On March 13, 1997, thousands watching for Halle-Bopp Comet saw a huge V-shaped light formation cross Arizona's sky. The silent, low-flying phenomenon made national headlines on major network... Read allOn March 13, 1997, thousands watching for Halle-Bopp Comet saw a huge V-shaped light formation cross Arizona's sky. The silent, low-flying phenomenon made national headlines on major networks and news shows.On March 13, 1997, thousands watching for Halle-Bopp Comet saw a huge V-shaped light formation cross Arizona's sky. The silent, low-flying phenomenon made national headlines on major networks and news shows.
- Awards
- 1 win & 4 nominations total
Lynne Kitei
- Self - Health Educator and Author
- (as Lynne D. Kitei M.D.)
Ruth Hover
- Self - Psychologist
- (as Ruth Hover Ph.D.)
Frances Emma Barwood
- Self - Former Phoenix Councilwoman & Vice Mayor
- (as Frances Barwood)
Daniel J. Kitei
- Self - Resident Physician in Neurology
- (as Daniel J. Kitei D.O.)
Edgar D. Mitchell
- Self - Apollo 14 Astronaut and Founder of the Institute of Noetic Science
- (as Edgar Mitchell Ph.D.)
Tom Brunty
- Self - Religious Studies Arizona State University
- (as Tom Brunty M.A.)
Joan Mortensen
- Self - Critical Care Nurse
- (as Joan Mortensen R.N.)
Gary Schwartz
- Self - Professor of Medicine Surgery & Psychology, University of Arizona
- (as Gary Schwartz Ph.D.)
Richard Powell
- Self - V.P. of Research University of Arizona
- (as Richard Powell Ph.D.)
Featured reviews
This is one of the best documentaries ever produced on the subject. And they finally take it to the next level, meaning that they are compelling us to consider the real implications of contact with intelligent life from another world, and encouraging us to consider our place in the cosmos, and the fact that we are part of a larger community. Everyone should watch this and regain a sense of awe and wonder at the incredible potential awaiting us. We must grow up as a race and turn our gaze outward AND inward.
"The Phoenix Lights," for all its importance and for all the obvious conviction behind it, gets itself all twisted into a pretzel because neither the visuals nor the witnesses seem able to distinguish between two entirely independent events.
Near sundown, a giant V-shaped formation of lights, perhaps a mile across, passed southward over Henderson, Nevada, interrupting a Little League baseball game. Hundred of witnesses stared up at the thing. It moved slowly and silently out of sight at low altitude. After dark, it passed down I-10 and flew over Phoenix, continuing southward towards Mexico. There is no question about its existence or its properties. It was witnessed by thousands of people, including law enforcement officers, professionals of various types, air traffic controllers, and military and civilian pilots.
Later that night, some Air Force Warthogs apparently dropped a series of bright flares during an exercise. The flares were in a series and disappeared one by one behind the mountains into the target area. The flares were photographed by numerous people, many of the good folk of Phoenix having been alerted to and excited by strange happenings in the sky, by this time.
Nobody knows what the first thing was. So the response of the public becomes, by default, the more interesting story. Somehow, the original story bled into the second. The huge triangle is dismissed as "Air Force flares." A Phoenix councilwoman, entering her office, was asked the morning after the event if she knew anything about the triangle. She'd heard nothing about it but she brought the subject up at the meeting, where it was dismissed with a single joking reply. Her question made it into the media, however, and her office phone lit up. When her answering machine could no longer handle the volume, the phones of other offices were called into play. She estimates the number of phone calls from eyewitnesses to the original incident at a thousand. She managed to respond in person to several hundred of them. In its description of the reports, the media singled out one, from a young boy who thought they were airplanes. Thereafter, the sightings were described as man-made objects mistaken for something else. The governor's response was to make a public announcement dismissing the affair, while accompanied by a staff member dressed in an extra-terrestrial costume.
The film was organized by a married couple, both doctors, living on the outskirts of Phoenix. Both had seen the giant triangle with its quiet amber lights. But although the movie was written by one of the docs, it couldn't be more confusing. She evidently saw lights on several different occasions and there were times -- long moments -- in which I didn't know which sighting she was talking about or which picture of which sighting I was looking at.
Too much time is wasted on "ancient visitations" and that sort of irrelevant stuff. And all the witnesses, including the two docs, seem convinced that they observed something from outer space. In the film, the witnesses describe the triangular orange lights as having a calming effect, almost deliberate. One likens it to a parade designed to show humans that "they" have no destructive intentions.
I'm a kind of scientist too, and I'm not so sure about all that. It's too much akin to Kierkegaard's "leap of (or to) faith", the "faith", in this case, lying in what Alan Hyneck called the extra-terrestrial hypothesis. It seems undeniable that something was there -- but what? Sure, it could be a space ship with aliens inside, or a kind of drone, but other explanations are possible. We now believe that matter can take four forms -- solid, gas, liquid, plasma -- but suppose there are others that occur more rarely and take forms like triangles or spheres. Suppose the objects aren't objects at all, but neural impulses in the mind of some cosmic intelligence? Can we be sure they aren't? Every explanation seems as absurd as any other.
The film is screwed up and that's too bad because we need to know more about the thing and its movements than we do about feelings of awe and visits in Biblical times. I'm personally convinced that something is going on because when I was in high school, at three in the morning of a bitterly cold night on an empty rural road, a friend and I witnessed the antics of a moon-like sphere in the crystalline atmosphere. It was fuzzy and bright, flew against the wind, wobbled slowly from side to side, made not a sound, and did a right-angle turn. I don't know what it was, although I waved and shouted at it. Nobody knows what it was. But if you're going to speculate, I would hope you would organize a film better than this.
Near sundown, a giant V-shaped formation of lights, perhaps a mile across, passed southward over Henderson, Nevada, interrupting a Little League baseball game. Hundred of witnesses stared up at the thing. It moved slowly and silently out of sight at low altitude. After dark, it passed down I-10 and flew over Phoenix, continuing southward towards Mexico. There is no question about its existence or its properties. It was witnessed by thousands of people, including law enforcement officers, professionals of various types, air traffic controllers, and military and civilian pilots.
Later that night, some Air Force Warthogs apparently dropped a series of bright flares during an exercise. The flares were in a series and disappeared one by one behind the mountains into the target area. The flares were photographed by numerous people, many of the good folk of Phoenix having been alerted to and excited by strange happenings in the sky, by this time.
Nobody knows what the first thing was. So the response of the public becomes, by default, the more interesting story. Somehow, the original story bled into the second. The huge triangle is dismissed as "Air Force flares." A Phoenix councilwoman, entering her office, was asked the morning after the event if she knew anything about the triangle. She'd heard nothing about it but she brought the subject up at the meeting, where it was dismissed with a single joking reply. Her question made it into the media, however, and her office phone lit up. When her answering machine could no longer handle the volume, the phones of other offices were called into play. She estimates the number of phone calls from eyewitnesses to the original incident at a thousand. She managed to respond in person to several hundred of them. In its description of the reports, the media singled out one, from a young boy who thought they were airplanes. Thereafter, the sightings were described as man-made objects mistaken for something else. The governor's response was to make a public announcement dismissing the affair, while accompanied by a staff member dressed in an extra-terrestrial costume.
The film was organized by a married couple, both doctors, living on the outskirts of Phoenix. Both had seen the giant triangle with its quiet amber lights. But although the movie was written by one of the docs, it couldn't be more confusing. She evidently saw lights on several different occasions and there were times -- long moments -- in which I didn't know which sighting she was talking about or which picture of which sighting I was looking at.
Too much time is wasted on "ancient visitations" and that sort of irrelevant stuff. And all the witnesses, including the two docs, seem convinced that they observed something from outer space. In the film, the witnesses describe the triangular orange lights as having a calming effect, almost deliberate. One likens it to a parade designed to show humans that "they" have no destructive intentions.
I'm a kind of scientist too, and I'm not so sure about all that. It's too much akin to Kierkegaard's "leap of (or to) faith", the "faith", in this case, lying in what Alan Hyneck called the extra-terrestrial hypothesis. It seems undeniable that something was there -- but what? Sure, it could be a space ship with aliens inside, or a kind of drone, but other explanations are possible. We now believe that matter can take four forms -- solid, gas, liquid, plasma -- but suppose there are others that occur more rarely and take forms like triangles or spheres. Suppose the objects aren't objects at all, but neural impulses in the mind of some cosmic intelligence? Can we be sure they aren't? Every explanation seems as absurd as any other.
The film is screwed up and that's too bad because we need to know more about the thing and its movements than we do about feelings of awe and visits in Biblical times. I'm personally convinced that something is going on because when I was in high school, at three in the morning of a bitterly cold night on an empty rural road, a friend and I witnessed the antics of a moon-like sphere in the crystalline atmosphere. It was fuzzy and bright, flew against the wind, wobbled slowly from side to side, made not a sound, and did a right-angle turn. I don't know what it was, although I waved and shouted at it. Nobody knows what it was. But if you're going to speculate, I would hope you would organize a film better than this.
First off, this was no PBS style documentary where they explored all sides. This was, it's aliens or UFO's right off the bat. I imagine this DVD is sold on all UFO conspiracy sites or in the gift stores in Roswell somewhere. I haven't a clue what these lights were and don't close my mind off to the possibilities, but they sure chose the major believers to put on camera instead of exploring all the possibilities, not just flares.
The first thing I noticed right off was, why do these lights/spacecraft aliens only appear at night? If this formation/craft/lights was so massive and the "aliens" want us to know they're around and they're intelligent, why not show up in the light?. Why not daytime to appear in its massive size.
Why aren't there people/believers in Phoenix right now on high alert every day with planes to take off on a moments notice, video cameras with super zooms or still cameras with grand zoom capabilities taking more shots up close. They know exactly were these lights show up, why not be around that area to take advantage of the possibilities. I mean they do state in this film that these lights/craft were very close to the ground and not high up. There are electronic devices that have the ability to zoom in pretty close even at a few thousand feet. At least close enough to see a solid object if there was one.
The video and photo footage of the lights was quite amazing and the stillness and formation of the lights is something to consider, but not to consider other ideas or solutions, is a mistake.
The first thing I noticed right off was, why do these lights/spacecraft aliens only appear at night? If this formation/craft/lights was so massive and the "aliens" want us to know they're around and they're intelligent, why not show up in the light?. Why not daytime to appear in its massive size.
Why aren't there people/believers in Phoenix right now on high alert every day with planes to take off on a moments notice, video cameras with super zooms or still cameras with grand zoom capabilities taking more shots up close. They know exactly were these lights show up, why not be around that area to take advantage of the possibilities. I mean they do state in this film that these lights/craft were very close to the ground and not high up. There are electronic devices that have the ability to zoom in pretty close even at a few thousand feet. At least close enough to see a solid object if there was one.
The video and photo footage of the lights was quite amazing and the stillness and formation of the lights is something to consider, but not to consider other ideas or solutions, is a mistake.
Watch this for entertainment value only. This is by no measure a documentary featuring any significant critical thought on this subject. It's basically a continuous stream of "Gee I saw sumthin'in the sky!" testimonials which, as an earlier reviewer noted, becomes very tedious after 30-40 minutes.
I have no doubt that thousands of people "saw sumpthin'" unusual in the night skies over Phoenix in March of 1997. But this "documentary" trades purely in the most outlandish and exotic explanations (i.e. visitors from another planet) for that spectacle.
So if you're the type of person who enjoys such meta-science documentaries you'll probably enjoy this film. But if yours is a more critical mind don't waste 90 minutes on it. You wont be either (a) better informed, or (b) convinced by the thesis.
I have no doubt that thousands of people "saw sumpthin'" unusual in the night skies over Phoenix in March of 1997. But this "documentary" trades purely in the most outlandish and exotic explanations (i.e. visitors from another planet) for that spectacle.
So if you're the type of person who enjoys such meta-science documentaries you'll probably enjoy this film. But if yours is a more critical mind don't waste 90 minutes on it. You wont be either (a) better informed, or (b) convinced by the thesis.
The March 13, 1997, Phoenix lights event plus a couple similar sightings are relentlessly trumpeted as an extra-terrestrial visitation. Unfortunately, other than the word of eyewitnesses that they saw something in the sky, there is zero evidence to support such a fantastic claim as visitors from outer space. This would have made a superior segment on The History Channel's "U.F.O. Hunters", but is not acceptable as a feature, simply because there is not enough material. The interviews especially wear thin, becoming more and more redundant. "The Phoenix Lights" will probably leave most viewers thinking less would have been best. - MERK
Did you know
- TriviaThe documentary includes two statements by witnesses under hidden identity:
- a Luke Air Force Base military,
- a civilian pilot, identified years later as himself by actor Kurt Russell; on March 13, 1997, he logged an aviation report at the Sky Harbor airport, where he landed after witnessing with his child son, the six lights in a v-shaped formation when he was preparing to land. He also registered the fact in his own logbook, but years later he had forgotten about it and was surprised to see himself on a television run of the movie. The actor is a former military helicopter and fighter pilot and FAA-licensed private pilot holding single and multi-engine capacities.
- ConnectionsReferences Les Envahisseurs de la planète rouge (1953)
- How long is The Phoenix Lights?Powered by Alexa
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- The Phoenix Lights: Beyond Top Secret
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- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 20 minutes
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