somewhat novel idea back in 1982 (unless you were a conspiracy buff, of course).

The largest and most powerful of these new inter-planetary superpowers, of course, is the Tyrell Corporation. Named after its founder and almost God-like creator of the Nexus-6 series replicants: Dr. Eldon Tyrell. A mega-genius with (like Dr. Frankenstein and the Illuminati before him) little or no qualms about the morality of his experiments. Creating (artificial) men and women with at least equal intelligence to their genetic designers ... only to live a mere four years max as nothing more than off-world slaves before they "retire."

Tyrell's favourite motto "More human than human" can't help but ring some alarm bells for anyone who has ever seen Alex Jones' parapolitical blockbuster Endgame. In the documentary film, Jones chronicles the secret elites plans to wipe out a staggering 80% of mankind and replace the species with what they believe is the next stage in human evolution: the post or transhuman. This "being" would be the perfect blending of man with machine, with cybernetics and genetic engineering at their zenith point, in other words, the partly organic "More human than human" replicants of Blade Runner.

However. it's the Tyrell Corporation's taste in architecture and wild life that really sounds the Illuminati alarm. The Tyrell Headquarters are a gigantic seven hundred stories tall pyramided shaped skyscraper. Perhaps resembling an Aztec or Ancient Egyptian pyramid.

A classic symbol associated with the Illuminati, the pyramid has always been an icon of authoritarianism and higher power. A meeting place between Heaven and Earth where great Kings and High Priests became gods in their peoples' eyes. Ridley Scott couldn't have picked a better design for the HQ of his replicants' post-modern father/maker and corporate dictator Tyrell.

In a documentary (Dangerous Days: The Making of Blade Runner) accompanying the DVD release of The Final Cut it's explained that a pyramid was chosen because in an older script Tyrell was exposed to be a replicant copy. The real Tyrell having died and been cryogenically preserved in a giant glass sarcophagus at the centre of the pyramided complex. Tyrell HQ, in effect, then was originally envisioned as being a kind of tomb like the pyramids of the Pharaohs. Be that as it may, perhaps there is a better reason for the strange choice of 2019 architecture.

As well as power and authority, the pyramid is also the perfect physical representation of compartmentalisation: the Illuminati system of control. It exists as a dumbed-down humanity at the base with a tiny enlightened capstone elite ruling on top, i.e. exactly the kind of Orwellian society seemingly reflected in Blade Runner.

Finally, if all this Illuminati imagery and symbolism (the All Seeing Eye, the Pyramid of Compartmentalisation, never mind the Orwellian and transhumanist overtones) wasn't enough, when Deckard (Harrison Ford) first visits Tyrell HQ he is greeted by a replicant owl. The owl (according to Ridley Scott) being Tyrell's official mascot and emblem. Yet another, be it much less well known, Illuminati symbol.

In the film that really put him on the map, Dark Secrets Inside Bohemian Grove, Alex Jones exposed how the "global elite" meet in secret each year to take part in a strange and bizarre ceremony called the "Cremation of Care." This is an event which, as outlandish as it sounds, involves the worship and even mock human sacrifice of an infant to a deity they call the Great Owl of Bohemia (a giant 45 foot stone owl god complete with almost demonic style horns). The horns particularly are most worrying because they're very reminiscent of the ancient Canaanite horned ideal Moloch, who, according to the Bible at least, really did have children sacrificed to it.

Did Ridley Scott really pick the owl as Tyrell's personal emblem and mascot because of its ancient association and meaning of wisdom, as most would argue? Or is there perhaps a double much darker meaning? When you put it all together: the owl, the pyramid, all the eye imagery, not to mention the fact that the only other animal replicant in the film is a snake, another Illuminati icon, it leaves little to no doubt that Scott and the writers must have done at least some research into Illuminati symbolism and imagery. Whether they believed in any of the conspiracy theories or not, is debatable and probably something we will never really know, but they must have been aware of them.

Some speculate that Philip K. Dick used remote viewing or other psycic means to write his books. Given that Hollywood celebrities like Arnold Swarchenegger have attended the bizarre Bohemian Grove, perhaps it's just possible Scott became intrigued that way. Whatever the truth, the Illuminati imagery adds a fascinating extra layer and realism to Scott's dystopian future that most people will sadly miss but still somehow know they're missing ... pulling them back again and again ... which is the genius of Ridley Scott.

http://binnallofamerica.com/rr7.18.9.html
 
BlackRiverFalls said:
Also the earlier story The Pyramids of Mars, aired October 25 to November 15 1976, had a premise needing no explanation :lol: which could just as well be the inspiration for the movie of Total Recall

I'm sure I've heard this mentioned somewhere before but I've never seen the slightest connection between the two plots, other than the use of pyramids and Mars. What am I missing?
 
I'm sure I've heard this mentioned somewhere before but I've never seen the slightest connection between the two plots, other than the use of pyramids and Mars. What am I missing?

other than the use of pyramids and mars, nothing. i forget if there were pyramids in We Can Remember It For You Wholesale, and am just musing on where that piece of imagery might have come from and how not actually that original it is in context, the Tomorrow People also did a scifi/pyramids story in the same era.

Edit: My point in context is that it seems tenuous to count sci-fi pyramids in as overt illuminati imagery when they were for that era all over the genre and pretty mainstream.
 
BlackRiverFalls said:
Thought I'd post this again.

Forgive me, but you're the one who brought Total Recall and The Matrix into this :?

Yeh, but we're on page 2 now, so I thought it would make it easier for posters to read the original post without going back to page 1.
 
I asked Christopher Knowles the author of The Secret Sun blog about this in an exclusive interview for UFOMystic.

Richard Thomas: Nothing to do with UFOs per se but back in 2009 I wrote a column for Binnall of America entitled “Blade Runner: Electronic Owls and Illuminati Symbolism,” pyramids, the All Seeing Eye, Owls, have you ever noticed the abundance of “Illuminati Symbolism” in Blade Runner and what, if anything, do you think it could mean? I know Philip K. Dick had an interest in paranormal type subjects, did he have much input into the film?

Christopher Knowles: Well, we know that Dick was all over anything weird or mystical, but I don’t think he had much involvement in the movie itself. Blade Runner kind of presents us with this kind of technocratic dystopia that some of these elite cult types would see as the paradise of their apotheosis. The cognitive elite in their penthouses and the poor, teeming masses huddled in the streets and the middle class a distant memory. The constant rain is kind of like the piss of the new gods in that regard. Maybe Scott incorporated some of those symbols as part of the overall social critique of this world that runs throughout the film. Maybe it was the screenwriter David Peoples, who also did similar films like Twelve Monkeys and Soldier.

Read the full interview at http://www.ufomystic.com/2011/01/14/chr ... secret-su/
 
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