“The Fourth Kind” offers the audience with an interesting storyline about alien abduction that is backed with actually visual and audio evidence.
In the movie we are introduced to Dr Abigail Tyler, a psychologist that worked in Nome, Alaska.
In one of her studies several people in Nome were experiencing traumatizing events in the middle of the night. She decided to record and videotape them to gain a light on to what was happening to this town.
“The Fourth Kind” uses this evidence to back up the events that took place in Nome. They went to an extreme extent to make sure the audience knew that every bit of evidence in this movie was real.
It stars Milla Jovovich (Resident Evil) as Dr. Abigail Tyler, Will Patton (The Punisher) who plays the town’s sheriff and Hakeem Kae-Kazim (Pirates Of The Caribbean) as a scholar and student of ancient languages.
Throughout the movie, Director Olatunde Osunsanmi interviews Tyler and talks to her about her experiences.
Since the 1960s there have been more suicides and disappearances then any other town in Alaska. The FBI has visited it over 2,000 times to look into these.
This film starts off a little slow, but after the first 20 minutes it starts to pick up the pace.
Several people in Nome claimed to have seen a white owl sitting outside their windows. The patients are hypnotized and, in many cases, hysterically recount the events that took place at night.
Actually video and sound clips reveal with shapes in the sky and disturbing images of the patient’s hypnosis.
The actors did not dramatize this film in anyway. They played actually video along with the actors to back up the evidence.
Osunsanmi made sure that the evidence did all the speaking for itself.
“The Fourth Kind” did have some disturbing parts to it, so if you are easily scared or sickened, this is not the movie for you.
Christopher Speichert, 21, networking technologies major from Bristol said, “I was in such shock that I do not even remember blinking.”
After seeing this movie it is hard not to believe that there must be life out there somewhere. Seeing how Tyler was very emotional also makes it hard not to believe it is not real.
Speichert said, “That movie really made me think twice about abductions and whether if they are real or not.”
At the end of the movie Jovovich and Osunsanmi leaves us with “we should develop our own conclusions about this.” Can there be such a thing as life in outer space?
Think about it. If we are one galaxy with one sun, and nine planets and there are trillions of galaxies…what are the chances that there is something out there?
“The Fourth Kind” is a must see, whether you are a believer or not.
The next time you look up at the stars, just remember, there could be someone looking back at you.
I give this movie an 8.5 out of 10.
In the movie we are introduced to Dr Abigail Tyler, a psychologist that worked in Nome, Alaska.
In one of her studies several people in Nome were experiencing traumatizing events in the middle of the night. She decided to record and videotape them to gain a light on to what was happening to this town.
“The Fourth Kind” uses this evidence to back up the events that took place in Nome. They went to an extreme extent to make sure the audience knew that every bit of evidence in this movie was real.
It stars Milla Jovovich (Resident Evil) as Dr. Abigail Tyler, Will Patton (The Punisher) who plays the town’s sheriff and Hakeem Kae-Kazim (Pirates Of The Caribbean) as a scholar and student of ancient languages.
Throughout the movie, Director Olatunde Osunsanmi interviews Tyler and talks to her about her experiences.
Since the 1960s there have been more suicides and disappearances then any other town in Alaska. The FBI has visited it over 2,000 times to look into these.
This film starts off a little slow, but after the first 20 minutes it starts to pick up the pace.
Several people in Nome claimed to have seen a white owl sitting outside their windows. The patients are hypnotized and, in many cases, hysterically recount the events that took place at night.
Actually video and sound clips reveal with shapes in the sky and disturbing images of the patient’s hypnosis.
The actors did not dramatize this film in anyway. They played actually video along with the actors to back up the evidence.
Osunsanmi made sure that the evidence did all the speaking for itself.
“The Fourth Kind” did have some disturbing parts to it, so if you are easily scared or sickened, this is not the movie for you.
Christopher Speichert, 21, networking technologies major from Bristol said, “I was in such shock that I do not even remember blinking.”
After seeing this movie it is hard not to believe that there must be life out there somewhere. Seeing how Tyler was very emotional also makes it hard not to believe it is not real.
Speichert said, “That movie really made me think twice about abductions and whether if they are real or not.”
At the end of the movie Jovovich and Osunsanmi leaves us with “we should develop our own conclusions about this.” Can there be such a thing as life in outer space?
Think about it. If we are one galaxy with one sun, and nine planets and there are trillions of galaxies…what are the chances that there is something out there?
“The Fourth Kind” is a must see, whether you are a believer or not.
The next time you look up at the stars, just remember, there could be someone looking back at you.
I give this movie an 8.5 out of 10.
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