Damn it all, anyway! I don't care one frickin' bit what "evidence" the so-called experts may have here to foist into my face in this "believe-what-you-like" documentary - Alien visitation is (IMO) all a total crock of you-know-what.
Based on Erich Von Daniken's well-publicized book - 1972's "Chariots of the Gods" is nothing but a highly-dubious presentation of pure novelty whose dead-seriousness (and total conviction to its subject matter) is actually quite laughable, for the most part.
Travelling the world over in order to present its "alien visitation" evidence as fact - I view "Chariots of the Gods" as simply being a well-crafted travelogue that's cleverly interspersed with hokey extraterrestrial info-dumps.
This is all, of course, absolutely contrived nonsense made to hoodwink the viewer into believing that alien visitation is, indeed, a reality and has occurred on this planet numerous times in the distant past.
Based on Erich Von Daniken's well-publicized book - 1972's "Chariots of the Gods" is nothing but a highly-dubious presentation of pure novelty whose dead-seriousness (and total conviction to its subject matter) is actually quite laughable, for the most part.
Travelling the world over in order to present its "alien visitation" evidence as fact - I view "Chariots of the Gods" as simply being a well-crafted travelogue that's cleverly interspersed with hokey extraterrestrial info-dumps.
This is all, of course, absolutely contrived nonsense made to hoodwink the viewer into believing that alien visitation is, indeed, a reality and has occurred on this planet numerous times in the distant past.