Spielberg's Disclosure Day Criticized for Overestimating Global Empathy

Spielberg’s Disclosure Day Criticized for Overestimating Global Empathy

7 reported

Steven Spielberg's new film "Disclosure Day" follows cybersecurity expert Daniel Kellner (Josh O'Connor) and weather presenter Margaret Fairchild (Emily Blunt) as they expose nearly eight decades of evidence that the U.S. government has known about extraterrestrial life. The film, released 49 years after "Close Encounters" and 44 after "E.T.," depicts worldwide shock when footage of aliens being exploited, vivisected, and killed is leaked. However, a review from The Guardian argues that such unanimous global outrage is unrealistic, noting that othered groups and animals already face similar abuse without widespread protest. The reviewer contends that the film's central assumption stems from a world unlike the one most people experience daily. The article notes that the film is not a documentary and does not have an overt moral message, but questions its premise of universal compassion. Steven Spielberg's new film "Disclosure Day" follows cybersecurity expert Daniel Kellner (Josh O'Connor) and weather presenter Margaret Fairchild (Emily Blunt) as they expose nearly eight decades of evidence that the U.S. government has known about extraterrestrial life. The film, released 49 years after "Close Encounters" and 44 after "E.T.," depicts worldwide shock when footage of aliens being exploited, vivisected, and killed is leaked. However, a review from The Guardian argues that such unanimous global outrage is unrealistic, noting that othered groups and animals already face similar abuse without widespread protest. The reviewer contends that the film's central assumption stems from a world unlike the one most people experience daily. The article notes that the film is not a documentary and does not have an overt moral message, but questions its premise of universal compassion.

What’s reported

"Disclosure Day" is a sci-fi film directed by Steven Spielberg, released 49 years after "Close Encounters" and 44 after "E.T."
The film follows cybersecurity expert Daniel Kellner (Josh O'Connor) and weather presenter Margaret Fairchild (Emily Blunt) as whistleblowers exposing nearly eight decades of U.S. government knowledge of extraterrestrial life.
Files are stolen from Wardex, a shady organization run by Noah Scanlon (Colin Firth), showing footage of U.S. organizations meeting, exploiting, vivisecting, and killing aliens.
The footage brings Daniel's girlfriend Jane (Eve Hewson) to tears and later causes traffic standstills when streamed without warning.
The Guardian review argues that such shock over alien mistreatment is unrealistic, given lack of similar outrage over abuse of othered groups and animals.
Aliens in the film appear as animals including moose, cardinals, foxes, and deer.
The article states the film is not a documentary and has no overt moral message.

Key figures

Steven Spielberg (film director)
Josh O'Connor (actor, plays Daniel Kellner)
Emily Blunt (actress, plays Margaret Fairchild)
Colin Firth (actor, plays Noah Scanlon)
Colman Domingo (actor, plays Hugo)
Eve Hewson (actress, plays Jane)
The Guardian (source outlet, reviewer not named in text)

Sources: The Guardian

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