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6,5/10
1,4 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Com entrevistas com seus seguidores, críticos e com o próprio Raël, essa série documental mostra como uma religião inspirada em OVNIs se transformou em um culto controverso.Com entrevistas com seus seguidores, críticos e com o próprio Raël, essa série documental mostra como uma religião inspirada em OVNIs se transformou em um culto controverso.Com entrevistas com seus seguidores, críticos e com o próprio Raël, essa série documental mostra como uma religião inspirada em OVNIs se transformou em um culto controverso.
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Avaliações em destaque
Raël is definitely the ultimate for delusional and for gullible, naive followers.
It's not the usual guru sect.
This sect goes way over the top and is still going after nearly 50 years.
What's different about Raël?
Well, this Frenchman claimed that he was taken to another planet to meet the creators of humans.
Not enough you say?
When on the other planet, he met all the main prophets, including Jesus, Mohammed, Buddha, etc... Still not enough for you?
Raël claimed they cloned a human being !
That was so controversial the US passed a law to ban any human cloning.
Raël even had a senate hearing where he testified.
This Netflix documentary series is a rare one where it's just the right length.
I enjoyed this documentary because .... honestly , I have never seen such a high level of gullibility, even for sects !
It's not the usual guru sect.
This sect goes way over the top and is still going after nearly 50 years.
What's different about Raël?
Well, this Frenchman claimed that he was taken to another planet to meet the creators of humans.
Not enough you say?
When on the other planet, he met all the main prophets, including Jesus, Mohammed, Buddha, etc... Still not enough for you?
Raël claimed they cloned a human being !
That was so controversial the US passed a law to ban any human cloning.
Raël even had a senate hearing where he testified.
This Netflix documentary series is a rare one where it's just the right length.
I enjoyed this documentary because .... honestly , I have never seen such a high level of gullibility, even for sects !
OMG this so called documentary was so boring and uninteresting.
A couple of laconical interviews with mostly still practicing Raelians, one ex-Raelian, and an embittered French magistrate, this has to be one of the laziest bit of documentary making I've had the displeasure to watch in some time.
Part way through I thought - has this been made by a Raelian.
No expose on any damage the cult may have done to its members, with seemingly very little in the way of trying to track down and interview former cult members, or look into the finances of the cult, or look into breaches of laws e.g. Fraud over the human cloning claims.
Mainly just interviews with current, very old cult members.
Boring, biased, and just very poor documentary making.
A couple of laconical interviews with mostly still practicing Raelians, one ex-Raelian, and an embittered French magistrate, this has to be one of the laziest bit of documentary making I've had the displeasure to watch in some time.
Part way through I thought - has this been made by a Raelian.
No expose on any damage the cult may have done to its members, with seemingly very little in the way of trying to track down and interview former cult members, or look into the finances of the cult, or look into breaches of laws e.g. Fraud over the human cloning claims.
Mainly just interviews with current, very old cult members.
Boring, biased, and just very poor documentary making.
This is just another generic story about a somewhat charismatic cult leader and a bunch of lost people who followed him, willing to accept any kind of nonsense to find structure and direction in their lives. However, this case isn't particularly interesting, and as a documentary, it feels lazy, much like many Netflix documentaries that prioritize viewer engagement over meaningful storytelling or observation of phenomena. Instead of creating yet another mediocre drama with a straightforward narrative, relying on testimonials and archive footage as supporting arguments for whatever predetermined story they want to tell, the documentary could have explored broader themes, such as the phenomenon of cults and their similarities to religions. It could have delved deeper into the emergence and practice of monotheistic religions over the past 3000 years, examining the differences between this cult leader and historical figures from Judea, Mecca, or Vermont. Alternatively, the documentary could have focused on Scientology and confronted the influence of Hollywood head-on.
I understand Netflix's business model; these documentaries are cost-effective to produce, add fresh content to the catalog, and keep viewers engaged for longer periods. However, they often lack cinematic or social value. While Netflix's documentary production budget may be small compared to their fiction projects, it still surpasses that of traditional non-streaming documentary projects. It's disappointing that Netflix doesn't aim higher and instead serves up the same content we've seen on cable TV for years, albeit with the Netflix brand attached.
I understand Netflix's business model; these documentaries are cost-effective to produce, add fresh content to the catalog, and keep viewers engaged for longer periods. However, they often lack cinematic or social value. While Netflix's documentary production budget may be small compared to their fiction projects, it still surpasses that of traditional non-streaming documentary projects. It's disappointing that Netflix doesn't aim higher and instead serves up the same content we've seen on cable TV for years, albeit with the Netflix brand attached.
People are so gullible, they believe just about anything. I'm surprised that during the old footage of that guru guy getting interviewed when he was young that nobody asked well. Were you taking drugs? Were you on drugs? What drugs did you take? Seriously, I mean yeah I saw UFO and it took him to another planet or whatever other stuff he said, but nobody asked like because that in that day and age drugs were huge. All these cults were like full of drugs so I'm surprised nobody asked like were you on heroin? Did you try LSD? Were you smoking pot like all the time or something like that? Nobody asked any of those questions so I think it's all BS I know people that went on drug trips and said exact same kind of crap And they have that blonde lady that's a chemist to give validation to this because she's really intelligent and she has a degree and she's so smart so of course she believes that it must be true. I just think she's also delusional. She probably had like massive sex orgies at that place and you know that's what most of those cults are all about Due to me, I'm getting no vibes from him of being real all I'm getting vibes of some narcissistic lonely insecure dude that somehow got people to follow him with his BS.
"The highest truth of the universe has been revealed to me: it's that you should all worship me, have sex with me (but only if you're good looking) and give me all your money."
Fascinating and infuriating story about how even some very well educated people can fall prey to a self-absorbed cult leader and waste their lives covering up his lies.
In the style of Holy Hell (about the Buddhafield sect) and Wild,Wild Country (about the Bhagwan/Osho sect), Raël: The Last Prophet tells the story of a cult mainly through interviews with current and former members, mixed with old footage of the sect's often absurd activities.
Interestingly, the cult leader himself, Claude Vorilhon ("Raël"), who has managed to become venerated as a prophet by tens of thousands of followers globally, agreed to be interviewed for this production at his current home in Japan.
Fascinating and infuriating story about how even some very well educated people can fall prey to a self-absorbed cult leader and waste their lives covering up his lies.
In the style of Holy Hell (about the Buddhafield sect) and Wild,Wild Country (about the Bhagwan/Osho sect), Raël: The Last Prophet tells the story of a cult mainly through interviews with current and former members, mixed with old footage of the sect's often absurd activities.
Interestingly, the cult leader himself, Claude Vorilhon ("Raël"), who has managed to become venerated as a prophet by tens of thousands of followers globally, agreed to be interviewed for this production at his current home in Japan.
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- Raël: The Alien Prophet
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