HAARP -- Holes in Heaven: Documentary Film Analysis
HAARP -- Holes in Heaven: Documentary Film Analysis
[edit | edit source]The Film
[edit | edit source]| Feature | Detail |
|---|---|
| Title | "Holes in Heaven? HAARP and Advances in Tesla Technology" |
| Year | 1998 |
| Narrator | Martin Sheen |
| Producers | Wendy Robbins; Paula Randol-Smith |
| Key participants | Dr. Bernard Eastlund; Dr. Nick Begich; Jeane Manning; and HAARP scientists representing the official position |
| Distribution | Initially limited; subsequently widely distributed through alternative media channels and online |
| Subject | HAARP's history, technology, and potential capabilities; the Tesla connection; the conspiracy claims |
Content and Structure
[edit | edit source]"Holes in Heaven" presents both the official scientific position and the conspiracy critics' arguments, including extended interviews with Eastlund (the patent inventor), Begich, and Manning alongside explanations from HAARP's own scientists. The documentary's title refers to one worst-case scenario described by critics: that HAARP heating could create a permanent ionospheric disturbance -- a "hole in heaven" that would not heal -- with catastrophic consequences for Earth's electromagnetic environment.
The film is notable for including one particularly alarming exchange that appears in HAARP documentation: a physicist at a conference responding to the suggestion that the ionospheric research could cause ecological catastrophe by saying, "Well, we'll just have to try it and find out."
Whether this exchange occurred as described, and whether its context is accurately represented, has been disputed by HAARP's official scientists.
The Martin Sheen Narration
[edit | edit source]The involvement of Martin Sheen -- a prominent mainstream Hollywood actor known for political activism -- as narrator gave the film a credibility profile that other HAARP documentaries lacked. Sheen was not a conspiracy advocate; his participation suggested that the questions the film raised were serious enough to attract a serious mainstream figure.
What the Film Got Right
[edit | edit source]The documentary accurately describes HAARP's physical specifications, the Eastlund patent's claimed capabilities, the Tesla prior art connection, and the European Parliament's concerns. It presents HAARP scientists speaking in their own words. It does not fabricate quotes or invent facts.
What the Film Overstated
[edit | edit source]The film presents the gap between what the Eastlund patent claims and what HAARP's scientists say they are doing as more meaningful than it may be. The possibility that the built facility's actual operational parameters fall well short of the patent's claimed capabilities -- making the patent aspirational rather than descriptive of the built system -- is not given adequate weight.
The Film's Legacy
[edit | edit source]"Holes in Heaven" became the primary audiovisual reference for HAARP conspiracy concerns through the early 2000s, before online video platforms made a wider range of content available. Its measured tone -- presenting both sides with a scientist-narrator -- distinguished it from less scrupulous treatments and gave it lasting influence.
