[center]Unsolved Mysteries
[large]The UFO Files[/large]
Part 1 of 4:
Bentwaters UFO
Allagash Abductions
Crop Circles
Phoenix UFO
Nazca Lines
Mexico UFO
Vancouver Lights[/center]
Would it surprise you to know that Unsolved Mysteries is one of the longest running television series of all time? From 1987 until his death in 2003, Robert Stack (probably best known as the original Eliot Ness in the 1950s TV series, The Untouchables) hosted this show that explored the paranormal. One part documentary, one part investigative report, and another part re-enactment drama.
The UFO Files though Unsolved Mysteries has endured since 1987, the producers were savvy enough to update the show making sure that UFO segments had an X-Files-esque feel to them. Robert Stack, clad in a trademark trench coat, introduces each segment with semi-serious gravity, as if he were revealing a government secret to Mulder and Sculley.
Each UFO segment plays like a mini-documentary. There are interviews with the eyewitnesses, analysis from experts in the field, some occasional footage and a re-enactment drama with low-budget special effects. The overall effect is quite earnest The audience will be intrigued by the interviews and the sightings with photographic evidence are always fascinating. Adding to the feeling of an unbiased documentary, the experts both sceptics and believers explain their positions while witnesses are run through lie detector tests or are corroborated with the local police chief or reverend. The end result is that the viewer is left with compelling evidence, credible witnesses but asked to draw their own conclusions.
[center]Unsolved Mysteries - The UFO Files - Part 1
(597.06 MB)
[large][/large][/center]
Unsolved Mysteries - The UFO Files
Moderator: Le Tocard
[center]Unsolved Mysteries
[large]The UFO Files[/large]
Part 2 of 4:
Roswell
Roswell/Area 51 Connection
Hudson Valley UFO
Belgian UFO
Falcon Lake UFO
UFO Healing[/center]
Would it surprise you to know that Unsolved Mysteries is one of the longest running television series of all time? From 1987 until his death in 2003, Robert Stack (probably best known as the original Eliot Ness in the 1950s TV series, The Untouchables) hosted this show that explored the paranormal. One part documentary, one part investigative report, and another part re-enactment drama.
The UFO Files though Unsolved Mysteries has endured since 1987, the producers were savvy enough to update the show making sure that UFO segments had an X-Files-esque feel to them. Robert Stack, clad in a trademark trench coat, introduces each segment with semi-serious gravity, as if he were revealing a government secret to Mulder and Sculley.
Each UFO segment plays like a mini-documentary. There are interviews with the eyewitnesses, analysis from experts in the field, some occasional footage and a re-enactment drama with low-budget special effects. The overall effect is quite earnest The audience will be intrigued by the interviews and the sightings with photographic evidence are always fascinating. Adding to the feeling of an unbiased documentary, the experts both sceptics and believers explain their positions while witnesses are run through lie detector tests or are corroborated with the local police chief or reverend. The end result is that the viewer is left with compelling evidence, credible witnesses but asked to draw their own conclusions.
[center]Unsolved Mysteries - The UFO Files - Part 2
(438.8 MB)
[large][/large][/center]
[large]The UFO Files[/large]
Part 2 of 4:
Roswell
Roswell/Area 51 Connection
Hudson Valley UFO
Belgian UFO
Falcon Lake UFO
UFO Healing[/center]
Would it surprise you to know that Unsolved Mysteries is one of the longest running television series of all time? From 1987 until his death in 2003, Robert Stack (probably best known as the original Eliot Ness in the 1950s TV series, The Untouchables) hosted this show that explored the paranormal. One part documentary, one part investigative report, and another part re-enactment drama.
The UFO Files though Unsolved Mysteries has endured since 1987, the producers were savvy enough to update the show making sure that UFO segments had an X-Files-esque feel to them. Robert Stack, clad in a trademark trench coat, introduces each segment with semi-serious gravity, as if he were revealing a government secret to Mulder and Sculley.
Each UFO segment plays like a mini-documentary. There are interviews with the eyewitnesses, analysis from experts in the field, some occasional footage and a re-enactment drama with low-budget special effects. The overall effect is quite earnest The audience will be intrigued by the interviews and the sightings with photographic evidence are always fascinating. Adding to the feeling of an unbiased documentary, the experts both sceptics and believers explain their positions while witnesses are run through lie detector tests or are corroborated with the local police chief or reverend. The end result is that the viewer is left with compelling evidence, credible witnesses but asked to draw their own conclusions.
[center]Unsolved Mysteries - The UFO Files - Part 2
(438.8 MB)
[large][/large][/center]
Last edited by DiMarcello on Wed Jun 16, 2010 9:20 pm, edited 1 time in total.
[center]Unsolved Mysteries
The UFO Files
Part 3 of 4 :
Austrailian UFO
Missing Time
Socorro Close Encounter
Kecksburg UFO
Texas UFO
Face On Mars[/center]
Would it surprise you to know that Unsolved Mysteries is one of the longest running television series of all time? From 1987 until his death in 2003, Robert Stack (probably best known as the original Eliot Ness in the 1950s TV series, The Untouchables) hosted this show that explored the paranormal. One part documentary, one part investigative report, and another part re-enactment drama.
The UFO Files though Unsolved Mysteries has endured since 1987, the producers were savvy enough to update the show making sure that UFO segments had an X-Files-esque feel to them. Robert Stack, clad in a trademark trench coat, introduces each segment with semi-serious gravity, as if he were revealing a government secret to Mulder and Sculley.
Each UFO segment plays like a mini-documentary. There are interviews with the eyewitnesses, analysis from experts in the field, some occasional footage and a re-enactment drama with low-budget special effects. The overall effect is quite earnest The audience will be intrigued by the interviews and the sightings with photographic evidence are always fascinating. Adding to the feeling of an unbiased documentary, the experts both sceptics and believers explain their positions while witnesses are run through lie detector tests or are corroborated with the local police chief or reverend. The end result is that the viewer is left with compelling evidence, credible witnesses but asked to draw their own conclusions.
[center]Unsolved Mysteries - The UFO Files - Part 3
(692.06 MB)
[large][/large][/center]
The UFO Files
Part 3 of 4 :
Austrailian UFO
Missing Time
Socorro Close Encounter
Kecksburg UFO
Texas UFO
Face On Mars[/center]
Would it surprise you to know that Unsolved Mysteries is one of the longest running television series of all time? From 1987 until his death in 2003, Robert Stack (probably best known as the original Eliot Ness in the 1950s TV series, The Untouchables) hosted this show that explored the paranormal. One part documentary, one part investigative report, and another part re-enactment drama.
The UFO Files though Unsolved Mysteries has endured since 1987, the producers were savvy enough to update the show making sure that UFO segments had an X-Files-esque feel to them. Robert Stack, clad in a trademark trench coat, introduces each segment with semi-serious gravity, as if he were revealing a government secret to Mulder and Sculley.
Each UFO segment plays like a mini-documentary. There are interviews with the eyewitnesses, analysis from experts in the field, some occasional footage and a re-enactment drama with low-budget special effects. The overall effect is quite earnest The audience will be intrigued by the interviews and the sightings with photographic evidence are always fascinating. Adding to the feeling of an unbiased documentary, the experts both sceptics and believers explain their positions while witnesses are run through lie detector tests or are corroborated with the local police chief or reverend. The end result is that the viewer is left with compelling evidence, credible witnesses but asked to draw their own conclusions.
[center]Unsolved Mysteries - The UFO Files - Part 3
(692.06 MB)
[large][/large][/center]
Last edited by DiMarcello on Sun Jun 20, 2010 10:19 pm, edited 1 time in total.
[center]Unsolved Mysteries
The UFO Files
Part 4 of 4:
Men In Black
Canadian UFO
Wheatfields Visitations
Life On Mars
Interceptors
The Blob
UFO Odyssey[/center]
Would it surprise you to know that Unsolved Mysteries is one of the longest running television series of all time? From 1987 until his death in 2003, Robert Stack (probably best known as the original Eliot Ness in the 1950s TV series, The Untouchables) hosted this show that explored the paranormal. One part documentary, one part investigative report, and another part re-enactment drama.
The UFO Files though Unsolved Mysteries has endured since 1987, the producers were savvy enough to update the show making sure that UFO segments had an X-Files-esque feel to them. Robert Stack, clad in a trademark trench coat, introduces each segment with semi-serious gravity, as if he were revealing a government secret to Mulder and Sculley.
Each UFO segment plays like a mini-documentary. There are interviews with the eyewitnesses, analysis from experts in the field, some occasional footage and a re-enactment drama with low-budget special effects. The overall effect is quite earnest The audience will be intrigued by the interviews and the sightings with photographic evidence are always fascinating. Adding to the feeling of an unbiased documentary, the experts both sceptics and believers explain their positions while witnesses are run through lie detector tests or are corroborated with the local police chief or reverend. The end result is that the viewer is left with compelling evidence, credible witnesses but asked to draw their own conclusions.
[center][large]Unsolved Mysteries - The UFO Files - Part 4
(563.03 MB)
[/large][/center]
The UFO Files
Part 4 of 4:
Men In Black
Canadian UFO
Wheatfields Visitations
Life On Mars
Interceptors
The Blob
UFO Odyssey[/center]
Would it surprise you to know that Unsolved Mysteries is one of the longest running television series of all time? From 1987 until his death in 2003, Robert Stack (probably best known as the original Eliot Ness in the 1950s TV series, The Untouchables) hosted this show that explored the paranormal. One part documentary, one part investigative report, and another part re-enactment drama.
The UFO Files though Unsolved Mysteries has endured since 1987, the producers were savvy enough to update the show making sure that UFO segments had an X-Files-esque feel to them. Robert Stack, clad in a trademark trench coat, introduces each segment with semi-serious gravity, as if he were revealing a government secret to Mulder and Sculley.
Each UFO segment plays like a mini-documentary. There are interviews with the eyewitnesses, analysis from experts in the field, some occasional footage and a re-enactment drama with low-budget special effects. The overall effect is quite earnest The audience will be intrigued by the interviews and the sightings with photographic evidence are always fascinating. Adding to the feeling of an unbiased documentary, the experts both sceptics and believers explain their positions while witnesses are run through lie detector tests or are corroborated with the local police chief or reverend. The end result is that the viewer is left with compelling evidence, credible witnesses but asked to draw their own conclusions.
[center][large]Unsolved Mysteries - The UFO Files - Part 4
(563.03 MB)
[/large][/center]
Last edited by DiMarcello on Sun Jun 20, 2010 10:19 pm, edited 1 time in total.