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Erich von däniken's chariots of the gods
Erich von däniken's chariots of the gods





erich von däniken

Mabuse, Jerry Cotton and Kommissar X films. Director Harald Reinl did movies in just about every popular German genre, from Edgar Wallace krimini, Karl May Westerns (both of these genres infuenced Italian giallo and westerns),mountain films, Heimatfilms ("hometown" rural movies), German war films and sequels to the Dr. The film starts by discussing how native tribes found cargo from planes and began worshipping the flying machines as gods, which is probably how our ancestors saw ancient occupants of interplanetary craft. In the alternate universe that was 1970, the German film Erinnerungen an die Zukunft (based on Erich von Däniken's book Chariots of the Gods?) made $26 million at the box office and was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. This can be confirmed via a Google search, but of course most people won't bother.) Yes, von Däniken is a clown, but that doesn't explain away the Piri Reis maps, whose mysteries were documented well before the ancient astronauts craze in Charles Hapgood's "Maps of the Ancient Sea Kings." And yes, *some* of the Tassili frescoes were faked, but the two featured prominently in this film-the horned faceless figure and the so-called Great God Mars-evidently are not among the fabrications. (Incidentally, von Däniken's critics have been just as indifferent in their dismissal of the Paleo-SETI theory's particulars, and two wrongs don't make a right. It goes without saying that this total indifference to accuracy has done enormous damage to the field of Paleo-SETI. In von Däniken's view, any legend or pile of ruins was fair game if it was old, then it was attributable to aliens. Shklovsky and Sagan had emphasized very specific criteria in the interpretation of ancient legends as reports of contact between earthlings and intelligent extraterrestrial lifeforms, hence their careful choice of a single legend which *might* represent such contact. And that's the problem: he was happy to make things up if it sold books. Von Däniken later conceded that he had simply made this up. So, too, did the patently ridiculous notion that the Nazca lines of Peru were landing strips for alien aircraft. The viewer was presented with beautifully-shot footage of various archaeological ruins around the world (accompanied by Peter Thomas's shimmering, irresistible soundtrack), and the belief that "aliens built the Pyramids" became cemented in the popular consciousness. Millions read his book "Chariots of the Gods?" and millions more saw this documentary film that was based on it.

erich von däniken

There were also the Tassili frescoes, whose nominal discoverer (Henri Lhote) believed that they depicted extraterrestrial beings.

erich von däniken

In the beginning there was the book "Intelligent Life in the Universe," whose co-authors (Iosif Shklovsky and Carl Sagan) cautiously postulated that the ancient Babylonian legend of Oannes might represent an instance of paleocontact.







Erich von däniken's chariots of the gods