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À l'aube de notre histoire

Original title: Ancient Apocalypse
  • TV Series
  • 2022–2024
  • 7
  • 30m
IMDb RATING
7.2/10
12K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
4,408
143
À l'aube de notre histoire (2022)
What if everything we know about prehistory is wrong? Journalist Graham Hancock visits archaeological sites around the world investigating if a civilization far more advanced than we ever believed possible existed thousands of years ago.
Play trailer2:02
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DocumentaryHistory

What if everything we know about prehistory is wrong? Journalist Graham Hancock visits archaeological sites around the world investigating if a civilization far more advanced than we ever be... Read allWhat if everything we know about prehistory is wrong? Journalist Graham Hancock visits archaeological sites around the world investigating if a civilization far more advanced than we ever believed possible existed thousands of years ago.What if everything we know about prehistory is wrong? Journalist Graham Hancock visits archaeological sites around the world investigating if a civilization far more advanced than we ever believed possible existed thousands of years ago.

  • Stars
    • Graham Hancock
    • Keanu Reeves
    • Leonardo Pakarati
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.2/10
    12K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    4,408
    143
    • Stars
      • Graham Hancock
      • Keanu Reeves
      • Leonardo Pakarati
    • 320User reviews
    • 15Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Episodes14

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    Ancient Apocalypse
    Trailer 0:34
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    Top cast43

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    Graham Hancock
    Graham Hancock
    • Self - Presenter
    • 2022–2024
    Keanu Reeves
    Keanu Reeves
    • Self - Actor
    • 2024
    Leonardo Pakarati
    Leonardo Pakarati
    • Self - Documentarian
    • 2024
    Christopher S. Davis
    Christopher S. Davis
    • Self - Archaeologist & Anthropologist
    • 2024
    Joe Rogan
    Joe Rogan
    • Self - Host, The Joe Rogan Experience Podcast…
    • 2022
    Martin Sweatman
    Martin Sweatman
    • Self - University of Edinburgh
    • 2022
    Luis Eduardo Luna
    Luis Eduardo Luna
    • Self - Anthropologist
    • 2024
    Jesus Gamarra
    Jesus Gamarra
    • Self - Researcher in Archaeology…
    • 2024
    Randall Carlson
    Randall Carlson
    • Self - Catastrophist Geology Researcher
    • 2022
    Ali Akbar
    Ali Akbar
    • Self - University of Indonesia
    • 2022
    Katya Stroud
    Katya Stroud
    • Self - Heritage Malta
    • 2022
    Necmi Karul
    Necmi Karul
    • Self - Istanbul University
    • 2022
    Mark Brink Jr.
    Mark Brink Jr.
    • Self - Site Manager, Poverty Point
    • 2022
    Michael Haley
    Michael Haley
    • Self - Marine Biologist
    • 2022
    Sevim Tunçdemir
    Sevim Tunçdemir
    • Self - Museum Director
    • 2022
    Edwin Barnhart
    Edwin Barnhart
    • Self - Archaeologist
    • 2024
    Sonia Haoa Cardinali
    Sonia Haoa Cardinali
    • Self - Archaeologist
    • 2024
    David Bustos
    David Bustos
    • Self - Resource Program Manager
    • 2024
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews320

    7.212.1K
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    Featured reviews

    8PotatoFalcon

    Some reviewers misinterpret

    This held my attention pretty well. I thought it was a bit overly rhetorical at parts and that the editing of (most of) his interviews with field experts or "buffs" (his term) really zeroed in on whatever sound bits propagated his precise message, otherwise ignoring most of what they might've contributed.

    Some of the reviews here state that he offered no "proof" of a prehistoric advanced civilization, and that pyramids, stone temples and such are not "advanced". On the contrary, the point he's trying to argue is that a global cataclysm would've wiped out all traces of any prehistoric advanced people, and that if there are traces, they may exist in places we haven't looked or been willing to look (which he gives examples of). He's arguing that, in fact, the scale of construction endeavors (megaliths, pyramids, subterranean structures), and the astronomical designs/orientations seen in them are advanced enough to suggest a level of knowledge and sophistication that could only have been passed down from earlier humans, thus indicating that they must've been constructed at more of a resource, technology, and population 'reset' than the beginning of human life as we know it. In other words, the primitive hunter-gatherer groups that archaeologists currently believe were the earliest humans couldn't have just up & created these structures, all at around the same time--nor would they have had any reason to unless motivated by stories of fear & suffering from an apocalypse.

    He dumps on archaeologists a lot, but seems to offer some reasonable explanations for it: he says they discount theories while refusing to look into them; that they refuse to excavate certain places; that they are not motivated to correct people's understanding of history even as new science proves old science to be incorrect.

    I can see that, to be honest. It's not that I know much about archaeology specifically, but it is a field wrapped in academia, which comes with all sorts of funding, political, and bureaucratic issues, all while the people involved are necessarily as passionate about furthering their own careers (and maybe supporting themselves) as they might be about furthering human knowledge. Ideas/projects that get funding are often within the comfort zones of various interconnected institutions, following ever similar paths, expanding on existing ideas, etc. This kind of thing exists all over academia. Look up Drs. Karikó and Weismann re: how long it took to get funding for mRNA vaccine research, for example.

    I'm gonna find myself some popcorn and look forward to hearing/reading any archaeology community response to this.
    sha-71562

    Old man needs new hobbies

    An old conspiracy theories believes he knows more than actual archaeologists and is so I'll researched that he can't even get basic dates for the sites he uses correctly. Netflix really just sunk their money into this oil spill of a ship for people to pretend they know what they're talking about.

    How about making an actual documentary series with established real archaeologists who have actual credentials and experience instead of letting this wrinkled legume get off on his own ego and drag every pseudoscience loving freak with him. If you have an interest in history just do some research but don't take the steps back that watching this mess would take you.
    bhcoopa

    It's concerning that this is what we call Docuseries

    This isn't a very well made show at all. It feels like something they made for a NatGeo show back in the 2000s but much less factual. The amount of slow-motion, pan-over drone shots of the worksite and Graham Hancock power-posing seem to outnumber the frames that actually meaningfully push the content forward.

    Essentially the show continuously presents archaeological evidence that refutes the typical timeline of human history, which Hancock insists must be because of this advanced ancient civilization we've lost contact with. There's no evidence though of these mystical capabilities.

    It genuinely feels like Graham Hancock is just showing up to various active archeological sites with a film crew, asking the workers questions, and then splicing out the parts of the interview that may further the ongoing narrative. I'm not convinced that the archaeologists presenting their findings are doing so in support of his theory, they're just having individual frames of content being mined out of interviews and interaction.

    Why is this concerning? It's a film that has been made professionally enough to be called documentary even though it's not factual. Someone who doesn't really have a whole lot of attachment to the issue would probably entertain this as a factual documentary without looking too critically at it. And someone who is a genuine conspiracy theorist would allow this to feedback into their disbelief in genuine science anyway.

    Could go on on, but I'll stop here.
    7bpoirier-04158

    An Pragmatic Review

    Having read both the scholarly papers for archaeological sites as well as Graham's books over the last few decades, they both seem to be at war with each other. While thought provoking, vivid, and beautifully filmed, this documentary falls short on what could have been a great response to "big archaeology" by Graham.

    His theories are beginning to gain steam. However, I can't help but wonder how many of the individuals he interviews (including himself) are victims to selection bias. Some of his speculations brought forth in the episode (specifically the Sirius one) seem so far-fetched that it often feels like he's drawing conclusions from nothing. I was hoping this documentary would be more detailed. Unfortunately, it is very clear it was made for entertainment instead of data. I hope, if one is green-lit, a sophomore effort will be more detailed, both for our sake and for Graham's sake. I think it would benefit the masses and academia alike to consider non-mainstream ideas. My final thought-Archaeologists require massive funding for monumental projects- just food for thought on how money (and who owns it) can control a narrative. Graham's work here aims to poke holes in that narrative.
    10petegallows

    If Gobekli Tepe is that old, all the ancient history we've learned

    Is wrong.

    Some of you here claim Hancock "has no proof" - yet Gobekli Tepe is scientifically proven - not by Hancock - to be as old, as he claims it to be. Google the site and see what age you can find.

    Once again - Gobekli and Karahan Tepe are indeed around 11-12 thousand years old (- which is universally agreed at this point), then everything they ever taught us about our ancient history is simply wrong.

    Imagine, we have suddenly discovered some new information - just like some started to claim a few hundred years ago, that Earth isn't flat or that the sun doesn't orbit around Earth - people who claimed this, were burned alive, because scientists of that time "knew better". Now we all (well most of us) agree with this as a fact. In a few decades, all the kids will know about Gobekli Tepe and hopefully many other places yet to be discovered and it will be accepted.

    You can't have it both ways - there was this joke about an old man at the zoo, looking at a giraffe all day long. Giraffe was walking around, chewing on the leaves, resting. The man was just shaking his head. They were closing up for the day and asked the man to leave. As he was leaving, he said "that animal you have there cannot possibly exist, it just makes no sense..", he walked away still shaking his head.

    I was on Malta in 1997, visited most of the megalithic sites - they told us, "these are the oldest man made structures in the world" - well, and they were wrong. (Unless they are not 5-6 thousand years old - as they thought, but are also 11 thousand + years old - in which case, the scientists were very wrong still - wrong at establishing the real construction date). In 1997, it was universally believed, that it was a fact. Gobekli Tepe was only discovered/serious digs started in 94/95, it took a few years to determine the actual age.

    Graham Hancock dares to ask questions.

    He dares to say (and I am paraphrasing) "well, if Gobekli Tepe is admittedly this old - you have to admit, you were wrong about our history. Our ancestors from that era obviously weren't nearly as primitive, as you claim. What else did you get wrong? What else do you claim, although you have no proof for whatsoever? Let's investigate, let's study, let's talk about it"

    The self assured, but very obviously mistaken historians and archaeologists: "no, you're a pseudo-scientist"

    Oh, OK then...

    There's no way, they were building such structures, while being just hunters and gatherers - although that's what these series also claim.

    Why and how would you build all that, while having no certainty, that you can have enough food in the surrounding area? Unless you can grow your own food and raise your own animals, you'd never do that - unless it was some "garden of eden", with nothing but endless supply of food growing and running around.

    But anyway, let's imagine for a while, that a huge cataclysm destroys most of the world in the next few days. You survive, a few thousand people around the world survive, but no technology survives. No internet. Most roads are gone, no electricity, no running water, no medical care..

    ...then some brainiac 20 thousand years from now asks - "so, if those people did exist and were not primitive, were are their houses? Where's their rubbish" - well, my friend, it's overgrown, under the sea, disintegrated - did you really expect your particular timber, or brick house will survive 10- 20 thousand years? After a cataclysm? Think about it. Look at a 100 year old abandoned shed. Now imagine it in 5 thousand years, 10 thousand years. What is it going to look like? All the huge pyramids in Mexico were overgrown - it only took a few hundreds of years of neglect, it all became a jungle.

    You know what could possibly survive all that? - such as a huge cataclysm and possibly ten thousand + years of climate change, vegetation grow, nature taking over in general? - A huge, megalithic structure, ideally burried under ground..like Gobekli Tepe and others.

    Is Graham Hancock right about everything? No, he doesn't have to be.

    And remember one more thing, while you're reading this and clicking thumbs down on my comment, on this wonderful website.. somewhere in a remote jungle, there's a small slender guy, chasing some squirrel sized animal with a spear or a blowgun, which is the most advanced piece of technology, that he ever held in his possession. You and this little savage guy can live at the same time, living totally different lives, a few thousand km from each other. His people will live like that for another bunch of thousands of years, unless we interfere with their lifestyle.

    In 2024, you still have modern people and primitive savages living "side by side"..if you have these savages living in stone age conditions today in Amazon jungle, how can anyone in their right mind claim, that it wasn't like that also 12 thousand or more years ago?

    Those Amazon rainforest tribes could never build their own Gobekli Tepe today and they would never ever try, it would never occur to them - "hey, let's build this huge, megalithic structure..". Maybe in a few thousand or tens of thousands of years they eventually would. Those people are the hunters and gatherers.

    Builders of Gobekli Tepe were obviously far ahead of that. So you want a proof - other, than it's scientifically proven, that these sites are that old? Here's your proof - today's hunter and gatherers have built nothing but some primitive shacks. And it's 2024.

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    History

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    • Connections
      Featured in Nerdrotic: Ancient Apocalypse REVIEW w/ Adam Crigler and 1/4 Black Garrett (2022)
    • Soundtracks
      Ancient Thought
      Written by Miguel Moreno

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • November 11, 2022 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Ancient Apocalypse
    • Filming locations
      • Göbeklitepe, Sanliurfa, Turkey
    • Production companies
      • ITN Productions
      • ITN Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

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    • Runtime
      • 30m
    • Color
      • Color

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