Finally, here is the most important recommendation of the week. Way back, 115 years ago, The Mistletoe Bough presented the story of a deadly game of hide-and-seek on a wedding night. In this version, the bride is the one who suggests the activity, and it’s her own fault that her fate is sealed before she can even consummate her vows. She hides so well that nobody finds her until 30 years later when her ghost is spotted coming out of a similar chest. The way the wedding party just gives up trying to find her after a short while is pretty amusing. Did they think she just ran off after saying “I do”? Maybe the film we see is the cover-up story. Maybe the family killed her and made up the idea that they just couldn’t locate her.
The Christmas-set tale of the Mistletoe Bough is actually based on a legend believed by some to have been a true story. There are even estates in England that claim to be the real location where the bride went missing and now haunts (British Pathe made a 1941 documentary short showing the village of Minster Lovell as the setting). The legend, the telling of which was a holiday tradition in Britain, became famous first in the 19th century as a poem and then a song and then a play and here a film. Two other silent short versions were made in 1923 and 1926. Most movie fans should be familiar with the story as it’s told by John Dall’s character in Alfred Hitchcock’s Rope.
The original film version was recently restored by the British Film Institute, and if you are in the UK you can watch the nine-minute version, in which the wedding party spends more time searching for the bride and even comes upon the locked chest where she’s hiding, on the BFI Player. Otherwise, watch the shorter cut below.
How so? Please elaborate. I watched the movie last year. It's terrific.
i did a little digging and found this:
Finally, here is the most important recommendation of the week. Way back, 115 years ago, The Mistletoe Bough presented the story of a deadly game of hide-and-seek on a wedding night. In this version, the bride is the one who suggests the activity, and it’s her own fault that her fate is sealed before she can even consummate her vows. She hides so well that nobody finds her until 30 years later when her ghost is spotted coming out of a similar chest. The way the wedding party just gives up trying to find her after a short while is pretty amusing. Did they think she just ran off after saying “I do”? Maybe the film we see is the cover-up story. Maybe the family killed her and made up the idea that they just couldn’t locate her.
The Christmas-set tale of the Mistletoe Bough is actually based on a legend believed by some to have been a true story. There are even estates in England that claim to be the real location where the bride went missing and now haunts (British Pathe made a 1941 documentary short showing the village of Minster Lovell as the setting). The legend, the telling of which was a holiday tradition in Britain, became famous first in the 19th century as a poem and then a song and then a play and here a film. Two other silent short versions were made in 1923 and 1926. Most movie fans should be familiar with the story as it’s told by John Dall’s character in Alfred Hitchcock’s Rope.
The original film version was recently restored by the British Film Institute, and if you are in the UK you can watch the nine-minute version, in which the wedding party spends more time searching for the bride and even comes upon the locked chest where she’s hiding, on the BFI Player. Otherwise, watch the shorter cut below.
Source: https://greatawakening.win/p/15IY89wStt/the-movie-ready-or-not-isnt-a-mo/c/
Because it shows us exactly what the elites do: that they hunt and kill on their properties.