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The Man from Earth: Holocene

The Man from Earth: Holocene 2017

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The Man from Earth: Holocene Plot Summary

Read the complete plot summary and ending explained for The Man from Earth: Holocene (2017). From turning points to emotional moments, uncover what really happened and why it matters.


John, [David Lee Smith], now going by the surname Young, teaches comparative religion at a community college in Chico, California. He is well-liked by students and married to fellow faculty member Carolyn Kittriss [Vanessa Williams]. For the first time in his life, John shows signs of ageing, and a hunting trip cut hints that his regenerative abilities are diminishing. When Isabel [Akemi Look], an enthusiastic student, is allowed to borrow books from John’s collection, she discovers one authored by Dr. Jenkins and signed for John Oldman. Curious, Isabel learns about another, controversial book he authored, an account of the 14,000-year-old John Oldman. Drawing parallels between Oldman and their teacher, she shares the discovery with her classmates the four: Tara [Brittany Curran], Liko [Carlos Knight] and Philip [Sterling Knight]. They are open to the possibility that they are the same person, although Philip’s faith is challenged by the book’s claim that John was Jesus Christ. Their suspicions are confirmed when they obtain the book and see the only photo of Oldman, who is described as averse to being photographed to facilitate forging new identities.

Isabel attempts to contact Dr. Jenkins by email, but he rudely rejects her, assuming she is yet another person seeking to ridicule him. Undeterred, Isabel, Tara [Brittany Curran] and Liko [Carlos Knight] trespass into the Young household, discovering several books authored by John under various surnames. They also find a painting believed to be by Vincent van Gogh, which Isabel’s cousin, an art major, considers possibly authentic supporting the book’s claim that John had known van Gogh personally. The group later contacts a retired university professor who recalls meeting John during the 1950s.

Isabel leaves a voice message for Jenkins, but this time he is interested when she mentions John Young and agrees to meet them on the condition that they first provide a clear photo of John’s face. After unsuccessful attempts to take a picture in class, they go into his house at night and photograph him while he is asleep. Jenkins, although somewhat hesitant as the purported John appears aged, agrees.

Shortly afterward, Tara visits John in his office. He becomes concerned when she cryptically claims to know his true identity. In tears, Tara explains that she has always felt lonely as well. When John attempts to comfort her, she makes a sexual advance, which he rejects, asking her to leave. Isabel scolds Tara when she confesses the incident, fearing that John may leave before Jenkins arrives. John is indeed preparing for departure, and his refusal to offer an explanation leads to an argument with his wife. That evening, the four confront John about the book’s veracity. He admits to being Oldman but insists that the story was a fabrication and expresses regret that Jenkins damaged his own reputation by publishing it. To stop him, John is tased and restrained in his basement, assigning Philip to watch him while the others attempt to retrieve Jenkins, whose car has broken down nearby.

Upon regaining consciousness, John warns Philip that their actions are criminal but offers not to report them if he is released. Philip, however, persists in questioning John about Jesus. After a few evasions, John finally admits to having been Jesus, explaining that he has avoided garnering attention since witnessing the distortion of his moral teachings. Although Philip initially welcomes the idea that John is divine despite telling the truth, the situation becomes tense when John expresses that all religious paths lead to salvation. Recounting the Book of Revelation, Philip renounces John as the seven-headed beast and stabs him.

When Jenkins, Isabel, Liko and Tara arrive, they are shocked to find blood stains throughout the house, with both John and Philip missing. Weeks later, John has been hiding in the wilderness, and he arranges to meet with Harry [John Billingsley]. They speculate that his aging might result from the Holocene itself ending to herald the Anthropocene. John accepts Harry’s invitation to live with his family.

Back in his home, Jenkins is visited by an FBI agent who knows about John’s many identities and extraordinary age, adding that he is a suspect in many violent crimes, including Philip’s disappearance. When he asks Jenkins whether he believes an immortal serial killer is possible, Jenkins replies that anything is.

The Man from Earth: Holocene Timeline

Follow the complete movie timeline of The Man from Earth: Holocene (2017) with every major event in chronological order. Great for understanding complex plots and story progression.


Aging reveals itself

John begins to show signs of aging for the first time. A hunting trip yields a cut, and the narrative notes that his regenerative abilities seem to be weakening. This moment unsettles him and hints at a deeper mystery about his nature.

Isabel uncovers John Oldman manuscript

Isabel borrows books from John's collection and discovers one written by Dr. Jenkins and signed for John Oldman. The discovery fuels speculation that John may be the 14,000 year old figure described in the controversial book. She shares what she finds with Tara, Liko, and Philip.

John's college library

Group ties Oldman to a 14 000 year old identity

The students draw parallels between Oldman and their teacher, questioning whether the same person could have lived through millennia. The idea that John might be a centuries old man begins to take hold. They remain open to the possibility while considering the book's claims.

College

Art and book clues emerge

In their investigations they trespass into the Young household and find several books authored by John under different surnames. They also discover a painting believed to be by Vincent van Gogh, which a cousin art major considers possibly authentic. The discovery adds weight to the book's claim that John has known famous figures.

John Young's house

Professor recalls meeting John in the 1950s

The group contacts a retired university professor who recalls meeting John during the 1950s. His memory provides a potential historical anchor for John's extraordinary age. This encounter lends credibility to the idea that John has lived through multiple eras.

Retired professor's memory, campus

Jenkins initially dismisses the inquiry

Isabel leaves a voice message for Jenkins, but he responds rudely, assuming she is another person seeking to ridicule him. The refusal dampens their attempt to verify the book's claims. The group remains undeterred by this setback.

Jenkins' office/phone

Trespass and discovery at the Young household

Isabel, Tara and Liko trespass into the Young household and uncover several books authored by John under various surnames. They also find a painting that the art major cousin believes might be authentic. The discoveries deepen their suspicions about John Oldman.

Young household

Attempted photo proof and midnight exposure

After unsuccessfully trying to capture a clear photo of John in class, the group enters his house at night and photographs him as he sleeps. The images are meant to prove his claimed age and identity to Dr. Jenkins. The plan raises further questions about his past.

night John Young's house

Tara confronts John about his identity

Tara visits John in his office and, in tears, indicates she senses his true identity. John tries to comfort her, but she makes a sexual advance and he refuses, prompting tension within the group. The event foreshadows the unraveling of trust.

John's office

Revelations and basement confinement

That evening the four confront John about the book's veracity. He admits to being Oldman but claims the story was a fabrication and expresses regret that Jenkins damaged his reputation. They tase him and restrain him in the basement, with Philip assigned to watch him as they plan to retrieve Jenkins.

Young household basement

Jesus confession and the fatal stabbing

John declares that he has been Jesus, explaining that he has avoided attention to prevent distortion of his teachings. Philip, renouncing John as the seven headed beast, stabs him. The act marks a violent climax to their confrontation.

Young household

Aftermath and wilderness path

When Jenkins, Isabel, Liko and Tara arrive, they find blood and discover John and Philip are missing. Weeks later John is living in the wilderness and plans to meet with Harry to discuss his aging and the end of the Holocene. He agrees to live with Harry's family and begins a new chapter away from civilization.

weeks later Wilderness; later with Harry's family

FBI agent investigates the case

An FBI agent visits Jenkins and reveals that John has many identities and is suspected in violent crimes, including Philip's disappearance. The agent asks if Jenkins believes an immortal serial killer is possible. Jenkins responds that anything is possible.

Jenkins' home/office

The Man from Earth: Holocene Characters

Explore all characters from The Man from Earth: Holocene (2017). Get detailed profiles with their roles, arcs, and key relationships explained.


John Oldman

A millennia-old man living under the alias John Young, he serves as a beloved professor whose calm exterior hides a concealed, centuries-spanning identity. The discovery of his true past triggers a crisis of trust among students and colleagues. He reveals himself as Oldman and later admits to his Jesus-like claims, choosing solitude over sensational fame. In the end, he disappears, retreating to the wilderness as the world debates his truth.

🧭 Immortal 🧠 Intellectual 🗺️ Secretive

Carolyn Kittriss

John’s wife and fellow faculty member, she embodies steady support and professional poise. The couple’s relationship is strained by the unraveling of John’s past, leading to tension and a difficult choice about their future. She anchors the domestic life that remains a counterbalance to the extraordinary truths uncovered. Her reactions reflect the film’s interrogation of personal loyalty amid public revelation.

💑 Partner 🛡️ Protective 🧭 Loyal

Isabel

An enthusiastic student who uncovers hints of John’s long life and initiates the investigation. Her curiosity drives the action, prompting a dangerous quest to confirm the book’s claims. She pushes the group to confront the possibility that their teacher is an immortal figure, testing boundaries and authority. Her insistence on the truth accelerates the conflict at the heart of the story.

🧭 Curious 👧 Student 🕵️ Inquisitive

Tara

A fellow student drawn into the mystery, she reveals loneliness and longing that color her judgment. Her willingness to push boundaries leads to a tense confrontation with John, including a sexual advance that is rebuffed. She participates in the plan to confront John, illustrating the group’s moral confusion and the price of seeking certainty.

👧 Student 🌀 Impulsive 🗯️ Risk-taker

Liko

One of John’s student confidants who is open to the possibility that the Oldman identity could be real. He contributes to the group’s investigation and participates in the surveillance of John. His cautious curiosity embodies the tension between belief and skepticism that drives the plot.

👦 Student 🕵️ Curious 🧭 Skeptical

Philip

Initially open to the idea that John could be divine, he becomes the catalyst for violence when John refuses to fully confirm the myth. He stabs John during the confrontation, becoming a symbol of how fanatical belief can provoke dangerous actions. His subsequent disappearance deepens the mystery surrounding John’s true nature.

👦 Student 🗡️ Violent 🌀 Zealous

Dr. Jenkins

A controversial author of the life-spanning book about John Oldman whom Isabel tries to contact. His publication damages John’s reputation and fuels the group’s certainty about his identity. He later colludes in the tense plan to confront John and faces FBI involvement as the case grows more perilous.

👨‍🏫 Author 🧠 Controversial 🕵️‍♂️ Target

Harry

An old friend who appears during John’s crisis, offering a potential place to hide with his family. He and John discuss the possibility that the Holocene’s end necessitates a new way of living. His invitation signals a possible path toward safety and acceptance away from public scrutiny.

🧔 Friend 🏡 Safe haven 🗺️ Supportive

The Man from Earth: Holocene Settings

Learn where and when The Man from Earth: Holocene (2017) takes place. Explore the film’s settings, era, and how they shape the narrative.


Time period

Present day

The events unfold in contemporary times, anchored by a college setting and modern social dynamics. The plot braids present-day interactions with references to humanity's distant past, centering on a man who has lived for thousands of years. The narrative uses this juxtaposition to explore how timeless secrets can disrupt a tight-knit community.

Location

Chico, California, John's house, wilderness

The story unfolds in a quiet Chico, California community, centered on a local college and the professor's home. It moves from classroom discussions to intimate domestic spaces, and finally to the surrounding wilderness where secrets are tested. This backdrop of an ordinary town becoming a stage for extraordinary revelations underscores the tension between everyday life and the extraordinary claims about John Oldman.

🏫 College setting 🌄 Small-town atmosphere 🔍 Mystery

The Man from Earth: Holocene Themes

Discover the main themes in The Man from Earth: Holocene (2017). Analyze the deeper meanings, emotional layers, and social commentary behind the film.


♾️

Eternal Life

A central thread is John's millennia-spanning existence and the loneliness that comes with endless years. The film probes whether living for ages distances a person from ordinary human concerns or makes moral choices more complicated. The revelation of his identity tests loyalty, ethics, and the burden of secrecy. It also raises questions about what immortality would mean for relationships and responsibility.

Belief & Doubt

Isabel and friends confront the possibility that John is Jesus or a central prophetic figure, challenging their faith and the foundations of their beliefs. The story casts doubt on accepted religious narratives by proposing that spiritual truths can exist in a life lived across centuries. It examines how belief is shaped by evidence, memory, and personal longing. The group’s discoveries force them to weigh faith against the moral costs of exposing the truth.

🔎

Truth Consequences

The pursuit of veracity leads to trespass, confrontation, and violence, illustrating how truth-seeking can destabilize lives. Jenkins’ controversial book damages John’s reputation and fuels the group’s certainty about his identity. The plan to confront the author spirals into danger, including a stabbing and disappearances. The film underscores that truth, while compelling, can fracture communities and imperil individuals.

🌍

Epoch End

The plot ties the idea of the Holocene ending to the coming Anthropocene, suggesting a civilization-wide shift in time. John’s aging accelerates as he contemplates a world on the cusp of a new geological era. The setting juxtaposes a familiar town with cosmic-scale changes, hinting that humanity’s era may be coming to a close. The conclusion positions John's choice to hide among ordinary life as a quiet response to a larger existential transition.

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The Man from Earth: Holocene Spoiler-Free Summary

Discover the spoiler-free summary of The Man from Earth: Holocene (2017). Get a concise overview without any spoilers.


In a modest community college town, John has spent decades shaping minds as a gentle comparative‑religion professor, his quiet routine anchored by a supportive partner, Carolyn. Beneath his unassuming exterior lies a staggering secret: after millennia of walking the earth, he is now feeling the first true signs of aging. The ordinary rhythm of lectures, research, and domestic life is suddenly tinged with the uncanny awareness that the ancient soul behind the name is confronting a mortality he has never known.

Among his most eager students, Isabel uncovers a long‑forgotten manuscript bearing John’s old surname, hinting that the professor may be the very figure whispered about in the annals of human history. She shares the find with her classmates—Tara, Liko, and Philip—who, each in their own way, grapple with the intoxicating blend of skepticism and reverence the possibility provokes. Their curiosity pulls them deeper into a web of obscure texts, faded photographs, and scholarly anecdotes that suggest a life woven through the very fabric of civilization, challenging both academic rigor and personal belief systems.

As the quartet’s inquiries tighten around John’s enigmatic past, the atmosphere grows charged with the weight of what might be revealed. The prospect of an immortal witness to humanity’s rise and fall threatens to upend the foundations of the world’s most pervasive faiths, while also placing the professor and those around him in a precarious liminal space between secrecy and exposure. In this intimate, thought‑provoking drama, the tension lies not in grand action but in the quiet, unsettling question of how far one can hide a truth that has the power to reshape everything we think we know.

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