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Reviews
Baron Blackwolf: Dogs of God (2012)
The Last Khan of Mongolia was a Werewolf
Baron Blackwolf Dogs of God is actually an advanced trailer for a feature film in the making (hopefully)and stars Ed Asner as a retired Colonel in the Imperial Russian army in the days before World War One and the Russian Revolution. The credits are misleading. The story and the screenplay are the work of Carroll "Poke" Runyon, noted for his documentaries on the occult. Harvey Rochman was given second credit on the original story by Runyon who is the sole copyright holder of all the Blackwolf material. The credits are further corrupted by referring to Runyon as "She" which is incorrect. Carroll "Poke" Runyon is a former Green Beret and very much on the masculine side of the gender gap. I am using this review format to get this corrected because IMDb makes the process so difficult that seems the only way to do it. However, I hope this doesn't put me on the spoiler blacklist. I'm just asking for help.
Poke Runyon, writer, creator, and producer: Baron Blackwolf, Dogs of God
Beyond Lemuria (2007)
An Occult Fim made by real Occultists
Beyond Lemuria is not like any Hollywood film you've ever seen. It is more than simply escapist entertainment. One might say it is "infotainment" because it deals with two important elements of American folklore that Hollywood has completely ignored: the mystic avatars of California's mysterious Mt. Shasta who claimed to derive their wisdom from Atlantis and Lemuria, and the 1940s revelations by Richard S. Shaver of ancient Elder Gods from outer space whose degenerate survivors still inhabit a vast cavern network. These two related themes are woven together in a storyline that uses documentary footage to familiarize the viewer with these forgotten mysteries, leading into a dramatic contrast between two esoteric groups who travel to Mt. Shasta. One group seeks the ancient secrets of super-science from the degenerate Deros deep in the caverns under the mountain, while the other group climbs to the heights to receive spiritual enlightenment. Actual cavern and mountain locations at Mt. Shasta were extensively used, lending authenticity to the strange story. The dramatic story line begins in an occult initiation ceremony where the candidate must choose between good and evil. Beyond Lemuria is best described as a modern medieval morality play. If the viewer keeps this initial scene in mind there will be no difficulty understanding the story -- or the message. Hollywood could not and would not make a film like this, so regardless of it faults, Beyond Lemuria is significant. You've never seen anything like it.