Heaven's Gate: The Cult Of Cults -
: Reviewers from sites like Decider note that the docuseries suggests many members weren't simply "tricked," but were finding answers to deeply human spiritual yearnings in a message that blended 1970s UFO fascination with traditional Christian millenarianism.
Clay Tweel's four-part docuseries, (HBO Max, 2020), is a meticulous and empathetic re-examination of one of the most sensationalized tragedies in American history. Rather than leaning into the morbid curiosity that often surrounds "UFO cults," Tweel focuses on humanizing the victims, transforming them from tabloid punchlines back into fathers, sisters, and seekers of meaning. A Counter-Narrative to Sensation Heaven's Gate: The Cult of Cults
For decades, the standard media image of Heaven's Gate was reduced to a few "wacky" identifiers: the Hale-Bopp comet, identical black Nikes, and Marshall Applewhite’s wide-eyed recruitment videos. Tweel’s series deliberately dismantles this caricature by: : Reviewers from sites like Decider note that