Danish director Michael Madsen seems to make his trademark: making documentaries that seem destined for a different purpose. He wrapped his ‘Into Eternity’ as informative film for the inhabitants of the earth about 100,000 years and speaks the viewer as if he / she lives actually in the year 102 000. In the sequel “The Visit: An Alien Encounter”, reportedly the second part of a trilogy, the viewer is also addressed directly, with questions like “Why are you here?” And “Where is you happy?” The viewer creeps so in the role of an alien, because – the title verklapte it all – that’s where ‘The Visit: An Alien Encounter’ is about.
Madsen in this documentary explores what happens on Earth and the subject of countless science fiction and horror films would actually happen: an alien invasion of intelligent life form. Madsen got several scientists and experts (from Nasa, the United Nations, a former spokesman for British Prime Minister David Cameron, and so on) until they entered this simulation. For the camera, they play them in the event of an invasion allotted role, while tossing and interesting philosophical questions. What do we tell the public? What if we all intelligent life form can not see with the resources now available to us? The extent to which aliens may obtain information about us; for example, we also tell you that we are not proud of? We say that we are able to destroy ourselves? There is war? How do we ensure that we infect the aliens and possibly vice versa? Sometimes they also conduct discussions with each other and there is a simulation that does a scientist as he cautiously approaches the spaceship and then go inside. And believe it or not, that’s pretty exciting.
Madsen in this documentary explores what happens on Earth and the subject of countless science fiction and horror films would actually happen: an alien invasion of intelligent life form. Madsen got several scientists and experts (from Nasa, the United Nations, a former spokesman for British Prime Minister David Cameron, and so on) until they entered this simulation. For the camera, they play them in the event of an invasion allotted role, while tossing and interesting philosophical questions. What do we tell the public? What if we all intelligent life form can not see with the resources now available to us? The extent to which aliens may obtain information about us; for example, we also tell you that we are not proud of? We say that we are able to destroy ourselves? There is war? How do we ensure that we infect the aliens and possibly vice versa? Sometimes they also conduct discussions with each other and there is a simulation that does a scientist as he cautiously approaches the spaceship and then go inside. And believe it or not, that’s pretty exciting.
The interviews are interspersed with footage in which everyday situations (people on the street, participating in traffic) sometimes in extreme slow motion, often immobile, are shown. The camera pans along the people who we like in a tableau vivant, observing. Is this how extraterrestrials see us? Also unusual is the fact that we see the interviewees sometimes talk, after which the rest of the story in voiceover comes to us, while the interviewee tightly into the camera keeps looking. It has a disturbing effect.You can watch movie in hd quality movies dvd quality only.It is unfortunate that ‘The Visit: An Alien Encounter “unable to excite consistent. The slow-motion clips literally out of the momentum and thereby saves the boredom. Yet Madsen is praising him an ambitious project like this has to make.
‘The Visit: An Alien Encounter “is partly due to the form in which it is cast, certainly not a film that will appeal to many people, but if you’re open to a particular experiment is certainly an unforgettable experience. Madsen gets you thinking about the human rights and our place in the universe. Existential questions, which you long after the credits remains worrying.
‘The Visit: An Alien Encounter “is partly due to the form in which it is cast, certainly not a film that will appeal to many people, but if you’re open to a particular experiment is certainly an unforgettable experience. Madsen gets you thinking about the human rights and our place in the universe. Existential questions, which you long after the credits remains worrying.
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