1977: Close Encounters of the Third Kind |
| Written by theunexplained.org | |
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Steven Spielberg launched his multi-million dollar movie Close Encounters Of The Third Kind in 1977. Not only was the movie loosely based on real UFO incidents, it also took its title from a classification system developed by the late Dr Alien J Hynek, since a CE3 is an encounter with alien beings. Further, one of the central characters, a French scientist played by Francois Truffaut, represented real-life ufologist Dr Jacques Vallee. This was the first major movie to open up the stranger shores of the phenomenon to the general public. Poltergeist-like effects abounded, and a family of hillbillies were depicted with sinister MIB qualities. The UFO entities used closely followed the common description given by real-life witnesses. The plot met the general public's expectations by featuring the return of Flight 19 from the Bermuda Triangle. Yet, by the end of the movie, some commentators noted that nowhere was it stated that the entities involved were extraterrestrial. Some ufologists saw the movie as part of a secret education program by the Government to slowly socialize the public into the reality of alien encounters. The skeptics predicted that the movie would act as a catalyst for thousands of bogus reports. The public would be even more ready to mis-identify weather balloons, aircraft landing lights and planets as spacecraft after seeing the movie. This did not happen, and should act as a salutary warning to those who believe the answer to the UFO phenomenon lies in the fields of sociology and psychology. Comments (0)
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