The film was made for just a few hundred thousand dollars, using reenactments and interviews with philosophers and physicists—some of whom later distanced themselves from the final edit. Byrne then orchestrated a guerrilla marketing campaign: she screened The Secret in living rooms, yoga studios, and churches, selling DVDs out of her garage.

Byrne later described reading it as a lightning bolt moment. She claims the “secret”—the law of attraction—unlocked everything. But here’s the intriguing twist: Instead of writing another self-help book, she used her TV producer instincts. She created a film first. Not a documentary in the traditional sense, but a hypnotic, testimonial-driven feature designed to feel like an initiation into hidden knowledge.

In 2004, Rhonda Byrne was at rock bottom. Her father had died unexpectedly, her television production career was in shambles, and she was struggling financially and emotionally. One night, her then-34-year-old daughter, Hayley, handed her a worn copy of a book called The Science of Getting Rich by Wallace D. Wattles, written in 1910.