Yeah titmouse, you got the right msg. But I liked this last part the best. It was great how he made insights into Riddicks eyes being altered to see in pitch black, in actuality indicating how he can see Cosmic Truth better than the rest of humanity at large. The things like that, his being a sociopathic killer but it is really about his following divine law over man made law. I'll paste it below. Haven't read EON's msg yet. Guess I'll do that now.
Montalk wrote:
"The Chronicles of Riddick" has an ending straight out of Wizard of Oz - where the blue-faced soldiers (the Nephilim) bow to Dorothy after she kills the witch. No doubt about it, this movie is one inspired by some higher forces.
Other interesting things:
- reference to cymatics - a dish of water vibrates in a cymatic pattern when these ghostly beings speak what memories they were extracting from Riddick during his interrogation session.
- Riddick comes from a race called the "Furyons" a fiercely independent warrior race who serve the cosmic function as balancers, something like god's gladiators. The Necromongers persecuted them and wiped out their world, and as an infant Riddick was one of the few survivors, growing up elsewhere on a prison planet where he picked up his antisocial behaviors.
- Judi Densch plays a light being called an Elemental whose function it is to advise and calculate probable futures. A lot like the C's. She helps Riddick follow his destiny to restore balance to the universe by fighting the Necromongers
- The Necromongers use these machine-like beings that look like the walking dead, though accessorized with x-ray vision and used as tools. Very much like the Grays.
- The main bad guy, called Lord Marshall, has occult powers including the ability to "split himself" into multiple probabilities at once before deciding which of those probability trajectories he fully materializes in. How's that for reference to hyperdimensional existence? He meets his fate at the end, but in a clever way illustrating the weakness of the STS system.
- Riddick almost has the soul sucked out of him by Lord Marshall, but his soul was too strong. Combine this with the fact that Riddick has special eyes that can see in the dark, and this seems to symbolize those with strong souls who can see truth amidst a sea of ignorance.
- Riddick grew up in a prison, unaware of his destiny as a liberator/warrior ... kinda like Wanderers growing up on prison earth.
The theme of this movie is that sometimes only bad can defeat evil. My interpretation: bad being a reference to those who don't follow social laws, and evil being a reference to those who don't follow divine laws. This movie introduces (or reminds to us) the concept that when it comes to the function of bringing balance into the world, only divine laws count, meaning those of an STO orientation might come off as antisocial.
That's why God's Gladiators (4D STO) never seemed like fluffy New Age types to me (as portrayed in certain channelings, like the commander Ashtar stuff) but rather knightly forces who know what means are justified by the ends.
Good judgement comes from experience; experience comes from bad judgement.
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You have to believe in the impossible in order to become.