The (((Usual Suspects)))

Morgoth’s Review
July 30, 2016

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One of the most common euphemisms used to describe Jewish people is ”The Usual Suspects” and the Jews themselves seem to know it and understand it as an ”Anti-Semitic trope”. The Usual Suspects is also a very well made 1995 crime thriller directed by gay Jew, Bryan Singer.  The most famous character in The Usual Suspects is ”Keyser Söze” whose identity is shrouded in mystery, Soze himself is seemingly omnipotent, a master manipulator and source of dread for all who cross his path.

This article is not so much a review of The Usual Suspects movie, which is excellent, but rather an investigation into whether there is any validity to the character of Keyser Soze being what we might call an ‘Anti-Semitic trope’.

The Usual Suspects has a notoriously intricate plot which can only be briefly outlined here. The movie opens at a harbour ablaze, a multitude of corpses are floating in the water and strewn all around the harbour and a docked ship. Five men, Verbal, Keaton, McManus, Fenster and Hockney, are rounded up and thrown onto an identity line up, the chronology of the movie then switches back and forth as one of the men, Verbal Kint, explains what happened after the line up and the events which led to the bloodbath at the harbour, in which al of the other men were killed. Kint then explains that after the line-up the men were contacted by a representative of the feared and semi-mythical, Keyser Soze, the men were then blackmailed and manipulated by Soze into killing the one man on earth who could identify him, or ‘name him’.

Kint, of course, is Soze, everything the audience has witnessed was Kint’s view of events. As plot twists go it’s simply brilliant. But what about the character, modus operandi and motivation…is Keyser Soze an Anti-Semitic canard?.

1. The Myth.

The origin of the Jewish people is something which most ‘normies’ haven’t thought about very much, they’re in the bible, they’ve always sort of just been there wandering from country to country. There’s lots of conspiracy theories about Jews, it’s all a bit vague, are they a race or a religion or what?. There’s a connection to the middle east and central Europe and, of course, Germany. But mainly most Europeans simply don’t know and even within circles which spend a great deal of energy researching the subject there’s debates on the ”Khazar Hypothesis” etc.

Keyser Soze’s origins are similarly shrouded in mystery. Soze/Kint explains that ”nobody is really sure where he came from” his father is rumoured to have been from Germany, he began his criminal career in Turkey, it is said. Soze’s main enemies come from Hungary, not south or central America, as is the norm for a modern criminal mastermind operating in America.

2. Manipulation.

One of the most frequent accusations directed toward the Jewish people is that they create a chaotic situation which they then manipulate so that the outcome benefits themselves. The Usual Suspects movie is a movie about manipulation, not just of the characters within the film, but of the audience too.

3. The Victim.

As Verbal Kint, Keyser Soze adopts a severe limp and fakes a crippled hand, as well as a generally hunched and cowed physical presence. Out of the 5 men he’s easily the least physically imposing and earns the nickname ”The Gimp” from the others. By playing the victim Soze gains the sympathy of the other men and the audience. Gabriel Byrne plays ‘Keaton’ the most experienced, feared and respected of the other men, he’s also the most sympathetic toward Kint/Soze. It is through Keaton that Soze gains influence, an influence which is never questioned because of status as weak and feeble victim. The great reveal at the end of The Usual Suspects is Soze shedding the victim guise and walking upright.

4. Debt.

Throughout the centuries the most frequent cause of tension between Jew and Gentile was the Jewish practice of usury, of trapping people with debt and interest upon that debt. Keyser Soze’s modus-operandi is not primarily one of outright violence but of ensnaring people via a debt owed to him. Soze will offer a job to a criminal in which the criminal actually makes more money that Soze does. This tactic initially seems rather paradoxical, if not moronic, but the catch is that Soze will later return to collect on the debt and the criminal will be forced into performing some sort of suicide mission or vastly more dangerous task, violence and death will follow if the criminal refuses, presumably carried out by another criminal enslaved to Soze.

As The Usual Suspects unfolds it is revealed that all of the men have at some point stolen from Soze or been involved with a scam, albeit unknowingly, which originated from Soze, they all, then, owe Soze, they are all in debt to him.

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The Shabbos Goy (left) performing work unfit for his master.

5. The Shabbos Goy.

An accusation often hurled at politicians is one of being a ”Shabbos Goy” this rather demeaning term is used to describe gentiles who carry out tasks and work deemed unfit for, or below Jews. Tony Blair is often cited as a prime example of a shabbos goy. In The Usual Suspects Keyser Soze has the equivalent of a shabbos goy in the character of ”Kobayashi”. It is through Kobayashi that the men learn of their involvement and enslavement to Keyser Soze. Kobayashi appears to be Indian (Asian) and we are told he’s a lawyer, he operates within legal and political circles on behalf of Soze. Soze’s shabbos goy has the potential to destroy Soze, he’s the only person who truly knows the character and nature of Soze and his operation, however, like Tony Blair, Kobayashi is awestruck by his master and his allegiance to his master seems to be unshakable

6. Naming The Soze.

The plot of The Usual Suspects hinges on Soze being identified by one of his old Hungarian rivals. It is Soze’s dire need to eliminate this threat which drives the whole story. Because of the secretive and manipulative nature of Soze’s power, having a genuine name and face pinned on him, for him to become an identifiable man, a villain at that, would be catastrophic. Unlike a Colombian drugs cartel, Soze does not have a large territory with hundreds of armed men, his power is one of secrecy, manipulation and shadowy control. Thus, if he, as a living breathing humanity being, is pinned to his crimes and exposed, the threat to him becomes exponential. Keaton, McManus, Fenster and Hockney are therefore acting more like a machine gun armed Anti Defamation League or European Jewish Congress when charged with the task of preventing Soze from being exposed, albeit unwittingly.

7. Verbal Gymnastics.

People often point out that Jewish people are highly adept at using language, some scientific research has even revealed that the parts of the Jewish brain relating to speech tend to be more developed than those parts are in other racial and ethnic groups. Whatever the truth of that, Jewish people are famously over-represented in the realms of politics and media and various other areas such as law, which require a person to talk a great deal and at length. It’s rather interesting, then, that Soze adopts the name of ‘Verbal’. The audience are told via Soze/Verbal, that the name was given to him in an ironic sense, because he’s rather quiet. But it isn’t really true that Verbal is reticent about talking, far from it….

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8. The Great Hoax.

The great twist at the end of The Usual Suspects not only reveals that Verbal Kint is Soze, but also that everything which Kint explained in the police station, everything which we as the audience thought of as ‘reality’ within the context of the film, was a lie, or if not a lie then it was certainly subject to what Soze wanted us to know. In a sense Keyser Soze was acting as our media, he was relating events and we, as the audience, were trying to understand and comprehend those events based upon what he was telling us. Soze is the only person left alive, so he has a monopoly on information regarding what happened.

It could be argued that because the western media is pretty much owned by Jewish people, that we are in a similar situation as the audience watching The Usual Suspects. When we watch a film or TV show or read a newspaper we are, in effect, listening to Keyser Soze spinning a yarn again, a yarn which serves the interests of the people who own the media.

At the finale of The Usual Suspects the audience is ‘Red-Pilled’ because they see the fraud, it’s given to them and there’s an element of shock, betrayal and confusion. The most famous line in The Usual Suspects is ”The greatest trick the devil ever pulled was convincing the world he didn’t exist”.

But how would the devil react to people who weren’t convinced, people who saw him clearly and called out him on his evil? Would those people not be castigated as the most evil people of all time?

I have no idea if any of this was intentional, but on a recent re-watch of The Usual Suspects from a ‘Red-Pilled’ perspective, it does sort of jump out at you…..