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Everything We Know About Steven Spielberg’s ‘Disclosure Day’ So Far

Steven Spielberg will soon head to theaters with his latest alien science fiction thriller film, Disclosure Day, which has received many positive and buzzy first reactions. First announced to be brewing two years ago in May 2024, the untitled event film was rumored to be about UFOs from the start. It took the release date […]

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Rebecca Ferguson’s Addictive Thriller Gem Is the Perfect Late-Night Streaming Watch

After Gone Girl arrived like a whirling dervish and messed up viewers all over the place, studios were desperate for the next big “there's a woman in trouble and she may be an unreliable narrator” thriller. This particular film arrived right in the middle of that wave, and while it never became quite as memorable as some of the more successful movies of that time, it's the perfect kind of movie you'd stick on late at night on a Saturday with a glass of wine and end up hooked. And nobody would argue with that for a review.

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‘Disclosure Day’: Limpid script held up by spectacular acting ensemble, must-watch for Spielberg fans

Malay Mail

KUALA LUMPUR, June 10 — If the fate of the free world depended on making a movie about aliens, which director would you entrust with that responsibility?

The obvious choice would be E.T. storyteller Steven Spielberg.

I wasn't planning on watching Disclosure Day as I haven't been a fan of his films of the last 10 years yet when the chance came to preview the film, ah, I thought, why not?

Much as I admire the breadth of Spielberg's work, I'm not always convinced by its depth.

Disclosure Day from its trailers seems more like a thriller that just happens to have aliens.

A hint of government conspiracy, Emily Blunt speaking in tongues, glowing children and a deer as an unexpected visitor... but what actually is Disclosure Day?

It's a movie about aliens.

Familiar beats, acting too good for material

The premise is right out of a UFO conspiracy textbook: aliens have existed all this time, they have been to Earth and the US government has done its best to cover it up.

Emily Blunt is in fine form as weather girl Margaret Fairchild aspiring to bigger, better things and wants out of Dodge, I mean, Kansas City.

Josh O'Connor by contrast to her shines nevertheless in his very understated portrayal of an Edward Snowden-type (explaining more than that would be too spoiler-y) and Colin Firth is utterly chilling as a world-weary, emotionally checked out spyboss.

The supporting cast are just as solid with Eve Hewson, Colman Domingo and Elizabeth Marvel being particular standouts in their roles.

Now that's my biggest problem with this film; the acting is near-sublime but the script is all over the place, a weird salad of espionage, Cold War and alien conspiracy theories.

Yes, I appreciate the attempt at a more cerebral narrative but the whole "the world is not black and white, it's shades of grey, does the end really justify the means" schpiel has been done better in the Final Fantasy games.

The pacing is like a car with a faulty transmission, sometimes sputtering almost to a halt (there is a panic attack scene that eats more screen time than it should) but then suddenly going full octane without warning.

Let's just say I would be very drunk if there was a drinking game involving how many times a black car appears on screen, and then crashed into another one.

With characters flirting with death, then driving really fast to get away from said death, I wonder if the real moral here is that the US really needs better public transportation.

As someone who works in the media I did find it a little affecting that the film actually still portrays the mass media, or in this case the broadcast media, as still the best way to reach the masses so they will hear what they need most — the truth.

Spielberg even manages a sneaky reference to the current "is this real" phenomena afflicting the state of the news today.

Should you watch it? If you're a non-disillusioned Spielberg fan, yes, immediately book yourself a seat, IMAX preferably, the film is at its most riveting in the wider format and, well, the comfier seats as it's a long ride at roughly 2.5 hours.

The film is flawed, mostly due to the writing but Spielberg still manages to squeeze out performances that are miles above the material and that, I think, makes it worth the ticket price.

Leave the kids at home, though, because the lack of any attempt at humour and the very heavy questions poised would probably put the youngsters to sleep.

But if you want an E.T. with more teeth (though less heart) and a less discombobulated War of the Worlds, Disclosure Day is still worthy of joining Spielberg's pantheon of "I am incredibly obsessed with aliens" cinema.

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‘Disclosure Day’ First Reactions Call Steven Spielberg’s Sci-Fi Epic ‘His Best Film in 20 Years’ and Praise Emily Blunt’s ‘All-Time’ Performance

Steven Spielberg’s “Disclosure Day” has been unveiled to members of the film press ahead of its June 12 release date, and first reactions are calling the sci-fi UFO-focused movie “Spielberg’s best film in 20 years,” with high praise for star Emily Blunt. Gizmodo senior entertainment reporter Germain Lussier took to X to share his reaction, […]

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‘Disclosure Day’ Review: Steven Spielberg Wraps New Close Encounters Into A Masterful 70’s-Style Thriller That Demands Complex Answers To Otherworldly Mysteries

On its surface Steven Spielberg’s masterfully crafted new film, Disclosure Day might be classified most easily as a 70’s style thriller in the vein of Three Days Of The Condor with Robert Redford or The Parallax View with Warren Beatty in which increasing creeping paranoia over shadowy governmental activities takes over the lives of the […]

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Emily Blunt Was “A Bit Terrified” To Use AI In Making ‘Disclosure Day’ Alien Voice, Details Creating “Really Strange Sounds” Herself

As Steven Spielberg explores extraterrestrial life onscreen once again, the Disclosure Day director’s set was all about embracing the human element. Emily Blunt, who stars in the June 12 Universal Pictures release as meteorologist Margaret Fairchild, recently explained why she was “a bit terrified” to use AI in order to make the alien clicking voice […]

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‘Disclosure Day’ First Reactions Laud Emily Blunt’s Performance, Declare It “Spielberg’s Best Film In 20 Years”

“First reactions” on social media are usually laudatory and vague, and those around Steven Spielberg’s upcoming Disclosure Day are no less so. But the specifics they do offer are intriguing and somewhat atypical, given that those posting call the film “funny,” the director’s “weirdest” and call out its “X-Files-meets-The Bible script.” Scroll down for a […]

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Emily Blunt Says She Is ‘Terrified of AI’ and Refused to Use it on ‘Disclosure Day’

Emily Blunt is “terrified” of AI and chose not to rely on it during a pivotal sequence in Steven Spielberg’s upcoming film “Disclosure Day.” The Spielberg-directed sci-fi film follows a Kansas City TV meteorologist, played by Blunt, who is suddenly overcome by a mysterious extraterrestrial force while taping a weather segment live on air. The […]

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‘Disclosure Day’ Review: Steven Spielberg’s Invigorating Chase Thriller Taps Into the Mania for Alien Conspiracy Theory, but It Never Becomes a Close Encounter With Wonder

Scene for scene, the movie is a vigorous and diverting ride. Yet coming after the mountains of real UAP footage we’ve seen, "Disclosure Day" never gives you the contact high of awe that "Close Encounters" did. It’s closer to "Alien Autopsy" with better lighting, or perhaps a Special Edition of "The X-Files."

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Steven Spielberg, the filmmaker who put extraterrestrials into the planet’s imagination, returns to his great obsession

“I am much more inclined now than when I made Close Encounters of the Third Kind to really believe that we are not the only intelligent civilization in the universe.” With that line, which Steven Spielberg repeats in the trailer for his new release, Disclosure Day, the filmmaker underscores that he has returned to his two great themes: extraterrestrial life and truth.

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© TOLGA AKMEN (EFE)

Steven Spielberg at the London premiere of ‘Disclosure Day’on June 4.
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