Directed by: Steven Spielberg
Starring: Emily Blunt, Josh O'Connor, Colman Domingo, Colin Firth, Eve Hewson, Wyatt Russell, Elizabeth Marvel
Disclosure Day begins with the promise of something wonderful, but it doesn't deliver. The payoff feels as if the movie ended just when it should be revving up. If anything, the movie should be called "Pre-Disclosure Day" because all of the action brings us to the Disclosure Day of the title. Steven Spielberg's tale is a profound disappointment that should have been titled, "Close Encounters of the Fourth Kind"
However, most of Disclosure Day doesn't involve the mere possibility of alien life, but instead the coverup that aliens have been among us for some time. I don't know. This doesn't seem like news. How secret could Roswell be if everyday people and conspiracy theorists alike seem to know of its existence? Daniel Kellner (O'Connor), formerly of a government agency called Wardex, whose mission is to prevent the information Daniel possesses from seeing the light of day. Wardex, led by Noah Scanlon (Firth), fears that such information would upset people too much. A former friend of Noah's named Hugo (Domingo) urges Daniel to reach him so the world will see what Daniel knows.
We also have Margaret Fairchild (Blunt), a Kansas City television meteorologist who suddenly begins speaking in alien tongue during a weather forecast. Margaret doesn't remember this episode after it happens, and as further incidents occur, it becomes obvious she is somehow connected to the aliens. However, the big reveal involving Margaret and Daniel is underwhelming. The actors do their best, with Firth giving us more dimensions as the villain who is able to transport himself into other people's kitchens using a special device that looks like a futuristic mouthpiece.
With all of the movies we've seen about aliens over the years, Disclosure Day doesn't bring anything new or fresh to the genre. It feels pedestrian, which is something you can't normally say about a Steven Spielberg film. Spielberg is nearing eighty years old and we don't know how many movies he has left in him. Disclosure Day leaves room open for a potential sequel, but when the evidence of the aliens is presented to the world, I kept waiting for some conspiracy theorist to explain how the recordings were fake. Hey, they're still doing it for the moon landing and it would be realistic considering today's media. Disclosure Day feels like it was written in 1985 and never updated to reflect the current media era.
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