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American media are often afraid to criticize, or even talk about, Scientology because of litigation fears. Video game makers don't seem to have that problem. They pride themselves on being edgy, outrageous, hip and satirical. They push the envelope more often and so perhaps are more willing to take a risk mocking the cult. Also, they are taken less seriously by society so they can do things under the radar which an attention getting feature film could not. Plus, with the cult so weak there has never been a better time to mock it safely than now. That's why it didn't really surprise me when two different big budget video games riffed on Scientology in 2011 alone. In both games the cult is the villain of course! "Dead Space 2" is a sequel to an ultraviolent third person shooter. That means the camera floats and follows the player from behind while they blow things up. "LA Noire" is a period detective mystery set in Los Angeles in 1947, just a few years before Dianetics was published by Scientology founder L. Ron Hubbard. It's also a third person shooter.Don't believe the cult inspired these games? Compare the pyramid drawing above and the logo of Scientology's Religious Technology Center at right. Hmmm.... read on! |
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Dead Space 2 postulates a future where Scientology has finally achieved it's goals of launching into space and attempting to spread itself to other worlds. This has always been Scientology's sci-fi dream. The world is not enough! They even gouged UFO landing pad symbols of their logos into the ground in several secret bunker locations. Why? Because these cultists believe in reincarnation. But what if everyone on earth were killed in World War III? There would be no one alive for their Thetans (souls) to reincarnate into. All formerly human Thetans would have to reincarnate into a newborn baby space alien on another planet, grow up, feel the urge to join Scientology, board a spacecraft (possibly of their own invention), fly to earth, see the UFO landing pad symbols, investigate, discover the nearby vault that holds LRH's words stored on metal plates to survive World War III, penetrate the nuclear blast-proof doors, decipher the founder's words stored in inert gas and printed on Titanium and then continue Scientology. I'm sure science fiction writer and Sci founder L. Ron Hubbard would appreciate Scientology spreading to other worlds like Unitology does in Dead Space 2. What he would not like is that Unitology has also been messing around with these Necromorphs behind the scenes and is up to no good. I've played the demo for both games 1 and 2. What I remember is being attacked by a giant zombie fat guy. Smart players shoot the yellowish, bloated undead horror in the head and it falls down dead. Toally dead. Even for a zombie. But new players always shoot the monster in it's zombie fat guy stomach. This causes it to die by bursting open and a hundred yellow giant spiderlings explode out, crawl up your legs and eat you. That's the Dead Space experience. And I don't even want to talk about the fanged fetuses which appear in the video below. The L. Ron Hubbard of Unitology is named Michael Altman. He's the one source of true wisdom. But, just like Scientology, appearances are deceiving. What seems like a feel good humanitarian group is also responsible for secret evil: alien zombies on Titan that shoot puke at you! LINK: ArsTechnica.com - Why Dead Space 2 is a direct attack on Scientology
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LA Noire starts with a disclaimer that this game is not about any one real person. There is a Howard Hughes "type," and L. Ron Hubbard "type." etc. Like LRH, Dr. Harlan Fontaine gives lectures on the mind, is a celebrity quack doctor, and runs a drug treatment/mental health clinic. Too bad he seems more interested in keeping his patients addicted rather than curing them. Seems World War II had created a huge surplus of shell shocked vets and unused morphine. Why not bring them together even if it's illegal? "What may on the surface appear to be illegal is actually of benefit to society at large" Fontaine asserts. Throughout the stolen morphine investigation he behaves as a sociopathic manipulator obsessed with power and is the games principle antagonist.
Los Angeles protesters are in for another treat in LA Noire thanks to it's faithful recreation of Hollywood Boulevard postwar. It's an eerie experience for those familiar with the boulevard to be driving down its 1947 video game version. At that time it was more like a small town main street with none of the tattoo parlors, hookers and space alien cults which moved in later. In particular, the Christie Hotel, Regal Shoes Building and Hollywood Guarantee Building are all faithfully recreated. When Hollywood fell into neglect the cult was able to buy these buildings on the cheap and fix them up.
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Dr. Harlan Fontaine is the L. Ron Hubbard of LA Noire, quack, con man and drug dealer. Note the words "The Complex" and the pyramid-like drawing. | In this still from the game's introduction a group waits outside to attend a lecture by Dr. Harlan Fontaine. The building may actually exist in Los Angeles. Whole chunks of LA have been duplicated closely. | Lecture by Dr. Harlan Fontaine called "The Human Mind: Medicine's Final Frontier" |
Newspapers scattered across the game trigger flashbacks which extend the plot. In this one Fontaine is seeing "helping" a troubled vet by injecting him something, probably morphine. Although Scientology believes in space aliens this newspaper archaically refers to Psychiatrists as "Alienists." | Two policemen in the game stand in front of the Christie Hotel, Hollywood Boulevard. The building really exists and is now owned by Scientology. | This rendering of the Hollywood Guarantee Building (HGB) shows it's appearance around 1950, decades before Scientology bought it and made it the home of their secret police (OSA). |
Across the street from HGB the Regal Shoes Building is portrayed. It now houses workers for the Office of Special Affairs and the Sea Org. | LA Noire Title Screen | YOUR DONATIONS KEEP THIS SITE GROWING! Donate safely and securely using PayPal |
Regal Shoes Building 2011 | ![]() Hollywood Guarantee Building 1923 and 2006 |
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