For as long as humanity has looked up at the night sky, it’s wondered one thing: ‘Do you think it will rain later?’
Oh, and we’ve also always been haunted by the wonderful and horrifying possibility that aliens prowl the cosmos.
And the latest person to be visited by this spectre is none other than Hollywood legend Steven Spielberg.
Spielberg is, of course, no stranger to extraterrestrials. He previously made the captivating Close Encounters of the Third Kind, the wonderful War of the Worlds, and he tried his best with Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull.
Still, his fantastic new movie, Disclosure Day, might be his most interesting take on aliens yet.
The film follows cybersecurity expert Daniel Kellner and meteorologist Margaret Fairchild, who find themselves at the heart of a plan to expose a cover-up of extraterrestrial secrets.
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I won’t say any more, as this is the type of film you need to see in a cinema (preferably on the biggest screen in your town), but it’s basically a fun and engaging mishmash of various conspiracy theories and alien anecdotes.
There are all the classics, including Roswell, Flight 1628, and even the recent Pentagon UFO videos.
Yet among all the familiar UFO stories, the filmmaker also makes use of one lesser-known but no less chilling urban legend for his film.
Disclosure Day review
Metro’s film critic Tori Brazier shares her thoughts on Disclosure Day...
There’s a particular point during Steven Spielberg’s new summer blockbuster Disclosure Day that sent chills up my spine.
It will also do the same for alien conspiracy theorists, but likely for different reasons.
While always entertaining, it’s also complex and controversial and hard in some ways to place among his remarkable back catalogue.
But Spielberg is too talented a filmmaker to produce a bad movie. And Disclosure Day absolutely isn’t one – but it is going to split audiences, given its unwillingness to give us that much that’s cut and dried.
Read the full review here.
In Disclosure Day, we’re told the government stopped telling presidents about aliens after a previous Commander in Chief took some unknown actor friend to see the aliens, but this isn’t some flimflam concocted by Spielberg.
This is the tale of President Richard Nixon and his friend, the comedian Jackie Gleason.
You see, Nixon and Gleason became friends in the ’60s, with the actor even endorsing old Tricky Dicky’s 1968 presidential campaign.
Apparently, the pair had bonded over a love of golf, but the sport wasn’t the only interest the pair shared; they both had a fascination with aliens.
So once Nixon got the keys to 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, he decided to do his old pal a favour.
Supposedly, after a few cocktails on February 19, 1973, the president drove Gleason to Homestead Air Force Base in Florida, where he showed him something that would leave the star traumatised.
While there, Nixon ordered soldiers to show his friend the embalmed bodies of four alien beings.
These otherworldly visitors were two feet tall, had small bald heads, and big ears. The nature of their death and the recovery of the bodies were never explained.
After seeing the creatures, Gleason was sworn to secrecy and returned home to his wife, Beverly McKittrick Gleason, who said he came in looking visibly shaken, pale, and haggard.
Gleason then confided in his wife what he’d seen, making her swear never to tell a soul about the aliens, fearing it might damage his reputation.
So if Gleason and his wife made a vow of secrecy, how do we know what went down? Well, after Gleason and Beverly got divorced, she started telling people.
Specifically, she wrote about it in an unpublished memoir and started telling people about it in interviews in the ’80s.
The story eventually ran in the always unreliable National Enquirer under the headline: ‘Space aliens exist! Ask Jackie Gleason — he’s actually seen them’.
So, is this a true story?
Well, I’m sorry, but there are more holes in this than a broken colander.
The first issue is that the president can’t just drive to an airbase, like someone nipping out for milk from the Co-Op. They’re always surrounded by security and tracked.
We then have to consider Beverly’s motivations. She told the story while trying to sell her book, and what better way to get publishers’ interest than spinning a yarn about a disgraced president and aliens.
Finally, some UFOlogists often point to Gleason’s interest in UFOs as proof he ‘knew’ something about alien life… but his obsession began in the late ’50s and ’60s, decades before the supposed trip to the base.
And yet… Nixon’s diary does reveal he met Gleason on that day in February.
Sadly, the president’s published schedule left no room for a drunken trip to see some alien mummies, but why let the truth get in the way of a good story? Spielberg certainly didn’t.
Of course, as a member of the mainstream media… I would claim all this was fake, wouldn’t I?
Disclosure Day is in cinemas now.
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