| UPDATED: 11:22, Fri, Jan 22, 2021
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Here we go yet again. While it’s yet to be officially announced, a fifth delay for Daniel Craig’s final James Bond movie is now looking extremely likely. With the pandemic on-going, even the 2020 releases that moved to 2021 are probably going to have to move again, especially if they’re set to arrive in cinemas before the summer. Sony have already moved their Jared Leto Marvel movie Morbius to October from March.
Footage shows demonic rituals inside occultist s abandoned satanic hideout2021|01:31
This footage reveals the demonic rituals found by urban explorers inside occultist Aleister Crowley s abandoned satanic hideout.The group of explorers - known as Lost Adventures - went to explore the old isolated farmhouse in Cornwall where Crowley once lived.The self-styled Great Beast owned Carn Cottage between St Ives and St Just and is believed to have used it as a base for his occult practices.It is said that the cottage was the spot where Crowley summoned the devil himself - and rumours of hauntings remain to this day.The group of urban explorers travelled there to add their names to the brave visitors scrawled on the walls.But once inside they were shocked to find a Sefirot on the ground lit with candles - a recognised way for people pursuing dark magic to link man and demon.The symmetrical pattern laid out in cones featured gods names and Hebrew text and is used to try and summon dark for
NEXT JAMES BOND contender Regé-Jean Page has been backed by Bridgerton fans to be the new 007 after Daniel Craig s No Time To Die, as the Duke of Hastings star posts that he s ‘shaken and stirred .
James Bond fans enjoy imagining favorite directors taking on the franchise, rhapsodizing over what a Quentin Tarantino Bond, for instance, might be like. But the fact of the matter is that ultimate control over the Bond movies doesn’t lie with directors. For years, before Sam Mendes and Cary Joji Fukunaga were brought into the game, the main helmers were non-auteur types who specialized in action sequences, and in some instances had risen from second unit, chosen by producers Barbara Broccoli and Michael Wilson. The true determining factor of the Bond movie, now that Ian Fleming’s works have been more or less exhausted for adaptation, is the scenario. Which is always producer-approved, it goes without saying. Fans can speculate “Bond wouldn’t do X” or “Bond wouldn’t do Y” to their hearts’ content, but Broccoli and Wilson are the arbiters.
Everyone knows that Timothy Dalton only got two James Bond movies and that, after
License to Kill in 1989, the Bond franchise took a six-year break before Pierce Brosnan took over the role in 1995 s
GoldenEye. But what one new book asks is: What if Dalton got more movies and those movies were totally different? The truth is, the plans for James Bond movies we never saw are, in some ways, even more thrilling than the movies that were actually released.
Bond expert Mark Edlitz s latest book,
The Lost Adventures of James Bond, is a deep dive into all the aspects of Bond adventures that aren t quite in the canon of the big screen films or the original Ian Fleming novels. Instead, Edlitz s book gives us a glimpse of what can best be described as the Lost Sea Scrolls of 007; versions of scripts and story treatments that, for a variety of reasons, never became cinematic missions of the world s most famous fictional spy. But, if Timothy Dalton didn t even get a third movie, how was th