Tags / Steven Spielberg

"Steven Spielberg"

15 BuzzVerdicts

Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade

4.5

1989 · Steven Spielberg · 127 min · Action

Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade is the rare third installment that rivals the original. Adding Sean Connery was a stroke of brilliance, shifting the franchise from pure adventure into something warmer without sacrificing the thrills. The comedy occasionally undercuts the stakes, and it hits many of the same beats as Raiders, but the Ford-Connery dynamic elevates everything around it. As a sendoff for the original trilogy, it's about as perfect as anyone could have asked for.

E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial

4.5

1982 · Steven Spielberg · 115 min · Sci-Fi / Family / Adventure

E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial endures because Spielberg built it around something timeless: a lonely kid who needs a friend. The special effects have aged, and the pacing carries the rhythms of a different era of filmmaking. But the emotional core is bulletproof. Henry Thomas gives one of the great child performances in cinema history, and John Williams' score does things to your heart that four decades haven't diminished. It's a film that earns every tear it asks for.

Close Encounters of the Third Kind

4.3

1977 · Steven Spielberg · 132 min · Sci-Fi / Drama

Close Encounters of the Third Kind remains one of the most optimistic science fiction films ever made, and Spielberg's vision of first contact as an act of wonder rather than war still feels radical. Richard Dreyfuss gives a performance that's both magnetic and unsettling, and the final sequence at Devil's Tower is filmmaking at its most awe-inspiring. The human cost of Roy's obsession complicates what could have been a simple feel-good story, and that tension is what gives the film its lasting depth.

The Color Purple (1985)

4.2

1985 · Steven Spielberg · 154 min · Drama

The Color Purple is a deeply felt film carried by performances that transcend the occasional heavy-handedness of Spielberg's direction. Whoopi Goldberg's Celie is one of the most moving characters in 1980s cinema, and the film's depiction of resilience, sisterhood, and self-discovery resonates with lasting power. It smooths some of Alice Walker's sharper edges, but what it preserves is a story of survival that's impossible to watch unmoved.

Catch Me If You Can

4.2

2002 · Steven Spielberg · 141 min · Crime Comedy-Drama

Catch Me If You Can is Spielberg working in pure entertainment mode, and it delivers on every level. DiCaprio is magnetic as a real-life con artist whose charm is as dangerous as it is delightful, and Tom Hanks grounds the whole thing with his quietly affecting FBI pursuer. It's breezy without being shallow, funny without being silly, and surprisingly touching once you realize this is a film about two lonely men orbiting each other across a decade. Not Spielberg's most ambitious work, but few films of its era are this effortlessly enjoyable.

West Side Story (2021)

4.1

2021 · Steven Spielberg · 156 min · Musical / Drama / Crime

West Side Story is Spielberg proving that the musical, as a cinematic form, still has the power to overwhelm. The dance sequences are some of the finest ever filmed, Ariana DeBose owns the screen as Anita, and the technical filmmaking is breathtaking from first frame to last. The central romance remains the weakest structural element, inherited from the source material rather than introduced by this version. But as a piece of pure cinema, choreographed and shot with a passion that borders on obsessive, it's a stunning achievement.

Minority Report

4.1

2002 · Steven Spielberg · 145 min · Sci-Fi

Minority Report is Spielberg working at the intersection of blockbuster spectacle and genuine ideas, delivering an action thriller that actually earns its philosophical ambitions. The world-building remains startlingly prescient, the central dilemma still provokes real debate, and Cruise anchors it with one of his most committed performances. The third act wraps things up a bit too neatly for a film that spends two hours questioning certainty, but the ride there is among Spielberg's best.

The Fabelmans

4.1

2022 · Steven Spielberg · 151 min · Drama

The Fabelmans is Spielberg turning the camera on himself and finding that the story of how he became a filmmaker is also the story of how he lost his family. Michelle Williams gives a performance of startling vulnerability, Gabriel LaBelle carries the film with skill beyond his years, and the filmmaking sequences capture the intoxicating discovery of artistic purpose like nothing else in recent cinema. It's more personal than polished, which is exactly what makes it feel like something new from a director who's been doing this for fifty years.

Munich

4.1

2005 · Steven Spielberg · 164 min · Drama / History / Thriller

Munich is Spielberg at his most morally troubled, a thriller that refuses to let its audience settle into the satisfaction of revenge. Eric Bana anchors the film with a performance that maps the full cost of doing terrible things for justifiable reasons. It's too long and occasionally too blunt in stating its themes. But as a film about what vengeance does to the people who carry it out, it's among the most serious and unsettling works in Spielberg's career.

Bridge of Spies

4.0

2015 · Steven Spielberg · 141 min · Drama / History / Thriller

Bridge of Spies is the kind of film they mean when people say they don't make them like they used to. Spielberg directs with total command of his craft, Tom Hanks brings warmth and conviction to a role built for him, and Mark Rylance steals the film with an Oscar-winning turn that redefines quiet scene-stealing. It's methodical where a lesser film would be breathless, and it trusts that the drama of principle is as compelling as any action sequence. A thoroughly satisfying piece of classical filmmaking.

Lincoln

4.0

2012 · Steven Spielberg · 150 min · Biography / Drama / History

Lincoln succeeds because Daniel Day-Lewis doesn't play a monument. He plays a tired, funny, cunning politician who happened to change the course of American history during the worst month of his life. Spielberg surrounds him with an ensemble that brings the messy realities of democracy to vivid life, and Tony Kushner's screenplay finds genuine drama in parliamentary procedure. It's a film about how the sausage gets made, and it makes that process as gripping as any battlefield.

A.I. Artificial Intelligence

3.8

2001 · Steven Spielberg · 146 min · Sci-Fi

A.I. Artificial Intelligence is a film at war with itself in the most fascinating way possible. The Kubrick blueprint and the Spielberg execution create something truly unique: a fairy tale set in a dying world, told by a filmmaker who can't help but reach for warmth even when the story demands ice. Haley Joel Osment's performance alone justifies the runtime. The tonal seams are real, and the final act will always divide audiences. But the questions A.I. asks about love, consciousness, and what it means to be real have only grown more urgent with time.

Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom

3.7

1984 · Steven Spielberg · 118 min · Action

Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom is the black sheep of the original trilogy, and that's both its weakness and its strange appeal. Spielberg pushed the franchise into darker territory than anyone expected, delivering set pieces that remain thrilling four decades later while wrapping them in a tone that still makes audiences uneasy. The cultural representation is a genuine problem that can't be handwaved away. Willie Scott tests patience in ways Short Round never does. But the mine cart chase is still one of the great action sequences in cinema, and the film's willingness to go places Raiders wouldn't is more interesting than it gets credit for.

War of the Worlds

3.5

2005 · Steven Spielberg · 117 min · Sci-Fi

War of the Worlds contains some of Spielberg's most viscerally effective filmmaking wrapped around a story that can't stick its landing. The first hour is a masterclass in large-scale terror filtered through an intimate perspective, and the tripod sequences carry a primal power that few disaster films can match. But the family dynamics don't fully land, the Tim Robbins basement sequence overstays its welcome, and Spielberg himself has acknowledged that the ending doesn't work. What's here is impressive enough to recommend, but the film never becomes the sum of its best parts.

The Terminal

3.5

2004 · Steven Spielberg · 128 min · Comedy

The Terminal is minor Spielberg, and it knows it. Tom Hanks brings warmth and specificity to a character who could easily have been a caricature, and the airport as a self-contained world is more charming than it has any right to be. The plot is too thin for its runtime, the romance doesn't convince, and the sentimentality runs unchecked in the final act. But as a gentle, good-natured film about kindness and patience in a system designed for neither, it has a modest appeal that's hard to dislike even when it's impossible to love.