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  1. #1
    Lo Zio L'avatar di Koenig
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    Predefinito The Fourth Kind (abduction+Milla Jovovich)

    Città di Nome, Alaska.
    Resa famosa dal cane Balto questo piccolo centro di 3590 abitanti dagli anni '60 è al centro di un mistero ancora insoluto, numerose persone sono sparite senza lasciare traccia.
    Nonostante prolungate indagini da parte dell'FBI volte a scongiurare la presenza di un serial killer ed a rassicurare la popolazione ancora non è stata trovata una spiegazione al fenomeno.

    Arriva a novembre un docu-film che promette di fare luce sull'intera vicenda, The Fourth Kind.
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IbQXxNWNxyY
    Con la partecipazione di Milla Jovovich, TFK miscela riprese reali con ricostruzione effettuate con attori professionisti.
    E la conclusioni a cui giunge sono sconcertanti, si tratta di ripetuti casi di rapimenti alieni (se il film lo chiamano "Il Quarto Tipo" qualcosa si intuisce ).

    Cosa rappresentano le misteriose figure che appaiono alla finestra dei rapiti ?
    Come mai alcuni di loro parlano in sumero ?
    Dove l'hanno trovato uno che conosce il sumero per sapere che si tratta di sumero ?

    La verità è là fuori

  2. #2

    Predefinito Riferimento: The Fourth Kind (abduction+Milla Jovovich)

    All'inizio pensavo avessi sbagliato sezione del forum... in effetti

  3. #3
    Lo Zio L'avatar di Koenig
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    Predefinito Riferimento: The Fourth Kind (abduction+Milla Jovovich)

    Ma noi siamo interessanti al mistero che si cela dietro al film

    Questo è un articolo dell'Anchorage Daily News del 2006 sulle infruttuose indagini dell'FBI
    Spoiler:
    FBI sees no serial killer, cites drinking, exposure.
    By TOM KIZZIA, Anchorage Daily News

    (Published: June 30, 2006)
    NOME, Alaska (AP) - A string of disappearances and mysterious deaths of Native villagers visiting Nome was not the work of a serial killer, an FBI analysis of the cases has concluded.

    An FBI study of 24 missing persons and suspicious death cases assembled by Nome police said excessive alcohol consumption and a harsh winter climate were common ties in many of the cases. In nine of the cases, where no bodies were ever found, state and local investigators said they will continue to search for new leads.

    The FBI conclusions were summarized at a news conference Thursday morning in Nome called by the Native nonprofit Kawerak Inc., which has been working with law enforcement and other Nome-area Native and civic groups on the disappearances.

    A list of victims' names in 20 cases was released by local officials last year in an effort to solicit information from the public. Nome police said they plan to talk with families of the victims in the coming weeks before releasing an updated list of names and an explanation of what they think happened.

    Of the 24 cases, three are being left alone at the request of families, two had already been prosecuted criminally, and one was a snowmachine accident, said Nome Police Chief Craig Moates. In nine of the cases, a re-examination of available evidence produced "definitive outcomes," Moates said. He said alcohol was a common factor in those cases.

    Though Moates offered no details Thursday, some of the dead are known to have died of exposure or from falling off a jetty into the cold water of the Snake River. Questions had been raised about the possibility of muggers preying on drunks. As concern spread in Seward Peninsula villages, the unsolved cases became a top priority two years ago for the region's Native leaders, including the Norton Sound Health Corp. and the Bering Straits Native Corp.

    "No evidence exists to support the conclusion that a serial killer has been targeting Native people in Nome," Moates said Thursday, summarizing the FBI conclusions. The FBI cited the lack of trauma shown on recovered bodies, the four-decades-plus time span of the cases, and the absence of a common suspect, Moates said.

    Kawerak officials said they hoped the conclusions - and the fact that the cases had received a fresh look - would help allay fears in many of the region's villages about the dangers of visiting Nome.

    "The fact that the FBI was able to come up with this response hopefully will help people sleep better," said Kawerak tribal law specialist Karlin Itchoak.

    Native officials said distrust of Nome police had reached a new low following the murder conviction of a Nome officer earlier this year and said efforts to rebuild relationships still had a long way to go.

    "I think there's a certain comfort level that these cases have been looked at by other than local law enforcement," Kawerak president Loretta Bullard said.

    But several officials cautioned that the FBI conclusions were based only on a review of information made available by Nome police. They said information about possible criminal links might still be available from villagers who have been reluctant to talk to police.

    "My concern has always been that there is information in the Native community that has not been brought forward," said Bering Straits Native Corp. attorney Gail Schubert, who called the pattern of disappearances odd and disturbing.

    Kawerak's Itchoak said villagers can contact him directly if they don't want to talk to police. The FBI is not doing a separate investigation but said it would review any new information. The community safety group that has coordinated the public information effort will meet again in September to plan its next steps, Itchoak said.

    Moates said the FBI had offered suggestions for follow-up investigations in the cases. He provided no details but said some of the work it suggested had already been undertaken by police.

    Attention to the missing persons cases has already brought some changes to Nome. Volunteer safety patrols have hit the streets after midnight during busy times in winter, such as the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race and the week Permanent Fund dividend checks are issued.

    "This is not just volunteers from the Native community," said Berda Willson, chairwoman of the Regional Wellness Forum, which organized the patrols. "People care about others in the region."

    Moates has also flown to area communities with Kawerak officials to discuss village concerns. He became police chief in 2004, and his efforts have drawn praise from local officials.

    The rollicking bars of Front Street make Nome an unusual hub for the Alaska Bush. Kawerak chairman Robert Keith of Elim said Thursday that the region's missing-person totals may be higher than others because of the legal drinking in bars. The region's villages have all voted themselves dry.

    FBI profilers met with leaders of the Nome organizations for more than three hours Wednesday to discuss their review. They did not participate in Thursday's news conference and deferred questions to Moates.

    Questo è più recente e riporta le polemiche sul film
    Spoiler:
    By KYLE HOPKINS
    [email protected]

    Families suspected a serial killer. The FBI mostly blamed alcohol and the cruel Alaska winter.

    This fall, a movie distributed by a major studio and marketed as a “dramatization” of real events is offering another explanation for decades of disappearances and suspicious deaths in and around Nome:

    Abduction by space aliens.

    "The Fourth Kind," a thriller, hits theaters Nov. 6. Marketing from NBC Universal says it’s based on “archival footage” of a psychologist who stumbled upon “the most disturbing evidence of alien abduction ever documented” while interviewing Alaskans.

    Spooky. Except it all looks to be a “Blair Witch Project” style fake-out.

    No one has heard of the psychologist, including the state licensing board and president of the state psychologists association. And while there have indeed been disappearances in Nome — mainly people traveling to the hub city from surrounding Inupiat and Siberian Yupik villages — blaming a real-life tragedy on alien abduction is not sitting well with the non-profit that pushed the cases into the open.

    “The movie looks ridiculous,” said Kawerak Inc. Vice President Melanie Edwards, who watched the trailer online Monday. “It’s insensitive to family members of people who have gone missing in Nome over the years.”

    Universal Pictures is distributing the film in the United States. The star, Milla Jovovich, is a veteran of three “Resident Evil” movies about diabolical corporations and zombies. In the trailer, she introduces herself as an actress and tells the audience that “every scene in this movie is supported by archived footage.”

    But it’s all fake, right? Did the film-makers ever go to Nome? What about the idea that all this trivializes a string of tragic Alaska deaths?

    The studio has no comment, an NBC Universal spokesman said in an e-mail Tuesday.

    Despite an FBI conclusion in 2006 that no serial killer was to blame, emotions over the missing and dead are still raw in the region.

    Dallas Massie is a retired state trooper who has been filling in as Nome police chief since early this year. Soon after he arrived, a relative of a St. Lawrence Island man who went missing in October 2004 called. He had heard there was someone new at the police department and hoped to see a re-energized investigation.

    The 2004 case is Nome’s most recent major missing-persons case, Massie said. Police, he said, are still looking for leads. Within reason.

    “I have yet to hear anybody with the theory that aliens are taking folks out of the region,” Massie said.

    VILLAGE DEATHS
    After years of rumors that Nome had become a dangerous place for travelers from the villages, local officials in 2005 released a list of about 20 disappearances and deaths in the city. The cases dated back to the 1960s. At the time, a Nome police officer was on trial for the murder of a young village woman, and some residents mistrusted city police.

    The FBI stepped in, reviewing two dozen cases, eventually determining that excessive alcohol consumption and the winter climate were a common link in many of the cases. Unlike other commercial hubs in rural Alaska, Nome is a “wet” city, with bars and liquor stores.

    Some of dead were killed by exposure or from falling off a jetty into the frigid Snake River, authorities said at the time.

    Delbert Pungowiyi of Savoonga still believes that foul play claimed his uncle, who flew to Nome in 1998 to buy a snowmachine and never came home.

    Despite the FBI’s conclusion, Pungowiyi suspects racially motivated, serial murders are to blame in at least some of the deaths.

    As for the new movie?

    “Oh my god, that is ridiculous,” he said.

    To be fair, “The Fourth Kind” seems to be telling a different story altogether. Movie trailers can be deceiving, but the victims shown in the short clip don’t appear to be visiting villagers.

    The movie’s title is a reference to a measurement system used to describe varying degrees of contacts with aliens. Think “Close Encounters of the Third Kind.” A UFO sighting would be the first kind of contact. The fourth kind is abduction.

    According to promotional materials from Universal, the film is framed around a psychologist named Abigail Tyler who interviewed traumatized patients in Nome.

    But state licensing examiner Jan Mays says she can’t find records of an Abigail Tyler ever being licensed in any profession in Alaska.

    No one by that name lived in Nome in recent years, according to a search of public record databases.

    Still, there are shreds of “evidence.”

    Try Googling “Abigail Tyler” and “Alaska.” You’ll get a link to a convincingly boring Web site called the “Alaska Psychiatry Journal” — complete with a biography of a psychologist by that name who researched sleep behavior in Nome. Except the site is suspiciously vacant, mostly a collection of articles on sleep studies with no home page or contact information.

    Another site, www.alaskanewsarchive.com, features a story from the Nome Nugget about Tyler moving to Nome for research. The problem? The story is credited to Nugget editor and publisher Nancy McGuire, who says it's baloney and she never wrote it.

    Both the news site and the medical journal site were created just last month, according to domain-name research sites.

    Ron Adler is CEO and director of the Alaska Psychiatric Institute. Denise Dillard is president of the Alaska Psychological Association. They said this week they’ve never heard of the Alaska Psychiatry Journal, or of Abigail Tyler.

    SHOT IN BULGARIA
    “The Fourth Kind” follows a Hollywood tradition of releasing films set in Alaska but filmed somewhere else. Recently, the horror flick “30 Days of Night” told of vampires invading Barrow during the sunless winter. It was shot in New Zealand, according to Internet Movie Database.

    “The Proposal,” a romantic comedy released this summer and set in Sitka, was actually filmed in Massachusetts. The state has created a tax incentive program to encourage Hollywood to actually shoot its Alaska-based movies in the state. But film office manager Dave Worrell said some of the biggest activity lately has been reality shows about rural law enforcement and wildlife officers.

    Filmmakers shot the “The Fourth Kind” in Bulgaria, according to IMDB. That may explain why the trailer shows a city surrounded by lush mountains rather than a flat tundra town at the shore of the Bering Sea.

    Nome Chamber of Commerce director Mitch Erickson watched the movie trailer at the city’s visitor center Monday. That fictional Nome is a pretty place, he said.

    “I wish we had those trees.”
    Ultima modifica di Koenig; 02-09-09 alle 21:14:36

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  5. #5
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    Predefinito Riferimento: The Fourth Kind (abduction+Milla Jovovich)


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  6. #6
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    Predefinito Riferimento: The Fourth Kind (abduction+Milla Jovovich)


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  9. #9
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    Predefinito Riferimento: The Fourth Kind (abduction+Milla Jovovich)

    Mi sono perso qualcosa di interessante?

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    Predefinito Riferimento: The Fourth Kind (abduction+Milla Jovovich)

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