Like a shark hunter who has lost track of the shark, or an adventurer unable to locate the Ark of the Covenant, Steven Spielberg has been drifting for the better part of the decade.In recent years, Spielberg has seemed far removed from the glories of Jaws (1975) or Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981), to say nothing of what I consider his masterpiece, the impeccably rendered, intimately scaled World War II drama, Empire of the Sun (1987). The director’s skeptics each mark the start of his decline in their own way, but his four most recent films seem a logical place to start: The Post (2017) was a particularly lame example of legacy media cheerleading, while Ready Player One (2018) represented a devastating concession to the most pernicious forces in modern movies, including CGI, video games, and pop culture nostalgia. More recently, Spielberg’s version of West Side Story (2021) was defiantly unnecessary, and his admittedly skillful autobiographical saga, The Fabelmans (2022), was a souffle of boyhood anecdotes.Perhaps one reason why his newest release, the extraterrestrial epic Disclosure Day, opened to such robust box-office returns is that it promised a certain retrenching from its director. Enthusiasts of Spielberg’s previous alien-focused films, especially Close Encounters of the Third Kind (1977) and E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial (1982), cannot be faulted for assuming their maker would produce a fresh set of beatific visions: heavenly images of friendly neighbors seeking fellowship with lonely Earthlings.
Aliens to the rescue: Review of Disclosure Day
If "Disclosure Day" was simply a restatement of Spielberg’s fervent hopes for human-alien contact, it would be nothing more than a reminder of his old movies.









