Grand Canyon: The Hidden Secrets (1984) Poster

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8/10
Grand Canyon: The Hidden Secrets
jcolyer12292 July 2007
A documentary narrated by Kieth Merrill. It is shown in the IMAX theater in Tusayan near the entrance of the Canyon. I like the opening line, "Man clings to the edge of eternity." The film focuses on human activity. The Anasazi were the first people in the Canyon. The Spaniards found it in 1540. John Wesley Powell, the one-armed Civil War veteran, navigated the Colorado River with his men in 1869. I was waiting for geology. It never came. The producers were aiming for a big screen experience and ticket sales rather than trying to impart knowledge. I wonder about the film's subtitle, The Hidden Secrets. It seems the secrets might be the fossils buried in the Canyon walls.
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10/10
Grand Canyon: The Hidden Secrets
zeebya29 August 2007
Some people have expressed disappointment that the IMAX film, Grand Canyon: The Hidden Secrets, did little to feature geology. As a geology buff myself, I can understand. But, there are geology discussions about the canyon all over the place. There is not so much discussion about the human history of Grand Canyon. And that's what this film attempts to serve up: the human history of Grand Canyon. And it does it in a manner that is visually stunning, emotionally compelling, and thoroughly memorable. And the narration, though somewhat Biblical, nevertheless fits the grandeur of the film perfectly: "There is no time here. Only the endless cycles of life chronicle the passing millenia. Man passes... in a whisper, a mere breath at the edge of eternity. Some live. Some die. Some... just disappear. Some will live forever, and speak in muted silence from the dust."

Of course, maybe I'm prejudiced: I have seen the film on screen, literally, more than 500 times. I used to operate the IMAX Theater at Los Angeles's Exposition Park.

The film does educate, as well as entertain, and it will show you the canyon in a way most of us will never get to see. It stands as well today as it did when it first came out in the mid-1980's. This film, like the canyon it celebrates, is truly timeless.

But, having said the above, I must offer a strong criticism: I have two versions of the film: the VHS version, which is the same as the original theatrical release, and the newer DVD version put out by National Geographic's IMAX Theater at Grand Canyon. I don't know if Destination Cinema (the film's producer) had any say in this or not, but apparently after Geographic got a hold of it, the film was re-edited, re-narrated, and re-scored. In some respects, it was "sanitized" and made to reflect current trends of Political Correctness in a way that is both damaging to the work of art that was the original film, and also dishonoring to the intent of both the filmmakers and the people who really lived the stories we see re-enacted. And, unfortunately, the re-scored music is a pale shadow of the original soundtrack recorded by the London Philharmonic Orchestra. There are several dialogue cuts that are simply unacceptable. For example, in the original, Powell's journal is quoted at a point of reflection and fear about their journey, as he writes: "Tomorrow we start our way down the great unknown. We have an unknown distance to run, an unknown river to explore. It is with anxiety and misgiving we enter the canyon below. What falls there be, we know not. What walls beset the canyon, we know not. What rapids or dangers, or treacherous disaster awaits us, we know not. But press on.... God willing." Well, in the re-edit, they cut out the line "God willing." Now, I know that today's PC people are afraid to mention God in anything, but C'MON! This was a VERY important sentiment for men in the era of the 1860's. How dare anyone remove or sanitize such a line just to appease some PC loudmouths out there because they don't like it? These men, when they set off into that dark gorge, as far as they were concerned, literally were placing their lives and their fate in the hands of God, and we dishonor them and their deeds when we allow revisionists to change their words and feelings. Same thing when speaking of the ancient Anasazi; there's a line they cut... "Did they not live, and love, and laugh as we?" Why cut such a thoughtful line? On a more positive note, there is a scene replacement that improves the film. The silly "Mud Monster" scene was replaced with a much more interesting scene involving a mountain man's close encounter with a mountain lion! Excellent scene.

Normally when movies are transferred to DVD, they usually add better stuff to round-out the package. They do have a nice, in-depth behind the scenes feature on the making of the film, but that's about it. Overall I must say, the original was great, but with the DVD they blew it!
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10/10
Only time in my life (so far!) I ever had my breath taken away, literally
jrarichards1 September 2018
Warning: Spoilers
I saw this Imax presentation in the cinema close to the Canyon itself on either May 31st or June 1st 1988, when it was still relatively fresh and new. Imax technology was not yet that familiar either. They billed this as seeing the Canyon as you will never see it in real life, and that was no lie, so that counters other reviewers' remarks about why have this film playing so close to the actual site...

And I must say that I did plenty of different things at by and in the Canyon on that trip - including seeing the sun rise over it as the only person around for miles, and (first!) seeing it in the pitch dark (there was just one light on way down below, and that was it) - and the fact that I had seen the film did not detract from anything I experienced at those times.

The film was tremendously exciting in my memory, though I also loved the quiet scenes of the gardens the native Americans had cultivated way down below, as well as those historical recreations as the Spanish first encountered this great gash in the Earth's surface. But most of all I of course remembered the boating and flying scenes, and I did indeed leave the cinema basically thrilled and exhilarated to the point where I could not catch my breath. That has - perhaps thankfully - never happened to me since, and had never happened before.

It was thus an EXTREME, earth-shattering experience for me, a little scary, but I was utterly overwhelmed by the majesty and beauty of this place that Danny Glover spoke about in the 1991 Lawrence Kasdan film "Grand Canyon". You know that human beings can do nothing about the Canyon. Even if they turned it into one big reservoir, it would go on and re-establish once the dam eventually fell down. Even if it was nuked it would just grow bigger and go on.

We need that in our lives, and - to my mind - the Imax "Hidden Secrets" gave me everything I needed to see and know about the Canyon overall, in a way that did not blunt the actual experience.

I salute the daring and imaginative/visionary makers for those reasons.
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5/10
simply not worth it
TheTerminatorsky12 October 2008
Warning: Spoilers
I saw this film at the Grand Canyon, in some plaza where we bought food and got a $10 discount on the $30 DVD($30-$10=$20). The IMAX theater there isn't that big. The sound was good, but not great. Now whats the point of seeing the film and then going out to see the Grand Canyon?! I just don't get it. I understand if you are _not_ there, somewhere in Alaska, or Alabama, or Texas, fine, watch it. But if you are going to see the Grand Canyon for real in 30min, why spoil the fun? Furthermore, had I know the film was made in 1984 I would not have agreed to waste $12 on only a 37min film, a short doc really. Too many scenes of indians running around aimlessly, not enough geography. The whole thing is a rip-off!
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