Director Dan Farah grew up with aliens. As a child of the 80s and 90s, pop culture was awash with extra-terrestrial sightings. âHow can you be a kid watching movies like ET and Close Encounters, TV shows like The X Files, and not end up curious about whether or not weâre alone in the universe?â he said in an interview with the Guardian. âAnd whether or not the US government does, in fact, hold secrets from the public.â
Farahâs exposure to otherworldly beings in fiction kickstarted an interest thatâs now morphed into a professional quest, and the subject of his documentary debut â The Age of Disclosure. Here, Farah makes the case that the United States has been hiding, for decades, a fount of information related to UAP (unidentified anomalous phenomena) â the acronym rebrand of the stigma-ridden UFO. â80 years of lies and deceptionâ: is this film proof of alien life on Earth? Read more
It would be easy to assume this is the stuff of tin-foil hats and Reddit forums, and in some ways the documentaryâs pseudo-narrator, Luis Elizondo, could come across as a type of conspiracy theorist at first glance. Heâs armed with a blackboard and piece of chalk, working to sell the viewer, running through a lot of overwhelming military and intelligence jargon, like âhypersonic velocityâ and âtrans medium travelâ with undeniable passion.
But thereâs a reason why Farah gravitated towards Elizondo (who also serves as an executive producer on the film). Heâs got genuine credentials. A former Pentagon official, who helped lead the Advanced Aerospace Threat Identification Program (AATIP), Elizondo eventually left his role in 2017, claiming the department was hiding vital information from the public. He also claims there was a âpowerful disinformation campaignâ from the Department of Defense to discredit his work.
Making a point to âonly interview people who have direct knowledgeâ of these programs from working within the US government was a north star for Farah â who has served as a producer on several films, including Steven Spielbergâs Ready Player One. While filming The Age of Disclosure, as more former officials and experts got on board, it helped to convince others to take part.
But Farah ran a tight ship over the three years it took to make the film. âEveryoneâs names would be kept silent until it was done,â he said, noting that he only told documentary subjects about who had agreed to take part in order to make them comfortable. âWe would make the movie in secrecy, so this information of whoâs in it would not get out there until we were done with this film, and these people I was approaching would have safety in numbers.â
Farah also opted to make the film independently, unattached from a studio or streamer. âNone of them would ever want to participate in a big commercial documentary,â Farah explained. âThey would be afraid of it being sensationalized. They would be afraid of being intercut with someone who was not on their level, who would undermine them.â
One of his early commitments came from Jay Stratton, a defense official who helped start AATIP, and is also an executive producer on the documentary. Stratton had an established career investigating UAP and non-human intelligence life on behalf of the government, and was responsible for briefing senior lawmakers in Congress and the White House. âI have seen with my own eyes non-human craft and non-human beings,â he says plainly at the beginning of the film.
After Stratton agreed to âbreak his silenceâ it had tremendous âripple effectsâ on the rest of the film, and convinced others to come forward. When the current secretary of state, Marco Rubio, agreed to take part, that escalated things. âThen next thing you know, general Jim Clapper was participating,â Farah said of the former director of national intelligence under Barack Obama, who sat for an interview.
The sheer wealth of contributions, 34 to be exact, from members of Congress across the political spectrum, as well as people with rich national security experience â many of whom might balk at the prospect of a cable news hit let-alone an independent documentary â certainly lends a veneer of credibility. Off the bat youâre confronted with a propulsive string score, and a supercut of former military and intelligence officials ensconced in armchairs. They all offer brief summaries of their CVs, spell out that we are not alone, and why the American public ought to know more about it. a man with a beard Dan Farah. Photograph: Dia Dipasupil/Getty Images
âThis [UAP] technology does stuff that we canât do, and if we canât figure out what it is or what it wants, or what itâs being used for,â says a former director of aviation security at the National Security Council. The former chief scientist for AATIP claims that those who are tasked with ensuring information about UAPs doesnât leak âwill use whatever tool they can find to try to convince people they shouldnât come forwardâ. Meanwhile a former defense official notes that if weâre able to understand the technology that weâre observing, it opens the door to so many âpotentially beneficial impacts, including clean energyâ.
In many ways, Rubio offers one of the more convincing arguments. He says that much of the research and intelligence about UAPs is on a need-to-know basis, with incoming administrations being left out of the loop on the details. âBut that begins to ramp out of control,â he notes, leading to a lack of transparency that might give US adversaries a head start by analyzing UAP technology. Itâs a theory that sounds all the more convincing coming from the noted foreign policy hawk, who spent time in the senate spearheading a bipartisan effort to understand more about UAPs.
The geopolitical arms race to reverse engineer UAP technology is, what Farah came to see, one of the biggest reasons behind the alleged cover-up. âYou canât tell your friends without telling your enemies,â Farah says in our interview, reciting one of Strattonâs lines in the documentary. He traces a line from the debunked 1947 Roswell âalien crash retrievalâ (generally considered the genesis of modern UAP conspiracies) to what he sees as the ongoing effort to withhold information â for fear of enemies getting wind of how much the US knows about extraterrestrial life.
âPut yourself in the shoes of US government and military officials in the 40s,â Farah said, explaining that, fresh off a second world war victory, the Truman administration couldnât tell the American people that âweâre in another conflict that we canât protect anyone from, because we donât even know anything about itâ.
He says this race escalated when the US found out that other countries, like Russia, were capturing and retrieving UAP technology. âHere we are now where the people who run our country are not aware of the facts,â he added. âThose people are supposed to be aware of significant information like this that has high stakes for us. And at a base level, the public deserves to know the truth about fundamental facts, like weâre not alone in the universe.â
In The Age of Disclosure, itâs clear that there is little room for pushback or skepticism, particularly since thereâs not a single detractor in the film to serve as a foil to the plethora of resolute interviewees. And Farah, for his part, doesnât see the need for those voices to cloud the documentaryâs throughline. âI think when people watch this movie, one of the realizations will be that the stigma around this topic is completely illogical and makes no sense and is not good for humanity,â he said. âWe need the scientific community, not only in the United States, but in every nation, accepting the fact that this is a real situation, this is a valid area of inquiry, and that they should put their brain power towards learning about this and answering a lot of the big questions that remain.â
Testimony is ultimately what film hinges on, and itâs really the only âproofâ it can offer. This, for Farah, is more compelling. He believes that âthe strongest evidenceâ is âcredible people putting their name and reputation on the line to tell you what they know at great riskâ. When it comes to video and photos, the director notes that it would do little to quieten claims that itâs all a hoax. âYou could put a picture or a video of the most extraordinary thing on the cover of a major news publication or on major plants on TV, and half the human population would tell you they think itâs AI or they think itâs visual effects,â he said.
As more people, like Elizondo and Stratton, speak out about their experiences, Farah hopes it will encourage more people who have been silenced in the past to reveal the truth. âFor way too long, the public has been lied to, kept in the dark, completely misled by a heavily financed and very sophisticated disinformation campaign,â he said.
âI think it is only a matter of time before a sitting US president steps to the podium, and tells the world that we are not the only intelligent life in the universe, and that the United States government intends to lead in this new chapter by ending the era of secrecy and beginning the era of transparency.â
The Age of Disclosure is currently available worldwide to rent or purchase on Prime Video.
If any alien life had sufficient technology to visit us then they would have sufficient knowledge to know thatâs a terrible idea and never visit. We are a war mongering planet full of morons and assholes. No intelligent life would be so stupid as to even make the attempt.
intelligent life
That bit is for sure, they hide from us like the plague
The Age of Disclosure is currently available worldwide to rent or purchase on Prime Video.
So this is an ad for something on Amazon.



