The Aliens Aren’t the Most Unbelievable Part of Steven Spielberg’s New Movie

Would even extraterrestrials inspire humanity to unite these days?

Foreign Policy
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The Aliens Aren’t the Most Unbelievable Part of Steven Spielberg’s New Movie

This essay discloses the ending of the movie Disclosure Day, so do not read if you want to avoid the truth until it is revealed to you in theaters.

In The X-Files, special agent Fox Mulder kept a poster in his office featuring a photo of a flying saucer worthy of a 1950s pulp novel cover above the words “I Want To Believe.” It was not a declaration of faith, but an admission of desire—and a very relatable aspect of human behavior. Sure, the poster says, UFO conspiracies may be a little nuts, but wouldn’t it be fantastic if they weren’t? For fellow travelers, Steven Spielberg’s newest movie, Disclosure Day, is a deliverance.

Few want to believe more than Spielberg, the 79-year-old film director and producer whose early empire was built off the back of adventure, fantasy, thrills, and, in some key cases, aliens from outer space. Though today equally respected for prestige dramas and historical epics, he’s always kept a foot in science fiction. The prolific auteur brought this duality home well in 1993, releasing both Schindler’s List and Jurassic Park in the same calendar year, and again in 2005, releasing Munich and War of the Worlds. He can look back with pride at spearheading the historical archive at the USC Shoah Foundation, but he can also rely on a solid payday whenever there’s a new installment in the noisy and childish Transformers franchise, of which he is an executive producer.

Spielberg has gone back to the extra terrestrial well this summer with Disclosure Day, a movie very much in dialogue with his first science fiction hit, 1977’s Close Encounters of the Third Kind. As a fast-paced thriller with no shortage of action, otherworldly technology, and weird phenomena, it largely succeeds. Spielberg and his usual collaborators (cinematographer Janusz Kaminski, composer John Williams, editor Sarah Broshar) exploit the language of cinema in superhuman ways, creating sequences that delight, enrapture, terrify (just a little), and delight. The guy’s rich and famous for a reason. Yet as I exited the theater, I was only on cloud eight. A friend and I agreed: “Yeah, he’s still got it, but he may be just a tad naive.” The movie’s thesis—that yoinking a Grey alien out of a Raiders of the Lost Ark-like warehouse and plopping it on the evening news will bring about world peace—is giving life in 2026 too much credit.


A silhouette of a person’s back stands out-of-focus in the immediate foreground, looking toward a group of small, slender, child-sized figures with large, bulbous heads and big black eyes. The small figures stand in clusters against a brightly glowing, overexposed white background, creating a stark, high-contrast silhouette effect.

A silhouette of a person’s back stands out-of-focus in the immediate foreground, looking toward a group of small, slender, child-sized figures with large, bulbous heads and big black eyes. The small figures stand in clusters against a brightly glowing, overexposed white background, creating a stark, high-contrast silhouette effect.

Richard Dreyfuss on the set of Close Encounters of the Third Kind in this undated photo from the 1970s.Sunset Boulevard/Corbis via Getty Images

Optimism and wonderment have been at the core of most of Spielberg’s mainstream hits. Even before the dinosaurs start eating people in Jurassic Park there’s that enormous close-up of Laura Dern and Sam Neill making the Spielberg face, the most basic visual representation of purity.

Close Encounters is the mothership of Spielberg’s cinematic syntax. It’s also a summation of themes particular to the 1970s. The interplanetary adventure fits in nicely with the post-Watergate paranoia trend. If you recall, the United States government lies to its citizens about a chemical spill to clear the area for an alien visitation. A grand conspiracy is at play, but “they” are keeping it, and its mind-blowing truth, away from us. There’s also the fundamentally New Age aspects of the movie, beyond the obvious points concerning benevolent extra-terrestrial life using sound and light to communicate: Lead character Roy (Richard Dreyfuss) is called—forced, really—to take a voyage of self-discovery and advancement, escaping the shackles of rote suburban life. (It’s worth noting, however, that once Spielberg became a father, he renounced his protagonist’s deadbeat-dad turn.)

These 1970s tropes were tamped down for Spielberg’s next engagement with aliens, 1982’s E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial, which, apart from being thrilling and funny and heartbreaking, was one of the more groundbreaking mainstream films to address the balkanization of the nuclear family—a topic of great concern among Reagan-era conservatives wishing to undo much of the previous decade’s social change. This is not to suggest that Spielberg made an inherently reactionary film, but, like in Close Encounters, he used aliens to address the big social issues of the period. E.T.’s fundamental message of “be good” (you can hear it with the music swelling, right?) offers the only reasonable advice for heartbroken children aiding their new pal on his adventure to return home.

It’s worth noting that E.T. began its life as a much darker project called Night Skies, a non-sequel follow-up to Close Encounters in which a family were terrorized by a group of aliens—one of whom had a streak of kindness and who befriended the family’s son. At a certain point, Spielberg homed in on just that last bit, eventually crafting what might, at the end of the day, be his signature film. Ever the smart producer, though, he repurposed elements of the initial script for future projects directed by others, namely Tobe Hooper’s Poltergeist (a family under siege by forces not of this Earth) and Joe Dante’s Gremlins (the same, but funnier). The Reagan era was also, for many, a time in which U.S. entrepreneurs made spaceship-sized amounts of money.

A young boy wearing a gray zip-up hoodie and red smudges around his eyes stands in a wooded area, looking upward and to the right with a wide-eyed expression. Next to him is E.T., a brown, wrinkly, non-human creature with a long neck, a wide head, large blue eyes, and flat facial features, also looking upward. The background is filled with blurry green pine trees under soft, hazy lighting.

A young boy wearing a gray zip-up hoodie and red smudges around his eyes stands in a wooded area, looking upward and to the right with a wide-eyed expression. Next to him is E.T., a brown, wrinkly, non-human creature with a long neck, a wide head, large blue eyes, and flat facial features, also looking upward. The background is filled with blurry green pine trees under soft, hazy lighting.

Henry Thomas on the set of E.T. in this undated photo from the 1980s.Sunset Boulevard/Corbis via Getty Images

Spielberg did eventually explore the darker side of aliens himself in 2005, with War of the Worlds. This is widely accepted as his response to the 9/11 attacks—an unburdening of the horrible images of that day, with scenes of urban destruction, mass panic, and unfathomably nightmarish deaths. Though this may not seem of a piece with Spielberg’s wonderment and optimism about beings from distant stars, I’d argue that his choice to safely place his residual anxieties in this particular box offers a kind of cover. The property—from its H.G. Wells origins to its notorious Orson Welles radio drama to the George Pal-produced 1953 Technicolor film, and even the late 1970s prog rock double-album by Jeff Wayne—are all part of the pulp magazine heritage of Spielberg’s youthful fascination, which also led him to produce the television serial Amazing Stories in the mid-1980s, borrowing from science fiction’s most legendary publication. It’s a dark and fearsome film, but just playful enough.

Certainly much more playful is 2008’s Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull, an unfairly maligned entry in the series Spielberg created with his chum George Lucas, whose first Star Wars film hit theaters just months before Close Encounters. (What a year to be a nerd!) Though mostly an exercise in action-adventure cinema, its release during the hangover of the Iraq War is no coincidence. Dr. Jones is fired from his university position due to McCarthy-era shenanigans, a reflection of the Patriot Act codes from the Bush era. There’s also the war-profiteering villain played by Ray Winstone, a surrogate, perhaps, for Blackwater.

Crystal Skull’s plot sends Harrison Ford and company to lost cities in Latin America, and plays with tropes popularized in the late 1960s book Chariots of the Gods? Unsolved Mysteries of the Past about “ancient astronauts.” There’s a bit of a twist to it, which I won’t spoil, in the hopes that you’ll give this movie (which is not as good as the earlier Indiana Jones pictures but is still quite good!) a second shot. It also bluntly confirms the stories of Roswell, New Mexico, and Area 51, the mother of all UFO conspiracy theories and wellspring of “I want to believe.”


Roswell is just an appetizer to the full meal that UFO (or the more modern UAP: unidentified anomalous or aerial phenomena) enthusiasts will get in Disclosure Day. Every conspiracy, even wacky ones involving a drunken Richard Nixon and Jackie Gleason (see this uh, reliable source), are true in this movie. And what’s more, an unelected black ops security group has been given a limitless budget and access to futuristic technology to keep it all under wraps. But they didn’t count on a few workers with a conscience, as well as a plucky midwestern weather reporter who is also an “experiencer”—the preferred term over “abductee” in the UAP community.

As with Close Encounters, the bulk of Disclosure Day follows a man and a woman (Josh O’Connor and Emily Blunt instead of Dreyfuss and Melinda Dillon) who must race across the country, following an instinct. This action is against their common sense (O’Connor mutters disbelief at his own actions over and over to great comic effect during one particularly adventuresome moment) but they are rarely frightened. In Close Encounters, the term “agreeable” is used to describe the tune that plays over and over in the minds of those who have seen the visiting ships. In Disclosure Day, Blunt’s character expresses a sense of calm and purpose, even though she suddenly starts speaking in alien clicks (we later learn she’s talking in math!) and can intuit people’s innermost thoughts.

The new film ups the anti-government sentiment in a key way. Not only are officials hiding the truth from us, the withheld information is actively making the world worse. The background noise of the movie, deftly inserted from overheard news broadcasts, is that the United States and Russia are inches from war, thanks to troubles on the Korean peninsula. What the good guys of the movie believe is that if mankind were given proof of alien intelligence, we would all regain our awe of the universe and put down our arms. (Preferably with wide eyes, mouth slightly agape, in close-up and with dramatic lighting.)

A woman with light brown hair stands in front of a large screen displaying a weather forecast map of the United States. She is wearing a sleeveless bright red dress with a ruffled detail at the waist, holding a small remote in her clasped hands while looking slightly upward with a serious expression. The map behind her shows weather patterns with green, yellow, and red radar indicators, a cold front line, and labels for cities including Denver, Wichita, and Chicago.

A woman with light brown hair stands in front of a large screen displaying a weather forecast map of the United States. She is wearing a sleeveless bright red dress with a ruffled detail at the waist, holding a small remote in her clasped hands while looking slightly upward with a serious expression. The map behind her shows weather patterns with green, yellow, and red radar indicators, a cold front line, and labels for cities including Denver, Wichita, and Chicago.

Emily Blunt plays meteorologist Margaret Fairchild on the set of sci-fi thriller Disclosure Day in this undated photo.Universal Pictures

This is not a particularly new sentiment, especially to anyone familiar with pulp stories. One of the foundational sci-fi films, 1951’s The Day The Earth Stood Still, features an emissary of peace from another planet who calls himself John Carpenter—a double Christ metaphor in both the initials and last name, for those who are slow to pick up on these things. He uses alien powers to put belligerent nations in their place (literally, by freezing the planet’s power grid) in an effort to get us to stop killing each other. The trope of aliens being the only thing that can unite humanity became so cliche that the comic Watchmen turned it on its head: An ends-justifies-the-means villain “saves” humanity on the verge of war by sacrificing an urban population and blaming it on aliens.

There’s no such postmodern play in Disclosure Day. Spielberg goes all-in on the concept that a newscast featuring a cache of videos that expand on those we’ve already seen and the appearance of an alien on TV will stop World War III. And this is, I fear, a somewhat outdated view.

Earlier in the movie, a character wary of disclosure calls the truth “a virus for which we have no immunity.” That’s a pretty loaded phrase in a post-COVID climate. The fear is that people of faith will freak out if alien life is proven, and it could lead to violence. But the wording connotes our current political conversation—where increasing numbers of the populace seem impervious to facts. In a world where Donald Trump and his followers dismiss everything they don’t like as “fake news,” I don’t think anything can convince them of something they don’t like. Nor do I see the presence of spaceships pushing Vladimir Putin to pause his meat grinder strategy in Ukraine. Far-right Zionists building more settlements in the West Bank and the latest Hamas recruits are far too entrenched to hear E.T.’s call to “be good.”

Disclosure Day uses all of Spielberg’s powers to build to a final, calming moment of peace. While the big finish uses clever editing, the director tips his hand. Human beings have retained their humanity; it just needs to be drawn out. And when faced with a higher intelligence, humility will win the day. One wonders if the 79-year-old legend has taken a real look at the world around him, as it’s nearly impossible to agree with this wishful thinking. Still, I want to believe.

Original Source

Foreign Policy

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