Friday 27 February 2015

I SAVED MYSELF THE WAR OF THE ROSES IN 1997, THANK GOD, BUT OUR SON PAID THE PRICE!

 I HAD A DREAM, A FANTASY, AND I BELIEVED IN ANGELS.

When my Common-Law wife, Sylviane Paulette Frémaux-Soormally, mother of my unique child, and her new Chevalier Servant Freemasonic "Jehovah Witness" Christopher Dean Harrington told the "Copford" Police that because of me her life was in danger, meaning I had the intention or had threatened to KILL HER, I found myself in hell as I know how vicious and evil can some women can be, especially when they have found another man to replace me!  And, I knew then that the best solution was to get the hell out of there as quicky as possible!  When my son decided to follow me after his mother and Christopher had my own solicitor serve me with a letter asking me to leave my house, this complicated things, but I was hoping that together we would sort out things, but he very soon became a victim of this betrayal.  I do not blame his mother, but myself for not having taken enough legal precautions to protect us both!  I never expected Christopher who I helped stop the repossession of his house to betray me.  This made me change my entire outlook on God, religion, and humans.  But, now, it had become a life and death situation and I knew that by leaving as fast as I could I would avoid the worst for both my son and me!  My wife did not want our son to stay as this would have compromised her affair (?) with Christopher who was often present in the house and would answer the telephone everytime I rang my wife from London!  I firmly decided to avoid the War of the Frémaux-Soormally also because I had watched the "WAR OF THE ROSES" by Michael Douglas as I found myself in a similar situation! 


Randy Johnston to Tomo Thompson
My beloved son broke his leg today. He's three years old. Go on, ask me what I'm doin to alleviate his pain. Perhaps ya want some specifics on the incident.

When a father can't be there for his kids due to a blind, psychotic, narcissistic CUNT OF A MOTHER who uses MY children as not only sympathy tickets, but as pawns to SOMEHOW prove she's the better parent, (coz you kno, she was able to get a JP to sign off on a heap of situations not only blown outta proportion, but initiated by her fukken stupid actions to start with, which automatically makes those pages of false happenings able to be tended as 'cough cough' evidence, so OBVIOUSLY she's the good parent), you know the system is not only fukkkkkkd, but they know and smile whilst waving, 'hava nice day pal'. There's only one more 'worst case scenario' to unfold, my second and third worst have already unfolded for all to be damaged by, really makes ya wonder why you're bothering to survive.
Save your sympathy for some other cunt, the Lord knows JEVs always got her fukken hand out, ready to collect...

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 Innocent man sent to jail for rape by his own fiancée


 


Published on 8 Apr 2019





On 60 MINUTES Liz Hayes investigates the terrifying case of the innocent man falsely accused by his fiancé of violent sexual crimes. How the woman he loved fooled police into believing she was a victim when in fact she was an evil liar. 

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For forty years, 60 Minutes have been telling Australians the world’s greatest stories. Tales that changed history, our nation and our lives. Reporters Liz Hayes, Allison Langdon, Tara Brown, Charles Wooley, Liam Bartlett and Sarah Abo look past the headlines because there is always a bigger picture. 

Sundays are for 60 Minutes. #60MinutesAustralia
  

Above we have 100% evidence how corrupt the Law, the DPP, Police and the Satanic Maritime Courts are as they were the ones guilty for using a SICK citizen, a sick woman, a maniac, Satanic or whatever we can rightly call her, TO MAKE MONEY at the expense of the people.  More evidence is the lenient way they dealt with her after she was guilty of making false accusations that made the accused spent $600,000 to DEFEND THEMSELVES, when the onus was on the authorities to find them guilty, and THEY HAD NONE except unproven allegations!  And, I knew all that right from the start having been victim of it in at least three countries: Mauritius, France and Britain!  [BAFS]


Did I act like a coward by running away?

I will never know what would have happened if I had stayed and fought back, not my wife and her new "partner", but the Police and the Satanic Freemasonic Maritime Courts!  
Thank God, I am not violent, do not take drugs, smoke or drink alcohol or sleep out with women!
But, deep inside, I am convinced I did the right thing! Unfortunately, both my son and I paid a horrificly tremendous price!




MY  BOSS-WIFE  SAID SHE NEVER EVEN MARRIED ME!


A marriage made in Hell

May Contain Spoilers







war-of-roses260pix.jpgI've I've had to defend myself for loving "The War of the Roses" so much. The majority of people I've discussed it with found it too mean-spirited. I realize it deals with an ugly subject but this is a prime example of a movie being great at how it is about its core subject, no matter how touchy. This is one of my all-time favorite films.

  Page design by Marie Haws.

"The War of the Roses" is surely the best thing Danny DeVito has ever done. In discussing him we may not be talking about the most renowned or prolific film director but I doubt there is any other living filmmaker who could have made a better movie with this particular material. It seems to fit his personality so well. DeVito is a guy that I can't help but admire. His sensational Louie DePalma character of "Taxi" fame was voted as the best ever on TV guide's 50Th anniversary and this could have never been done by just anybody reading the lines as written. Here is a round, balding, five foot man who became a star of the screen thanks to personality and true genius.

DeVito had a decent directorial debut with "Throw Momma from the Train," but in retrospect that movie seems like an exercise in the style that he mastered here. There is an incredible attention to detail in every shot and scene of "The War of the Roses." While watching it we can sense the director having a ball with this material, fully aware of the great script he got to work with and the exact approach it requires.

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"The War of the Roses" starts with a fairy tale feeling but quickly evolves into the blackest of comedies. This could have truly been a terrible movie in the wrong hands. The film depicts the journey of Barbara and Oliver Rose (Kathleen Turner and Michael Douglas) through two decades in their lives in a marriage takes them from love and happiness to mutual disgust. DeVito plays Gavin D'Amato, Oliver's friend and business partner who narrates the story to a poor soul of a client, a man of few words (or none) who Gavin realizes might be going in a path similar to that of our heroes.
"The War of the Roses" is one of those rare comedies in which countless lines are memorable and hilarious, but what makes it unique is its visual style, told mostly through DeVito's own eye-level POV -- which makes all taller characters look like giants. There is a constant use of odd angles that seem to spring from the subject matter and never feel gratuitous. The film comes alive with countless visual and audio gags such as those showing the steam related to the "pissed-on fish" and the sizzling sound of frying onions while Olivier is stuck in the sauna, with his subsequent recovery by drinking what seems like a gallon bottle of Gatorade. The film is also full of oddities designed to constantly unsettle the audience, like the presence of the loud and overweight children and the constant handling of raw liver. What can one say about a comedy on divorce that manages to include a monster-truck jumping scene? Anything goes.

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One of the most enjoyable aspects of "The War of the Roses" is its merciless attitude toward lawyers, from Gavin's auto-critical attitude to Oliver's self grandiose poise. There's also Barbara's stone-faced attorney played by the late G.D. Spradlin, who will only dare to show a smile upon being referred to as a "tiny little infinitesimal worm-like prick" by Oliver (this surely tells him he has done his work properly).
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"Roses" isn't even kind to the usually sacred children or animals groups, even though DeVito does relent for the briefest of moments by pardoning the life of Bennie the dog, which I guess spared the movie from the wrath of even more people. Was he right in caving in, if just for a second? Much like Roger does in his "A Fish Called Wanda" review, I'm perplexed by some audience's concern for on-screen animals and their simultaneous lack of the same for humans -- but in this case, DeVito's canine point was nonetheless made and his audience cringed (if only for the briefest of moments), which in retrospect should be enough.

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Behind the greatness in "The War of the Roses" is the fact that no matter how outlandish the scenes and how silly the two main characters always end up looking, there is an implicit truth to them. As Robert DeNiro's Al Capone once said (regarding an all-together different subject) "we laugh because it's funny and we laugh because it's true." An old teacher of mine who taught about the peculiarities of Family Corporations, always used to say there can be no worst hatred than that between family members who once loved each other and I believe this explains why some people involved in family rifts end up doing things totally out of their character.

Barbara and Oliver Rose seem like nice and loving people when dealing with just about anybody else but each other. Then they get to play monsters. Even though there are plenty of psychological aspects to discuss from a subject of this nature, we have to remember this is not a movie about the causes of war so much as the fun of the war itself. Sure, it is rather obvious that Oliver became a controlling husband and has a knack for putting down his insecure wife, with Barbara in turn going completely "medieval" on him, something that even at the very end he cannot comprehend. "Love means never having to say you are sorry," but the Roses prove it surely can never hurt.

The film becomes a critique of materialism and consumerism as little by little the Roses destroy the contents of their tacky-taste house that they spent a lifetime collecting. The film finds the perfect excuse to claustrophobically keep these characters together all the way through as both refuse to relent on their absurd quest. We end up recalling the fire which burned their Christmas Tree and wish it had taken the whole house along, as it would have been to their benefit to rid themselves of the subject at the center of their dispute.

Much has been made about Turner and Douglas' screen chemistry, but what's truly amazing is that it translated to roles of absolute hate as well. "The War of the Roses" is yet another of the films of the period in which the latter played a character who was tormented by his leading lady (Demi Moore and, Glenn Close also come to mind) and I've always doubted this to be just a coincidence as he's always seemed to have a talent for playing the victim of strong female figures. Gavin recalls his father telling him "men can never outdo women when it comes to love and revenge" and right or wrong, this clearly became this film's personal philosophy.

Whatever both character's numerous faults, only Barbara is depicted as wholly cold-hearted from a certain point onward, going so far to reject Oliver in her last breath. This is the reason why I can personally explain the slightest of personal sympathies only for Oliver, though I realize this kind of reaction may also depend on the sex and personal experiences of each individual viewer.

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"The War of the Roses" is relentless in its approach. We are shocked when two thirds into this ride Gavin tells his client: "so far this was a normal divorce story, but you may need a drink to listen to the rest" and the last chapter certainly doesn't prove him wrong. The violence here sometimes resembles a road-runner cartoon but the movie never ceases to be funny.

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Upon its release, "Roses" was heavily criticized for its nasty, unhappy ending but the truth of the matter is that any kind of reconciliation between these characters would have felt phony, as the couple we've grown to know have nothing to do with the concept of happiness. At any rate, when the credits roll we realize it was the DeVito character that gradually became the central focus of the story and he in turn has become a voice of reason, a loving husband and an overall good man. Heck, he's even become a lawyer willing to yield his fee for his fellow man. Now that's your happy ending right there.

My Mona Lisa Daughter-in-law No 1 - Only in my dream!
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MOVIE - "FALLING DOWN" - SHORT EXTRACT
My fave movie - next to, "They Live"
 
This movie was released in 1993 and is more relevant than ever.

Michael Douglas plays a "middle class" man at the end of his tether. Out of work and watching his life fall apart under the economic rationalist policies of the Reagan and Thatcher era, he takes matters into this own hands and expresses his frustration with the "American dream".

In this segment the Douglas character makes the point that the fast food hamburger picture on the wall does not live up to the actual hamburger passed to him across the counter. CLASSIC.

The American Dream - a "miserable squashed thing".
- "You see, this is what I'm talking about. Turn around and look at that! You see what I mean? Its plump, it's juicy, it's three inches thick. Now...look at this sorry, miserable squashed thing! Can anybody tell me whats wrong with this picture? Anybody? Anybody at all?" -


This movie was released in 1993 and is more relevant than ever. Michael Douglas
 
- One very wrong thing in the FILM is the "Nazi" stereotype!  (BAFS)

My French wife accompanied by her new Chevalier Servant, a "Jehovah Witness", our own business partner, informed the RACIST ANTI-MUSLIM AND ANTI-ARAB (PRO-ISRAEL) Police that her life was in danger because of me.  But, when the Police (ONE YOUNG AND UNARMED POLICE OFFICER) came my wife could think of nothing to tell the Police officer why she said and thought that her life was in danger because of me. She was advised to stay in a hotel for the night if she felt her life was threatened and see a solicitor in the morning!

I NEVER COMMITTED ANY ACT OF VIOLENCE IN MY ENTIRE LIFE SINCE MY COLLEGE YEARS! 
MY WIFE WAS SCARED TO DEATH BECAUSE SHE WAS BETRAYING ME BEHIND MY BACK AND I DID FIND OUT!  AND STEALING MY LEGAL AND OTHER DOCUMENTS TO TAKE TO CHRISTOPHER D. HARRINGTON'S HOME, HER NEW CHEVALIER SERVANT!

Is it a coincidence that Michael's wife AMANDA in "FALLING DOWN" bears the same name as my Mona Lisa daughter-in-law AMANDA?  

See my Testament on RASPUTIN & SIMBA!
(BAFS)

 

Johann Strauss Orchestra with Andre Rieu - "And The Waltz Goes On" (Anthony Hopkins)

 And the waltz goes on - Andre Rieu/ Anthony Hopkins

84,068

Published on 25 Feb 2014
Because I love and I admire Anthony Hopkins and also Andre Rieu, I decided to make this video about an wonderful story of a waltz. It is special, in a way and interesting also how this composition saw the light, how it was created from inside deep feelings, became very known thanks to love and includes also the story of a beautiful friendship. After 47 years since it was composed, this waltz was played in public and it took so long because the people who have a high value never realize this and the arrogance is an unknown feeling for them.

Couple married 67 years holds hands in final hours together

FRESNO, Calif. (AP) — After spending 67 years together as devoted husband and wife, there was no question how Floyd and Violet Hartwig would end their lives — together.
Sensing the couple was close to death, their children pushed their two hospice beds together and gently placed their father's hand in the mother's palm.
Floyd, 90, died first. Violet, 89, followed five hours later. They died Feb. 11 at home, just as they had wished, the family said.
"They wanted to go together," their daughter, Donna Scharton, said Thursday. "It was meant to be that way."


The two knew each other as children, growing up in the Central California farming community of Easton. Romance sparked at a local dance hall one night when Floyd, a decorated Navy sailor, was home on shore leave. They were married on Aug. 16, 1947, and while away Floyd showered Violet with affection through love letters the family cherishes.
Returning home for good, the two raised three children on their small farm, growing cotton and raising turkeys. Violet helped on the ranch and kept the house. She prepared breakfast early each morning for her husband, seeing him off to work as a ranch foreman and delivering eggs.
"They were dedicated to each other," Scharton said. "Even other people who met them said they had that connection."
The couple, who had four grandchildren and 10 great-grandchildren, remained active until recently. Around the holidays, the family noticed that Violet's dementia had worsened, and in late January a doctor said Floyd's failing kidneys gave him two weeks to live.
The family moved the couches from the living room of their ranch house, making space for the hospice beds. Cynthia Letson said that after her grandfather passed, they told her grandmother that she could go, too. They told Violet that Floyd was waiting for her.
Letson said her grandparents are a positive example at a time with too many broken marriages.
"It would be nice if the world got back to the core of marriage," Letson said. "I don't think people realize that anymore. They need to go back to the basics that marriage is forever."

1 comment:

  1. My French wife accompanied by her new Chevalier Servant, a "Jehovah Witness", our own business partner, informed the RACIST ANTI-MUSLIM AND ANTI-ARAB (PRO-ISRAEL) Police that her life was in danger because of me. But, when the Police (ONE YOUNG AND UNARMED POLICE OFFICER) came my wife could think of nothing to tell the Police officer why she said and thought that her life was in danger because of me. She was advised to stay in a hotel for the night if she felt her life was threatened and see a solicitor in the morning!



    I NEVER COMMITTED ANY ACT OF VIOLENCE IN MY ENTIRE LIFE SINCE MY COLLEGE YEARS! MY WIFE WAS SCARED TO DEATH BECAUSE SHE WAS BETRAYING ME BEHIND MY BACK AND I DID FIND OUT! AND STEALING MY LEGAL AND OTHER DOCUMENTS TO TAKE TO CHRISTOPHER D. HARRINGTON'S HOME, HER NEW CHEVALIER SERVANT!



    Is it a coincidence that Michael's wife AMANDA in "FALLING DOWN" bears the same name as my Mona Lisa daughter-in-law AMANDA?



    See my Testament on RASPUTIN & SIMBA!

    (BAFS)


    ReplyDelete