Film Review – The Age of Disclosure (2025)

Title – The Age of Disclosure (2025)

Director – Dan Farah (feature debut)

Cast – Luis Elizondo, Jay Stratton, Marco Rubio, Harold Puthoff

Plot – A documentary exploring the supposed multi-decade spanning cover up of UAP’s with testimonials from multiple inside sources coming forward to share their stories of their own personal experiences with the world beyond our own.  

“See the film they don’t want you to see”

Review by Eddie on 29/05/2026

The age-old question of are we alone in the universe is one that has been with mankind since the dawn of our existence and all these years on is still no closer to being answered despite what the believers or the naysayers would have us think.

Attempting to shine a light on this topic is the documentary The Age of Disclosure, the debut feature length film from director Dan Farrah, who has here enlisted the support of dozens of notable United States citizens, including current politicians and retired intelligence/armed forces employees to discuss the potential secrets being hidden from the world in a day and age where we seek answers more intently than ever before.

For those that have long followed this space, mainly revolving around reports and government documentation that centres around UAP’s (the new age word for UFO’s), it’s unlikely that Disclosure will be providing any new information and may feel like a mere retreading of familiar ground but viewers like myself who are less invested in this space on a regular basis there’s some interesting possibilities raised here that’s not quite enough to justify this documentaries rough feeling approach and a lot of chatter about supposed facts that can’t be backed up with substantive evidence.

There’s no real rhyme and reason to Farrah’s approach to this hotly debated topic, the film is mostly either just supposed experts talking at us about things they’ve done or seen or even heard from second-hand with a few scatterings of some highly grainy footage, Microsoft Paint like CGI segments or news footage splattered throughout, while the sight of watching Luis Elizondo tragic walk in slow motion around Washington DC certainly wears thin after the umpteenth time.

Clocking in close to two hours in length, Farrah’s inability to really follow any form of solid structure dampens the films chances of keeping you engaged throughout as you eagerly await someone or something to come forward to provide a more definitive answer to the many questions raised here, with Disclosure leaving us once more wondering who’s side to believe, with it likely many will still lean into the side of scepticism based purely off the fact no one is able to unleash an ace up their sleeve to prove their passionate point.

There’re some interesting elements to Disclosure and there’s merit in exploring these things in a public and easily accessible way but while we await someone to deliver a knock-out blow to either side or an individual figure to really get behind in one way or the other, Disclosure can only provide us with some much viewing value before it feels a little stagnant and even amateurish in nature.

Final Say –

For the uninitiated there’s some value to be mined from this documentary but overall, The Age of Disclosure is a little too light on hard facts and too DIY in nature to become a must-see.

2 1/2 congress hearings out of 5

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