Overlords of the UFOs
Written by W. Gordon Allen
Directed by G. Brook Stanford

Overlords of the UFOs Contains priceless footage of huge invisible protozoa!

I first saw Overlords of the UFO during a visit to the Mojave Desert to see George Van Tassel's Integratron, which infuses its bioelectric energies into living cells for the purpose of rejuvenation. After a fascinating visit to this amazing device, built by Van Tassel according to the channelled instructions he received from extraterrestrial intelligences, my wife Fayaway and I went to see the movie Overlords of the UFO at a drive-in nearby, expecting new insight into the mysteries of unidentified flying objects. We were quickly disappointed, however. The stated intention of the movie is to answer the question "Who are the Overlords of the UFO?"--a phrase the narrator repeats ad nauseam, in a vain effort to get us to ask: Is our planet in danger of invasion? Are flying saucers abducting people and military aircraft? Is the government hiding secrets about the UFOs? The narrator droned on as the screen featured stock footage of the U.S. Army and Air Force, and vague light and color shows, full of sound and tranquility, but signifying nothing. My wife and I got more enjoyment out of the people in the cars around us. As footage of obviously fake UFOs slid across the screen, they exclaimed "Look at that pie plate go!" and "Real gas music from Jupiter!" Fayaway and I chuckled to ourselves, but our amusement changed to awe with the next reel.

The narrator informed us that the footage we were about to see had been shot by Trevor James Constable, and that it showed living creatures which lived invisibly in the skies around us. If I may be immodest for a moment, I will say that I am an amateur protozoologist of some knowledge and experience, and that the images on the screen resembled nothing so much as the paramecia which I had been observing beneath the microscope for many, many years. The cilia, the water expelling vesicle, the nucleus, were all evident, as the organism moved back and forth beside the branches of a plant which would look suspiciously like a stem of moss or algae, if it had not been hundreds of feet high relative to the giant protozoan beside it. The sky behind this scene, so perfectly blue as to appear as if it were artificial, was nearly identical to the Rheinberg illumination used by some microscopists to produce clearer images.

This footage is invaluable to protozoologists, and yet has been relegated to being shown alongside material for which "unauthentic" is too kind a word. This film led me to track down a copy of Constable's Cosmic Pulse of Life, which, however flawed it might be in other ways, is the primary source for investigators of the huge invisible protozoans which swim the ocean of air above us. Overlords of the UFO is priceless because it makes footage of these creatures available to us, if all too briefly. This video would have five star rating if the director had removed all the other material, and merely presented, wordlessly, footage of those huge invisible amebae, paramecia, and other protozoa which float transparently, soundlessly, in the air over our heads. In my research over the past 20 years I have never come across any other source for this film, which should be on file at the Society of Protozoologists. We need a paradigm shift in the field of protozoology, and this footage must be recognized as a record of new members of that class of creature whose most striking characteristic is invisibility, whether due to their interdimensional ability or their minuscule size.



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© 2007 Hermester Barrington





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