Favourite Steven Spielberg DIRECTED sci-fi movie |
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Icarium
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Posted: November 02 2022 at 13:48 |
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Steven Spielberg,is a person despite hes position as or can be seen as a formulaic Hollywood director. Is a director i also very much admire, for many reasons. He have an amasing knowledge of film and of film making is very high, he can create art in every genre, is very vercetile. Yet he never forgetts to make movies that intrigues and entertains. Some of hes movies i also will call art
I made an error which also shows my lack of awerness, hes first movie Firelight should have been on top of the poll. But came last. So the list is not perfectly chronologicall. Spielberg is a master of sci-fi, with a blend of awe and of fun. I like very much both CEoTK, ET, AI, Minority Report, War of the world, and Ready Player One, which really made me return my faith. So which of hes sci-fi is your favourite Edited by Icarium - November 03 2022 at 02:23 |
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Psychedelic Paul
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Yet across the gulf of space, minds that are to our minds as ours are to those of the beasts that perish, intellects vast and cool and unsympathetic, regarded this earth with envious eyes, and slowly and surely drew their plans against us.....
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Grumpyprogfan
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E.T.
My favorite Spielberg movies are the Back to the Future Trilogy. |
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progaardvark
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From this list, Close Encounter gets my vote.
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Heart of the Matter
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It's Close EncounterS of the THIRD Kind, and War of the WorldS
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moshkito
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Hi,
CLOSE ENCOUNTERS ... IF it is in its original version with the extra 20 some minutes that were taken out. It was a much better film, and helped make things more interesting and a better story! Other wise, I would say that E.T. is the great one, although I think that the over the moon shot is way too stoopid and not necessary, but this is Hollywood, right?
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geekfreak
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Close Encounter of the first Kind
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Friedrich Nietzsche: "Without music, life would be a mistake."
Music Is Live Two people are better off than one, for they can help each other succeed. Keep Calm And Listen To The Music… < |
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Icarium
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I love John Williamss score on Close Encounter of third Time, probably hes most experimental and inspired composition.
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JD
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Close Encounter of the Third Kind Three reasons. 1 - Richard Dreyfuss' character's mania that culminates with him building the Devils Tower in his living room, including using real shrubberies 2 - The massive keyboard Jumbo Tron setup 3 - The Soundtrack Edited by JD - November 03 2022 at 10:06 |
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Argo2112
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I went with Minority Report but I haven't seen Close Encounters in a very long time.
Probably should check it out again.
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essexboyinwales
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How was Spielberg involved with these?! Love ET and CEOTTK, but I also have a soft spot for WOTW, the opening half hour or so is remarkably well done….. |
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Heaven is waiting but waiting is Hell
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suitkees
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^ Spielberg was an executive producer on all three of the BttF films. Spielberg is a master in making entertaining films. Although I dislike his dinosaur duds, most of his other films are good to great. Difficult to single out one... I guess for me it would be between Close Encounters and Minority Report. I'll go with the latter this time.
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moshkito
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Hi, AND, don't forget Francois Truffaut! Excellent, and he has the knack for acting that he showed his actors in a lot of his films!
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Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told!
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suitkees
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^ Oh, allow me to disagree on that one, Mosh. I find Truffaut's acting rather bland, here and everywhere else where he appeared. In general, and I know it is not a popular opinion here in France and probably elsewhere, I think Truffaut is a much overrated (ah, for once I adopt this awful word) director. Up till La peau douce he's brilliant, but afterwards his bourgeois tendencies are getting the up. Fahrenheit 451 is interesting but, especially in the directing department, lacking - imho. After that, it is getting too talkative and focused on relations (and his look on relationships). His cinema becomes very soppy, if you ask me...
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The razamataz is a pain in the bum |
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Icarium
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I voted Ready Player One, one of the funnest movies ive ever seen. Such a joyful movie, not better then ET, not Minority Report, etc, but this is an older Spieberg, does not have to proove antything (one could think) but the amount of childlike wonder, and grasp of the zeitgeist, this movie shows a good understanding of both social commentary, and showing the love for console video gaming,as a kid of the late 80s, whole 90s and beginning of the 00z, this film is my imagination (or were). Havbt read the book, but the film is chefs kiss.
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Cristi
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Spielberg never directed a movie called "Firelight".
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moshkito
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Hi, Actually, a lot of French directors are "too talkative". Check this out: Rivette: Long discussions spread out, sometimes around the story. Perfect example is "La Belle Noiseusse" which is almost 4 hours long to make a small point in the end ... but in between it is far out to watch a hand draw a picture right from the start! Godard: Best not get started on him, because he would immediately interrupt and do some kind of philosophical diatribe about this or that. Try some metaphysics over a cup of mil, dissolving the coffee, or the other way around ... totally insane! Berri: Very talkative films, however to say that there is no "story" means that we are too impatient. Check out the 2 films "Jean de Florette" and "Manon of the Spring". The whole time you have no idea what is really going on, and the dialogue is NOT sidestepping the issue, and neither is it hiding anything, it just seems in the right place. Until the last 5 minutes of the 2nd film, when you get the most amazing jolt. THAT, is great literature in film, right there! Truffaut: Agreed that he is very talky in his films, but I'm not sure that any of his films would have been as good without it, not to mention that a big part of it might have been that a lot of it was improvised, by actors well drilled and trained, to know and follow a program or story! All four of these, the major French directors, known collectively as "the new wave" were all, Film Critics as well (Les Cahiers du Cinema) ... and they knew film, its history, and a lot more. Film for them, was exposition, and dialogue was something that the English had dumped for "big moments" and dumped the rest of the dialogue and story ... like no one cares about Shakespeare except the main lines! The French were not that egotistical! They were much more literary minded, and I think there was a place for that in film, although to say that in America is like saying something bad about all American film, most of which is just "entertainment" and has to do with money, and not film at all!
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Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told!
www.pedrosena.com |
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Gentle and Giant
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Must be this. Can't say I've ever heard of before, let alone seen it: |
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Oh, for the wings of any bird, other than a battery hen
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Logan
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Reportedly/ reputedly very few have seen it. Spielberg is supposed to have based Close Encounters on this film he made whew he was 17 for 500 dollars. And it reputedly showed in one theatre which seated 500 where at one dollar per ticket it made 501 dollars reputedly (maybe two dollars from his mum). Supposedly most of the film was lost (given to a production company that went bust and not retrieved?) and there are only a few minutes to watch (can be seen on youtube). I don't know how much of the story is true, there's quite a lot I've read about it that makes me sceptical. Anyway, my obvious (to me) vote is for Close Encounters of the Third Kind. I love that film. It makes for a nice double-bill with the Steven Spielberg penned and produced Poltergeist. |
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Icarium
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So its only added for historical and curiosity reasons |
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