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Area 51: The CIA's Secret Files

Area 51: The CIA's Secret Files

★ 5.82014Movie5 h 0 mEstados Unidos
Dokumentaryo

The history of Area 51 and the programs created there.

247 people rated
🔇

Area 51: The CIA's Secret Files

2014

R

5 h 0 m

Estados Unidos

Dokumentaryo

The history of Area 51 and the programs created there.
More

5.8 /10

247 people rated

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Nangungunang Cast(2)
starring avatar
Eric Meyers
Self - Narrator
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Peter Merlin
Self - Aerospace Historian

Pagsusuri ng User

author avatar

Junior Dekalex

29/05/2023 10:54
source: Area 51: The CIA's Secret Files
author avatar

iamnotmizzk

26/05/2023 02:28
Moviecut—Area 51: The CIA's Secret Files
author avatar

Jolly

23/05/2023 03:53
It begins with a former military pilot who has given permission to give us a tour over the Area. The tour never happens, it does not happen because air traffic control will not let him in. It offers further details, but it is not convincing when presenting them together with these illogical inconsistencies. If the tour that attracts our attention was not real, who knows if the rest was. Stuck to the facts, a former employee dying of what is believes to be work related, but is unable to sue due to a Presidential decree? All that to stop a compensation disability. But on the other hand, it is extremely detailed in names, places, and dates mumbo-jumbo.
author avatar

صدقة جارية

23/05/2023 03:53
Another Disney Plus update pushes this National Geographic documentary onto my radar, as it's now quite high alphabetically. Despite being happy to use the more outlandish theories about Area 51 for the advertising, the documentary is strictly linked to facts and declassified truths about what has occurred at the secretive location. Located in the Nevada Desert, protected by both remoteness and surrounding mountain ranges, Area 51 is a CIA and later Air Force base that has acquired a reputation for the secrecy of the work that has gone on there. Through interviews with former workers, and by looking at declassified CIA material, this documentary sticks to the facts about the site's involvement in the scientific development of high-altitude spy planes, as a training site for pilots and then in the creation of RADAR invisible spy planes. I had a cursory knowledge about spy planes before this documentary, but I didn't know that so much of the development on them had taken place at Area 51. Despite wasting a bit of time in the pre-amble by flying towards the site and getting warned to turn away by the control tower, mostly the show is either CGI work, showing the developments at the site, historical footage or testimony from people who used to work there. There are interesting titbits, such as the CIA setting up dummy companies to export enough Titanium out of Russia in order to build planes to spy on them. There's also a bit of tragic stuff, with an interview with a former security guard who is dying of cancer that he believes was caused by the burning off of toxic material at the site but is unable to sue due to a Presidential decree. It's not the most interesting documentary I've ever seen, but it was enough to keep me engaged for 50 minutes or so and I was glad that it stuck to the facts and not the more fanciful stuff.
author avatar

واجع العين خطاهم

25/02/2023 20:23
source: Area 51: The CIA's Secret Files
author avatar

Carla Bastos

25/02/2023 20:23
It begins with a former military pilot who has given permission to give us a tour over the Area. The tour never happens, it does not happen because air traffic control will not let him in. It offers further details, but it is not convincing when presenting them together with these illogical inconsistencies. If the tour that attracts our attention was not real, who knows if the rest was. Stuck to the facts, a former employee dying of what is believes to be work related, but is unable to sue due to a Presidential decree? All that to stop a compensation disability. But on the other hand, it is extremely detailed in names, places, and dates mumbo-jumbo.
author avatar

Rae🖖🏾

25/02/2023 20:23
Another Disney Plus update pushes this National Geographic documentary onto my radar, as it's now quite high alphabetically. Despite being happy to use the more outlandish theories about Area 51 for the advertising, the documentary is strictly linked to facts and declassified truths about what has occurred at the secretive location. Located in the Nevada Desert, protected by both remoteness and surrounding mountain ranges, Area 51 is a CIA and later Air Force base that has acquired a reputation for the secrecy of the work that has gone on there. Through interviews with former workers, and by looking at declassified CIA material, this documentary sticks to the facts about the site's involvement in the scientific development of high-altitude spy planes, as a training site for pilots and then in the creation of RADAR invisible spy planes. I had a cursory knowledge about spy planes before this documentary, but I didn't know that so much of the development on them had taken place at Area 51. Despite wasting a bit of time in the pre-amble by flying towards the site and getting warned to turn away by the control tower, mostly the show is either CGI work, showing the developments at the site, historical footage or testimony from people who used to work there. There are interesting titbits, such as the CIA setting up dummy companies to export enough Titanium out of Russia in order to build planes to spy on them. There's also a bit of tragic stuff, with an interview with a former security guard who is dying of cancer that he believes was caused by the burning off of toxic material at the site but is unable to sue due to a Presidential decree. It's not the most interesting documentary I've ever seen, but it was enough to keep me engaged for 50 minutes or so and I was glad that it stuck to the facts and not the more fanciful stuff.
— No more content —

Pagsusuri ng User

author avatar

Junior Dekalex

29/05/2023 10:54
source: Area 51: The CIA's Secret Files
author avatar

iamnotmizzk

26/05/2023 02:28
Moviecut—Area 51: The CIA's Secret Files
author avatar

Jolly

23/05/2023 03:53
It begins with a former military pilot who has given permission to give us a tour over the Area. The tour never happens, it does not happen because air traffic control will not let him in. It offers further details, but it is not convincing when presenting them together with these illogical inconsistencies. If the tour that attracts our attention was not real, who knows if the rest was. Stuck to the facts, a former employee dying of what is believes to be work related, but is unable to sue due to a Presidential decree? All that to stop a compensation disability. But on the other hand, it is extremely detailed in names, places, and dates mumbo-jumbo.
author avatar

صدقة جارية

23/05/2023 03:53
Another Disney Plus update pushes this National Geographic documentary onto my radar, as it's now quite high alphabetically. Despite being happy to use the more outlandish theories about Area 51 for the advertising, the documentary is strictly linked to facts and declassified truths about what has occurred at the secretive location. Located in the Nevada Desert, protected by both remoteness and surrounding mountain ranges, Area 51 is a CIA and later Air Force base that has acquired a reputation for the secrecy of the work that has gone on there. Through interviews with former workers, and by looking at declassified CIA material, this documentary sticks to the facts about the site's involvement in the scientific development of high-altitude spy planes, as a training site for pilots and then in the creation of RADAR invisible spy planes. I had a cursory knowledge about spy planes before this documentary, but I didn't know that so much of the development on them had taken place at Area 51. Despite wasting a bit of time in the pre-amble by flying towards the site and getting warned to turn away by the control tower, mostly the show is either CGI work, showing the developments at the site, historical footage or testimony from people who used to work there. There are interesting titbits, such as the CIA setting up dummy companies to export enough Titanium out of Russia in order to build planes to spy on them. There's also a bit of tragic stuff, with an interview with a former security guard who is dying of cancer that he believes was caused by the burning off of toxic material at the site but is unable to sue due to a Presidential decree. It's not the most interesting documentary I've ever seen, but it was enough to keep me engaged for 50 minutes or so and I was glad that it stuck to the facts and not the more fanciful stuff.
author avatar

واجع العين خطاهم

25/02/2023 20:23
source: Area 51: The CIA's Secret Files
author avatar

Carla Bastos

25/02/2023 20:23
It begins with a former military pilot who has given permission to give us a tour over the Area. The tour never happens, it does not happen because air traffic control will not let him in. It offers further details, but it is not convincing when presenting them together with these illogical inconsistencies. If the tour that attracts our attention was not real, who knows if the rest was. Stuck to the facts, a former employee dying of what is believes to be work related, but is unable to sue due to a Presidential decree? All that to stop a compensation disability. But on the other hand, it is extremely detailed in names, places, and dates mumbo-jumbo.
author avatar

Rae🖖🏾

25/02/2023 20:23
Another Disney Plus update pushes this National Geographic documentary onto my radar, as it's now quite high alphabetically. Despite being happy to use the more outlandish theories about Area 51 for the advertising, the documentary is strictly linked to facts and declassified truths about what has occurred at the secretive location. Located in the Nevada Desert, protected by both remoteness and surrounding mountain ranges, Area 51 is a CIA and later Air Force base that has acquired a reputation for the secrecy of the work that has gone on there. Through interviews with former workers, and by looking at declassified CIA material, this documentary sticks to the facts about the site's involvement in the scientific development of high-altitude spy planes, as a training site for pilots and then in the creation of RADAR invisible spy planes. I had a cursory knowledge about spy planes before this documentary, but I didn't know that so much of the development on them had taken place at Area 51. Despite wasting a bit of time in the pre-amble by flying towards the site and getting warned to turn away by the control tower, mostly the show is either CGI work, showing the developments at the site, historical footage or testimony from people who used to work there. There are interesting titbits, such as the CIA setting up dummy companies to export enough Titanium out of Russia in order to build planes to spy on them. There's also a bit of tragic stuff, with an interview with a former security guard who is dying of cancer that he believes was caused by the burning off of toxic material at the site but is unable to sue due to a Presidential decree. It's not the most interesting documentary I've ever seen, but it was enough to keep me engaged for 50 minutes or so and I was glad that it stuck to the facts and not the more fanciful stuff.
— No more content —
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Disclaimer: Ang lahat ng mga video at larawan sa 1234money ay mula sa Internet, at ang kanilang mga copyright ay pagmamay-ari ng mga orihinal na tagalikha. Nagbibigay lamang kami ng mga serbisyo sa webpage at hindi nag-iimbak, nagtatala, o nag-a-upload ng anumang nilalaman.