In Christopher Nolan's 2014 Interstellar, NASA dispatches the Endurance to a wormhole near Saturn to evaluate three potentially habitable exoplanets. The cover story to Cooper and NASA staff is Plan A: Professor Brand will solve a gravitational equation allowing enormous space stations to lift off Earth, evacuating the population. The truth comes in Brand's deathbed confession: Plan A was always impossible because the equation requires data from inside a black hole's singularity, which Brand believed could not be obtained. Plan B was always the actual plan: the Endurance carrying 5,000 fertilized embryos to seed a new colony. The crew were never going to bring humanity home but were genetic carriers for a colony that would replace it.
Approfondir
Prérequis
- Pas de données disponibles.
Prochaines étapes
- Pas de données disponibles.
Approfondir
Every Sci-Fi Movie Where the Mission Was a Lie Explained in 20 MinutesIndexé :
Twelve sci-fi missions where the cover story was a lie, from the Nostromo to the Lima Project. We trace what each crew was told versus what their employer actually wanted, including Special Order 937, Plan B, and the Cepheus payload. #scifi #scifimovies #alien #interstellar #pandorum – Timestamps – 00:00 The Nostromo 01:50 Carter Burke 03:15 Project Prometheus 04:52 The Sarang Base 06:43 The Mars Hoax 08:16 The Discovery One 10:05 The Elysium 11:23 The Lewis And Clark 12:52 Doug Quaid 14:15 The Endurance 16:10 The U.S.S. Vengeance 17:25 The Cygnus 18:42 The Lima Project Drop a like and sub for more! 🖖 ============================================================ Disclaimer: This video may contain copyrighted material used under Fair Use provisions of US Copyright Law (Section 107). All credit goes to the respective copyright owners. This content is used for educational/commentary/criticism purposes only, is transformative in nature, and is not intended as a substitute for the original work. No copyright infringement is intended. We credit all sources where possible and follow YouTube’s Fair Use and copyright guidelines. For attribution concerns, please contact us directly.
the Nostromo.
The crew thought they were towing 20 million tons of mineral ore home.
The company sent them to die.
In Ridley Scott's 1979 Alien, screenplay by Dan O'Bannon, the USCSS Nostromo is a commercial towing vehicle hauling refined ore from Thedus to Earth.
When its computer wakes the seven-person crew to investigate a transmission from LV-426, the cover story is procedural.
Company protocol mandates investigation of any potential distress signal, and crew shares are reduced if anyone refuses.
The truth [music] is special order 937.
Weyland-Yutani had partially decoded the transmission, identified it as evidence of a hostile alien life form, and routed the Nostromo as a deliberate retrieval mission for a sample.
Science officer Ash, a Hyperdyne Systems 120-A2 synthetic, was a sleeper agent installed two days before launch from Thedus.
His directive read, "Priority one.
Ensure return of organism for analysis.
All other considerations secondary. Crew expendable."
Ash overrode Ripley's quarantine command and admitted Kane and the facehugger into the ship.
When Ripley confronts him through Mother's terminal, the order text appears with no in-universe ambiguity.
Ridley Scott has confirmed in commentary that the Nostromo crew were never meant to come home.
Mission's economic framing was a contractual fiction.
This is the founding template every sci-fi corporate betrayal mission has borrowed from since.
And the rule that in space, the worker is the cheapest line item, is what makes special order 937 still land.
Every other entry on this list operates in its [music] shadow.
Carter Burke.
57 years after the Nostromo, Weyland-Yutani sent Ripley back to LV 426 with a bureaucrat carrying the same secret order in different handwriting.
James Cameron's 1986 Aliens introduces Carter Burke, played by Paul Reiser, a Weyland-Yutani junior executive who recruits Ripley as a colonial marine consultant on a so-called rescue mission to the Hadley's Hope colony.
The cover story is reasonable on paper.
Reestablish contact after radio silence and ensure colonists safety.
The truth is that Burke had personally authorized the colonists Russ Jordan to investigate the derelict engineer ship, the same one the Nostromo crew found, knowing exactly what was inside.
His plan was to trap Ripley and Newt in the medical bay, allow facehuggers to impregnate them, kill the witnesses, and smuggle the embryos through Earth quarantine inside their unconscious bodies.
Weyland-Yutani's bioweapons division valued a live xenomorph specimen at millions per unit on Burke's own admission.
Ripley's claim in Alien 3 is that he was promoted, not disciplined.
Burke is the franchise's argument that special order 937 was never a one-time policy.
It was institutional, and the lie scales with the body count.
Project Prometheus. A trillion-dollar science expedition was funded by one dying man who didn't tell the crew he was on board.
Ridley Scott's 2012 Prometheus sends the USCSS Prometheus from Earth in 2091 on a Weyland Industries funded mission to LV-223.
This is Weyland Industries, the predecessor lineage to the Weyland-Yutani we know from Alien.
The Yutani merger comes later.
The mission is publicly framed as a scientific expedition to investigate an alien star map appearing in unrelated human cave paintings.
The cover story to the 17-person crew is "Contact the engineers, study the origin of human life, return findings."
The truth is that Peter Weyland, played by Guy Pearce, is alive, more than 100 years old, in cryosleep in a hidden quarter of the ship, >> [music] >> and his real objective is to ask the engineers to extend his lifespan.
His daughter, Meredith Vickers, played by Charlize Theron, is on board to manage the deception, and the Android David operates as Weyland's agent from launch, not the cruise.
The engineer responds by killing Weyland and his team.
Whether that response is rejection of Weyland personally, or hostility toward humanity in general, the film leaves deliberately ambiguous.
Where Alien externalized corporate evil into the company, Prometheus internalizes it into one billionaire's vanity.
The crew weren't collateral on a balance sheet. They were collateral on one man's refusal to die. The Sarang base. A man finishing his three-year contract on the dark side of the moon discovers the contract is the lie, and so is he.
In Duncan Jones's 2009 Moon, Sam Bell, played by Sam Rockwell, is the sole human worker at Sarang, a helium-3 mining base on the lunar far side operated by Lunar Industries.
The cover story is straightforward. A three-year solo contract, live communications to Earth disabled due to satellite damage, and Sam returns home upon completion.
The truth comes in three layers. First, Lunar Industries has been cycling through Sam Bell clones for the entire history of the base.
Each genetically identical, each implanted with the original Sam Bell's pre-recorded memories of his wife and daughter.
Second, every clone believes he's the original and is told at the end of his cycle that he's entering hibernation for the trip home.
Third, the so-called hibernation pods are incinerators.
The satellite damage excuse is a continuous live signal jam, preventing any clone from reaching the real Sam Bell on Earth, who is canonically still alive and unaware.
The reveal is a hidden vault containing hundreds of inert clones in artificial womb stasis.
GERTY, the base's AI, ultimately violates protocol to help two simultaneously awake clones escape together.
The newer clone reaches Earth and triggers a public scandal.
Closing voice-overs indicate Lunar Industries stock collapses and a public investigation begins.
Moon transforms the corporate mission lie from a one-time betrayal into a recurring industrial process.
The deception isn't an order. It's an entire HR pipeline.
By the way, if you're enjoying this so far, I post videos like this constantly.
Subscribing would really help out.
Thanks. The Mars Hoax. Three astronauts climbed into the rocket at Cape Canaveral, were yanked out at the last second, and spent the next year acting out a Mars landing in a Texas film studio.
Peter Hyams' 1977 Capricorn One sets the mission as humanity's first crewed Mars landing, with astronauts Brubaker, Willis, and Walker, played by James Brolin, Sam Waterston, and O.J. Simpson, introduced as the public face of NASA's revival.
The cover story to the world is a live televised landing.
The truth is that NASA officials discovered the Apollo-derived life support contractor had cut corners, and the astronauts would die in transit.
Rather than scrub the launch and admit failure, which would end NASA funding and erase billions in private contractor profits, the mission is faked.
The astronauts are removed from the capsule on the launchpad, flown to a remote Air Force base, and forced to perform the landing on a sound stage under threat to their families.
The empty capsule continues the real Mars trajectory.
The heat shield burns up on re-entry, killing the astronauts on paper and sealing the cover-up.
Reporter Robert Caulfield, played by Elliott Gould, starts unraveling the lie when Brubaker manages a single phone call to his wife.
Hyams has stated that his script predated the moon landing hoax conspiracy theories and arguably popularized them.
The villain in this one isn't a corporation chasing alien specimens.
It's NASA itself, choosing a televised lie over a budget cut.
The Discovery One. Five astronauts spent 18 months traveling to Jupiter and none of them knew why.
Stanley Kubrick's 1968 2001: A Space Odyssey, with a screenplay co-written by Arthur C. Clarke, sends the Discovery One from Earth on a mission framed publicly as a scientific expedition.
The cover story to the five-person crew is a standard exploratory run, with three hibernating mission specialists scheduled to be awakened on arrival.
The truth is that TMA-1, the lunar monolith excavated at Tycho crater 18 months earlier, transmitted a single radio signal to Jupiter the moment it was first exposed to sunlight.
The entire Discovery mission is a classified reconnaissance to that signal's destination.
Frank Poole and Dave Bowman are deliberately kept in the dark because the National Council of Aeronautics classified the monolith for reasons of national security.
HAL 9000 was briefed on the true mission objective at design time and the contradiction between his core directive, process information accurately, and his secret directive, withhold the mission truth from the active crew, is what triggers his malfunction.
Kubrick reveals the truth via a recorded Heywood Floyd briefing that HAL plays for Bowman after his return.
The message had been intended for the hibernating specialist, not the active crew.
The lie wasn't told to enrich a corporation or fake a landing.
>> [music] >> It was told because the truth, an alien artifact, was deemed too destabilizing for public knowledge, and the AI that knew the truth went insane keeping it.
Both Clarke and Kubrick treated HAL's breakdown as tragedy rather than malice, which makes this the rare entry where the lie's purpose is genuinely defensible.
The Elysium.
Two crewmen wake up disoriented on a deep space colony ship and discover the ship landed eight centuries ago.
In Christian Alvart's 2009 Pandorum, the Elysium is humanity's last colony ship dispatched to the habitable planet Tanis with 60,000 colonists in cryosleep.
The cover story is passed down between waking crew rotations.
The ship is in transit. Mission ETA decades away.
Cryosleep monitoring routine.
When the bridge shutters open, the truth lands.
The Elysium left Earth 923 years ago, reached Tanis roughly 800 years ago, crash-landed in a Tanis ocean, and has been submerged ever since.
The bioluminescent stars outside the windows are Tanisian sea life.
Earth was destroyed shortly after launch, and Corporal Gallo, a previous rotation crew member, went insane and concealed the truth from each subsequent crew.
Pandorum is the longest-running lie on this list.
Eight centuries of crew rotations, each one inheriting the deception from the one before, none of them in on it.
The mission wasn't deceptive at launch.
It became a lie because no one had the courage to say it was over.
The Lewis and Clark.
A search and rescue crew was dispatched to recover a missing science vessel, and Earth never told them the vessel was a black budget weapon test.
In Paul W.S. Anderson's 1997 Event Horizon, the year is 2047, and the Lewis and Clark is dispatched to Neptune orbit to investigate a distress signal from the Event Horizon, a vessel that had disappeared 7 years earlier on its maiden voyage to Proxima Centauri.
The cover story is propulsion failure on a deep space science exploration vessel.
The truth is that the Event Horizon was a black budget US Aerospace Command project to test the first faster-than-light gravity drive, a device that opens a wormhole by creating a controlled black hole.
The original mission's failure was classified. The official record reported the ship destroyed, and only Dr. Weir, played by Sam Neill, the drive's designer, knew it had survived. Captain Miller, played by Laurence Fishburne, and his crew are briefed on the cover.
Weir withholds the gravity drive truth until they're already on board.
The drive worked, but it punched a hole into a non-Euclidean dimension that returned with the ship as a malevolent presence.
Whether that dimension is specifically hell or just generally hostile, the film stays deliberately ambiguous.
The rescue crew were lied to because the truth, an experimental wormhole drive that breached reality, was too embarrassing to declassify. Doug Quaid, a construction worker, books a memory implant of a Mars vacation and learns that his entire life is the implant.
Paul Verhoeven's 1990 Total Recall, based on Philip K. Dick's We Can Remember It for You Wholesale, gives Doug Quaid, played by Arnold Schwarzenegger, a cover identity.
He's an Earth-based construction worker whose recall trip to a Mars memory will trigger a routine vacation fantasy.
The canonical truth is that Quaid is Carl Hauser, a Cohagen Administration agent who volunteered to have his identity wiped and replaced with a manufactured construction worker life on Earth so he could later be reactivated as an unwitting infiltrator against Cohaato's Mars rebellion.
The recall visit accidentally activated Hauser early.
Verhoeven has confirmed the film is built to support both readings.
The implanted memory interpretation is a fan-supported alternate read that the director endorses as ambiguous. But the Hauser as Cohagen agent reveal is canon either way.
Quaid's entire identity was the cover story, which makes this the only entry on the list where the protagonist himself is the lie.
>> [music] >> The mission wasn't the betrayal.
The man on the mission was.
The Endurance.
Earth was dying and NASA promised a four-person crew they'd find humanity a new home.
The man who built the mission knew they'd never bring anyone back.
In Christopher Nolan's 2014 Interstellar, set in a near future where blight is collapsing Earth's food supply, the secret remnant of NASA dispatches the Endurance to a wormhole near Saturn to evaluate three potentially habitable exoplanets.
The cover story to Cooper, played by Matthew McConaughey, and to NASA staff, including Cooper's daughter Murph, is plan A. Professor Brand, played by Michael Caine, will solve a gravitational equation that allows enormous space stations to lift off Earth, evacuating the population.
The cover story for plan B is a backup contingency with the Endurance carrying 5,000 fertilized embryos to seed a new colony on whichever planet proves habitable.
The truth comes in Brand's deathbed confession to Murph.
Plan A was always impossible.
The equation requires data from inside a black hole's singularity, which Brand believed could not be obtained.
He used plan A as a recruitment fiction.
Plan B was always the actual plan.
Cooper, Dr. Amelia Brand, played by Anne Hathaway, Doyle, and Romilly were never going to bring humanity home.
They were the genetic carriers for a colony that would replace it. The film resolves the lie unexpectedly.
Cooper retrieves the singularity data via the Tesseract. Murph completes the equation, and plan A succeeds despite Brand's certainty it couldn't.
The takeaway is that the most consequential mission lies are the ones the liar believed were technically true.
The USS Vengeance.
Starfleet sent the Enterprise into Klingon space with 72 torpedoes to assassinate a fugitive.
And the admiral who dispatched them wanted the ship destroyed.
J.J. Abrams's 2013 Star Trek Into Darkness hands Captain Kirk, played by Chris Pine, a cover mission.
Pursue terrorist John Harrison, the alias for Khan, played by Benedict Cumberbatch, into Klingon space and execute him with 72 experimental long-range torpedoes.
The truth is that Admiral Marcus had revived Khan from cryosleep and forced him to design Section 31 weapons technology, including the USS Vengeance dreadnought.
The 72 torpedoes contained Khan's frozen, genetically engineered crewmates as hostages.
Marcus deliberately sabotaged the Enterprise's warp core so the ship would strand in Klingon space after firing on Kronos, sparking a Klingon retaliatory strike that would justify the militarized Starfleet he'd been quietly building since the destruction of Vulcan.
It's a Capricorn 1 style government deception scaled up to interstellar war.
The Cygnus.
A research ship arrived to rescue a missing crew, and the captain who waved them in had murdered everyone aboard 20 years earlier.
Gary Nelson's 1979 The Black Hole, produced by Walt Disney Productions, opens 547 days into the USS Palomino's mission when it discovers the USS Cygnus, a research vessel that had disappeared 20 years earlier anchored at the edge of a black hole.
The cover story given by Dr. Hans Reinhardt, played by Maximilian Schell, is that the Cygnus encountered a meteor field and was disabled, that he ordered his crew home, and that he remained alone with his work.
The truth is that Reinhardt's crew tried to mutiny when he refused to return to Earth.
He had them lobotomized and converted into the faceless robot drones now staffing the Cygnus.
Captain McCrae's father, [music] who had refused to leave with the others, was also killed and converted.
This was Disney's most expensive film at the time, and the lobotomy reveal still lands.
The Black Hole is the rare entry where the mission lie was told 20 years after the original mission ended.
Reinhardt's whole rescue me framing was rehearsed.
>> [music] >> He was waiting for a Palomino class crew to use as fresh material.
The Lima Project. SpaceCom told an astronaut that his father was a hero lost on humanity's greatest mission.
They sent him to Neptune to detonate a bomb on what was left.
James Gray's 2019 Ad Astra recruits Roy McBride, played by Brad Pitt, into a covert SpaceCom mission to Neptune to investigate cosmic ray surges destabilizing the solar system.
The cover story to Roy is that his father, Clifford McBride, played by Tommy Lee Jones, the commander of the 29-years-lost Lima project, humanity's first deep space search for extraterrestrial intelligence, may still be alive and may be the source of the surges.
Roy's familial connection makes him the ideal envoy to convince his father to deactivate the antimatter reactor.
The truth, revealed mid-mission, is that SpaceCom already knows Clifford is alive and has confirmed he killed his own crew when they tried to mutiny, terrified by his obsession with finding aliens that didn't exist.
The Cepheus mission Roy boards has been requisitioned without his knowledge to carry a nuclear payload to destroy the Lima project entirely.
Roy was meant to deliver one transmission and then be excluded from the strike crew.
After discovering the requisition, he goes rogue, completes the rendezvous solo, and confronts his father at the Lima station.
Clifford's mission discovered no intelligent life. Rather than admit failure, he killed his mutinous crew and continued sending falsified results back to Earth.
James Gray has confirmed the film is a deliberate Heart of Darkness reframing, with Clifford McBride as Kurtz.
Ad Astra closes the list with the most personal version of the trope.
The mission lie wasn't told by a corporation or a government for profit or politics.
It was told by SpaceCom to a son, using his dead father grief as a recruitment lever.
And the underlying lie was bigger.
Humanity hadn't found anything out there at all, and the man who couldn't accept that killed for the silence.
If you found this worth your time, consider subscribing to keep up with every new upload.
Thanks for watching.
Vidéos Similaires
Fixies, The - A New Leg for Bear! | Kids Cartoons | WildBrain Rescue Station
WildBrainRescueStation
654 views•2026-05-17
Leftover Women Are Growing OUT OF CONTROL! They Are Left Single & Childless After The Carousel Stops
GentlemensClub-1
11K views•2026-05-16
🔥 Oklahoma City THUNDER FULL Roster & Depth Chart | NBA Salaries 2025-26 | Full Payroll!
CourtHeroes1
239 views•2026-05-15
The God Who Interrupts Plans | The Mystics, Mystery & the Book of Acts | May 17 | Faith City Church
FaithHalifax
185 views•2026-05-18
WHY DARKNESS FEARS A PRAYING BELIEVER | APOSTLE AROME OSAYI
RuachHubSeries
515 views•2026-05-16
The Yu Menglong Case: Xing Fei’s Tears of Joy After Killer’s Shocking Arrest
WangXianvibes
526 views•2026-05-16
How To Get The AA Badge In GORILLA TAG (2026)
BootlegGT
246 views•2026-05-15
Dojo Samurais harassed a girl, never dreaming she was a hidden Kung Fu master!
SharpSwordTheatre
164 views•2026-05-17











