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Review of Star Dreams from New Dawn Magazine
Jennifer Hoskins

STAR DREAMS:

A Feature Documentary Exploring the Mystery of Crop Circles

Produced, written and directed by Robert L. Nichol

Released by Sacred Mysteries

DVD, 84 minutes

Appeared in New Dawn No. 105 (November-December 2007)

www.newdawnmagazine.com


You’d have to have been asleep for much longer than

Rip Van Winkle’s 20 year nap not to have heard of them.


The crop circle phenomenon has been seen widely since the late 20th century yet

this is hardly the earliest history of them. There are records of them for hundreds

of years all over the world.

The most recent blooming of crop circles numbers over 10,000 until the time of

production of this DVD. There are not only crop circles, but ice and sand circles,

fields of flowers that have been seen as far afield as the UK, Europe, Canada,

Australia and South East Asia. They appear to be growing in complexity and meaning.


Is someone trying to send us a message? Are the messages developing into real

communications? Who makes the crop circles? How are they made? Are all the crop

circles a hoax?


This documentary goes far towards answering many of the most common questions

while treating the viewer to a breathtaking visual feast of what can only be

described as sacred geometry in its most mysterious form.


Sacred Mysteries have once again come up with a thrilling and inspiring production.

The visuals are stunning. The crop circles are seen both from the air and from

the human level on the ground.

The makers state at the end of the film that they have tried to show only genuine

crop circles. Yes, there are hoaxes about, but having seen pictures of both,

I can state with certainty that it is easy for this reviewer to tell the difference.


The material is spiced with eyewitness accounts of the phenomenon. Most come

from very ordinary people who have been witness to an extraordinary happening.

Admittedly, some accounts seem a bit weird. Sceptics and believers are both heard,

but the latter are in the majority.


Toward the end of the film, even my ordinarily open mind was a bit stretched

by the concepts of and references to ‘lightships’ and ‘Galactic

Federation.’ Ok, aliens I can accept; at least I desperately want them

to exist. Earth energies in the form of Devas, angels, fairies and other spirit

beings, I accept.


I am not yet ready for intergalactic crop circle template designers and makers,

despite some energetic arguments put forward by the interviewees. As ever, I

may be proven wrong.


This film is a stunner whether you believe in the non-local nature of the phenomenon

or not. The images are fractals formed from natural, organic materials and often

have an eerie familiarity. When seen from the air some have depth and texture

that simply do not appear possible to have been created by humans (read that

to be hoaxers) on the ground. Some are over an acre in area.


My own question is this: How many people would be needed in a team to create

in a single, overnight session a crop circle with over 1,000 elements? What about

the noise and the evidence of a large number of humans tramping through crops

without leaving a trace and bending – but not breaking – the stalks

of the crop? What kind of intricate choreography and practice is required to

get it so flawlessly perfect on the first effort? Large questions indeed.


There is also the manifest evidence of energy differences inside and outside

the crop circles, which has been measured. Fascinating stuff. Other manifestations

include balls of light and orbs of light, which are captured on film. The clear

suggestion is that these occurred during the actual creation of the phenomenon.


The real stars of this documentary are the incredibly delicate and absorbingly

beautiful crop circles themselves. Some are breathtaking in their complex beauty.

Others are stunning in their precise geometric simplicity. All are worth looking

at again and again.


Watch this once to learn. Watch it again to take in what you need from this reporting.

This is a recommended film.


– Jennifer

Hoskins

JENNIFER HOSKINS is currently an online bookshop proprietor.

Previously she spent decades in the field of psychiatry.

Jennifer’s areas of interest covers

psychology, mythology, symbology, comparative religion, folklore, and spirituality

of all kinds. You can contact Jennifer by email on faith@iexpress.net.au



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