Although I don't remember precisely, I think I bought this because it was the exact price I needed to use up my Shakespeare budget for the year. Also, I had hopes that it wouldn't be just another documentary-style propaganda piece for another anti-Stratfordian conspiracy theory. After all, it had Sir Stanley Wells!
Eventually, I gave it a try. And it interested me at first in having much higher production values than the usual fare in this genre does. And then it interested me because our narrator / presenter / guide presents himself as skeptical of the skeptical. Finally, it interested me because it seemed to be about a Baconian theory of authorship, which seemed quaint.
And then it got very odd. And odder. And then it seemed to leave the oddness scale behind.
Here's a rough summary. We start with the idea that there are codes in Shakespeare's works and Shakespeare's gravestone and the Shakespeare monument. And those codes point toward Francis Bacon.
And then we learn about the Holy Grail to which all those codes are pointing: The manuscripts of Shakespeare's plays (in this theory, the plays were written by Shakespeare, the man from Stratford, but they were written at the instigation of Francis Bacon and Henry Neville), which are preserved in mercury somewhere on the planet Earth.
I mention the planet Earth because we have to leave it for the next step. We have to go to the constellation Cygnus (a.k.a. "The Swan") and see where it's pointing on Earth—that will be the location of the Shakespeare manuscripts stored in mercury by Francis Bacon. That turns out to be Oak Island, Nova Scotia.
Did I mention that the Rosicrucians are behind all of this?
Finally, we learn that the Shakespeare manuscripts aren't the only Holy Grail hidden on Oak Island. The Ark of the Covenant is also there. Together with a powerful and historical menorah—possibly the very one involved in the miracle of Hanukkah. And maybe the Holy Grail is there, too—I admit to letting my attention wander a bit at that point.
The documentary (I'm debating whether to put that in air quotes are not) astounded me by how outrageous its claims became. They build somewhat eccentrically but also gradually so that, if you give each step the benefit of the doubt, you hardly notice when you cross over into the utterly outlandish.
I tried to excerpt a brief clip, but I was unable to do the film justice with just a little bit. Here, then, are some key points in the presentation.
I wish that Sir Stanley had been given more screen time. He could have provided much to rectify the extreme leaps in logic that guide the conspiracy to its ultimately ridiculous conclusions.
Links: The Film at IMDB.