PREDICTION: New Film Probes 1959 "Superman" Death

Sep 08, 2006 18:37

Skylar was asking me for my opinion on the "Hollywoodland" movie with Ben Affleck regarding the death of George Reeves who played Superman in the TV Series.

----------------- Original Message -----------------
From: Skylar
Date: Sep 8, 2006 11:01 AM

Riddle Me this: So whats your take on the new Adrian Brody/Ben Affleck flick Hollywoodland? It's getting mixed reviews. Affleck is actually getting kudos for his performance and the writing for Brody's detective character has been knocked. That's a switcharoo. If you don't know the story, it's a fictionalized account of what occured at the time of Superman actor George Reeves' death. Brody's character was fictional.

What's your 20?

To: Skylar
From: Rod
Date: 9/8/2006
Subject: Hollywoodland, Social Suicide, Murder, Psychic Forensics

I saw the news write-up. There's a lot of stuff going on in the background with the name tags in that film.

For anyone who pays close attention to my Journal and Blogs, I had been saying about how my "Game Character" technically got "murdered." For people who watch "Constantine" with Keanu Reeves as the Psychic Detective, the dead Twin Isabel represents me as Isabelo.

I said that I have a Superman Game Character. People who know what to look for will notice clues in the roster of actors who were in the movie:
  1. You had Philip MacKenzie as Bill Bliss
  2. I said 9/8/2006 about Bliss tied in with Lindsay Lohan's purse getting stolen in the UK
  3. I'm Filipino, which would be the Philippines for Philip
  4. MacKenzie is Mac. Bliss uses a Mac
The other clues are regarding Leonore Lemmon:
  1. Robin Tunney plays Leonore
  2. Leonore Lemmon is LL like Lois Lane, Lana Lang, and Lex Luthor
  3. Robin Tunney is born 6/19
  4. I was complaining about another person named Robin who was jeering at me when I said I was Superman.
  5. The Robin who was jeering at me is born 6/19
  6. Leonore = Leo = Sun
  7. Superman gets his powers from the Sun, which is a Star
  8. I said I get my Super Strength from the "Adult Star" SUNny LEOne
Lois Smith plays Helen Bessalo:
  1. Lois = Lois Lane
  2. Helen = Helen of Troy
  3. Notice it's Diane LANE for Lois Lane
  4. Diane Lane is born 1/22
  5. I said 8/9/2006 that Adult Star Harmony Bliss is born 1/22
Bob Hoskins plays Eddie Mannix:
  1. Initials EM = 5/13
  2. Sunny Leone is born 5/13
  3. Mannix = Ma/NN-IX = Mother(Ma) Valentine(NN/2-14) God(IX/9/I/1)
  4. Isabella Valentine uses pictures of Sunny Leone
  5. Isabella Valentine is in San Diego
  6. The Area Code for San Diego is 619
  7. 619 = 6/19 = Robin Tunney's B-Day = Leonore Lemmon
The other person whom I said is born 6/19 is Kathleen Turner who was in the "Virgin Suicides."

I said I'm Superman and I'm a Pure Male Virgin. In the movie "Constantine," they write off Twin Isabel's fall from the roof as a suicide because she was mentally ill.

In Summer 2004 when I was telling Bliss (Bill Bliss) about Psychic Phenomenon, she thought I was mentally ill and should get Psychiatric Help.

When I started talking about observed Psychic Phenomenon and that I'm like the real Superman, that was like committing "Social Suicide" because everyone thing I went nuts.

That's why you see all those tags surfacing in the movie "Hollywoodland." The Subonscious Mind of the writer who made up that script was pulling from the Subconscious Realm.
  1. Kevin Hare plays Robert Condon
  2. Hare = Rabbit
  3. I'm born Year of the Rabbit
You mentioned about the reviews and the Detective trying to prove it's a murder:
  1. Adrien Brody plays Louis Simo
  2. Initials LS = Non-SL
  3. SL = Sunny Leone
  4. Non-SL = Non-Sunny Leone
  5. I said that Superman is a Super Sperm
  6. The Earth would be a Planetary Ovum
  7. All the Letters in the Compans (N+W+S+E) add up to 61 (Prime Number)
  8. 61 upside down = 19
  9. 19 = S = Superman
Notice the name "Rod" in B(rod)y, which ismy name.

The reason why you're seeing bad reviews for Adrien Brody is because it's a reflection of how I've been going around like a Detective using "Psychic Forensics" to prove that my Game Character got "killed off."

The way that people think that George Reeves committed suicide is the same way that people think that I commited "Social Suicide" when I started pointing out how I'm Superman and that all the Letters in CHRIST add up to 77 = IR on the Periodic Table for Jesus Christ.

That's one way to get branded as a nutcase and where you get alienated from society.

That movie is also referring to what happened 4/2/2004. I said that when I was talking to Isabella Valentine who invited me to talk to her, she didn't tell me that her co-partner ("Business Husband") was away on Vacation:
  1. Isabella Valentine = Sunny Leone = Sun = Leo = Leonore Lemmon = LL = Lois Lane
  2. Charlie = Eddie Mannix
  3. Rod = George Reeves
One of the last things that Bliss (Bill Bliss) told me on 4/3/2004 was that the reason why Charlie of BCB got angry when he caught me and Isabella Valentine talking was because he was jealous.

Bliss said that Isabella Valentine was his property and I was talking to her. So he "got rid of me" in a similar fashion the way George Reeves "mysteriously died."

Charlie of BCB didn't like me talking to Isabella. However, it worked out perfectly for him when I started running around talking about Psychic Phenomenon because it made everyone thing I was a certified nut job justifying his supposed claims that he didn't trust me and that Isabella shouldn't be talking to me.

What better way to get rid of someone and getting them out of someone's life than with that person seeming to have become deranged talking about Psychic Phenomenon. I had accused Charlie in Summer 2004 about 2nd Degree Manslaughter with the Death of Mattie Stepanek.

All the women got pissed and came to his defense claiming I was harassing him.

Once again, we come back to the point I keep making about Psychic Phenomenon. If I keep on manifesting Psychic Phenomenon and my Psychic Readings are correct, then it means there's a high probability that my allegations about Charlie having killed Mattie Stepanek (accidentally) are most likely true.

It would then mean that I was right and those women were wrong. In the movie realm, it would mean George Reeves got murdered and that Louis Simo, the detective, was correct about George Reeves being murdered.

Once again, we come back to my method of using "Psychic Forensics" that shows hidden Name and Number tags listed on everyone.

However, because it's "cutting edge" technology that no one has ever seen before, few people believe the method I'm using.

Rod
Notable entries with the news article below:
  1. Twins:
      George Reeves who was in "Gone with the Wind" as one of the Twins.
    1. I said I'm a Gemini Twin
    2. I said Bliss is a Gemini Twin
    3. Bliss = Bill Bliss in the movie "Hollywoodland"
  2. "Gone with the Wind":
    1. "Gone with the Wind" starts with GO = IR in Spanish
    2. Clark Gable was in Gone with the
    3. Clark Gable = Clark Kent
  3. Clark Gable:
    1. His Final Debue was Gay Langland in "Misfits"
    2. Gay = Homosexual
    3. Rumors were swirling about how Superman is Gay
    4. Langland = Lang = Lana Lang
    5. Land = LAN/D = Local Area Network(LAN) Mother(D/4/Cancer/Eternal Mother)
George Reeves also had a small role in "From Here to Eternity." It's talking about Time.

New Film Probes 1959 "Superman" Death
By BOB THOMAS, Associated Press Writer
LOS ANGELES - On June 17, 1959, millions of American youngsters were devastated by the news: Superman was dead.



George Reeves, whose work as TV's Man of Steel would set the Superman screen standard for decades, died in his Benedict Canyon home from a gunshot to the head. The coroner ruled it suicide. The new film "Hollywoodland," which opens Friday, suggests Reeves might have been murdered.

Ben Affleck portrays Reeves, Diane Lane is his rich mistress, Bob Hoskins is her studio-boss husband and Adrien Brody is a third-rate private eye trying to prove it was murder.

Considering the drama that surrounded Reeves' life and death, it's surprising that Hollywood hasn't explored his saga until now.

Reeves was born George Basselo on April 6, 1914, in Woodstock, Iowa. At the age of 15 he moved to Southern California, where the tall, solidly built teenager became a championship wrestler on the Pasadena City College team.

His first film role was auspicious: he was cast as one of the Tarleton twins in the opening scenes of the 1939 film classic, "Gone With the Wind." His new name was listed at the bottom of the credits: George Reeves.

Reeves' film career was gaining momentum when he was drafted into the Army. After World War II ended, he struggled through minor roles in "A" pictures and leads in "B" films. When he could find no film work at all, he supported himself by digging septic tanks.

During a dull stretch in his career, Reeves agreed to star in a "Superman" TV series. It was filmed on the cheap, with the actors sometimes working on five different episodes in a day.

The syndicated "The Adventures of Superman" proved a surprise hit, however, attracting both adult and child audiences. "I even got a letter from the Emperor of Japan telling me how much he enjoyed the series," Reeves once said.

The actor made 100 episodes as the character who was "faster than a speeding bullet, more powerful than a locomotive." He was earning $2,500 a show, good money for a non-network series. But there was a downside.

He learned that studios were loath to hire TV stars. He managed to land a small role in 1953's "From Here to Eternity," but that was all.

Reeves, who had married and divorced in the early 1940s, was having an affair with Toni Mannix, a former "Ziegfeld Follies" beauty who was married to Eddie Mannix, a former bouncer who became a powerful executive at MGM. Mannix was aware of his wife's affair but didn't intervene; he had his own mistress.

Toni Mannix lavished gifts on her lover, including his house, furnishings, car and elegant wardrobe. The largesse failed to improve his spirits, which grew increasingly worse as acting jobs eluded him. In a blow to Mrs. Mannix, Reeves announced his engagement to Leonore Lemmon, a twice-married New Yorker.

Late on the night of June 16, 1959, Reeves and Lemmon were drinking with two friends in the living room of his house. "I'm tired; I'm going to bed," Reeves said, and he disappeared upstairs. A few moments later came the crack of a 30-calibre Luger. Reeves, 45, was dead.

There was talk in Hollywood that someone else may have shot Reeves, who had bequeathed his house, car and wardrobe to Toni Mannix.

But the Los Angeles County Coroner's report said, "the position of Reeves' body on the bed, the angle of the bullet's path and the autopsy findings all point to suicide."

Except for devoted "Superman" fans, the matter of Reeves' death dropped off the radar until 1995, when the NBC series "Unsolved Mysteries" presented a segment, "Who Killed Superman?" Alternatives to suicide were suggested but not pursued.

In 2000, ABC's "20/20" offered its own take on the Reeves matter, suggesting that the jilted Toni Mannix might have sought revenge.

And now we have "Hollywoodland," which advances the notion that Eddie Mannix, angered by Reeves' rejection of his wife, might have hired a hit man as revenge.

"Mannix was a tough guy," observes the film's director, Allen Coulter. "With that toughness came a reputation for ruthlessness."

Coulter, who has directed episodes of "The Sopranos" and "Sex in the City" but never a feature film, considered "all kinds of names" for the role of George Reeves before choosing Affleck, whose own career was in a downswing.

"Ben was the right age," the director explained, "and he had a kind of Hollywood glamour about him. I thought for 30 seconds before deciding on him."

"Hollywoodland" has the look of the film capital in the 1950s, vintage cars and all. But Coulter admitted, "We shot six weeks in Toronto and two weeks in Los Angeles."

In a joint interview with co-star Diane Lane, Adrien Brody observed, "Hollywood was more glamorous in the 1950s than it is today."

"Back then, there was some preservation of dignity. Royalty was really royalty," added Lane, Oscar nominee as best actress in the 2002 film "Unfaithful."

Unlike Affleck, Lane had to audition for the role of Reeves' lover and financial supporter.

"Once I realized all the things that went wrong in his life, I was very grateful to be part of his story," she said. "I think she loved him."

Brody, who won the Oscar for best actor in 2002's "The Pianist," commented that in the 1950s there was a new style of acting, exemplified by method actors Montgomery Clift, James Dean, Marlon Brando and others from the Actors Studio.

"There was a new system, and George Reeves was caught in the middle," he said. "He didn't fit in anymore."

Brody's character is mostly fictional, though in real life Reeves' mother did hire a private eye to look into his death.

"I got to play this middle-class guy who wants to be big stuff," Brody remarked. "He was similar in aspirations to George (Reeves). They both wanted respect, to be more successful. The big catalyst is his realization that he hasn't really cared about much, other than himself. That opened him up to being more self-aware."

Wed Sep 6, 2:33 PM ET

[Click Here for Original Link]

bliss, humor, isabella valentine, 619, forensics, superman

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