The Age of Disclosure: The Documentary That’s Forcing the UFO Conversation Into the Mainstream
- Brian Done

- Nov 25
- 4 min read
For decades, the UFO topic sat in the strange borderland between fringe theory and government secrecy. But The Age of Disclosure, a newly released documentary, has now kicked down the door, and suddenly the conversation is louder, more public, and more serious than ever before.
What was once whispered in dimly lit UFO conferences is now being debated in newsrooms, political halls, and homes around the world. This film isn’t just another UFO documentary, it’s a pressure valve. After years of mounting leaks, whistleblowers, classified programs, and congressional hearings, that valve has blown wide open.
Here’s a deeper look at what makes this documentary so explosive, and why it’s being called the most important UFO film of the century.

Testimony from High-Level Figures-Not Anonymous Voices
Past UFO documentaries relied heavily on grainy eyewitness footage and the accounts of everyday citizens. However, The Age of Disclosure breaks this mold by featuring public, on-record statements from sitting United States senators, intelligence insiders, veteran military personnel, and former White House level advisors.
Key participants in the documentary include:
Senator Marco Rubio, discussing repeated incursions of unknown UFO craft over restricted nuclear sites, a claim historically whispered but rarely acknowledged on camera.
Eric Davis, a defense consultant and longtime aerospace insider, who reiterates that senior officials, including President George H.W. Bush, were aware of direct alien contact events as early as the mid 1960s.
Former intelligence and Pentagon personnel, some of whom openly suggest the existence of reverse engineering UFO programs, legacy crash retrieval efforts, and “non-human biologics.” The documentary doesn’t dance around these claims. It presents them directly, on the record, and without sensationalism.
The Holloman AFB 1964 Encounter—Revisited With New Weight
One of the most shocking revelations revisited in the film is the 1964 Holloman Air Force Base encounter, long whispered about in UFO circles. According to the testimony highlighted in the documentary, a UFO craft descended at the base and a meeting occurred between United States officials and non-human entities, or aliens.
What’s new is the weight of corroboration: a senior insider claiming that the highest levels of government were aware, including George H.W. Bush. This isn’t presented as folklore, it’s framed as a pivotal event that shaped decades of subsequent UFO secrecy.
Nuclear Facilities: A Global Pattern of UFO Interest
Marco Rubio’s statement about unidentified craft repeatedly appearing over nuclear sites is arguably one of the most important disclosures in the film.
Why?
Because this pattern has been documented worldwide at the following locations:
United States missile silos
Soviet era installations
British and French nuclear facilities
Recent incidents near United States Navy task forces carrying nuclear capabilities
The documentary also suggests a decades long, and global pattern to these UFO events. These craft don’t just appear randomly. They appear strategically, in places where the stakes are the highest.
This raises uncomfortable questions like the following:
Are they monitoring us?
Are they warning us?
Or are they simply observing a species on the brink of mastering planet breaking technology?
The Cover-up Narrative: A Refined, More Plausible Picture
Instead of painting the government as a single monolithic entity hiding alien craft in an underground bunker, the documentary outlines a more nuanced view of secrecy:
Compartmentalization: Thousands of small classified pockets, each holding fragments of the whole.
Decades of Stove-piped programs: Aerospace contractors building unknown hardware without knowing its origin.
A culture of denial baked into national security: Not malicious, simply the default reflex of a system designed to protect strategic advantage. This updated model makes the “cover-up” seem far less like an X-Files conspiracy and far more like the natural outcome of a sprawling, security-driven bureaucracy.
Why Now? The Momentum Behind Disclosure
The Age of Disclosure arrives at a perfect, and volatile moment in history:
UFO sightings are surging worldwide.
Government transparency is being demanded from both sides of the political spectrum.
Social media has made secrecy nearly impossible.
The stigma around UAP reporting is disappearing.
These conditions form a storm system, and the film acts like lightning, illuminating everything for a brief but blinding moment.
The Film’s Big Message: We Are Past the Point of Denial
The documentary doesn’t claim to have the “final truth” about UFOs and aliens. It doesn’t promise aliens are on the White House lawn or that disclosure will happen tomorrow. Instead, it pushes a far more grounded and more disruptive idea:
The world’s governments know far more about non-human intelligence, or aliens, than they have ever admitted, and the window for secrecy is closing.
If the film is right, the “Age of Disclosure” isn’t coming.
It’s already here.
Final Thoughts: A Paradigm Shift in Real Time
Whether you’re a UFO skeptic, a believer, or somewhere in between, The Age of Disclosure is impossible to ignore. It’s not sensationalism, it’s pressure. Pressure built from decades of UFO testimony, leaked documents, radar data, nuclear incidents, and political whispers that have now become public statements.
The documentary doesn’t just tell a story.
It signals a transition.
A moment when the question is no longer “Are UFOs real?”
But rather: “What does humanity do when the alien truth can no longer be contained?”
If the film’s revelations continue gaining traction, we may look back on The Age of Disclosure as the moment the world finally admitted what many have suspected for years:
We are not alone and we never have been. Now what do we do?





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