Mirage Men | |
Director: | John Lundberg Roland Denning Kypros Kyprianou |
Producer: | Roland Dennnig Kypros Kyprianou John Lundberg Mark Pilkington |
Starring: | Rick Doty |
Cinematography: | Grant Wakefield Zillah Bowes |
Editing: | Roland Denning Kypros Kyprianou |
Music: | Cyclobe Urthona |
Studio: | Perception Management Productions |
Distributor: | Random Media |
Runtime: | 85 minutes |
Country: | United Kingdom |
Language: | English |
Mirage Men is a 2013 documentary film directed by John Lundberg, written by Mark Pilkington and co-directed by Roland Denning and Kypros Kyprianou. Mirage Men suggests there was conspiracy by the U.S. military to fabricate UFO folklore in order to deflect attention from classified military projects. It prominently features Richard Doty (born October 11, 1944), a retired Special Agent who worked for AFOSI, the United States Air Force Office of Special Investigation.[1]
The film had its world premiere at the 2013 Sheffield Doc/Fest[2] in the UK on 13 June 2013, its North American premiere at the 2013 Fantastic Fest in Austin, Texas on 22 September 2013, its Australian premiere at the Canberra International Film Festival[3] on 31 October 2013 and its Nordic premiere at the Stockholm Film Festival in Sweden on 10 November 2013.
Mark Pilkington's book about the project, also called Mirage Men, was published in 2010 by Constable & Robinson.[4]
Critical reception for the documentary has been positive. Twitch Film said the film was "Scary, unsettling" and "offered profound food for thought". Electric Sheep magazine[5] called it "one of the must see documentaries of the year". Ain't it Cool News[1] called the film "a real head trip" and said they were "glued to [their] seat".
Mirage Men has been excerpted in the Adam Curtis documentary HyperNormalisation on BBC iPlayer.[6]
American novelist Ernest Cline credits the Mirage Men film as an influence on his novel and screenplay Armada in which the government has known for decades of an alien invasion and has been funding sci-fi films and videogames in order to prepare people for war.[7]