A study of the dark legends that surround the Camp Hero Air Force Base in Montauk, Long Island.
Similar titles
Reviews
A must see documentary on the Mk Ultra mind programming in Montauk. It's not asking your opinion, just watch it and learn from it. Well filmed and well put together. So glad I found it. True terror that is mind expanding and enlightening. A movie for the higher mind that shows what the US government got up to in the 70's onward.
This is not in the movie so no spoiler here. The Montauk Project was something that started back in 1791 as it was about two family the cook family in the Pruett family as Jack Pruett came out of a crystal as sister who came to make him was Ashland Pruett who can't age pass nine, as he in her are white, as well as it go, as Nichol was the only one who can see him, P.S Al is Edward Cameron in Duncan 2.0 is got Duncan Cameron soul, well as it come to be, as I don't care what did, if you can teleport someone or time travel then that a good thing as well as it go on here, but the movie was good, in you can't get it no where, as the book can't get to, as same thing to files as well as it go, so stop saying thing are not real, where your poof it not real, as we can't poof it real, as you can't poof is not.
If you are looking for a juicy conspiracy film featuring space aliens, evil government agencies, and nefarious human experiments... keep looking. This pathetic excuse for a documentary is an amateurish exercise in sheer idiocy. An assembly of the usual "eyewitnesses" spin fantastic and yet somehow utterly boring yarns about their experiences below ground in a sinister Air Force base where children are mind-controlled for unspecified reasons — all without a single shred of evidence to back up a single bizarre assertion. One of these talking heads, a bearded character named Swerdlow, is an obvious huckster who is apparently promoting some kind of pay-per-view scam he has concocted on a paranoiac members-only website. I have never seen a less credible presenter. Face it, folks, there are enough conspiracy/UFO/secret world government nut jobs out there for them to amount to a market! Anyway, top the whole thing off with a ludicrous high-tension soundtrack, a sound mix that sounds as if it was done by a ten-year-old, and a voice-over script that never uses a simple word when a bigger more pretentious-sounding word is available — and you've got the whole picture. Sooner or later all the usual suspects show up, the Illuminati, the Grays (who we are informed are actually just mind-controlled human fetuses!!!) — everything short of Dracula and the Wolf Man. And with all that going for it, the filmmaking is so plodding and repetitive that it's almost impossible to sit through more than a few minutes at a time. A truly shameful piece of... work.
Aside from the outstanding cinematography, candid and honest interviews with the actual parties involved in the Montauk Project, and haunting narration you can see that director Christopher Garetano poured his heart and soul into this project. Delaying it's release and scraping the first version with his time, money and reputation on the line further back that he was dedicated to produce quality, well investigated, unbiased work. D o many documentarians have an angle or agenda they are pushing; not Garetano. He lets the viewer decide what is and isn't real based on what those who claim to have been involved report and compare it to historical fact in similar cases. He asks the viewer to join his journey, be aware of subtleties such as facial expressions and voice inflection and come to their own conclusion. This is the real deal, the cross road where horror and non fiction collide. I highly recommend viewing Montauk Chronicals.