“Disclosure Day” is nigh!
We’re not talking about end times for UFO believers, but about this week’s debut of Steven Spielberg’s latest movie about space aliens.
“Disclosure Day” is something of a second coming for the classic alien sci-fi movie — or perhaps a third coming, given that Spielberg is already famous for “Close Encounters of the Third Kind” (1977) and “E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial” (1982).
The second-coming analogy is apt for another reason: The movie’s title plays off the expectation that the world’s governments will disclose all their secrets about alien contact, but only when they determine that their citizens are ready to hear them. “UFO believers await the day of disclosure with the same burning eagerness as a religious believer expecting the Messiah,” Adam Kirsch, a senior editor at The Atlantic, writes in a forthcoming book titled “We Want to Believe.”
Kirsch says such believers might greet Spielberg’s movie as evidence that Disclosure Day is truly nigh. “For people who are very deeply committed to this idea of disclosure, they will take it as confirmation that disclosure is something that is really going to happen,” he says.
Even Meg Charlton, the author of a newly published alien-abduction novel titled “Voyagers,” felt a sense of anticipation as she was writing the manuscript. “I did spend a lot of the book nervous that I would be scooped by first contact somehow, or full disclosure,” she recalls.
In a double-stuffed episode of the Fiction Science podcast, Kirsch and Charlton explore what science and fiction reveal about our obsession with alien visitors.
