🎬 THE ANUNNAKI: RISE OF THE GODS (2026)

THE ANUNNAKI: RISE OF THE GODS (2026)
When the Gods Return, Mankind Must Choose Who They Truly Are
For thousands of years, humanity believed the gods were myths.
Stories carved into stone. Names whispered by scholars. Legends buried beneath sand.
The Anunnaki: Rise of the Gods opens with a brutal revelation: they were never myths.
They were waiting.

The Awakening Beneath the Sand
The film begins in the scorched deserts of Mesopotamia, where an international archaeological team uncovers a sealed structure older than recorded history—its walls etched with symbols that predate language itself. When the final seal is broken, the ground trembles.
The sky darkens.
Gravity warps.
Something ancient breathes again.
The Anunnaki—beings once worshiped as gods—awaken from their enforced slumber, released by human curiosity and arrogance. They are not benevolent creators returning to guide humanity.

They are rulers reclaiming what they believe was stolen.
The Anunnaki: Gods of Dominion
The Anunnaki are not portrayed as fantasy deities, but as cosmic entities—beings whose technology and biology are indistinguishable from divinity. They once shaped humanity genetically, sculpting mankind as laborers, soldiers, and worshippers.
Now, they return to find a world that moved on without them.
And they are furious.
Cities collapse under gravitational storms. Skies ignite with celestial fire. Ancient temples awaken across the globe—dormant machines responding to their masters’ call.
To the Anunnaki, humanity is a failed experiment that has grown dangerously independent.
And failed experiments are erased.

Eli Kaen: The Mortal Chosen to Defy Heaven
At the center of the chaos stands Eli Kaen (Dwayne Johnson), a former soldier turned reluctant explorer—haunted by war, disillusioned by humanity, and searching for meaning in forgotten places.
Eli isn’t a chosen hero by prophecy.
He’s an accident.
When the Anunnaki awaken, an ancient failsafe activates—binding Eli to a warrior spirit engineered by the gods themselves, a being designed long ago to police both gods and men.
The result is catastrophic.

Eli survives wounds that should kill him. He hears voices older than Earth. His strength grows—but so does the pull of something far more dangerous than power.
Godhood.