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âŁOn August 12, 1861, President Abraham Lincoln announced that September would be a time of National Humiliation, Prayer, and Fasting.
Inspired by President Lincolnâs Proclamation, the Liberty Action Network in coordination with the Maryland Salt & Light Brigade and Spirit War International would like to invite All God-fearing Americans to join us for a time of Humiliation, Repentance, Prayer & Fasting during the month of September, to conclude on September 26, 2022. A Calling To The People
We encourage you to join with this national effort to unite His people in ONE ACCORD. Invite everyone in your sphere of influence to join this action. Encourage churches and groups to join.
In 1861 it was the president that called for Americans to humble themselves and pray.
In 2022, it is We The People, the Children of God who are calling for this action. We pray that the Holy Spirit will prompt Godâs People to join and participate as He leads us.
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https://www.aila.org/infonet/p....residential-proclama - Proclamation 10115 of October 30, 2020
National Day of Remembrance for Americans Killed by
Illegal Aliens, 2020 ...yes, imagine that; in fairness, let's look at TaterTot's: https://www.whitehouse.gov/bri....efing-room/president
âŁThe United Spot
What are your thoughts on Migrants being dropped off at Kamalaâs house and Marthaâs Vineyard?
Please comment below. Thanks
https://www.youtube.com/c/TheUnitedSpot/featured
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hZJOuAQWNHU - Meet the Demstones!
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https://notthebee.com/article/....the-department-of-th
You have to see the letter of complaint: https://proxy.duckduckgo.com/i....u/?u=https://media.g
âŁTwo space cadets crash-land on a desert planet, where an evil wizard seeks the ultimate power to take over the world. Although the movie borrows some background footage from Star Wars, the plot is mostly unrelated.
https://www.esquireme.com/news..../the-strange-case-of
The strange case of Turkish Star Wars
The Ottoman Empire Strikes Back
The sub-genre of mockbusters has been celebrated (albeit somewhat ironically) for years, with a brisk trade in VHS tapes and copied DVDs. Now, many of the âclassicsâ of that genre are freely available on the internet, often with recently-added English subtitles.
While the likes of Asylum studio in America are currently doing fine with modern straight-to-DVD rip-offs and Bollywood regularly steals from American films (ânow with added dancingâ), few do it better than the Turks did. Some spectacular mockbusters were made in the 1970s and â80s in Turkey that really need to be seen to be believed. The most famous of the collection is the âTurkish Star Warsâ.
In 1982, director Ăetin Inanç made a film called DĂźnyay Kurtaran Adam, which translates as âThe Man Who Saves the Worldâ. It would become famous by its unofficial title âTurkish Star Warsâ. This was mostly due to the wholly unauthorised use of spliced-in footage from George Lucasâ â77 original that Inanç used for many of his filmâs scenes. Not all of them made sense in context and they were all in a different aspect ratio to the rest of the film. But that didnât stop the sticky-fingered director, who seemed to have a plan that consisted of stealing clips and music from wherever he could. He filled the rest of the (very loose) narrative with his own actors, and although the plot doesnât follow the original Star Wars shot-for-shot (far from it) itâs very clear what film is mostly being copied.
Inançâs film, and numerous others like it, was made because around that time the Turkish film board wasnât letting many Western blockbusters into the country. Inanç had started out making erotica, but following the military coup dâĂŠtat of the country in 1980 and the passing of new censorship laws, he decided to move into propaganda and action films instead. He soon gained the nickname âjet directorâ due to his penchant for making entire films in just ten days.
Unfortunately, the lack of money at his disposal and minimal time spent on his films was clearly evident in the final products.
As well as stealing actual footage from Star Wars, other gaps in the film â and budget â were filled with stock footage of the Russian space programme and old newsreel clips of NASA rocket launches. And when it came to the original effects shot in Turkey, itâs evident that no expense was spent.
They did a least have a recognised actor. The filmâs star was CĂźneyt Arkin, who far from being a desperate B-movie jobber was one of the biggest actors in the country at the time. (He is now considered a legend of Turkish cinema, with over 250 films to his name.) Arkin was a qualified doctor but, more relevantly, was also a trained martial arts expert. So rather than lightsaber fights there are a lot of hand-to-hand combat scenes that make good use of his skills. One scene in particular â the training montage â has become cult viewing. While such scenes have become a clichĂŠ to the point that even doing a parody of it is now clichĂŠd, this one is bewilderingly fantastic. At one point the hero kicks a boulder into a wall causing an explosion. The fact that itâs all set to the Giorgio Moroder version of the Battlestar Galactica theme just makes it somehow better. And weirder.
In fact, the whole soundtrack is a rip-off, but as with the montage, rather than just taking the original Star Wars music by John Williams, it also makes use of other famous scores. Along with Battlestar Galacticaâs music, the director also incorporates the Raiders of the Lost Ark theme tune; at other points it âborrowsâ music from Flash Gordon, Moonraker, Planet of the Apes, Silent Running and even uses Bachâs âToccata and Fugue in D Minorâ.
It was not uncommon at the time for soundtracks and characters from other films to be used in Turkish cinema. For example, in one of the Turkish Batman films, the villain looks suspiciously like a total rip-off of Ernst Blofeld from the James Bond series. Those suspicions are confirmed when you see him in one scene with a cat on his lap and then, just in case you still werenât sure, the famous John Barry 007 theme strikes up.
While some of the martial art skills on display in DĂźnyayÄą Kurtaran Adam are fairly decent, it seems strange to see them being used in the famous Alderaan cantina scene on home-made aliens that look like Sesame Street puppets. At one point, a large Elmo look-alike is karate-chopped in half. All of this is intercut with actual Star Wars alien footage and with a ropey cover of the cantina bands music playing in the background.
Along the way we see a copy of Robbie the Robot from Lost In Space, working for someone who is clearly based on Ming the Merciless. There are skeletons on horseback, zombies, slave girls, â50s style spacemen, two golden ninjas and a big furry monster that even the props department from early Doctor Who episodes would laugh at. This creatureâs voice was seemingly over-dubbed by someone going âGrrrrrâŚraaaahâ in post-production. Itâs all a wonderful mess, but other than the unintentional hilarity, the only thing going for it compared to the Lucas series is the complete absence of Jar Jar Binks.
Although not a success at the box office, it spawned a sequel â Son Of The Man Who Saves The World. Arkin continued to get regular work although his last film in 2008 was a poorly-received Turkish sex comedy that currently has an IMDb score of 1.8 out of ten.
Turkish Star Wars, however, has become cult viewing, with surprisingly regular public screenings, and it has led to director Ăetin Inanç being celebrated as the Turkish Ed Wood. Inanç would go on to make rip offs of Jaws and Rambo (see right) during the â80s, but Turkish Star Wars will forever be his magnum opus.
Despite the fact that the film infringes on a huge number of copyrights, the film itself is seemingly not in copyright so is free in the public domain to view or download via the excellent http://archive.org. Itâs worth seeing, if only so the next time someone says to you that the latest Hollywood film was the worst film they have ever seen, youâll be able to reply, âHang on, have you ever seen Turkish Star Wars?â
Six other Turkish mockbusters
Korkusuz (1986)
Translated as âRampageâ, this is the Turkish version of Rambo, and despite the low standard set by the American original this still falls comically short. His rocket launcher appears to be a childâs toy that barely shoots more than six feet, but that doesnât stop the many explosions in the distance and hammy deaths galore.
Badi (1983)
Special effects are tricky to do with no budget, but that didnât stop the Turks making their own version of E.T. using a child in a rubber alien suit. It emits smoke from its rear end and some scenes are speeded up, but then it veers from slapstick comedy to heartbreaking scenes of animal death that would give Kes a run for its money. The sequel (Homoti) features an alien with a visible zip on his back.
Seytan (1974)
The Exorcist gets the treatment with a plot that pretty much follows the original (except being Turkish instead of using the Bible they use the Muslim Holy book) while the famous scene with the possessed child in bed is like a strange parody. That said, itâs not as bad as the others listed here. Sure itâs not going to have you leaving the lights on at night, but weâve seen worse effects in recent B-movies.
SĂźpermen DĂśnĂźyor (1979)
This version of Superman has some truly horrible flying special-effects and the fight scenes are comically choreographed, in places looking more like an episode of The Benny Hill Show. In its defence, however, unlike the Indian Superman rip off, at least his Turkish counterpart doesnât occasionally break into a very camp dance routine for no reason.
ĂĂśl (1983)
In the Turkish version of Jaws, along with the famous shark (and its visibly peeling paint job) there are martial arts fights, high-speed car chases and in the middle of the film, an exotic dance sequence. Purists will be glad to see the famous John William theme is used, but also present one the soundtrack are Survivorâs âEye of the Tigerâ from Rocky and instrumental cover version of Led Zeppelinâs âWhole Lotta Loveâ.
Turist Ămer Uzay Yolunda (1974)
The Star Trek rip-off was loosely based on one of the 1966 episodes of the original TV series and notably would have had a budget of about the same. And, rather than an American soundstage they got to use the actual ruins at Ephesus as a setting for an alien planet, yet still this comes off as pretty terrible. The addition of a comedy Turkish tramp named Ămer the Tourist (mentioned in the title) really doesnât add to Gene Roddenberryâs original vision.
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After many attempts to gather the original actors in the film to create a sequel to The Man Who Saved the World, a follow-up, The Son of the Man Who Saved the World (DĂźnyayÄą Kurtaran Adam'Äąn OÄlu), commonly known as Turks in Space, was shot in 2006.
The sequel was released on 15 December 2006. Some fans expressed their disapproval that the special effects were not similar to the original film, where all the space scenes were ripped directly from science fiction titles of the time, such as Star Wars, the Star Trek series, and Battlestar Galactica. Famous actors from Turkey, such as Mehmet Ali Erbil took part, and Kartal Tibet directed.
âŁhttps://therepugnantplayhouse.....wordpress.com/2017/0
âŁKorgoth of Barbaria | [adult swim] wiki | Fandom
âŁKorgoth of Barbaria was a proposed series made for Adult Swim.
âŁHistory
Created by Aaron Springer, the pilot episode first aired on June 3, 2006 at 12:30 AM (EST) on Adult Swim. On June 18, 2006, Adult Swim ran a bumper announcing Korgoth was officially picked up as a series. However, it was dropped before production began.
Setting
The show was set in a post-apocalyptic world where sorcery and the remnants of technology exist simultaneously. Korgoth was prone to humorous amounts of violence, tying in with his Viking heritage.
Plot
Korgoth is infected with a deadly parasite by Gog-Ma-Gogg, and extorted to steal an item known as "The Golden Goblin of the Fourth Age" from the wizard Specules, whom Gog believes to have recently died. Korgoth journeys with a group of Gog-Ma-Gogg's henchmen to Specules' castle, picking up a girl and killing several things along the way.
The group reaches the castle, considerably smaller than when it had left, and begin to plunder it. As Korgoth searches for the Golden Goblin, Specules returns, explaining that he was on vacation. Specules uses his magic to kill or incapacitate all but Korgoth, who proves largely immune to the ridiculous creatures the wizard conjures. As a last resort, Specules uses his magic directly against Korgoth; however, he is knocked off-balance and accidentally kills Korgoth's girl. Angered, Korgoth takes a two-pronged candle stick holder and impales Specules through the eyes, only to find that the wizard has magically transferred his head onto the dead girl's body. Specules proceeds to fly out the window.
Korgoth returns to Gog-Ma-Gogg with the Golden Goblin (a simple modern-age novelty item) and gets the elixir for the deadly parasite, though the elixir takes many seasons to take effect. He is last seen walking away, pulling a cart full of medicine bottles.
Credits
Executive Producer: Aaron Springer
Creator: Aaron Springer, Genndy Tartakovsky
Composer: Lee Holdridge
Cast
Diedrich Bader as Korgoth, Henchman #1
Corey Burton as The Narrator, Specules, Doorman, Henchman #2
Craig Raisner as Gog-Ma-Gogg, Bargrot
John DiMaggio as Stink, Scrotus, Henchman #4
Tom Kenny as Hargon, Hechman #3
Susan Spano as Orala
âŁHOT MIC: Congress in action.. I am without words.. YOU GOTTA SEE THIS! Nadler shits his pants! They are speaking on the 'Protecting Our Democracy' ACT.. Someone should tell them we are a 'CONSTUTIONAL REPUBLIC'... NOT a 'Democracy'. These people are insane criminals guilty of undermining the interests of the people. They are guilty of the HIGHEST TREASON and need held accountable for their crimes. And yes, he really shit his pants.. I only added in the music and laughing.
The fart was not an effect.
#JERRYNADLER #NANCYPELOSI #SPEAKEROFTHEHOUSE #CALIFORNIA #SANFRANCISCO #HEALTH #MEDICINE #CONGRESS #HOUSE #SENATE #GOVERNMENT #LAW #USCONSTITUTION #REALNEWS #BILLYJONES #FINANCE #CRYPTO #BLOCKCHAIN #BITCOIN #COMEDY #FUNNY #LAUGHS #HUMOR #ROTFLMAO #LMAO #FART #NADLER #SHITSPANTS
REPOSTED/MIRRORED
For entertainment only
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