Review: Documentary ‘Calling All Earthlings’ provides a light look at 1950s curio the Integratron
For those who have ever wondered about that domed white, flying saucer-shaped structure perched on a particularly sparse patch of Landers, Calif., the provocative, if slight, documentary, “Calling All Earthlings,†heeds the call.
Turns out, it’s called the Integratron, an electromagnetic, life-extending cellular rejuvenation machine constructed in the late 1950s by George Van Tassel, a former Howard Hughes employee, from blueprints that he maintained were handed to him by a visiting humanoid named Solganda.
Cue the theremin.
Although Van Tassel is no longer living (he died suddenly in a Pasadena hotel room in 1978, just prior to his invention’s long-awaited activation), director Jonathan Berman finds no shortage of cooperative family members, historians, conspiracy theorists, healers and artists (singer Eric Burdon among them) in an area long associated with off-the-grid living.
Given all the intriguing stuff he had at his disposal — Van Tassel’s annual Interplanetary Spacecraft Conventions attracted the attention of the FBI, who suspected they were a front for Communist Party activities — it’s a shame Berman isn’t able to bring the enigmatic man of the hour (plus 17 minutes) into greater focus.
Perhaps, like the restored Integratron itself, which has since become a popular tourist attraction that treats visitors to soothing, acoustically balanced “sound baths†for about $40 per person, there was never truly any there, there.
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‘Calling All Earthlings’
Not rated
Running time: 1 hour, 17 minutes
Playing: Starts June 29, Ahrya Fine Arts, Beverly Hills; July 1, 11 a.m., 7:30 p.m., Laemmle Playhouse 7, Pasadena; Mon., 7:30 p.m., Laemmle NoHo 7 North Hollywood; Tue., 7:30 p.m., Laemmle Monica Film Center, Santa Monica
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