It has been nearly two decades since Steven Spielberg seriously looked up at the stars with the intent to terrify us.
While he has played in the sci-fi sandbox recently with films like Ready Player One, those felt like fun diversions. They lacked the grounded, sweaty-palmed awe that defined his early career masterpieces. But if the first look at his new film, Disclosure Day, is any indication, the master hasn’t just returned to the alien genre—he looks ready to remind the modern industry exactly how it’s supposed to be done.
The intense first trailer, which stars Emily Blunt as a woman navigating a world on the brink of undeniable First Contact, arrived today. (For a full rundown of the trailer details, you can check out the coverage over at The Guardian or Variety)
But the real story here isn’t just the plot details; it’s the tone. In an era currently dominated by green-screen fatigue and endless multiverse cameos, Spielberg appears to be dragging the summer blockbuster back down to earth.
This shift in tone is perhaps best embodied by the inclusion of Josh O’Connor (The Crown, Challengers). O’Connor appears to be playing the audience surrogate—not a soldier or a scientist, but a civilian “whistleblower” desperate to reveal the truth. His line in the trailer, “People have a right to know… it belongs to 7 billion people,” anchors the film in a very modern anxiety.
In the 70s, Close Encounters was about the government successfully hiding the truth, but in 2026, Disclosure Day seems to be about the impossibility of keeping secrets in the digital age. By casting O’Connor—an actor known for raw, emotional intensity rather than action-hero stunts—Spielberg is signaling that the drama here will be human, not just pyrotechnic.
It feels like a deliberate return to the enduring magic of films like Close Encounters or even War of the Worlds. The terror in those films didn’t come from the special effects at the finale; it came from the unbearable tension of ordinary people facing extraordinary events in their own backyards.
Disclosure Day seems to be tapping directly back into that specific vein of Spielberg magic. The focus isn’t on massive CGI battles, but on reaction shots—that look of paralyzed awe that he captured so perfectly in 1977. This doesn’t look like an action movie designed to sell toys; it looks like a suspense thriller designed to keep you awake at night.
Welcome back to the genre, Steven. We missed this.
Disclosure Day arrives in theaters and IMAX on June 12, 2026.