Steven Spielberg is back with his highly anticipated return to the science fiction genre with new film Disclosure Day, and one film reviewer has shared his four-word verdict on the movie15:38, 10 Jun 2026Updated 15:45, 10 Jun 2026Disclosure Day is director Steven Spielberg's highly anticipated return to the science fiction genre. Co-written with his frequent collaborator David Koepp, the film serves as a thematic culmination and a "summation film" to his legendary alien-centric filmography, which includes Close Encounters of the Third Kind, E.T., and War of the Worlds. It released in UK cinemas today (June 10) and will launch in US theatres on Friday (June 12).‌Instead of a traditional alien invasion story, Disclosure Day plays out like a gritty, fast-paced 1970s conspiracy thriller merged with Minority Report style corporate surveillance. The narrative starts inside an ongoing fight to declassify decades worth of concealed alien presence on Earth.‌Whistleblower Daniel Kellner (Josh O'Connor) is a cybersecurity expert who steals a massive archive of top-secret data from the nefarious Wardex corporation containing concrete proof of alien contact.‌Meanwhile, Margaret Fairchild (Emily Blunt) - the messenger – is a Kansas City television meteorologist who is suddenly imbued with unexplainable abilities—eventually breaking into a live broadcast speaking an unknown alien math language that only Daniel can interpret.The two characters are drawn together by a mysterious pull while on the run from a ruthless government and corporate agency figure named Noah (Colin Firth), who intends to suppress the truth at all costs.‌The film features an elite ensemble cast and a reunion of Spielberg’s most iconic behind-the-scenes creatives. As well as Blunt and O'Connor, Colin Firth, Colman Domingo, Eve Hewson, and Wyatt Russell all star in the film.Janusz Kamiński returns as the Director of Photography, utilising continuous camera motion and old-school lens flares to capture a mood of tense, persuasive gloom.Meanwhile, John Williams composed the musical score, which critics have described as subtle, building in confidence as the characters navigate their journey.‌Early reviews are overwhelmingly positive, with multiple major publications calling it Spielberg’s finest, most cohesive blockbuster in two decades.Critics have heavily praised Blunt's powerful, potentially award-winning performance, Koepp's dialogue-heavy script, and a staggering second-act chase sequence.Rather than relying on heavy CGI spectacle, reviewers note that the movie functions primarily as an emotional plea for human empathy, unity, and truth in a deeply divided world.‌Giving his take on the film, TikTok reviewer Alex (@popculturebrain), who boasts 957,000 followers, gave a four-word verdict on the movie.He told fans: "Spielberg is so back."Content cannot be displayed without consent‌Adding to this, the reviewer said he was going to tell fans "the good and the bad without spoilers".He told them: "Alright, Steven Spielberg never went away, but this is the movie the world has been waiting for him to deliver."First let's start out with the script. Spielberg created the story, then David Koepp wrote a brilliant elegantly constructed screenplay that mixes intrigue, heart, ethical questions, humour and dazzling sci-fi concepts."‌He said this gave fans a movie that was "old school Spielberg" but through a modern social political lens.The reviewer also said the film "tackles big societal questions and moral dilemmas like the best sci-fi always does".Alex said the film feels "original and fresh" and "essential to the world right now".‌He also said it has "incredible" action scenes, layered tension and threat and great cinematography.Talking about the ending, he also added it was "the most gripping climax since One Battle After Another".He said: "It grabs for 30+ minutes and does not let go. You could feel the entire audience being swept up in its drama."‌Talking about his few "minor nitpicks", Alex said the script "withholds a lot of information from the audience" as the film "hinges on mystery". He noted: "Your tolerance for that may vary."He also mentioned he thought a gas station scene was "inconsistent" with the rest of the film and said some of the sound affects used were "distracting".However, he added: "But again, those were just minor nitpicks. All in all, this movie rocks and is another huge win for originality in theatres."‌Fans were loving the review, with it racking up more than 8,000 likes.One person exclaimed: "I’m so excited to see it. I have loved the trailers and I’m going to see it in IMAX on Thursday."While another added: "I wasn't excited by the trailer but these reviews coming out, it looks like I'm wrong."Article continues belowHowever, a third chimed in: "I have to say it all looks good on paper, but I’m skeptical. I guess we’ll see."