Filmed in Portland, Oregon, What the Bleep Do We Know!? presents a viewpoint of the physical universe and human life within it, with connections to neuroscience and quantum physics. Some ideas discussed in the film are:
The movie is based upon the events surrounding what became known as the 'Watseka Wonder'. Using period photographs, dramatic recreations, and interviews with subject experts, it addresses what is allegedly the first well-documented and recorded spirit possession story in America of 1877, and the subsequent recorded "possessions" suffered by Lurancy.
At the brink of year 2000, a time when Nostradamus and other prophets predicted doomsday, a cosmic meltdown, Almanach 1999-2000 takes a humorous look at the world of divination. A fiscinating trip to the very heart of the strange, this film opens up the spheres of the paranormal, giving us an opportunity to discover an entire gallery of colourful personalities (psychic, astrologist, prophet, sceptic, philosopher, grower, etc.) who manage to cast doubt on our entire relationship with the future.
Animal tracker Ivan Marx opens by mentioning the film is the culmination of 10 years of research. He says that the Eskimos called the creature "bushman," the Colville Indians "Sasquatch," and the Hoopas "Om-mah," but is most commonly known as Bigfoot.
L'homme qui a vu demain est un film de style documentaire de 1981 sur les prédictions de l'astrologue et médecin français Michel de Notredame. L'Homme qui vit demain est raconté par Orson Welles.
Les Cloches des profondeurs est un documentaire d'investigation du réalisateur allemand Werner Herzog sur le mysticisme en Russie. Il est composé de plusieurs sous-parties, annoncées par des chapitres. Schématiquement, la première moitié du documentaire est consacrée aux guérisseurs religieux russes, tandis que la seconde partie s'intéresse de plus près à la légende de la cité perdue de Kitej.
Ce documentaire sur le phénomène OVNI vise à montrer que certains ovnis peuvent être extraterrestres et que le secret et le ridicule sont régulièrement utilisés pour garder la vérité sur les ovnis cachée.
Un grand nombre de personnes se battent à coups de boules de neige. Au milieu de cette mêlée, survient un cycliste sur lequel tout le monde lance des boules et finit par tomber de son vélo. Il se relève, s’esquive vivement avec sa bicyclette et la bataille reprend de plus belle.
P.A. Straubinger first encounters inedia in a television documentary about Nicholas of Flüe, a 15th-century ascetic who was reported to have lived 19 years without eating. Later, Straubinger starts research on the internet and subsequently has the desire to meet people practising inedia. He travels through different countries and interviews people who claim to nourish themselves with light, vitality, Prana or Qi, among them Jasmuheen, Michael Werner and "Mataji" Prahlad Jani. Straubinger also consults different people from classical and alternative medicine and science and looks for explanatory models for inedia. Straubinger conveys that for him, the materialistic world view of modern science falls short.