"Bill Brown's Roswell [...] takes a fanciful look at the supposed crash of a flying saucer near Roswell, New Mexico in 1947. [...] Brown...seems to take the event seriously. He wonders what the craft was doing in Roswell of all places, speculating that it was piloted by a 'star boy...joyriding through the cosmos' who 'got lost and lost control.' But Brown also sees his subject playfully, as if through a child's eyes, [...] The fish-eye lens used for some landscape shots curves the horizon line, making the sky seem enclosed-- navigable, traversable. In the film's strongest image, Brown stands facing the camera with a sheaf of papers in hand, as an animated drawing of a spaceship scoots across the paper, suggesting a connection between UFO fantasies and the magical possibilities of cinema." -Fred Camper, Chicago Reader
Directed by Bill Brown
IMDB
N/A
Letterboxd
3.6 / 5
Popular Reviews
3 reviews
Charlie
5.0★ · 10/14/25
Watching this while staying in the town was interesting
Watching this while staying in the town was interesting
froggy
6.0★ · 05/05/25
the only thing i could see when kyle was climbing up that ladder in the beginning was 50 pounds of ASS (the movie itself is a 3/5 but the alien design is cool so 3.5/5)
the only thing i could see when kyle was climbing up that ladder in the beginning was 50 pounds of ASS (the movie itself is a 3/5 but the alien design is cool so 3.5/5)