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Ancient Apocalypse

  • TV Series
  • 2022–2024
  • TV-MA
  • 30m
IMDb RATING
7.2/10
12K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
2,471
2,532
Ancient Apocalypse (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
3 Videos
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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
    2,471
    2,532
    • Stars
      • Graham Hancock
      • Keanu Reeves
      • Leonardo Pakarati
    • 319User reviews
    • 15Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Episodes14

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    Official Trailer - Season 2
    Trailer 2:02
    Official Trailer - Season 2
    Official Trailer
    Trailer 0:35
    Official Trailer
    Official Trailer
    Trailer 0:35
    Official Trailer
    Ancient Apocalypse
    Trailer 0:34
    Ancient Apocalypse

    Photos15

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    Top cast43

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

    User reviews319

    7.212K
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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. KarikΓ³ 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.
    7KinglyViking

    Questions now create controversy?

    If his motivation for making this film was merely asking questions about natural phenomenons & seemingly, forgotten landmarks, then this show has some defining moments. I do feel like he throws around a lot of dates, and treats thousands of years very loosely in his episodes, but his David Attenborough oration made this show more entertaining. The music & zoomed in angles made some moments a little overdramatic, which disconnected our thoughts from the story. Was the show thought provoking, yes, was is it entirely factually supported, no. This show has created many good questions & raised some interesting hypotheses. Why does a show like this create an apocalypse of his own, an a apocalypse of vitriol. His ideas are interesting, and this creates more investigations in to these suggestions. One thing we know, is those sites exist, and the monoliths and sites are old, so someone must have built them with more knowledge then clubs & loin clothes. This is indeed a thought provoking show, but remember, he is still throwing out ideas. If anything, this show has an entertainment value, but if this show doesn't provide accuracy to the ancient culture of forgotten history, then at least the show has shed some light on the current academic narrow mindedness of ancient history already has been answered. Whether you agreed with his viewpoint or not, we can see how this show has created interesting conversations & intriguing further study.
    6whitemerrick

    ancient humans, Joe rogan and an ice age later

    Okay, so I watched this cause I'm an archaeology buff and I have to say I'm divided. On the one hand, this guy has a perfectly believable point which is that History as we know it is basically incomplete because we are missing large parts of time in our records due to war and cataclysm. That's a theory I can absolutely get behind. He essentially states that we have forgotten more ancient, advanced civilisations than we currently know. So in this theory Sumeria is not the oldest by far and human "civilised" history is actually several millenia older. Again I might be inclined to get behind that. He chalks up this amnesia to the ice age and willing ignorance from the academia. Having been in the academia myself I cam confirm that it can be stifling place full of people who are extremely reluctant to admit they might not hold the absolute, final truth so again far enough. But then it takes a turn into crazy Mulder conspiracy land. Not only is academia narrow-minded and humankind amnesiac, no. The truth is that all ancient civilisations are descended from a single super ancient, super advanced forgotten civilisation. And the evidence for this is that a bunch of them have kind of similar legends about their origins. So basically I sorta of agree with his premise but his conclusion is banana pants. He completely throws out the scientific method and he absolutely does cherry pick his legends and his facts. Being from one of the countries he visits and talks about I can confirm that the legends of my country he chose isn't even the most common one. This guy uses a very effective method to try and convince people which is he mixes up facts with the unknown and people's inherent desire for the mysterious to have meaning and then leads you down a very odd rabbit hole. I'm giving it 6 stars cause some of the things he says and presents are interesting enough that I'll read about them later on but also because he kinda goes down a cray cray path there. Oh and one star down because he talked to Joe Rogan.
    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.
    8TrillianFantastic

    An interesting theory

    Hancock leads us on a nice and tidy path of his research and field of interest during the past decades, and gives us an compelling theory of lost civilizations due to global cataclysm.

    Critics of this documentary series seem to dislike Hancock for his rejection of consensus in fields like archeology and geology, or dislike Hancock for being arrogant and bitter (in rather arrogant and bitter wording themselves).

    Personally I find the theory well substantiated, enough to warrant more interest and research. I'm filled with a burning desire to see more of the submerged structures, and to excavate areas that have only been found via LiDAR scanning.

    If you'd like to dip your toe into some groundbreaking theories relating to ancient civilizations, and the possible reasons for so little remaining for us to find, this is an excellent start.

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    Storyline

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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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    FAQ14

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • November 11, 2022 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • ΠŸΡ€Π°Π΄Π°Π²Π½Ρ–ΠΉ апокаліпсис
    • Filming locations
      • GΓΆbeklitepe, Sanliurfa, Turkey
    • Production companies
      • ITN Productions
      • ITN Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 30m
    • Color
      • Color

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