अपनी भाषा में प्लॉट जोड़ेंA viral Facebook event to storm Area 51 draws millions of signups, prompting military warnings. As memes spread about Naruto-running past bullets, UFO hunters and internet personalities conv... सभी पढ़ेंA viral Facebook event to storm Area 51 draws millions of signups, prompting military warnings. As memes spread about Naruto-running past bullets, UFO hunters and internet personalities converge for what could be a desert party or clash.A viral Facebook event to storm Area 51 draws millions of signups, prompting military warnings. As memes spread about Naruto-running past bullets, UFO hunters and internet personalities converge for what could be a desert party or clash.
एपिसोड ब्राउज़ करें
फ़ीचर्ड समीक्षाएं
If you've pondered the age old question are Aliens more intelligent than earthlings, this film is for you.
Wasting a couple of hours watching nerdy fame seekers coalescing around government conspiracy theories, exemplify fake courage, and show why working at a vape kiosk is your only skillset, while a local business owner chooses profit over ppl of her town of 50, ponder no more.
So the next question in life- what's worse, these social media idiots or the mainstream media who gives them attention?
Wasting a couple of hours watching nerdy fame seekers coalescing around government conspiracy theories, exemplify fake courage, and show why working at a vape kiosk is your only skillset, while a local business owner chooses profit over ppl of her town of 50, ponder no more.
So the next question in life- what's worse, these social media idiots or the mainstream media who gives them attention?
How do you police a joke?
That was what the FBI agent states at the very end of this overly long and drawn out story about a bunch of nerds with nothing better to do but drive into the desert for attention.
If any recent Netflix documentary best describes modern America it is this one. A stupid kid posting an event as a joke gets taken seriously that a group of conspiracy nutjobs, attention seeking influencers and random weird alien obsessed people decide to take seriously and actually attend.
What follows is this kid being out of his depth as he works with a conman who didn't want to put any of his own money into the event, a local business woman who got greedy and alienated (no pun intended) the rest of her town and a modern day mafioso who tried to scam her which she thankfully backed out of.
That's not even taking into account all the media attention it got or the response of the military in dealing with a potential threat on a US military base. It truly was the best example of a trainwreck in this series.
Unfortunately, the filmmaking let's it down with weird editing choices, random animation sequences and splitting it into two parts which hasn't been done in the other trainwreck documentaries for a story that didn't seem to offer much in the end.
Nobody comes out looking good at the end of this and all it did was showcase how easy it is to manipulate a generation of young adults raised on social media with ADHD, brain-rot and no ambition other than to be famous on the internet.
If Netflix wants to keep making these it would be nice if they made one that had serious consequences instead of them all being a playful joke but maybe that's wishful thinking.
Overall, it is a strange story told in a strange way with the actual 'storming' of Area 51 happening in the last ten minutes. It would have been nice to get different interviews from the locals on life after this event and what has been done to prevent it from happening again but with people's dependency on social media only becoming more and more important it's more likely to happen again sooner rather than later.
That was what the FBI agent states at the very end of this overly long and drawn out story about a bunch of nerds with nothing better to do but drive into the desert for attention.
If any recent Netflix documentary best describes modern America it is this one. A stupid kid posting an event as a joke gets taken seriously that a group of conspiracy nutjobs, attention seeking influencers and random weird alien obsessed people decide to take seriously and actually attend.
What follows is this kid being out of his depth as he works with a conman who didn't want to put any of his own money into the event, a local business woman who got greedy and alienated (no pun intended) the rest of her town and a modern day mafioso who tried to scam her which she thankfully backed out of.
That's not even taking into account all the media attention it got or the response of the military in dealing with a potential threat on a US military base. It truly was the best example of a trainwreck in this series.
Unfortunately, the filmmaking let's it down with weird editing choices, random animation sequences and splitting it into two parts which hasn't been done in the other trainwreck documentaries for a story that didn't seem to offer much in the end.
Nobody comes out looking good at the end of this and all it did was showcase how easy it is to manipulate a generation of young adults raised on social media with ADHD, brain-rot and no ambition other than to be famous on the internet.
If Netflix wants to keep making these it would be nice if they made one that had serious consequences instead of them all being a playful joke but maybe that's wishful thinking.
Overall, it is a strange story told in a strange way with the actual 'storming' of Area 51 happening in the last ten minutes. It would have been nice to get different interviews from the locals on life after this event and what has been done to prevent it from happening again but with people's dependency on social media only becoming more and more important it's more likely to happen again sooner rather than later.
I was excited for this. I remember following it from the U. K. how ever this is so badly put together and all over the place.
Rarely do I need to switch off a series I've been excited to watch. I'm sure the makers at Netflix took something when putting this together. Jumps to pointless stuff and it's dire. Worth cancelling Netflix over. Looks like a student made it but tried to use an editing app and they had ADHD. The storyline was here but instead of following what happens it constantly edited in ridiculous and pointless scenes.
Rarely do I need to switch off a series I've been excited to watch. I'm sure the makers at Netflix took something when putting this together. Jumps to pointless stuff and it's dire. Worth cancelling Netflix over. Looks like a student made it but tried to use an editing app and they had ADHD. The storyline was here but instead of following what happens it constantly edited in ridiculous and pointless scenes.
I now have an answer to the question "Can you make a documentary and only interview morons?"
the answer from Netflix is "yes"
This is a repetitive and meandering mess. Everyone says the same thing several times. The Vice guy was unnecessary and dumb as a stump. There were so many unnecessary interviews, it boggles the mind. Disco Donnie is the creepiest dude ever.
My review jumps all over the place, as this doc does. As dumb as the interview subjects seem, the Director and editor of this are clearly the dumbest people involved.
Just an absolutely unwatchable mess. The internet Historian did a short doc on this with no money, and it's head and shoulders aboce this crap.
the answer from Netflix is "yes"
This is a repetitive and meandering mess. Everyone says the same thing several times. The Vice guy was unnecessary and dumb as a stump. There were so many unnecessary interviews, it boggles the mind. Disco Donnie is the creepiest dude ever.
My review jumps all over the place, as this doc does. As dumb as the interview subjects seem, the Director and editor of this are clearly the dumbest people involved.
Just an absolutely unwatchable mess. The internet Historian did a short doc on this with no money, and it's head and shoulders aboce this crap.
Far more interesting than recent Trainwreck episode "Real Project X" (in which many kids showed up to a birthday party and, for some reason, we know about it), this story involves a better variety of testimonies, with higher stakes considering the location, and a fairly intricate backstory where half-baked internet ideas go head-to-head with reality.
Social media dwellers are a parody of themselves at this point, and anyone with a couple decades will immediately roll their eyes at the immature elements of this doc, but it's still a fun study of people with lives that permit ideas like "let's storm a government base because aliens and party" before facing humility.
Not exactly something you do if you have priorities, but still hilarious to watch, like seeing Johnny Knoxville and pals invent idiotic stunts for your amusement. The silliness is balanced out by interviews with town locals, military, and other grown-ups who live in reality. When all the parts mix in the end, not much happens besides some partying, but thankfully it didn't go the other way resulting in tragedy.
I'm not sure it had to be split into 2 episodes. Yet I didn't feel like much time was wasted if viewed as a single film. It's ultimately a familiar lesson: reality wins against absurdist notions from the internet. But rarely do we see it done so uniquely, and at least a few people got a dance party out of it.
Social media dwellers are a parody of themselves at this point, and anyone with a couple decades will immediately roll their eyes at the immature elements of this doc, but it's still a fun study of people with lives that permit ideas like "let's storm a government base because aliens and party" before facing humility.
Not exactly something you do if you have priorities, but still hilarious to watch, like seeing Johnny Knoxville and pals invent idiotic stunts for your amusement. The silliness is balanced out by interviews with town locals, military, and other grown-ups who live in reality. When all the parts mix in the end, not much happens besides some partying, but thankfully it didn't go the other way resulting in tragedy.
I'm not sure it had to be split into 2 episodes. Yet I didn't feel like much time was wasted if viewed as a single film. It's ultimately a familiar lesson: reality wins against absurdist notions from the internet. But rarely do we see it done so uniquely, and at least a few people got a dance party out of it.
टॉप पसंद
रेटिंग देने के लिए साइन-इन करें और वैयक्तिकृत सुझावों के लिए वॉचलिस्ट करें
विवरण
- चलने की अवधि
- 1 घं 37 मि(97 min)
- रंग
इस पेज में योगदान दें
किसी बदलाव का सुझाव दें या अनुपलब्ध कॉन्टेंट जोड़ें