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This Tiny Town in Alaska Has a Dark and Evil History That is Impossible to Forget. The mysterious disappearances of residents in Nome, Alaska between 1960 and 2004 sparked nationwide intrigue and inspired a major motion picture about alien abductions.
Marketed as a fact-based thriller, The Fourth Kind uses a documentary-reenactment approach to explore a series of unsolved disappearances in the Alaska town. One possible explanation? Alien...
There are lots of unusual things about the city of Nome, Alaska, including a series of strange disappearances. Many people have gone missing over the years, and there are a few theories as to why. Some believe alien abductions are to blame, while others point to even more sinister reasons.
Between 1960 and 2004, at least 24 people—mostly men from neighboring native villages—vanished without any traces of their whereabouts. Several speculations have been made about what happened to them—some suspected a serial killer was on the loose, while others theorized that the region’s harsh environment was to blame.
Set in Nome, Alaska, the story is based on the mysterious disappearances of 24 people in Nome from the 1960s through to 2004. According to “Box Office Mojo”, The Fourth Kind was a box office hit, making $47.46 million worldwide, from an estimated $10 million budget.
There was no low key alien invasion of Nome, Alaska. Dr. Abigail Tyler does not exist. HOWEVER. There is no shortage of real life creepy info that mirrors the fictional events portrayed in The Fourth Kind.
The film is a pseudodocumentary —purporting to be a dramatic re-enactment of true events that occurred in Nome, Alaska - in which a psychologist uses hypnosis to uncover memories of alien abduction from her patients, and finds evidence suggesting that she may have been abducted as well.