By Kenn Thomas
Critics skeptical of the Roswell flying saucer crash story often claim that interest in the event dropped off immediately after its initial media flash in 1947, only to be revived in the 1980s by unreliable UFO researchers seeking to profiteer from a myth of their own making. I have often contradicted this assertion by pointing out that the scientist Wilhelm Reich paid a visit to Roswell in 1955 and made clear references to aliens in relation to the town in his final book, Contact With Space. It is an unusual book primarily documenting Reich and his assistants using beam cannons to clash with flying saucers--in real life, not on the silver screen.
Researchers have slowly been accumulating Roswell references in movies and other pop culture forms to support the idea that the incident had more of a cultural impact on pre-1980s pop culture than previously has been presupposed. The little Roswell grey aliens appear in a mid-1960s episode of the anime cartoon Prince Planet, for instance. Recently, a 1951 wristwatch ad from the Hamilton Corporation was discovered that referred to the weather balloon explanation for flying saucers, an explanation offered only for Roswell in 1947 until adopted by the Robertson UFO investigation panel of 1952. Another obvious example often escapes notice; however, that again ties the tale back to Wilhelm Reich. It involves the famous 1956 Ray Harryhausen movie Earth Vs. the Flying Saucers.
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| Roswell-like alien in Earth Vs. the Flying Saucers. |
In that movie, aliens attack the earth in flying saucers and in a few instances the aliens hobble out onto the surface. The creatures look a bit like roll-on deodorant cans with stiff arms and legs. The costumes were used briefly in one other movie, 1961’s The Creation of Humanoids, most recently broadcast following an episode of cable TV’s The Walking Dead series. In Earth Vs. the Flying Saucers, the costumes’ rounded helmets with no features conceal the aliens’ real form until one is killed and his roll-cap removed. The alien looks like a Roswell grey.
Wilhelm Reich had Ruidoso, New Mexico as his destination in 1955 for an overnight stay on his way to Tuscon, Arizona. Passing through Roswell—and Stanton Friedman often makes the point at lectures that few just “pass through” Roswell’s out of the way location—Reich clearly was looking for signs of aliens. In Contact With Space, he writes: “Although it was very hot as we neared Roswell, New Mexico, no OR flow [OR was Reich’s abbreviation for orgone, or natural earth energy] was visible on the road, which should have been shimmering with ‘heatwaves’. Instead, DOR [Reich’s abbreviation for “deadly orgone radiation”, which he believed came from the exhaust of UFOs].”
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Some of Reich's assistants, including his daughter, Eva, with a cloudbuster gun mounted on a truck, circa 1955. |
Reich’s concern about the environmental impact of UFOs stemmed from experiences he had in his lab in Rangeley, Maine called Orgonon. In 1951 he first discovered the DOR business by putting a milligram of radium into one of his orgone boxes, an invention of his designed to harness the natural earth energy. It resulted in highly polluted air around the lab, causing fauna to wilt and animals to become ill. Strange red UFOs appeared in the sky over Rangeley. In response to all this, Reich came up with another invention, the “cloudbuster,” a cannon mounted on the back of a truck that concentrated and redirected orgone, which was aimed and fired at the UFOs, causing them to disappear. In the following years, he brought these devices with him to Tucson, Arizona, passing through Roswell, and did battle with UFOs there.
That happened in real life. It’s an obscure story to many now but apparently a paradigm for the major Hollywood science fiction of the time. Reich’s cloudbuster battles with UFOs are virtually reproduced in Earth Vs. the Flying Saucers. Instead of orgone, earth's scientists develop a sonar canon, but they are mounted onto trucks and directed at the space ships in the same way Reich did it. And the movie was released just shortly after the end of Reich’s desert UFO adventure, so it can’t be said that Reich took his ideas from a fanciful movie. In fact, it seems quite the reverse.
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| Scenes from Earth Vs. the Flying Saucers, including cloudbuster-like cannon (upper right). |
The controversies about Earth Vs. the Flying Saucers in the UFO community relate to Donald Keyhoe's request that his name be removed from the credits following his discovery that it would be a “fictional” movie (see here for details). But was it fictional? The movie may have had little relation to Keyhoe’s book at the time, but did it have another uncredited real life analog?
Kenn Thomas’ essay, “Wilhelm Reich, Eisenhower and the Aliens” appears in Secret and Suppressed II: Banned Ideas and Hidden History into the 21st Century, Edited by Adam Parfrey and Kenn Thomas, available at feralhouse.com. Mr. Thomas’ current book, JFK & UFO, is also available from Feral House. Thomas’ web site is steamshovelpress.com.




> The alien looks like a Roswell grey.
ReplyDelete1) How do you know what a Roswell grey looks like?
2) We're not blind. That does not look like the conventional grey.
"The little Roswell grey aliens appear in a mid-1960s episode of the anime cartoon Prince Planet, for instance."
ReplyDeleteFound your grey alien at 4:44!
Very interesting article, Mr. Thomas. Personally I don't know whether these 'coincidences' between fiction and reality are a proof of informants disseminating little seeds of disclosure through pop culture references, or whether these similarities are the result of the channeling quality of the creative process itself.
Take for instance this example of a cheesy 80's TV sitcom that "predicted" Gaddafi's death in the faraway year of 2011, and which has prompted several members of the Fortean community to see it as further validation that 'they' had Gaddafi's assassination planned well in advance(!).
Personally I prefer to see it as a hint that we live in some sort of 'hyper-reality' where fact & fantasy are continually cross-pollinated by the power of human --and maybe non-human--imagination; I'm sure Jorge Luis Borges could explain it to us if he was still alive :)
I once taped but never watched an episode of Lone Gunmen, the X-Files offshoot comedy, because it had a thinly disguised reference to PROMIS, a super surveillance software I wrote about in The Octopus. It wasn't until long after that when I discovered the episode also had a scene of a plane flying into the World Trade Towers, and this was broadcast in the March preceding 9/11. The plane was stopped by the back-door access supplied by the PROMIS-like software!
ReplyDeleteYes, Borges recognized the labyrinth, like the weird coincidence that Coleridge dreamt of Kubla Khan, who had dreamt of a palatial city, etc. But there's a scientist named Paul Kammerer who collected data suggesting that synchronicities comprise a kind of physics, holding the world together. Even Einstein said that the idea was "not absurd."
> Found your grey alien at 4:44!
ReplyDeleteThanks for the link, RPJ. It's a keeper.
It's interesting that this image was first broadcast in June 1965, before the abduction portion of the Hill case broke in October 1965 (according to Wiki, it wasn't broadcast in American until September 1966, a few weeks before Interrupted Journey was released).
Not that the Hills' "men" looked like greys -- Betty denied it to the end -- but that is what proponents repeat endlessly, regardless of the facts.
Something to ponder.
Oh, other guy:
ReplyDeleteHow do you know what a conventional grey looks like? I've heard that they have large, rounded heads with olive shaped eyes. I think maybe you are at least a bit myopic if you can't see that in the image from the movie presented here.
And what do you mean "we", kemosabe?
Red Pill: Here's one you might try to find: there's an episode of Lost In Space that has a cloudbuster-like device used to make rain on the planet they've crashed on. Rainmaking was another use of the cloudbuster. And I think in the same episode, Guy Madison says something to June Lockhart about "character structure", which is a term right out of Reich's writings.
ReplyDeleteKenn, I watched that movie just a few weeks ago. The aliens are hatchet-faced, have eyebrow ridges, aqualine noses and large mouths. Just because something is bald and earless doesn't make it a conventional grey.
ReplyDeleteAnd you still haven't answered the question, rather, you've evaded it: how do you know what a Roswell grey looks like?
I think I made the point, not evaded it: how do you? How does anyone? A "conventional" Roswell grey has the well-known, broadstroke characteristics given in the popular media, no matter how many secondary descriptions you want to tadd. No two descriptions of the creatures match perfectly and you're making a picayune, hair-splitting complaint. The "orgone" guns are really "sonar" guns in the movie, as I mentioned in the article. But the visual coincidence is stunning. You can't see the forest for the trees.
ReplyDelete"But there's a scientist named Paul Kammerer who collected data suggesting that synchronicities comprise a kind of physics, holding the world together. Even Einstein said that the idea was "not absurd.""
ReplyDeleteIndeed, Kammerer is building upon the ideas first expressed by Vallee in 'Messengers of Deception'. I think almost everyone skips the part where Vallee speculates whether we live in an 'associative' universe, instead of a causative one; it's likely that in the 1970s no one understood those terms, but now that we live in an Internet age and are familiar with concepts like hypertext links, it does resonate a lot with me :)
PS: Kenn, what's your take on 'Left at East Gate' and the mention Warren and Robbins made of a massive cloudbuster-like device located at the Bentwaters base?
"Here's one you might try to find: there's an episode of Lost In Space that has a cloudbuster-like device used to make rain on the planet they've crashed on."
ReplyDeleteAfter doing a bit of teh googling, I found a reference from Season's 2 episode 'Mutiny in Space':
"Mutiny In Space - Dr. Smith tries an experiment in rain making. In doing so, he destroys the weather station. He is ostracized as a result. As he wanders off in a huff, he finds a damaged spaceship captained by an admiral who acts like a vestige of the Nelsonian navy and dresses like a refugee from Wellington's army, complete with tricorne. Will and Smith get pressed into the service of the admiral who was the victim of a mutiny which saw him cast away in the first place. His treatment of his pressed hands threatens to incite another mutiny. Square rigged space ships? This is pretty screwy even for Lost in Space."
On Youtube I only found a kind of potpourri video of the entire season, and I think the cloudbuster-like device appears at 1:42.
I also found a hulu video of that episode, but unfortunately I can't watch since I'm in Mexico :-/
I don't know if it's that Lost in Space ep or not. Btw, the term used was "character armor" not character "structure", but both are Reichian terms. What season and episode number does hulu have for it? Why can't you watch hulu in Mexico?
ReplyDeleteKammerer worked in the 1910s and 20s. He actually came up with the idea of synchronicity, although he called it "seriality". His story can be found in Arthur Koestler's Case of the Midwife Toad. But your point is well made. Internet searches are forced associations or coincidences. They used to be called Boolean searches.
Peter Robbins is a friend of mine and an honest guy. There's other photographic proof that at least the US Air Force developed something it called a cloudbuster. Reich, of course, reported everything he did to the USAF.
kt
"Just because something is bald and earless doesn't make it a conventional grey."
ReplyDeleteThat's true, but I agree with Kenn's assertion that the alien in Earth Vs. the Flying Saucers "has the well-known, broadstroke characteristics given in the popular media," to what we would term a "Grey", despite the secondary characteristics that you point out.
Indeed, when I first watched the film a few years ago on DVD I was struck immediately by the appearance of the alien. I paused the movie and wrote in my notebook: "Grey!!!"
"Kammerer worked in the 1910s and 20s. He actually came up with the idea of synchronicity, although he called it "seriality". His story can be found in Arthur Koestler's Case of the Midwife Toad. But your point is well made. Internet searches are forced associations or coincidences. They used to be called Boolean searches."
ReplyDeleteUm... then we're probably speaking of different Kammerer's, because the Kammerer I was referring too is alive and has a blog :P
I can't watch Hulu because of regional constrictions, which is imbecilic to the extreme because there shouldn't be any borders on the net :-/
Re. the Roswell aliens: my take is that the appearance of the bodies that were allegedly recovered has varied and morphed during the years, depending on different witnesses --and in the Roswell saga, even someone who heard his grandfather talk about it is considered a witness-- the first reports would show the EBEs --let's remember that the term 'Grey' started with the infamous MJ-12 papers, so that should give us reason to pause-- as fairly humanoid except for the expanded cranium and the shorter height. Wilbert Smith confessed before he died that he saw the bodies and were short but humanoid.
I think the first description of recovered aliens as typical Greys was made in the 1950s, based on the sketch of a doctor who claimed to have performed an autopsy on one of the aliens (big head, emaciated body, three claw-like fingers with a webbed membrane between them, I'm looking at the image on page 68 of The UFO phenomenon volume from the Time Life collection).
Then as the years progressed and the 'Grey' stereotype started to 'wipe out' all the other classes of dwarfish aliens that used to be reported, people would associate Roswell with grey aliens; yet we STILL find differing descriptions, like the testimony of Dr. Eric Walker, who described the aliens as alive and completely human(!).
So, IMHO the 'Grey' stereotype has not exactly been shown to be very consistent throughout the decades.
Perhaps the stereotype reflects our unconscious fear about the evolution of our own species. Everytime scientists and fictionalists start to imagine what would human beings look like in a million years from now, they always show an elongation of the cranium coupled with a withering of the rest of the body --e.g. H.G. Wells 'man of the year million'.
There's a Kammerer today that deals with synchronicities? That's a synchronicity itself!
ReplyDeleteAn underlying question here is, of course, did the scriptwriter have any awareness of what a grey looked like? Or is this just a coincidence? We could ask Ray Harryhausen--he's 90 now and has a web site that accepts inquiries. But he was just special effects.
One of the screenwriters was Bernard Norman, writing under the name Raymond Marcus. He had to use a pseudonym because he was blacklisted as a Communist. He was scheduled to testify before HUAC but was never called, leaving a cloud of suspicion that wrecked his career. So he is someone who would be sensitive about an authoritarian backlash against saying too much about what could have been a state secret. But he's also someone who defied authority by continuing to work under a pseudonym. he died four years ago.
There is no doubt that a group called MJ12 existed and that at least the Cutler-twining memo is authentic. I demonstrate this in that essay in Secret and Suppressed II. It all has to do with date matching the CT with another memo found many years later in an archives far away, and it once again involves Reich and the cloudbusters.
Kenn,if you want to know more about the *present* Kammerer and his theories involving Transhumanism and Bohm's Implicate Order, then I would suggest you listen to the Gralien Report podcast in which he was interviewed.
ReplyDeleteI view the MJ-12 as a disinformation campaign. Disinformation by its very definition implies that a few kernels of truth are scattered around a big pile of manure. MJ-12 might have existed, but we cannot ascertain it had anything to do with UFOs.
Nevertheless, the fact that the papers were created and delivered to the UFO community proves official involvement --for reasons we can only speculate at the moment.
Kenn:--
ReplyDeleteFWIW the still from the film looks exactly like the figure in the Roswell autopsy film, or whatever it's called, whether it's fake or real I really don't know.
Wasn't it the "debunkers'" claim that Stanton Friedman resurrected the Roswell incident and that it had been completely forgotten decades before that? That type of assertion, "completely forgotten," isn't susceptible to testing anyway.
One doesn't have to choose a mind/synchronicity model over a cause/effect one for an 80s sitcom on Qadafi's death, though. If you go back to 1979 or so Saturday Night Live did a skit on his alleged "Libyan death squads" allegedly to be sent to the US to whack Libyan students in the US who refused to return home. Qadafi was demonized and villified for decades before the press had even heard of Osama bin Laden.
If I may, I'd like to engage in some "associative" thoughts here myself. In L. Ron Hubbard's son's writings about his father he mentions L Ron secretly loading a gun or canon into the trunk of his car to sell to agents of some kind. The idea is L Ron made off with the equipment from his time of service in the US military. This would have been the 50s or early 60s I guess. Consider that L Ron lived between Port Orchard and Maury Island in June, 1947, and he or his father were personal friends with the commander of the Bangor naval base there. Around this time, in the immediate post-WWII years, L Ron met up with and became assistant to Jack Parsons, a story which has been explored and exaggerated all over the place. But he later did claim he had been sent there by ONI to break up Parson's black magic coven or some such. And Crowley in his final years was almost brought to Pasadena to convalesce. If Reich lacked any official support, it's a little strange he was so regular in his reports to the US government on his on-going war with the UFOs in the SW. FWIW.
@Anon: here's some more 'associative smörgåsbord' for your enjoyment:
ReplyDeleteYou mention Jack Parsons and his buddy Ron L Hubbard, who were members of the infamous Ordo Templi Orientis, and are said to have indulged in freakish sexual rituals in order to perform their plan of producing a 'Moon child'.
In the book 'Sodomy and the Pirate Tradition' one can find areference to 2 crew members of the H.M.S. Africaine, one John Parsons and one Jack Hubbard, who were "whipped for uncleanness, a general term then current for deviant sexual behavior."
If you listen closely, you can almost hear The Trickster laughing ;)
Hollywood does this all the time, they are an integral part of the establishment and the power and money order of things. The more one keeps this in mind as they watch movies they will have a much greater view of a much grander reality from which we have been completely cut off and kept in an amazing state of ignorance and naivety.
ReplyDelete"...Keyhoe's request that his name be removed from the credits..."
ReplyDeleteRecently viewed Earth Vs. the Flying Saucers; Keyhoe's name does indeed remain in the opening credits of the film.
see also: http://youtu.be/PxkdCciZMhk
What! no mention of " My favorite martsion " mid 1960's sit-com. I really liked his " Sport model " craft. Thank you for the work you do and this great website.
ReplyDeleteThe 'lost in space' program had a ray type of drilling device to drill into the ground. I have no idea which episode it was in, maybe in a few of them.
ReplyDeleteSpecial footnote for those who have followed this thus far:
ReplyDeleteThe 14th episode of Prince Planet has a scientist investigating a spacecraft crash in a desert–and his name is “Dr. Orgonite”!
The Cloud buster didn't shoot orgone into the sky as stated before. It isn't a canon at all. It fuctions as something like a lighning rod does.It draws the atmosheric orgone energy down from the area it is pointed toward. The device must be grounded in water or snow to work properly. If the UFO uses this form of energy for flight as Wilhelm Reich thought possible then the cloudbuster might have some effect on them if pointed at one in flight. This seemed to be the case as the UFO's seemed to expirience difficulties remaining in the air and would move off out of the area. Maybe the Government used one of these to bring a UFO down at Roswell. Reich always kept the Goverment up on his research and published all his work.
ReplyDeleteI've always found it interesting that in "Earth vs. The Flying Saucers," the name of Dr. Russell Marvin's project was "Project Skyhook."
ReplyDeleteThere was a real Project Skyhook in the late 1940s and into the 1950s. The purpose was to conduct atmospheric research through the use of high-altitude balloons. The first Project Skyhook balloon was released on September 25, 1947. Just two days after the "Twining Memo" titled, "AMC [Air Materiel Command] Opinion Concerning 'Flying Discs'" in which Air Force General Nathan F. Twining stated, "The phenomenon is real and not visionary or fictitious."
These and other high-altitude balloons were the cause of many UFO reports. A Project Skyhook balloon is often blamed as what Captain Thomas F. Mantell climbed and "chased" over Kentucky on January 7, 1948 until his F-51 Mustang fighter suddenly nosed over and plummeted to the ground, killing this very fine World War II veteran, presumably due to hypoxia ("oxygen starvation").
Project Skyhook benefited from technology gained from its predecessor, Project Mogul. Top secret Project Mogul had a different mission. Project Mogul sent microphones and transmitters up in high-altitude balloons between 1947 and 1949 in an attempt to detect atomic testing in the Soviet Union.
The Air Force speculates that a Project Mogul balloon (Flight #4) launched on June 4, 1947 came down on the Foster Ranch near Corona, New Mexico, and was discovered by rancher Mac Brazel, which precipitated the whole "Roswell UFO" controversy.
reich was killed because he discovered the ufos stationed like stars above cities in the usa.(plus disabling one)he reported this to the military and without knowing it ,put his head into the proverbial meat grinder,because the ufo are,and have always been military,tesla electric flying saucers,cylinders,triangles.machines ONLY built by humans and ONLY engineered by humans.read pentagon aliens pdf on google by william r lyne
ReplyDeleteand lyne on you tube.he was there when they did the roswell hoax using shaved rhesus monkeys in flight suit with dry green tempura paint purchasede from his dads shop!!he even knew the nurse who was present for the "autopsy".reic
h was killed because of his seeing a saucer up close.