Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueTake strange occurrences, weird events, and unexplained happenings and put them all together. That is what you get with Beyond the Unknown. Each episode shows you something different.Take strange occurrences, weird events, and unexplained happenings and put them all together. That is what you get with Beyond the Unknown. Each episode shows you something different.Take strange occurrences, weird events, and unexplained happenings and put them all together. That is what you get with Beyond the Unknown. Each episode shows you something different.
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These are not new stories. They are resorted stories from Mysteries at the Museum. If you've watched most of the MATM episodes, don't waste your time watching these.
This series is Mysteries at the Museum with a different title. Why bother?
The show was apparently created by a guy that liked telling little kids that there was a Santa Claus, since that's basically what it is: The backstory of a legend followed by revealing a mundane explanation. That's OK, though. It beats the 'push a conspiracy theory with no rational thought attached' crap out there. So, that alone makes it watchable.
Where it becomes unintentionally hilarious is at the end of every segment, they show some object from a museum that you would think would be part of the story. But most of the time, it's an item "reminiscent of the actual item". It just seems incredibly lazy and pointless, especially since actual artifacts from many of the stories actually exist...in museums!
My favorite was the segment on Lake Nyos in Cameroon that suffered a linnie carbon dioxide) eruption. The issue was fixed by sticking a few pipes deep in the lake. What do they show us? A plain old PVC pipe from a plumbing museum in Massachusetts. Why?
As others have said, there are also plenty of fact and costuming inaccuracies, but these don't bother me as much as they apparently bother some people. Geez.
Where it becomes unintentionally hilarious is at the end of every segment, they show some object from a museum that you would think would be part of the story. But most of the time, it's an item "reminiscent of the actual item". It just seems incredibly lazy and pointless, especially since actual artifacts from many of the stories actually exist...in museums!
My favorite was the segment on Lake Nyos in Cameroon that suffered a linnie carbon dioxide) eruption. The issue was fixed by sticking a few pipes deep in the lake. What do they show us? A plain old PVC pipe from a plumbing museum in Massachusetts. Why?
As others have said, there are also plenty of fact and costuming inaccuracies, but these don't bother me as much as they apparently bother some people. Geez.
It's an enjoyable show, but they need to fact check their research before airing. In almost every episode there are multiple inconsistencies or incorrect parts. Ie; in S3-Ep10, the mystery of Ambrose Small - he (and his theatre) was from London Ontario, not Toronto Ontario. So when they say they dredged the lake in Toronto, that makes no sense.
I'd like to correct a review about Season 3, Ep10, The Disappearance of Ambrose Small. Where the reviewer says there is an inconsistency because Ambrose Small disappeared from the Grand Theatre in London, not Toronto.
I just watched the episode, and they actually reported it correctly. Small was last seen in the Grand Opera House at 11 Adelaide St. West in Toronto which he had sold that very day along with other theatres across the country including one in London. But the Grand Opera House was where Small kept his office, and it is some 3 blocks away from the Toronto Harbour so it does make sense that the Toronto police would dredge the harbour.
Grand Opera House, not to be confused with the Grand Theatre.
I just watched the episode, and they actually reported it correctly. Small was last seen in the Grand Opera House at 11 Adelaide St. West in Toronto which he had sold that very day along with other theatres across the country including one in London. But the Grand Opera House was where Small kept his office, and it is some 3 blocks away from the Toronto Harbour so it does make sense that the Toronto police would dredge the harbour.
Grand Opera House, not to be confused with the Grand Theatre.
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- AnecdotesSame format as Mysteries at the Museum (2010) with Don Wildman providing the informative narration, same style of reenactments by actors and same gorgeous cinematography lighting the actors. As Mysteries at the Museum (2010) sadly seems to have disappeared from the Travel Channel in favor of miscellaneous ghost-hunting shows, this rare educational program for intelligent audiences with a thirst for knowledge, appears to be the next best replacement show. It is unclear if the original show has been canceled.
- GaffesIn "Spaceship on a Beach" the French word "Les Prophéties" is oft & on erroneously pronounced by Dan Wildmann as "Pro-Fay-TEE", when it is actually pronounced "PRO-fay-see", just like in English---the word in anglophone languages already being of French origins. Only one time does Wildmann pronounce it properly, then he reverts back to the erroneous "Tee" ending syllabus.
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- Durée45 minutes
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By what name was Beyond the Unknown (2019) officially released in India in English?
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