Alan and Harrison Raw at the Capel Green premiere

Capel Green: A Premiere, a Memory, and a Moment of Witness

On Sunday, Harrison, Sara and I had the privilege of attending the premiere of Capel Green — a powerful new documentary film exploring one of the UK’s most compelling and debated cases of high strangeness: the Rendlesham Forest incident of 1980.

We drove down from Hull on Saturday and checked into a quiet Travelodge in Ipswich. That evening, we took a long-overdue walk through Rendlesham Forest, our first since the sighting we experienced there together in 2018. The day had been soaked with heavy rain, but a break in the weather allowed us to walk the full three-mile trail in peace. That drive by the forest and the path through the trees still holds a strange quietness, and revisiting it brought back a flood of memories.

The premiere itself was held at The Regal in Stowmarket, a fitting venue, close to the forest and steeped in local history. Despite the relentless rain, the atmosphere inside was warm, buzzing with anticipation, and completely sold-out. It was a joy to reconnect with director Dion Johnson, Tino Megaro, and the team we first met at a UFO convention back in 2018. Tino was even wearing his Research and Witness badge from our convention RAWCon2020.

We ran through the technical checks and programme early. The stage was dressed with props from the film, and the mic levels were checked. By the time I returned to the foyer, the place was packed. Book stalls had been set up, one for Lori Rehfeldt to sell her powerful new memoir Rendlesham Lone Ranger, and another offering a Capel Green photo book and official posters. I made sure to grab copies of each for us and had them signed. I was surprised (and a little moved) when someone asked us to sign a book too, because they wanted everyone who’s in the film to sign their copy — that was Harrison’s first autograph, and my first on a book I didn’t write.

When the curtains drew back, I had the honour of introducing Director Dion Johnson to the stage. The film that followed was intense, beautifully constructed, and deeply human, a remarkable achievement by a team of over 100 people, working for eight years to tell this story properly. At one point, Harrison and I appeared on screen, captured during an interview not long after our own experience at the forest. Seeing my beardless self and a 14-year-old Harrison speak about that sighting was surreal. He’s now 21 and writing a book about strange phenomena across the UK, a project that grew from this very experience, and which he’s been documenting on his blog here at Research and Witness.

After the screening, I introduced a post-film discussion with three of the original witnesses: Larry Warren, and Lori (who had flown in from the U.S.). They shared their stories with grace, clarity, and courage. Harrison and I supported the audience Q&A from the sides of the theatre, with radio mics, though time was short. The conversations that we didn’t fit in, spilled naturally into the bar afterward, where we continued connecting with guests, fellow researchers, and old friends like Chris Rosings, who had flown over from Toulouse. We gave Chris and YouTuber Ben, a lift back to their hotels before finally reaching our beds. Full of memories, inspiration, and invitations from three podcast hosts to join them soon for a catch up on Harrison’s experiences.

One thing that stuck with me was the number of people who asked us if we would bring RAWcon back for another show. Five years on, and people still remember the event fondly. On the drive home, Harrison said, he was quite enthused by that. So maybe RAWcon2 is on the Horizon. What’s the chances of another pandemic getting in the way? Hmmm don’t answer that.

The premiere was an extraordinary day, humbling, energising, and filled with the kind of moments that remind us why witnessing matters.

Congratulations to everyone involved in this film. Dion has done a phenomenal job bringing these stories together with sensitivity and skill. We look forward to seeing Capel Green reach an even wider audience when it finds its home on a streaming platform. Exciting times! 🎬
Alan
Research and Witness Team

#CapelGreen #DocumentaryPremiere #WitnessHistory #ResearchAndWitness

Capel Green

A Turning Point for Research & Witness

Posted: July 2025

This month marks a turning point for Research & Witness. The long-awaited documentary Capel Green has just released its official trailer — and in it, you’ll see a glimpse of something very close to our hearts: a brief clip from the original interview Harrison and I gave as witnesses, seven years ago.

You can watch the trailer here:


Why this matters

Back in 2018, when Harrison was just 14, we were interviewed for this project as civilian witnesses to a strange presence over Rendlesham Forest. It was a powerful experience, not just the sighting itself, but the feeling that something important had gone unsaid — that the strange encounters of decades before were still occurring. That moment became the seed of something larger in our lives.

In the years since, that seed has grown into what you now know as Research & Witness.

Inspired by that original encounter and the questions it raised, we began our own investigations, started this blog, and eventually hosted the Research & Witness Convention in 2020, bringing together voices from across the UK to discuss anomalous experiences with care and curiosity.

To now see our original interview woven into the official trailer, and to be invited as guests to the film’s premiere by Director Dion Johnson and his team, feels like coming full circle.


Strange sightings persist

We’ll be attending the Capel Green premiere on 20 July at the Stowmarket Regal Cinema. It’s a chance to reconnect with fellow witnesses, investigators, and filmmakers, and to reflect on how far the conversation has come. Harrison is now 21 and has had many experiences since 2018, but that sighting still remains clear and significant to both of us.

Our deeper interest in these anomalous phenomena was sparked during a conversation with Dion and his team, when we shared our drawings of what we had seen.

Their reaction was unexpected; they said that what we had drawn was so much more significant than we could possibly know. Eventually, they showed us previously unseen sketches by original witnesses. The match was undeniable. A shape we thought unique to our own sighting appeared again — too close for coincidence. There are similarities to what has been previously reported or represented in sculpture on the forest path, but there are clear differences that are only shared by the drawings that were now being shown to us. In that moment our perception of popular reality shifted. Now as an objective adult journalist, everything I had dismissed — as sensationalism, as misidentification — was potentially true. I have supported Harrison’s interest in the unexplained ever since.

Staying Grounded

Our approach hasn’t changed: we don’t chase headlines. We document. We research. We witness. And we share what we find.

Capel Green is a documentary with emotional weight, historical depth, and renewed urgency. We’re proud to have played a small part in its making — and we look forward to seeing how others respond to it. The process has been long because the research has been methodical and detailed. The quality of this film is outstanding and it is definitely worth the wait. Congratulations to all contributors, we can’t wait to see all of this evidence together on 20th July.

More to follow after the premiere.

Tickets are on sale, and some seats are still available. Here’s a link to the cinema:

https://regalstowmarket.co.uk/RegalStowmarket.dll/WhatsOn?f=9453494

See you there.

Alan & Harrison
Research & Witness