Showing posts with label Mjolnir at the Movies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mjolnir at the Movies. Show all posts

Monday, 3 March 2025

MJOLNIR AT THE MOVIES EPISODE XXXI: LOST HORIZON

Mimi and David are back again to explore Frank Capra's 1937 forgotten classic Lost Horizon, which gives us a great excuse to digress on how liberalism, communism and Christianity all tap into each other as philosophies upon which to base utopian governance, each presenting a thin veneer of altruism that masks the inevitable despotism that follows....

 

 

Friday, 28 February 2025

MJOLNIR AT THE MOVIES EPISODE XXX: GORDON'S ALIVE!

Mjolnir at the Movies is back! David Yorkshire has returned to film reviews with new cohost Mimi, and these are going out live on X/Twitter (although Mr Musk, that great defender of free speech, has shadow banned us to death!) But YouTube has not banned us yet, in spite of having banned David Yorkshire's account, and so subscribe while ye still can! In the first of our new podcasts, we delve into the classic that is Flash Gordon. Is it just Cold War propaganda for kids or is there more to it, and more sinister propaganda...?

 

 

Saturday, 27 March 2021

MJOLNIR AT THE MINISERIES EPISODE II: THE KOBRA KAI KID

As Mjolnir at the Movies makes its long-unawaited return, Hanna and David take a look at the popular series Cobra Kai, a belated TV spin-off from the original Karate Kid films, rather forgetting that shite with Will Smith's brat ever existed - and quite rightly so. In fact, we also forget to mention it, as it was so utterly forgettable. We discuss the evolution of woke politics from the original film to the series, as well as the effects of demographic change on programmes in general. As the series' creators hail from a certain tribe, the JQ inevitably crops up. We also examine the current nostalgia for the 1980s and the effects of deconstruction theory on culture.



Sunday, 10 May 2020

MJOLNIR AT THE MOVIES EPISODE XXIX: TRON & NOT A CLU

James and David take a look at the 1982 fantasy film Tron and its belated sequel Tron Legacy. Both were produced by Disney, yet the focus, tone and purpose shifts from the original family film to the darker sequel in which the political religion of Holocaustianity comes to the fore....

 

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Sunday, 19 April 2020

MJOLNIR AT THE MOVIES EPISODE XXVIII: METROPOLIS

James and David take a look at perhaps the grandaddy of science fiction films - no, not Aelita! - but Metropolis. Directed by Fritz Lang and written by Thea von Harbou, it has influenced film makers for decades since, with references to it still appearing in culture - so much so that people who haven't even watched it will still know some of the most iconic images from it. We examine many of the themes of the film: Christian morality, industrialism, Marxist political theory, class conflict, urbanism and architecture, and attitudes to nudity, as well as going into German expressionism and expressionism in the arts in general. We also consider the strange paradox of a half-Jewish director and a National Socialist race-mixing degenerate screenwriter creating a rather moral film in tune with many of our own ideals.



Friday, 3 January 2020

MJOLNIR AT THE MOVIES INTERMISSION: POSSUM

In this particular Intermission, David Yorkshire takes a look at small-budget British horror film Possum, written and directed by Matthew Holness, who had previously written and starred in horror spoof TV series Garth Marenghi's Darkplace for Channel 4. The film is refreshingly diversity-free and offers a new spin on the well-worn horror trope of the puppeteer and his dummy....

 

 

Thursday, 2 January 2020

MJOLNIR AT THE MOVIES INTERMISSION: STAR WOKE EPISODE IX, THE RISE OF SKYWA*KER

With the others on holiday, David Yorkshire starts the New Year by taking a look at what will hopefully be the last Star Wars film of all time. It would be nice if it drew the curtain on Disney and Kathleen Kennedy's career too, but that appears unlikely. David would like to assure our listeners that he watched the film free of charge and urges others not to contribute to the revenues of the disseminators of anti-White propaganda.

 

 

Thursday, 31 October 2019

MJOLNIR AT THE MOVIES ALTER HALLOWEEN SPECIAL

In this Halloween special edition of Mjolnir at the Movies, James and David Yorkshire take a look at Youtube sci-fi channel Dust's sister channel Alter, which showcases horror shorts. We start with a few of the more politically driven films, of which there are more of than on the Dust channel, such as the awful 'The Invaders', before moving on to some horror-comedies and more serious efforts of varying degrees of quality. We save the best for last though: a truly original piece of stop motion animation entitled 'Operator'. Please subscribe to our channels and share on social media.

 

 

Tuesday, 8 October 2019

MJOLNIR AT THE MOVIES EPISODE 27: THE WITCHES

An ideal film and topic for this month as we approach Halloween, as David and James are joined by Hanna to discuss one of her favourite films, The Witches (1990). She also brings with her a watchful child in order to ensure no witches are present at the time of recording or able to listen in later as we know from this film that a witch trying to listen to a child for any length of time would drive such a creature mad. A great piece of children's fiction by Roald Dahl adapted to the big screen and blessed by the incredible talents of Jim Henson himself in his last work for the big screen before he sadly died. How does the film hold up today and what messages and meaning does it have? Such tangents this episode include the 'blood libel', Tessa Dahl's revelation about Gary Glitter's paedophilia on This Is Your Life, the elites' penchant for child abuse, Esther Rantzen and (((children's charities))), folk tale and faery tale, and much more.... Spoiler warning as always.

 

 

Saturday, 5 October 2019

MJOLNIR AT THE MOVIES DUST SPECIAL

James and David Yorkshire take a look at the website and Youtube channel Dust, a platform for independent film makers of sci-fi fiction to showcase their short films. We analyse a few of the best and most interesting - as well as the worst - films on the Dust platform. We end by reminding people of the good work of independent film maker Michael Kingsbury and urge people to support him.

 

 

Sunday, 15 September 2019

MJOLNIR AT THE MOVIES EPISODE 27: BRAZIL

As the 70th anniversary to George Orwell's Nineteen Eighty-Four has come around, the Mjolnir at the Movies crowd decided to review.....Brazil (1985). We have a look at this dystopian satire and what it reveals of the qualities Terry Gilliam has as a director, the connections to Nineteen Eighty-Four, how much of it really is satire and who might appreciate and identify with this movie. We examine Gilliam's influences and why this tends to be a favourite with Rightists, despite Gilliam's open support of Leftist politics. Do Sam Lowri and Harry Tuttle provide inspiration for domestic terrorists like Timothy McVeigh?

 

 


Tuesday, 3 September 2019

MJOLNIR AT THE MOVIES EPISODE 25: TERMINATARDS

In Episode 25 of Mjolnir at the Movies, we review the Terminator franchise, in other words all five films and even the series The Sarah Connor Chronicles, with a look ahead to the forthcoming Terminator: Dark Fate. Such themes addressed include Linda Hamilton vs Mary Sue, the acting prowess of the Styrian Oak, the strange need for death camps and motorcycle knees in Terminator: Salvation, how masculine cinematic iconography is reused and recycled, the most inappropriate times for women to wash their tits, James Cameron's evolution into shitlibbery, the effects of marketing on film making, and Terminator midgets and Twinkie bars....

Monday, 19 August 2019

MJOLNIR AT THE MOVIES EPISODE 24: THE 'BURBS

In this podcast, James, Neil and David take a look at Joe Dante's 1989 horror-comedy The 'Burbs, which featured a star-studded cast (Tom Hanks, Carrie Fisher, Bruce Dern, Henry Gibson, Corey Feldman) and was widely loved by the general public, but derided by critics. Indeed, we call professional film criticism into question, but also examine why Dante's blend of horror-comedy actually works, even though the critics do not seem to understand it. Also, Pizzagate rears its ugly head again....

Thursday, 8 August 2019

MJOLNIR AT THE MOVIES EPISODE 23: CHARIOTS OF FIRE

The Mjolnir at the Movies trio look at the Academy Award winning film Chariots of Fire, perhaps most famous for its musical score by Vangelis. Superficially, the film seems to be a triumph-against-anti-Semitism vehicle for Zionist propaganda; but is it really? Is the portrayal of Harold Abrahams at all flattering? And is not the moral of the story that British society was simply too liberal, and in being so, allowed itself to be transformed by people like Abrahams? We take a look at the tension between the bourgeois ethos and the aristocratic ethos and how mercantilism transformed the world of sport. By breaking the moral codes of amateurism, Abrahams might have won gold at the 1924 Olympics, but did Britain?

Wednesday, 7 August 2019

MJOLNIR AT THE MOVIES NOW SHOWING EPISODE 2

In this Now Showing, James and David discuss the new Lion King and other unnecessary remakes and sequels, the latest women-replace-men flick The Kitchen, Tarantino's covering for Jollywood paedophile Roman Polanski and its link to his new film Once Upon a Time in Hollywood and Polanski's imminent suffering-Jew flick An Officer and a Spy, and the freshly filmed adaptation of Frank Herbert's Dune, due out next year, among other things. We attempto to answer the greatest question in film: why are there so few creature features involving jellyfish....?

 

 


Tuesday, 6 August 2019

MJOLNIR AT THE MOVIES EPISODE 22: GONE WITH THE NATION

In this episode of Mjolnir at the Movies, we look at two thematically connected films: D W Griffith's epic masterpiece The Birth of a Nation and the equally majestic Gone with the Wind. Both concern the American Civil War and Reconstruction Era and both have courted their share of controversy, particularly The Birth of a Nation, in which the Ku Klux Klan are portrayed as liberating heroes. The film is rather topical, as last month, Bowling Green State University removed the pioneering star of the silent screen Lillian Gish's name from their theatre after a visit from Black Lives Matter co-founder Opal Tometi. The battle for the reinstatement of her name is still ongoing and supported even by actors like Helen Mirren and James Earl Jones. As the film is in the public domain, we have put it on the Mjolnir at the Movies channel for your viewing:

 


Wednesday, 12 June 2019

MJOLNIR AT THE MOVIES NOW SHOWING EPISODE 1 (and a small rant)

As Neil is absent, James and David discuss the latest goings on in the film world in this new format of Mjolnir at the Movies: 'Now Showing', with a look at the films just gone, the ones currently in the cinemas and the ones due for release, including the Tolkien biopic, Avengers: Endgame, Brightburn and the next wave of superhero films. We also look at independent film studios Dust and Celtic Films, the latter run by the director Michael Kingsbury. Kingsbury has made a trilogy of dramatic films about the Soviet gulag system: Gulag Vorkuta, Gulag Barashevo and Gulag Magadan and he does not avoid the JQ. More on this below, but first, the podcast, which can also be found on Bitchute. Please subscribe, as all videos will slowly be transferred over to this more accommodating platform.

 

 


Thursday, 9 May 2019

MJOLNIR AT THE MOVIES EPISODE 21: THE BLACK HOLE (PARENTAL GUIDANCE)

Back in the days when Disney was still something resembling the company Walt and Roy Disney had founded, the studio embarked upon an ambitious sci-fi project that would cost the princely sum of $20 million two years after and $9 million more than Star Wars. Yet whereas Star Wars became a box office smash and had enormously significant cultural impact, The Black Hole was a much more modest success and was sucked down into a vortex of time and space to the point where few people now remember it. Was the problem the fact that the screenwriters decided that putting Spenglerian philosophy and elements of Gothic horror into the script was a good idea in a kids' film? Find out in this week's instalment of Mjolnir at the Movies:

 

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Saturday, 4 May 2019

ANOTHER BUNDLE O' MEMES

Every day, new people subscribe to the Mjolnir Magazine Facebook page and to the David Yorkshire and Mjolnir at the Movies Youtube channels. And every day, the admin staff of those host entities pop by to steal a handful of those subscribers. I know it goes on because people have told me how they have been unsubscribed from pages and channels including my own, just as I myself have found myself unsubscribed from pages and channels I had joined. It is petty and tiresome, but it has the effect (((Mark Zuckerberg))) and (((Susan Wojcicki))) require: that proper Rightists grow tired of seeing their subscription numbers never grow or dwindle and give up producing content. I really wish Holly Hazeltree for one would start producing videos again. Our Facebook page has lost over 500 subscribers in the past year despite plenty of new subscribers. This is not a defeat, but a challenge. It is a challenge for us to become more creative in how we advertise the outlets for our content. Memes are a great way of getting out messages simply and in an entertaining way.



 

MJOLNIR AT THE MOVIES EPISODE 20: VIDEODROME AND EXISTENZ

"The battle for the mind of North America will be fought in the video arena, the Videodrome. The television screen is the retina of the mind’s eye. Therefore, the television screen is part of the physical structure of the brain. Therefore, whatever appears on the television screen emerges as raw experience for those watching. Therefore, television is reality. And reality is less than television."


So says Professor Brian O'Blivion, voicing the words of (((David Cronenberg))), whose films Videodrome and eXistenZ, as we explore, are themselves part of that battle....


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