Disclosure Day (2026)

Steven Spielberg directs Emily Blunt, Josh O’Connor and Colin Firth in this conspiracy thriller where a group of unlikely whistle blowers are chased by a shadowy organisation who have suppressed evidence of close encounters.
The craft in this is undeniably masterful but the story as told is oft drab, uninvolving and chaotic. Blunt’s is a gloriously vivacious and energetic presence but not the lead. Her powers and importance are enigmatic, never fully locked down. She is more a sexy Macgufffin than a flesh and blood character. The big set piece sequences are momentarily thrilling but hobbled by obvious digital FX that have no place in a film this expensive and self important. AND the inescapable tight spots are resolved with little effort or logic once they have served their popcorn purpose. The movie plays out like a bunch of scripts blended together. Projects that Spielberg couldn’t get to work over the years. Off cuts minced from abandoned prestige drama but sold now as summer blockbuster. It is a feathered fish with sinister sequences, philosophical debates, some wonder but little cohesion. If it was the final three episodes of The X-Files it would make far more sense. But as the potential swan song of cinema’s greatest entertainer?… I’m not satisfied and I’m precisely the sort of fan who should give this a grateful pass. The movie feels in constant conversation with Steve’s life’s work (a jacket here, a showy one-r or three there, crowbarred in family dysfunction, Close Encounters) but is this all self reflection or cavalier Easter egg cuteness?
5
Perfect Double Bill: Close Encounters Of Third Kind (1977)









