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Washington "Post", 11/28/99: Great article about Travolta, "Battlefield Earth" movie (Xenu mentioned among other things)!

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Bat Child (Sue M.)

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Nov 28, 1999, 3:00:00 AM11/28/99
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Found at:

http://washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/style/A48280-1999Nov26.html

====================

John Travolta, Out on the 'Battlefield'


By Richard Leiby
Washington Post Staff Writer
Sunday, November 28, 1999; Page G1


MONTREAL – Something otherworldly is happening inside Hangar 12,
something they're trying to keep secret. But we can tell you this
much: John Travolta is involved, and so are space aliens.

Soldiers have secured the perimeter. "Warning: This establishment is
under permanent surveillance by the military police," a sign says.
Absolutely no trespassing, by order of Canada's minister of national
defense.

But through the 10-foot-high chain-link fence topped with triple
strands of barbed wire, you can spy pieces of weird aircraft. They
look like menacing insects. Occasionally a large, hairy creature will
amble into view.

It's only a movie, the authorities say. The Canadian military is
simply renting a secure facility to Travolta and his film crew. Here
is the official story:

Inside Hangar 12, they are making an $80 million sci-fi epic called
"Battlefield Earth." Travolta, the co-producer, stars as a
nine-foot-tall alien overlord with glowing amber eyes set in a
grotesquely elongated head. He has hooklike talons for hands. "Planet
of the Apes" meets "Star Wars": Travolta as you've never seen him
before.

Okay. But what's the real story? At the end of the millennium, you
can't believe press releases. On the Internet, startling allegations
are flying: about an invasion fleet deployed from the Marcab
Confederacy; about mind-control implant stations set up on Mars; about
the parallels between the top-secret teachings of the Church of
Scientology and the novel "Battlefield Earth" by Scientology founder
L. Ron Hubbard.

So is "Battlefield Earth" a recruiting film for Scientology?

Nonsense, Travolta says. The movie, he keeps telling reporters, has
absolutely, positively no connection to Scientology. No sirree.

Travolta's publicists refused several requests from The Washington
Post to interview the star. See, he's already put it all on the
record:

Since 1975 he has been a devotee of Scientology, an "applied religious
philosophy" that claims millions of adherents. He credits Hubbard, the
late science-fiction author, for all his worldly and spiritual
successes. The actor believes that Hubbard's teachings and writings
hold mankind's hope for salvation.

Travolta calls "Battlefield Earth" one of the most popular books
published in this century. He has been trying to make it into a movie
for 15 years. But until now, he's told reporters, he didn't have the
Hollywood clout to do it. The film will be distributed and marketed
with backing from two major studios--Morgan Creek Productions and
Warner Bros.--and is scheduled to open next May.

"The truth of why I'm doing it is because it's a great piece of
science fiction," Travolta has said. "This is not about him [Hubbard].
... I'm very interested in Scientology, but that's personal. This is
different. This has nothing to do with Scientology."

But maybe this has everything to do with a cult: a paranoid, insular
group that refuses to answer further questions from the press because
it hopes to wring as much money from the public as possible and
doesn't believe in giving away its secrets for free. It's about a
hierarchy that hopes to dominate the world with its propaganda and
turn us all into robotic supplicants.

In other words, it's about ... the movie business.

Dwelling Among the Stars

Who doesn't love John Travolta? Who wouldn't want to be Travolta? He
earns $20 million a picture, owns four homes and four airplanes; he
jets around the world with his beautiful actress-wife, Kelly Preston,
whom he is constantly kissing in the vicinity of tabloid
photographers. The couple periodically lands to make movies and pose
on magazine covers and promote their movies, giving interviews about
how much they love each other.

John has given Kelly a bit part in his pet project. Like him, she'll
play one of the Psychlos--the horrible monsters in "Battlefield
Earth." The Psychlos are pitiless fascists who have turned Earth into
a prison planet in which humans are hunted and killed for sport.

"I have a huge head, and I walk on these stiltlike legs," Preston
recently told TV Guide's online edition.

She, too, embraces Scientology, saying it has "cleaned away everything
that was unwanted in myself." Other celebrities say the church keeps
them off drugs and provides balance in the roller-coaster world of
show biz. Newly arrived L.A. dreamers sign up for courses, hoping to
make connections that will get them out of those bellhop jobs at the
Mondrian and onto the big screen.

Church counseling relies on a battery-powered contraption called an
"E-meter"-- a lie detector-type device invented by Hubbard that
supposedly helps members locate sources of mental and spiritual
distress. Scientology says its therapies can make people smarter,
healthier, more successful.

It seeks, in Hubbard's words, "a civilization without insanity,
without criminals and without war"--an ideal also espoused by
Travolta.

But there's a reason the church is often called controversial. In
France this month Scientology staff members were convicted of fraud. A
German court ruled that Scientology used "inhuman and totalitarian
practices." A California appeals court branded its treatment of one
member "manifestly outrageous." (His award of $2.5 million for
"serious emotional injury" was twice upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court,
but he has never been able to collect.) Scientology believes such
findings are the result of religious intolerance.

Church policy letters show that Scientology wants to eradicate
psychiatry and psychology, as well as gain control, or the allegiance,
of "key political figures" and the proprietors of "all news media."
Its avowed goal is to "Clear the Planet"--that is, to turn everyone
into a Scientologist who has achieved the level of "Clear" through
Hubbard's books, drills and E-meter.

Celebrities are key to the crusade to clear the planet. Hubbard
realized in Scientology's early days that the public adores and mimics
celebs--not because they're necessarily intelligent or enlightened,
but because they're rich and famous. In 1955 --five years after
publishing his cornerstone text, "Dianetics: The Modern Science of
Mental Health"--he ordered followers to bring stars into the fold,
knowing their magnetism would attract ordinary pew-packers.

If Isaac Hayes, Tom Cruise, Jenna Elfman, Kirstie Alley, Lisa Marie
Presley and Chick Corea all groove on Scientology, then it must be,
well, groovy. Who wouldn't want to dwell among the stars?

Psychlo-Babble

Writing "Battlefield Earth: A Saga of the Year 3000," Hubbard
revisited the space operas he'd churned out for pennies a word before
he started his own religion. It weighs in at 1,050 pages in paperback
and is considered by sci-fi fans to be Hubbard's last good work,
written while he was in hiding in 1980. (He died at age 74 in 1986.)

Hubbard had disappeared to escape the scandals that engulfed his
church in the late '70s. Scientology was besieged by lawsuits alleging
fraud, brainwashing and criminal conduct, and was tarred by the
indictment of several top officials who had infiltrated federal
agencies, bugged an IRS meeting and burgled files the government kept
on the group. Hubbard himself was named an unindicted co-conspirator
in the 1978 criminal case; his third wife, Mary Sue, was sentenced to
four years in prison for orchestrating the schemes.

He turned to writing what he called "pure science fiction." But it's
not difficult to see connections between his fiction and his religious
teachings.

For those who pay enough to achieve its top levels (as Travolta has),
Scientology offers a secret cosmology centered on intergalactic
travel, space battles and encounters with aliens. Traditional faiths
may embrace visions of Heaven and Hell, redeemers and miracles, but
Hubbard says all those were merely "implanted" in humans by
extraterrestrials eons ago.

Since the early '50s, the founder's sacred writings have focused on
his belief that Earthlings are the pawns of aliens. Hubbard taught
that the psychiatric establishment--which always looked askance at his
theories--was not just a present-day evil, but a timeless one. In a
distant galaxy, alien "psychs" devised implants that would ultimately
wreck the spiritual progress of human beings, he said. The psychs and
their "blackened souls," he preached, were to blame for all crime,
violence and sin. "They destroyed every great civilization to date and
are hard at work on this one."

In "Battlefield Earth," Hubbard writes that the ruthless Psychlo race
was the tool of a medical cult that implanted metallic capsules in
Psychlo babies' skulls so they grow up to become sadists. He writes
that these "mental doctors"--called "catrists"--made up the "real,
hidden government."

Psychlo ... catrist? It doesn't take a degree in semiotics to make the
connection.

"Battlefield Earth" wasn't the first time Hubbard mixed themes from
Holy Writ and blazing ray guns. In 1977, he penned a screenplay titled
"Revolt in the Stars," featuring an intergalactic overlord named Xenu
and his psychiatric advisers, Stug and Sty. They carry out a holocaust
by rounding up "unwanted" beings from every planet and transporting
them to Earth, where they are put in volcanoes and slaughtered with
atomic bombs. This extermination operation, which occurred 75 million
years ago, is called "Phase III."

The plot of "Revolt" mirrors a sacred Scientology text called "OT III"
(which stands for Operating Thetan Section III). It is revealed to
Scientologists only after they pay tens of thousands of dollars and
undergo many hours of intensive "processing" to prepare them for the
Xenu message.

The scripture--widely leaked by disgruntled ex-members--describes how
the exterminated alien beings were fused into clusters in the
volcanoes and attached themselves to human spirits. To become truly
free, Hubbard teaches, parishioners must detect these aliens and get
rid of them using the E-meter device. (To do this, you hold a metal
can in each hand and focus on a point in the body where a sensation or
pain is perceived.)

"Revolt" was shopped around Hollywood in late 1979 but never made it
to the screen. Undaunted, Hubbard turned his imagination to a book he
titled "Man, the Endangered Species" – later to be called "Battlefield
Earth." Also around this time, a young actor named John Travolta began
his journey into the uppermost levels of Scientology, learning about
the secret agenda of the aliens, the implanters and the psychiatrists.


Secrets of the Universe

In the summer of 1974, Ernest Borgnine took a role that, for an Oscar
winner, must have marked a low point. Made up to resemble a demented
goat, he played Satan in "The Devil's Rain," a cheesy horror flick
being shot in Mexico. Also on the set: John Travolta in his first
movie role. He had lines like "Blasphemer! Get him, he is a
blasphemer!"

Heavily influenced by his mother, a suburban New Jersey drama coach,
Johnny Travolta grew up something of an acting prodigy; as a teenager
he aced auditions for Broadway roles and for TV soaps, and toured
nationally in the musical "Grease." But when he came to Los Angeles to
break into films, he was just another struggling no-name.

"He was in need of friends. He was depressed. ... It was a very lonely
time for him," actress Joan Prather later told Rolling Stone magazine.
Prather, who also appeared in "The Devil's Rain," gave Travolta some
Scientology books while they were in Mexico. By 1975 he was relying on
Hubbard's E-meter to handle his neuroses instead of continuing to see
a therapist.

"It made sense to me right away because it seemed like a means of
self-help," the actor is quoted as saying in the biography "John
Travolta: Back in Character," by Wensley Clarkson. "A meter shows you
when you're responding to a bad experience in your past. You find the
source of pain, acknowledge it, deal with it."

A lackluster student who had dropped out of school after the 10th
grade, Travolta declared that he didn't need a formal education: "Now
I'm into Scientology, the science of the mind." By 1980, Travolta told
Rolling Stone, he had achieved the state of "Clear," which he
described as "cleansed of unwanted feelings and mental images."

As he rocketed to fame in the sitcom "Welcome Back, Kotter" and such
movies as "Saturday Night Fever" and "Grease," Travolta became a
revered figure at Scientology's Celebrity Centre in Los Angeles, which
was established to expand Hubbard's teachings into the artistic world.
He was identified in a church photograph as an Operating Thetan – a
super-being who could claim powers beyond the heightened awareness and
intelligence levels achieved by "Clears."

He was unlocking, as he later told a Scientology publication, "the
secrets of the universe."

Operating Thetans learn about the evil Xenu, survive the so-called
"Wall of Fire" and begin to divest themselves of alien infestations.
The revelation that humans are controlled by alien spirits prompts
some Scientologists to quit the church, but to others it confirms
Hubbard's genius.

Travolta stopped taking Scientology courses for about a year and a
half after reaching the Operating Thetan stage. He expressed
dissatisfaction with the church's management, which was then
undergoing purges and an onslaught of negative publicity for harassing
its enemies.

"I don't believe in the way the organization is being run," the actor
told Rolling Stone in 1983. But he called Hubbard's teachings "pretty
brilliant. ... I try to separate the material and the organization."

He rallied to Scientology's defense in the mid-'80s after juries
awarded former followers millions of dollars for fraud and mental
abuse they say they suffered as church members. (One judgment was
upheld on appeal, and others were settled out of court.) When some of
the sacred scriptures--including the Xenu story--ended up in a court
file, 1,500 Scientologists crammed the courthouse to block public
access to the documents. In 1986 Travolta himself marched into Los
Angeles Superior Court, hoping to make a pro-church speech in the case
where the documents had been revealed. (The judge instructed Travolta
to sit down, and he complied.)

Detecting Enemies

He's legendary among reporters for being a gracious and accommodating
interview subject, known to give a hug or offer to relieve a sore
throat using Scientology techniques. Many acquaintances talk of
Travolta's warmth and kindness. But he shows a more pugnacious side
when talking about church enemies--described in Hubbard's writings as
"suppressive persons." Skeptical journalists, ex-members who sue
Scientology, government investigators or family members antagonistic
to the sect would all qualify.

Travolta has taken special courses to help him detect enemies. "I
don't think anyone should be tolerant of suppressive acts," Travolta
said in a 1990 interview with the church's Celebrity magazine. "I no
longer doubt when I am in the presence of suppression. And I am very
unreasonable about it."

In Scientology writings, a suppressive person deserves no mercy. He
may be "deprived of property or injured by any means by any
Scientologist," according to a 1967 Hubbard policy letter. "May be
tricked, sued, or lied to or destroyed."

Travolta never speaks about such policies in mainstream publications.
Nor does he mention his Operating Thetan status, which, according to
church teachings, gives him the ability to control "matter, energy,
space, time, form and life."

Travolta renewed his OT studies in the 1990s after teaming up with
fellow advanced-level Scientologist Kirstie Alley for the "Look Who's
Talking" pictures. In 1996, he told a Scientology magazine about a new
course he was taking called "L10"--which, according to church
literature, helps Operating Thetans "unleash potentials not seen in
this sector of the galaxy for a long, long time." (Price: $1,000 per
hour.) At the time, Travolta was starring in "Phenomenon," playing a
lunkhead who, after a presumed alien encounter, becomes a genius with
superhuman powers.

In the same Celebrity interview, the actor cited the popularity of his
'90s films "Pulp Fiction," "Get Shorty" and "Broken Arrow" as evidence
of his "upwards statistics," thanks to Scientology. But he has never
publicly faulted Hubbard's teachings for his career lows. According to
Scientologists, the founder's technology can never be wrong.

Travolta's career seemed to enter a death spiral in the 1980s. "He was
poised on the edge of oblivion," Clarkson writes in his otherwise
gushing biography. "He was accepting bad parts, and turning down good
ones, with unerring consistency. By 1989, he was seriously considering
a new career."

His comeback was launched when he accepted the role of a
heroin-addicted hit man in ultra-violent "Pulp Fiction," directed by
Quentin Tarantino. The filmmakers were offering Travolta a fee of only
$150,000. According to some former Scientology insiders, the church
wasn't enamored of the grisly role. None of that deterred him.

"It is a very anti-drug, anti-crime story," Travolta told Celebrity in
1993. "It shows the brutality and crudeness of it all."

The part won Travolta his first Oscar nomination since "Saturday Night
Fever," and good scripts started coming his way again. Soon he was
commanding fees in the millions. In 1994 the church named him as L.
Ron Hubbard's "personal public relations officer" at a Los Angeles
ceremony, and he has since become its best-known disciple.

(When quizzed in recent interviews about the impact of gory imagery
and murder in his last film, "The General's Daughter," Travolta said
he didn't think the media inspired anyone to commit acts of violence.
What's to blame for crime, he declared, are psychiatric medications.
He mentioned Prozac and Ritalin. It was pure Hubbard-speak: Psychiatry
causes crime.)

In 1996, after winning a Golden Globe award for "Get Shorty," Travolta
acknowledged and quoted "a great man, L. Ron Hubbard." Later,
backstage, he told reporters he wanted to make a movie of Hubbard's
life.

A Subtle Strategy

When Hubbard's swashbuckling epic was published in 1982,
Scientologists immediately saw parallels to the life of its author.
Some figured Hubbard had based its fair-haired hero, Jonnie Goodboy
Tyler--who almost single-handedly liberates Earth from the vile
Psychlos--on himself.

"This was Hubbard building his own mythology," says Gerry Armstrong, a
former Hubbard aide who lost faith in the founder in 1981 and left
after a dozen years on staff. "Hubbard had developed his own
hagiography."

In "Battlefield Earth"--the book and the movie--Tyler takes on the
head of the Psychlo security force, Terl, who lords over a mining
operation on Earth. Terl rounds up humans and feeds them a diet of raw
rats. He is obsessed with spying, blackmailing and manufacturing
evidence to be used against his enemies. (Some who had known Hubbard
and personally felt his wrath detected traits of Hubbard in Terl,
too.)

Soon after the book came out, Hubbard autographed a copy for Travolta,
says former Scientology public relations official Robert Vaughn Young.
"I delivered it into his hands," Young recalls. "I am sure that
Hubbard wanted John to play Jonnie Goodboy Tyler. It surprised me to
learn that, as it ended up, he was going to play Terl."

(This summer, at his only news conference about the movie, Travolta
said he'd always wanted to be Tyler but too much time had passed. "I'm
too old. ... Imagine me, as fat as I am, running around with guns.")

No matter what Travolta's role, disaffected former Scientologists say
the movie will serve to boost the church's membership and reinforce
Hubbard's anti-psychiatry message. But Young--who worked as an
image-builder for the church for 20 years before he became disgruntled
and quit in 1989--detects a more subtle strategy.

"In one sense, John Travolta is right--this is not a book about
Scientology," he says. "But it's a way for people to discover
Scientology. It's a lead-in."

Scientology officials have been hoping to see "Battlefield Earth" made
into a movie since at least 1984, when they unleashed a 30-foot-high
inflatable figure of Terl on Sunset Strip as part of a publicity
blitz. A director was hired and auditions were held in Denver, but the
project fizzled.

Around that time, Travolta first took interest in making the movie. He
just didn't have the juice in Hollywood to pull it off. Over the
years, the script went through about 10 revisions. In 1998 Travolta
contacted Corey Mandell, a 33-year-old screenwriter who had worked
with Ridley ("Blade Runner") Scott but had yet to get a script
produced.

"I am not a Scientologist," Mandell declared in an interview with The
Post. "I came on board because John asked me to read the book and
said, 'It's not a religious book. It's a science-fiction story.
There's nothing sacred about the story, nothing of the religious
philosophy.'

"I was given this to read purely as science fiction--to see whether it
was intriguing as a movie. And it was."

Travolta and his longtime manager, Jonathan Krane, arranged financing
and distribution. They hired Roger Christian, who had worked with
George Lucas on "Star Wars: Episode I: The Phantom Menace," to direct.


"It's the pinnacle of using my power for something," Travolta told the
New York Daily News in explaining how he came to finally make
"Battlefield Earth." "I can get things done that a studio might not
normally do. I told my manager, 'If we can't do the things now that we
want to do, what good is the power? It's a waste, basically. Let's
test it and try to get the things done that we believe in.' "

The Secret Ingredient

At the military base in Montreal, "Battlefield Earth" crew members
politely decline to be quoted. They have signed nondisclosure
agreements. Beefy security men quickly affix tarps to the chain-link
fence at the first sign of an unauthorized photographer. They position
catering trucks to obstruct the view of a reporter.

But they can't hide everything, including props that look like they
came from a '50s B-movie: old baby buggies, gas pumps, street lamps, a
phone booth, rocket parts. (These items bring to mind the Marcab
Confederacy, which Hubbard defined in a church dictionary as "a
decadent kicked-in-the-head civilization that contains automobiles,
business suits, fedora hats, telephones, spaceships.")

A Psychlo wanders by, partially costumed. He looks like Bigfoot gone
Rastafarian.

"Seen any aliens?" a reporter asks a tattooed biker type guarding the
gate.

"No, that guy's from Florida."

Why all the secrecy?

In part, it's just how the movie business works these days. The
studios and stars want publicity only when it suits their goals--that
is, to promote a picture upon its release. Travolta usually offers
scads of interviews to support his movies, but only under tightly
controlled circumstances. He is among the celebs who have the leverage
to handpick the writers who will interview them.

"It's not the kind of publicity we want to do right now," explains
production spokeswoman Pamela Godfrey. "Your agenda and the marketing
agenda for the film aren't in sync with each other. So, sorry."

The producers say they also want to make sure nobody steals their
high-tech look--or their surprises. In a hotel bar in downtown
Montreal where the crew is unwinding after a long day of shooting, the
set's official still photographer holds up a bottle of beer.

"This is a movie," he says. "It's a product just like any other."

Consider the star to be a secret ingredient in a soon-to-be-marketed
new brand of beer, says the photographer, David James, who has worked
on "Saving Private Ryan" among other major releases. In this case, he
says, Travolta playing a nine-foot hairy alien is the draw, certain to
be a subject of worldwide fascination. "Why release the secret
ingredient early?"

As for L. Ron Hubbard, James had never heard of him before he started
working on this movie. "I don't even know about Christianity, let
alone Scientology," James says with a wry smile, putting down the
bottle of beer and holding up a tray of peanuts.

"This is a movie ... "


© 1999 The Washington Post Comp

====================

Sue, SP4(:), listed on the Scieno Sitter list 5 times!
--
http://www.primenet.com/~xenubat

"It will take a *long* time to find another enemy
with the combination of evil and incompetence
you see in Scientology."--Keith Henson

roger gonnet

unread,
Nov 28, 1999, 3:00:00 AM11/28/99
to

Bat Child (Sue M.) <Xen...@primenet.com> a écrit dans le message :
3842bb87...@news.primenet.com...

> Found at:
>
> http://washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/style/A48280-1999Nov26.html
>
> ====================
>
> John Travolta, Out on the 'Battlefield'

great, thanks a lot!!

roger

>
>
> By Richard Leiby
> Washington Post Staff Writer
> Sunday, November 28, 1999; Page G1
>
>

> MONTREAL - Something otherworldly is happening inside Hangar 12,

> titled "Man, the Endangered Species" - later to be called "Battlefield

> He was identified in a church photograph as an Operating Thetan - a

AndroidCat

unread,
Nov 28, 1999, 3:00:00 AM11/28/99
to
Ouch, OUCH, *OUCH*!

A VWD to the Washington Post and Richard Leiby!

The only thing that could make this article better would be if it was
published with Mark's snapshot of JT having an entrubulated moment.


Bat Child (Sue M.) <Xen...@primenet.com> wrote in message
news:3842bb87...@news.primenet.com...


> Found at:
>
> http://washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/style/A48280-1999Nov26.html
>
> ====================
>
> John Travolta, Out on the 'Battlefield'
>
>
> By Richard Leiby
> Washington Post Staff Writer
> Sunday, November 28, 1999; Page G1
>
>

> MONTREAL - Something otherworldly is happening inside Hangar 12,

> titled "Man, the Endangered Species" - later to be called "Battlefield

> He was identified in a church photograph as an Operating Thetan - a

Mike O'Connor

unread,
Nov 28, 1999, 3:00:00 AM11/28/99
to
In article <3842bb87...@news.primenet.com>, Xen...@primenet.com
wrote:

>Inside Hangar 12, they are making an $80 million sci-fi epic called
>"Battlefield Earth."

I'd follow the money on this one. Wonder who the investers are?

--
Mike O'Connor - mi...@leptonicsystems.com
<http://www.leptonicsystems.com/>

Steve Zadarnowski

unread,
Nov 29, 1999, 3:00:00 AM11/29/99
to
Xen...@primenet.com (Bat Child (Sue M.)) wrote:

>So is "Battlefield Earth" a recruiting film for Scientology?

>Nonsense, Travolta says. The movie, he keeps telling reporters, has
>absolutely, positively no connection to Scientology. No sirree.

Fuck. Now I'll have to go and see the movie to see if the
shills are advertising Scientology.

S

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