me neither , I thought it was kinda cute, I imagine greys more sinister and more rudimentary looking, like the greys in the movie Fire in the Skyrylek said:Also didn't get the creeped out feeling while watching it.
me neither , I thought it was kinda cute, I imagine greys more sinister and more rudimentary looking, like the greys in the movie Fire in the Skyrylek said:Also didn't get the creeped out feeling while watching it.
The video was accompanied with the following video claiming to have connections to the US Airforce:
Herr Eisenheim said:me neither , I thought it was kinda cute, I imagine greys more sinister and more rudimentary looking, like the greys in the movie Fire in the Skyrylek said:Also didn't get the creeped out feeling while watching it.
Approaching Infinity said:Herr Eisenheim said:it looks nothing like an alien from the famous alien autopsy video, and if I am not mistaken Cs said that one was real. I tend to agree with others- looks like CGI to me
If I'm not mistaken, they said that one was a gray/human hybrid.
Touko Pouko says:
May 5, 2011 at 9:48 pm
These are fake. Brief summary:
Timer display font is Consolas. It was introduced by Microsoft in around 2005. I’ve confirmed this with overlay comparison.
The uploaded video is 25 frames per second, the original car scene about 13.5fps, so some frames have been duplicated in conversion. However, if you compare these duplicate consecutive frames, the camera shakes between them, even though the car doesn’t move. This proves the shake effect was not in the original, but added with studio post-processing (same with aging/scratch/focus effects).
The timer digits have their own degradation/aging effect. This is apparent from scraches that only appear inside the digits, but don’t extend across the whole frame. No natural process explains why scratches on the film would be neatly clipped inside the digits and remain there during several frames.
.This fashion disaster first started appearing in the 1980s as a misguided attempt to downplay the sudden influx of pencil-neck aliens into the crews of ufos after Spielberg’s effects designer Carlo Rimbaldi introduced the thin neck alteration into his creation for Close Encounters of the Third Kind (1977). It soon started appearing in the reports collected by Budd Hopkins. It first was heard in the testimony of Steven Kilburn in Missing Time (1982), but soon reached visual expression in Kathie Davis’s alien drawn for Intruders (1987). Others followed like this second example from Jean Mundy’s abductee group. The worst victim of this trend however clearly has be the poor Gray drawn a Chicago businessman called Jim. The poor fellow looks terribly uncomfortable as though forced to wear it because it was gift from its clone-master
rudicron said:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7hFJ2GAAoCM&feature=related
What do you guys make of this vid? Seems real to me! (one of the few ones out there)
venusian said:This video is discussed here here. If you searched for 'roswell video' first, you might have found it. :)