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A Look at the Symbolism in Channing Tatum Movie “Blink Twice” + Trailer
Vigilant Citizen – vigilantcitizen.com Oct 17, 2024
In “Blink Twice,” unsuspecting women are flown to a tropical island and abused by some very wealthy men. This premise is clearly inspired by Jeffrey Epstein’s infamous island, which the world’s most powerful people visited. While the movie appears to be “exposing” what happens in these gatherings, its symbolism gives the story a different meaning. It is rather twisted.
Warning: Mountainous spoilers ahead!
Blink Twice begins with a “trigger warning,” stating that it is a “psychological thriller about the abuse of power” and that it contains “sexual violence.” While this message appears to be well-meaning, it also gives off a strange feeling that it promises “sexual violence” to the weirdos turned on by it.
This bivalence sums up the entire movie. While it appears to say one thing, it actually says the opposite.
To prove this fact, one only needs to look at the movie’s original name: Pussy Island. While the movie is believed to “expose” rich and powerful people abusing people in remote islands, the pornographic flavor of the original title turns it into a twisted, voyeuristic experience.
Inspired by the horrific stories of Epstein Island (although the media actively censors the rampant pedophilia that happened there), Blink Twice reframes, distorts, and, in a perverted way, glamorizes. The “sexual violence” scenes are padded with long minutes of “humor” which end up turning everything into a joke. Meanwhile, the underground sex ring of the elite is turned into a “feminist” narrative, where women killing a bunch of men solves everything. Of course, none of this reflects real life, where lots of women actively facilitate and even participate in the abuse.
Blink Twice does not expose or even comment on the elite drugging and raping sex slaves, including minors. Because, in the end, it is a Hollywood movie. Do you think Hollywood would do that to itself? As we’ll see, this movie’s “moral of the story” is not about overthrowing this system but perpetuating it – but with a pseudo-feminist angle.
Everything about Blink Twice is weird, disingenuous, and profoundly disconnected from reality. It is how Hollywood people would portray what Hollywood people do in places like Epstein Island. Appropriately enough, the movie is the directorial debut of Zoë Kravitz – the daughter of musician Lenny Kravitz and actress Lisa Bonet. She’s a product of Hollywood, and she’s been inside that system since birth.
Along with film writer E.T. Feigenbaum, Kravitz crafted a movie that turns the elite’s disgusting obsessions into “entertainment.” More importantly, the movie symbolically portrays the events as a “sacrifice” necessary for the protagonist to obtain what she truly desires. Then there is also the Holly-weird, reoccurring 'white men bad' theme running through it, as well.
While the movie’s story is relatively straightforward, semi-hidden references and symbolism add a layer of meaning—and they are rather disturbing. It is about trauma-based mind control.
Here’s a look at the major themes of the movie.
Premonitions
Frida repeats the movie’s motto to herself. It will take a disturbing meaning.
Blink Twice‘s protagonist is Frida, a struggling cocktail waitress attempting to launch a nail business. In the movie’s first scene, she watches a video of Slater King, a tech billionaire who was accused of “abuse of power” and “regrettable behavior.”
There are far too many photo clips from the movie to post here.