
"Director Dan Farah grew up with aliens. As a child of the 80s and 90s, pop culture was awash with extra-terrestrial sightings. How can you be a kid watching movies like ET and Close Encounters, TV shows like The X Files, and not end up curious about whether or not we're alone in the universe? he said in an interview with the Guardian. And whether or not the US government does, in fact, hold secrets from the public. Farah's exposure to otherworldly beings in fiction"
"Here, Farah makes the case that the United States has been hiding, for decades, a font of information related to UAP (unidentified anomalous phenomena) the acronym rebrand of the stigma-ridden UFO. It would be easy to assume this is the stuff of tin-foil hats and Reddit forums, and in some ways the documentary's pseudo-narrator, Luis Elizondo, could come across as a type of conspiracy theorist at first glance."
Dan Farah grew up immersed in 1980s and 1990s pop-culture portrayals of extraterrestrials and turned that curiosity into a documentary, The Age of Disclosure. The film asserts that the United States has concealed decades of information about UAP (unidentified anomalous phenomena). Luis Elizondo, a former Pentagon official who helped lead AATIP, left his role in 2017 and claims the department hid vital information and conducted a Department of Defense disinformation campaign to discredit his work. Farah interviewed only people with direct government program experience. The film presents military and intelligence terminology alongside eyewitness and insider testimony to support its claims.
Read at www.theguardian.com
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