The film is based on a true story. In July 1947, in the remote desert area of Roswell, New Mexico, a mysterious flying object fell from the sky, and a worldwide speculation began. The "Roswell Crash" shocked the world. It is said that after the crash, the US Air Force not only picked up fragments of flying saucers, but also secretly dissected the bodies of aliens. In 1995, the British Flying Saucer Society claimed that among their specially invited attendees, a British businessman named Ray Shantilli would bring a documentary filmed in 1947, which documented the crash of the Roswell flying saucer. And the entire process of dissecting aliens with the US military.
Let me start by telling you that the 1995 world-beating anatomical alien documentary was fake, and the makers admitted it was concocted in an apartment. The film is also about the making of this fake documentary. Speaking of which, you might think that without the suspense, you'd lose interest in watching this film, but it's still a good light comedy. I like the protagonists in the play very much. They have the entrepreneurial ambition that every young person has, and they add bold imagination to the state of being unwilling to live in a state of being unwilling to live. Therefore, in our opinion, it is a series of absurd situations. Success, it's definitely a comedy of life. There are many clips in the film, such as the continuous laugh of the American officers and soldiers watching the documentary they made, and the relaxed and natural expressions of the two protagonists when they are sitting on the bed and dividing the mountains of banknotes, all of which are rich in comedy. Although it's not a belly laugh, but people can't help but laugh out of their hearts after seeing it.
Although this film tells about the hoax of dissecting alien documentaries, it clearly expresses doubts about the Roswell crash that still exist to this day, and does not deny the possibility of real documentaries. As for the truth of the Roswell crash, the U.S. military initially said it was a flying saucer, and later changed its name to a weather balloon. After many doubts, it was renamed a military test balloon to monitor the Soviet nuclear test at that time. The debate slowly subsided until 1995. The appearance of this documentary brings up the whole incident again. Now there is another saying. A book called "Desert Corpse Throwers" mentioned that at that time the US military was conducting an inhuman experiment on living bodies. The balloons used for experiments crashed, and the so-called alien corpses were those The corpse of the subject, so the U.S. military was hesitant. It seems that only the U.S. military has a say in the truth of the incident, but who knows if what they say is true or false. In any case, in short, there is no escape from these three possibilities, it depends on which one you believe.
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