Wind Advisory
from SAT 12:00 PM MST until SAT 10:00 PM MST, Western Pima County including Ajo/Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument, Tohono O'odham Nation including Sells, Upper Santa Cruz River and Altar Valleys including Nogales, Tucson Metro Area including Tucson/Green Valley/Marana/Vail, South Central Pinal County including Eloy/Picacho Peak State Park, Southeast Pinal County including Kearny/Mammoth/Oracle, Upper San Pedro River Valley including Sierra Vista/Benson, Eastern Cochise County below 5000 ft including Douglas/Wilcox, Upper Gila River and Aravaipa Valleys including Clifton/Safford, White Mountains of Graham and Greenlee Counties including Hannagan Meadow, Galiuro and Pinaleno Mountains including Mount Graham, Chiricahua Mountains including Chiricahua National Monument, Dragoon/Mule/Huachuca and Santa Rita Mountains including Bisbee/Canelo Hills/Madera Canyon, Santa Catalina and Rincon Mountains including Mount Lemmon/Summerhaven, Baboquivari Mountains including Kitt Peak, Kofa, Central La Paz, Aguila Valley, Southeast Yuma County, Gila River Valley, Northwest Valley, Tonopah Desert, Gila Bend, Buckeye/Avondale, Cave Creek/New River, Deer Valley, Central Phoenix, North Phoenix/Glendale, New River Mesa, Scottsdale/Paradise Valley, Rio Verde/Salt River, East Valley, Fountain Hills/East Mesa, South Mountain/Ahwatukee, Southeast Valley/Queen Creek, Superior, Northwest Pinal County, West Pinal County, Apache Junction/Gold Canyon, Tonto Basin, Mazatzal Mountains, Pinal/Superstition Mountains, Sonoran Desert Natl Monument, San Carlos, Dripping Springs, Globe/Miami, Southeast Gila County

The Phoenix Incident

On March 13, 1997, thousands of people witnessed strange lights in the night sky over Phoenix.

Some saw a boomerang-shaped space craft and other saw triangular lights in the sky. Months later, the military came forward and said it was just flares.

Many called it the largest UFO sighting in North America.

That's all we really know for sure, but The Phoenix Incident takes this famous sighting a bit further by portraying a massive military cover up and confrontation with aliens from another world.

The Phoenix Incident is fiction, right? Or is it a science-fiction thriller? One thing is clear, it certainly tries to blur the lines between fiction and reality.

Director Keith Arem is very familiar with the sightings 19 years ago. He says his movie is a journey into a terrifying reality of what may have happened that night.

The Phoenix Incident premieres at the International UFO Congress on Friday night at the We-Ko-Pa Resort east of Phoenix. The movie opens nationwide on March 10.

To watch the trailer for The Phoenix Incident, click here.