The Fourth Kind - posters, covers, wallpapers

Lots of posters, covers and wallpapers for the movie "The Fourth Kind"
The Fourth Kind (2009)
Timing: 1:38 (98 min)
The Fourth Kind - TMDB rating
6.322/10
1654
The Fourth Kind - Kinopoisk rating
6.232/10
86586
The Fourth Kind - IMDB rating
5.9/10
86000

Backdrops, wallpaper

Backdrop to the movie "The Fourth Kind" #291617HD Ready 900p
Backdrop to the movie "The Fourth Kind" #291614Full HD 1080p
Backdrop to the movie "The Fourth Kind" #291615Full HD 1080p
Backdrop to the movie "The Fourth Kind" #291616Full HD 1080p
Backdrop to the movie "The Fourth Kind" #291618Full HD 1080p

Posters, covers

Poster to the movie "The Fourth Kind" #2916212K 1440p
Poster to the movie "The Fourth Kind" #291623HD Ready 1000p
Poster to the movie "The Fourth Kind" #2916242K 1500p
Poster to the movie "The Fourth Kind" #2916253K 1687p
Poster to the movie "The Fourth Kind" #2916262K 1440p

What's left behind the scenes

  • According to promotional materials, the film tells the story of a psychologist named Abigail Tyler who examined patients at Nome. However, the state of Alaska's chief licensor, Jan Mayes, said she could not find any records of Abigail Tyler and that she never received a license to practice in the state. Ron Adler, executive director of the Alaska Psychiatric Institute, and Dennis Dillard, president of the Alaska Psychological Association, said they had never heard of Abigail Tyler. Websites "Alaska Psychiatric Journal" and "Alaska News Archive," containing references to Tyler, were created by the film's producers but were then removed due to fabrication when it was discovered they were created a month before the film's premiere, and one of the authors of the news articles stated she had never written them.
  • Fictionalized interviews used throughout the film angered the families of real missing persons from the town of Nome, Alaska. Melanie Edwards, Vice President of Kawerak Inc. (a non-profit organization representing Alaska Tribal Nations), described the film as “insensitive to family members of people who have gone missing in Nome over the years.” However, representatives of Universal Pictures refused to meet with either the organization or local journalists.
  • Squamish, British Columbia, Canada, served as the "stand-in" for Nome.
  • According to promotional materials from Universal Pictures, the film tells the story of a psychologist named Abigail Tyler who examined sick patients in Nome. However, the chief licensing officer for the State of Alaska, Ian Mays, said he could find no record of Abigail Tyler and that she never received a license to practice in the state. Ron Adler, Executive Director of the Alaska Psychiatric Institute, and Dennis Dillard, President of the Alaska Psychological Association, said they had never heard of Abigail Tyler. Websites for the “Alaska Psychiatric Journal” and the “Alaska News Archive” containing references to Tyler were created by the film's producers but were later removed due to fabrication when it was discovered they were created a month before the film's release, and one of the news article’s authors stated she had never written them.
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