I thought I’d be done with Netflix by now. I’d actually gone through the process of canceling it. But then Graham Hancock posted online that a new season of Ancient Apocalypse was arriving in just a couple weeks. So I begrudgingly canceled my cancelation and waited in anticipation for the mid-October drop.
Season three of The Lincoln Lawyer arriving the same day was also a factor, I admit.
Ancient Apocalypse is one of the rare streaming exclusives that I’ve watched more than once. While I don’t agree with everything Hancock says or speculates, he has a soothing voice, gets to go to beautifully shot locations, and has a wild imagination. Yesterday I did something I never do and watched five of the six new episodes, and this morning I finished it off.
I’ll definitely watch them again.
The first season was defined by Hancock’s antagonism toward traditional archeology. As the opening credits remind us, he himself is a journalist, just a guy asking questions and presenting theories, and the establishment hates him. Netflix wasn’t able to get him on certain sites for filming, and the after the show proved to be a hit Hancock was called a racist.
Because that’s what “they” do.
In these new episodes the chip on his shoulder isn’t quite as apparent. Ultimately, he even expresses gratitude for some of the work that’s been done. The focus of the new series is the Americas, so aside from some callbacks to last season, most of what we see is in South America, including Easter Island, and the photography is gorgeous. I’ll never travel the world, and will be lucky if I see anything west of the Mississippi River, so I watch as much for the travelogue as the alternate history.
Maybe I’ll watch Somebody Feed Phil next.
If I have one annoyance, it’s how much time Hancock devotes to adoration of ayahuasca. Parts of episodes 4 and 5 give us a long primer on the drug’s use and possible influence on ancient cultures. Maybe some of their artwork was inspired by drug trips. Maybe it was given to human sacrifices to “ease their journey into the afterlife.” That doesn’t make it good.
But anyone who knows anything about Hancock knows he loves the stuff.
Season one ends on an ominous note (it’s right there in the name, Apocalypse). While season two doesn’t do anything to ease our fears, the final moment is optimistic. All Hancock wants to do is find proof that a single civilization instructed all the ancient cultures in the arts and sciences, and now he thinks he’s getting very close. Will he ever be satisfied? Will his critics? The answer to both is probably not. But it all but guarantees a season three.
Guess I’ll be renewing my Netflix in a couple years.