WHERE ARE ALL THE UFOs?
96-05-10 08:24:36 / posted May 12, 1996
Source: Variety
By John P. McCarthy
HOLLYWOOD (Variety) - ``Where Are All the UFOs?'' Answer:
Firmly lodged in the public imagination and perhaps even in the
makeup of the human brain, but nowhere else, according to the
hard evidence.
A&E special gives a good historical overview of ``flying
saucer'' phenomena while debunking at every turn.
The approach taken in the two-hour program is far from dry,
however. Producer-director Scott Paddor hedges with a hyperbolic
tone. Skepticism of the title question is undercut by
sensationalized set-ups and transitions delivered by narrator
Michael Dorn (``Star Trek: Deep Space Nine'')
For example, after claiming there's little substance to
reports of alien visitations, the question is begged: ``Where
then do these aliens come from?''
Documentary's strength is in describing how historical
perspective determines such stories or sightings. They are
shaped by a specific world view and reflect contemporary, local
concerns. UFOs and aliens are our version of angels, goblins and
leprechauns.
Orson Welles' 1939 radio broadcast of ``War of the Worlds''
was a watershed, but the term flying saucer wasn't coined until
1947, when pilot Kenneth Arnold claimed to have seen 9 skipping
disks over Mt. Rainier. Perhaps the most intriguing incident
occurred that same year in Roswell, N.M., where the crash of a
UFO was allegedly covered up by the Air Force.
Photo analysts demonstrate that the vast majority of
sightings are atmospheric anomalies or human hoaxes. During the
'50s and throughout the Cold War, the UFO craze was fed by
popular magazines, books, movies and rallies (some connected to
the anti-nuclear movement).
A Canadian neuroscientist tries to explain away abduction
stories -- which tend to share a scenario and include strikingly
similar descriptions of aliens -- using the brain's anatomy and
electrical patterns.
One self-proclaimed abductee can hardly keep a straight
face. Another describes his abductor as dressed ``like a
Greyhound-bus driver.''
The more recent phenomenon of ``crop circles,'' which has
spawned magazines such as ``The Cerealogist,'' is revealed to be
a hoax perpetrated by crop circle artists. Still, a sliver of
credence is given to a handful of occurrences that have never
been adequately explained, including one in the heart of
downtown Washington, D.C.
Tech credits are up to par, with an abundance of clips and
interviews skillfully pieced together. Documentary ends on a
hopeful and scientifically viable note showing efforts to
receive communications from other life forms in the universe.
``Science tells us to expect distant, not close
encounters.'' Diehards will be unmoved, while curious and
impartial viewers will have their hopes raised and dashed.
UFOs say more about human nature than extraterrestrials, so
``Where Are All the UFOs?'' necessarily leaves the door open for
belief in alien visitations. But just a crack.
Narrator: Michael Dorn.
Produced by Greystone Communications for A&E Networks.
Executive producers, Craig Haffner, Donna Lusitana, Michael E.
Katz; producer, Scott Paddor; coordinating producer, Lois
Yaffee; director, Scott Paddor; camera, Brian Callahan, Greg
Davis, Paul Dougherty, Wojtek Kozlowski, Chuck Lichtenauer, Mike
Messenheimer, Richard Numeroff, Dave Pryke, Tom Zanes; editor,
Michael W. Andrews; sound, Joe Bungert, Joe Crabb, Ann Gauer,
Jim Goertel, Lee Hart, Sean Keeping, Roger Raiford; music,
Christopher L. Stone.
Reuters/Variety
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