The Beatles cry for Help!
Prelude to the sacrifice
Here’s the second video in a series dedicated to decoding the hidden messages, predictive programming and propaganda in the Beatles films. This video deals with 1965’s “Help!”
For me, the whole reason for having the comment section open on my videos is for everyone involved to have a conversation and share ideas (even if it does mean banning a few trolls now and then!)
Here are some wonderful ideas and little kernels of knowledge that my fabulous subscribers came up with after I posted this video:
Leo McKern, the actor playing the death cult leader, Clang, lost his left eye in an accident whilst working in a factory when he was 15. That means that, like Billy, he was also one-eyed. In most versions of the story, it was the left eye that the Egyptian god, Horus, actually lost. In light of that fact, it’s fantastically apt that Leo played a cult leader without his left eye.
Gerry Bron, (the brother of the comedy actress Eleanor Bron, who played Ahme) was the manager of the Bonzos, the band founded by Billy as Vivian Stanshall.
I mentioned the Superman comics in my video that were on the music stand in front of Paul. However, the Jimmy Olson comics that are also there could be a reference to Frank Olson, who was involved with LSD experiments and MK Ultra.
Speaking of Superman, someone rightly reminded me that those stories were inspired by the 19th century “Golem of Prague” story, in which a 16th century Jewish community created a Golem to protect them. This idea of the golem is also reflected in Mary Shelley’s “Frankenstein”, also inspired by golem. Perhaps this talk of artificially recreated men is a sly reference to Billy? Extending on from this, the cover for The National’s 2023 album called “The First Two Pages of Frankenstein”, is a photo of a little boy holding a styrofoam head with a Paul name tag on it.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First_Two_Pages_of_Frankenstein
The use of a Harrods delivery van now has a link back to Lady Di, whom the occulted cabal believe was the reincarnated Egyptian goddess, Isis. Diana was reputedly dating, Dodi Al-Fayed, the son of Mohammed Al-Fayed, who owed Harrods at the time of Diana’s death.
In the scene at the City Barge pub where Ringo falls into a cellar, this could have been a reference to the Beatles time playing at the Cavern Club, in Liverpool, which was also in a cellar. Ringo, of course, was the last one to join “the fab four” to play as a Beatle at the Cavern Club.
The guitarist, Vic Flick, played on both the Bond theme (which was used in “Help!”, during a chase scene) and the instrumental version of “This Boy” in the film, “A Hard Day’s Night”.
Although I did talk about the song choices on the soundtrack to “Help!”, I could have said more. Consider the titles: “Help!”, “You’ve Gotta Hide Your Love Away” and “Another Girl”. “Help” is really just a cry for help. The love to be hidden, is the love for Paul after he died. The other girl is really another Paul, in the form of Billy. Even the song, “The Night Before”, includes the line “when I think of things we did, it makes me want to cry!” Is this a reference to the deal with the devil that is also referred to in “Yesterday”, when Paul “said something wrong”?
In the section of “Help!”, where Clang is discussing getting young people into sacrifices, so that they will know the value of blood well shed, the young people in question are probably the Beatles themselves. By agreeing to their involvement of the Beatles psy-op, they, perhaps unwittingly, got involved in their own sacrifices!

