Steven Spielberg Finally Reveals 1st Trailer For New UFO Film ‘Disclosure Day’, And Now We’re…
The veil has finally been lifted for Hollywood icon Steven Spielberg’s clandestine sci-fi project centered around UFOs and an extraterrestrial incursion that’s been speculated on and whispered about for more than a year, and it’s one of the best early Christmas gifts we⁘ve been given in years!
Plus it’s kinda scary!
Universal Pictures just unwrapped this somber new trailer for Spielberg’s “Disclosure Day” and it’s an uncanny exploration of an alien invasion as initially experienced by a meteorologist (Emily Blunt) and a passionate UFO whistleblower (Josh O’Connor) who want to share the truth with the world all at once.
The official teaser synopsis describes the Spielberg-directed event film as “If you found out we weren’t alone, if someone showed you, proved it to you, would that frighten you? This summer, the truth belongs to seven billion people. We are coming close to ⁘ Disclosure Day.”
Spielberg’s long fascination with UFOs, aliens, and outer space began at a very early age when his father woke him up late one night to go witness the Perseid meteor shower while lying in a field outside the suburbs of Haddon Heights, New Jersey.
This led to one of his first amateur film projects at the age of 17, a 1964 feature-length sci-fi movie called “Firelight” that he screened at a local Phoenix, Arizona theater for family and friends for the price of $1 per ticket.
His Hollywood explorations of flying saucers and science fiction came to glorious fruition with 1977’s ” Close Encounters of the Third Kind ,” then later in 1982’s “E.T the Extra-Terrestrial,” and more recently for 2005’s “War of the Worlds.” Now he’s firmly back in the UFO business with a dark descent into traditional alien invasion fare, complete with crop circles, sentient cardinals, herds of odd elk, and some positively creepy clicking voices.
But so far, no actual aliens or spaceships!
“Disclosure Day’s” screenplay, based on an original Spielberg story, was penned by frequent collaborator David Koepp, who helped write “Jurassic Park,” “Jurassic Park: The Lost World,” and “War of the Worlds.”
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