42 out of 53 people found the following comment useful :- Aliens in Muncie make for Spielberg's Best Film Ever, 10 January 2006
Author:
David H. Schleicher from New Jersey, USA
Steven Spielberg has made huge popcorn blockbusters that gross more
money at the box office (i.e. "Jaws," "Raiders of the Lost Ark," or
"Jurassic Park") and are more exciting on a visceral level. As he as
aged and matured as a director, he has also made movies that are more
important and will hold a more solid place in the chronicles of film as
an artistic document of history (i.e. "Schindler's List," "Saving
Private Ryan," and "Munich"). For my money, his best film will still
always be "Close Encounters of the Third Kind." This film is
Spielberg's humanistic and heartfelt answer to Kubrick's intellectual
and cerebral look at man's first contact with life from elsewhere in
the universe in his 1968 opus "2001: A Space Odyssey."
"Close Encounters" came early on in Spielberg's career, made in 1977,
and has all the hallmarks of his later films played just right before
he became so self-referential. Here we have his typical bag of tricks
long before they became so typical: familial strife, coming to terms
with something bigger than oneself that challenges the male
protagonist's view of the world around him, little kids in jeopardy,
superb build up of suspense, fantastic visual effects, and a memorable
score from John Williams. From the first UFO sightings in Muncie,
Indiana to the fantastic finale at Devil's Tower in Wyoming, this is
grand entertainment. Lots of films have emulated this movie to varying
degrees of success, from Robert Zemeckis' earnest "Contact," to the
shameful scam that was M. Night Shymalan's "Signs," and even Spielberg
himself recently did the dark natured flip-side to benevolent alien
encounters with his remake of "War of the Worlds" (which makes a
fantastic double-feature with this). However, nothing compares to this
true original. No other film has made me want to believe in aliens
more, and I'll never look at a plate of mashed potatoes the same again.
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42 out of 53 people found the following comment useful :-

Aliens in Muncie make for Spielberg's Best Film Ever, 10 January 2006
Author: David H. Schleicher from New Jersey, USA
Steven Spielberg has made huge popcorn blockbusters that gross more money at the box office (i.e. "Jaws," "Raiders of the Lost Ark," or "Jurassic Park") and are more exciting on a visceral level. As he as aged and matured as a director, he has also made movies that are more important and will hold a more solid place in the chronicles of film as an artistic document of history (i.e. "Schindler's List," "Saving Private Ryan," and "Munich"). For my money, his best film will still always be "Close Encounters of the Third Kind." This film is Spielberg's humanistic and heartfelt answer to Kubrick's intellectual and cerebral look at man's first contact with life from elsewhere in the universe in his 1968 opus "2001: A Space Odyssey."
"Close Encounters" came early on in Spielberg's career, made in 1977, and has all the hallmarks of his later films played just right before he became so self-referential. Here we have his typical bag of tricks long before they became so typical: familial strife, coming to terms with something bigger than oneself that challenges the male protagonist's view of the world around him, little kids in jeopardy, superb build up of suspense, fantastic visual effects, and a memorable score from John Williams. From the first UFO sightings in Muncie, Indiana to the fantastic finale at Devil's Tower in Wyoming, this is grand entertainment. Lots of films have emulated this movie to varying degrees of success, from Robert Zemeckis' earnest "Contact," to the shameful scam that was M. Night Shymalan's "Signs," and even Spielberg himself recently did the dark natured flip-side to benevolent alien encounters with his remake of "War of the Worlds" (which makes a fantastic double-feature with this). However, nothing compares to this true original. No other film has made me want to believe in aliens more, and I'll never look at a plate of mashed potatoes the same again.
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