Skip to main content
Games Radar Newsarama Total Film Edge Retro Gamer SFX
GamesRadar+ GamesRadar+ The smarter take on movies
flag of UK
UK
flag of US
US
flag of Canada
Canada
flag of Australia
Australia
Sign in
  • View Profile
  • Sign out
Gaming Magazines
Gaming Magazines
Why subscribe?
  • Subscribe from just £3
  • Takes you closer to the games, movies and TV you love
  • Try a single issue or save on a subscription
  • Issues delivered straight to your door or device
From$12
Subscribe now
Trending
  • Best Netflix Movies
  • Best movies on Disney Plus
  • Movie Release Dates
  • Best Netflix Shows
Don't miss these
The Shrouds
Drama Movies It may feature corpses, missing limbs, and AI, but with The Shrouds, legendary director David Cronenberg has made the ultimate meditation on grief: "To me, there is no afterlife"
Roy Scheider as Martin Brody in Jaws
Thriller Movies Jaws may be 50 years old, but Steven Spielberg's shark thriller is still a blockbuster in a league of its own
Steven Spielberg
Thriller Movies Steven Spielberg says he thought his "career was virtually over" during the making of Jaws: "Everybody was saying to me, 'You are never going to get hired again'"
Abraham's Boys: A Dracula Story
Drama Movies New indie horror Abraham's Boys: A Dracula Story is Frailty meets There Will Be Blood with a haunting focus on family – and I have no complaints
Leonardo DiCaprio as Bob in One Battle After Another
Action Movies Legendary director Steven Spielberg praises Leonardo DiCaprio's new "bizarre" action thriller at early screening: "What an insane movie, oh my God"
Caleb Landry Jones as Walter in Harvest
Drama Movies I loved the folk horror elements of 28 Years Later, and this new nightmarish medieval movie follows in its footsteps in all the right ways
Lurker
Thriller Movies New indie thriller Lurker is a tense, cautionary tale about celebrity obsession — and it made me question my own morale
Wednesday season 2 stop motion sequence
Fantasy Shows Wednesday season 2 features a new Tim Burton stop-motion short, and Netflix has released an amazing behind-the-scenes look at how it was made
Jonah Wren Phillips as Oliver and Sally Hawkins as Laura in Bring Her Back
Horror Movies Bring Her Back directors admit they don't feel "any more confident now" despite releasing two hit horrors in a row: "The pressure was almost unbearable after Talk to Me"
cobweb horror
Movies The 25 best movies on Netflix to watch this week
Alison Brie and Dave Franco as Millie and Tim in Together
Horror Movies Together stars Alison Brie and Dave Franco think "there's no place for vanity" in either comedy or horror: "We're not worried about how we look when we're in these crazy positions"
The Thing sitting on his bed sporting his big rocky beard in The Fantastic Four: First Steps
Marvel Movies We finally know how Ben Grimm shaves his Thing beard in The Fantastic Four: First Steps, and it's the funniest thing I've seen since learning how Superman does it
Elle Fanning in Predator: Badlands
Sci-Fi Movies Predator Badlands director explains how Steven Spielberg's Jaws and the video game Shadow of the Colossus influenced the upcoming sci-fi movie: "The Predator's gotta be badass and ferocious, but also sincere and have a pulse of its own"
Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale
Drama Movies Downton Abbey helped me through the toughest times, but The Grand Finale feels like the perfect time to wrap things up
Dogtooth
Drama Movies The new Yorgos Lanthimos movie is getting rave first reactions out of Venice Film Festival, but I think it's worth revisiting his breakout feature Dogtooth before Bugonia hits theaters this fall
  1. Entertainment
  2. Movies

Spielberg On Spielberg

Features
By GamesRadar published 9 May 2011

The Beard gets reflective…

When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Here’s how it works.

What made you finally embrace a fourth Indiana Jones movie?

What made you finally embrace a fourth Indiana Jones movie?

It's not for money or success. It's for the good times. I've always said that I had the most fun in my life while making those three movies with George [ Lucas ] and Harrison [ Ford ]. It's a very good story. It's worth living that long to see!

Page 1 of 16
Page 1 of 16
Do you think your fans would like to see a sequel to ET?

Do you think your fans would like to see a sequel to ET?

ET was a very personal little picture. My motivation for making it was pure and non-profit based - I didn't think it would be a hit because it was about kids and no films about kids under 18 were doing any business then.

I wouldn't make a sequel because it couldn't be superior to the original and I don't want to blemish a perfect picture.

Page 2 of 16
Page 2 of 16
It's common knowledge you disapproved of the Jaws sequels. Why didn't you make any of them?

It's common knowledge you disapproved of the Jaws sequels. Why didn't you make any of them?

Because making the first movie was a nightmare! There were endless problems with the shark and it was an impossible shoot. I thought my career was over because no one had ever taken a movie 100 days over schedule. It was successful, but I never wanted to go near the water again.

Page 3 of 16
Page 3 of 16
How do you feel about pretty much inventing the Summer Event Movie?

How do you feel about pretty much inventing the Summer Event Movie?

It was Universal's choice to release it in the summertime. They figured that people would be at the beach, go swimming and say, "Hey, that reminds me - let's go and see that shark movie!"

I honestly didn't know it was gonna create this, you know, lava flow each summer. Frankly, I don't really think there's a right time or a wrong time to release a movie.

Take Titanic . That was initially scheduled for summer but came out at Christmas. People don't always know what they're talking about...

Page 4 of 16
Page 4 of 16
Your earlier films were universally adored but often sniffed at by critics. Has a need for plaudits shaped your later career?

Your earlier films were universally adored but often sniffed at by critics. Has a need for plaudits shaped your later career?

When I was first starting out, I was asked, "When are your films going to start finding meaning, to start reflecting the world?" Everyone said that Jaws was a really great movie but when was I going to make something substantial?

Now I'm making movies that I think are doing good work in the world and people are saying, "When will you get back to those lighthearted pictures?" I feel like Woody Allen in Stardust Memories , when the aliens land...

Page 5 of 16
Page 5 of 16
You seem to be quite obsessed with aliens. Have you any idea where that obsession comes from?

You seem to be quite obsessed with aliens. Have you any idea where that obsession comes from?

It's my hobby! Everyone has a hobby and mine is aliens. Some people go to the wood shop and make bowling-pin lamps, stuff like that. I tell stories about aliens. Well, my father was a science-fiction aficionado - he collected all the Analog magazines and the Amazing Stories from back in the '40s and '50s.

I always thought, "Gee, what if there are alien life forms out there and they come to visit us?" Like in Close Encounters Of The Third Kind and ET ... I believe in those stories in a strange, mystical way.

AI , however, is different because we all know where artificial intelligence is going. It speculates what will happen in our future when artificial intelligence becomes a tremendous benefit… Or a huge threat.

Page 6 of 16
Page 6 of 16
Is it fair to say that comparing AI to a film like Close Encounters again shows how your mindset has slowly changed?

Is it fair to say that comparing AI to a film like Close Encounters again shows how your mindset has slowly changed?

I was more in sync with AI in 1994 when Stanley Kubrick asked me to direct it than I was in 1984 when he first showed it to me.

I'd now rather flash a warning than a piece of cotton candy saying, "Go into the future; go into the light." It's not that I'm cynical - just a little more realistic about the world.

Page 7 of 16
Page 7 of 16
Tell us about your relationship with Kubrick...

Tell us about your relationship with Kubrick...

I only met Stanley 12 times in the 18 years I knew him, all of them at his home in St Albans. But we were always on the phone, sometimes once a week, sometimes once a day. I paid for it because it was always collect calls!

I had such a phone bill from 18 years of talking to Kubrick! We talked about movies. Whenever a movie was a box-office success, he'd ask me why. I was like, "Stanley, I don't have an answer. I don't know why a film succeeds or doesn't succeed."

He was the most famous brain-drain of any man I've ever met! Most of our relationship was Stanley asking me questions, sucking my mind dry until he figured I had nothing left in the gas tank. Then he'd say, "Got to go," and hang up. Two weeks later he'd call me again and start draining…

Page 8 of 16
Page 8 of 16
Kubrick tackled World War One and Vietnam with Paths Of Glory and Full Metal Jacket. Why did you choose World War Two with Saving Private Ryan?

Kubrick tackled World War One and Vietnam with Paths Of Glory and Full Metal Jacket. Why did you choose World War Two with Saving Private Ryan?

World War Two is the most important event of the last 100 years. We either won it and maintained our freedom or we lost it and lost everything.

My father fought in Burma and was always saying, "Nobody ever makes a movie about my war except as an excuse to do action and adventure."

[Saving Private Ryan] is graphic because it's what really happened. It's a very, very honest recreation of the landing on 6 June 1944. I could have made Saving Private Ryan a very safe picture; I could have done all the violence off-camera and I could have had people dying in slo-mo, like in the movies we go and see every summer. But my intention was to resensitise the audience.

Page 9 of 16
Page 9 of 16
How do you even begin directing a scene like that opener? It must have been a logistical nightmare...

How do you even begin directing a scene like that opener? It must have been a logistical nightmare...

I wanted to tell the story like I was a Signal Corps cameraman. They basically tried to save themselves while documenting the combat that surrounded them. That's why most of the shots are low to the ground, because all the Signal Corps cameramen stayed sensibly low to avoid being killed.

I also included all the mistakes that they'd make: if a camera fell over, I used it in the movie. The camera drops and everything is suddenly sideways for a couple of seconds. That's more truthful than slickly staged combat.

Page 10 of 16
Page 10 of 16
Many people feel that the US and UK ratings boards went easy on Ryan because it was a Steven Spielberg film. Unfair?

Many people feel that the US and UK ratings boards went easy on Ryan because it was a Steven Spielberg film. Unfair?

That was speculated on by trade publications but it's not something the ratings board said. They didn't say, "If it wasn't for Spielberg, we would have given this an NC-17." They saw the picture independent of any authority or any influence and they judged it to be a strong R.

Page 11 of 16
Page 11 of 16
How do you switch off at night? Isn't it tough to film blood and guts all day and then lay your head on the pillow and go to sleep?

How do you switch off at night? Isn't it tough to film blood and guts all day and then lay your head on the pillow and go to sleep?

Good question. With Ryan , I learned how to compartmentalise the horror. I'd race back to the hotel, order a Guinness and go right to sleep. On Sunday, I'd play with the kids in the backyard. Schindler's List was different - there were nights when I totally fell apart.

I had never done a serious war film. I mean, they're fighting Nazis in the Indiana Jones films but it's for our amusement, a springboard to false adventure.

Schindler's List is true to my roots: my family lost many cousins, aunts and uncles in the Holocaust. I bought the book in 1982 but I couldn't have directed it then. I had to wait 11 years to be sure that I wouldn't sugarcoat it.

Page 12 of 16
Page 12 of 16
But some people did criticise the ending - or the endings - for being "sugar-coated". Did that madden you?

But some people did criticise the ending - or the endings - for being "sugar-coated". Did that madden you?

In all great drama there's redemption. Without redemption there is no hope. And the one thing I'm never going to give up on is hope. A lot of people said at the time, "Why didn't the film end brutally for all 1,200 Schindler Juden? Why were they saved? Why put on a 'Spielbergian' happy ending?"

In fact, the story came right out of history. I could have chosen a much darker Holocaust story where nobody survives the furnaces, but I wanted some kind of redemption. That's the person I am and I can't survive without that in my life.

Page 13 of 16
Page 13 of 16
Schindler's List was your third serious drama after The Color Purple and Empire Of The Sun. It was the first to garner such profuse praise...

Schindler's List was your third serious drama after The Color Purple and Empire Of The Sun. It was the first to garner such profuse praise...

I think that The Color Purple is one of the best movies I've ever made. Alice Walker's book was almost impossible to adapt, so I made the movie to be much more emotional.

Of course, Walker's intellectual readership saw the film and felt I'd grossly softened her book. They were right. But I'm proud that I got it to the screen.

I've always worked fast, with enthusiasm and energy. If I don't work fast - if I concentrate too much on the details - I lose the picture.

Page 14 of 16
Page 14 of 16
The Terminal made an interesting companion piece to Catch Me If You Can. It's light and breezy but not without its serious moments...

The Terminal made an interesting companion piece to Catch Me If You Can. It's light and breezy but not without its serious moments...

I wanted to do another movie that could make us laugh and cry and feel good about the world. I wanted to do something else that could make us smile. This is a time when we need to smile more and Hollywood movies are supposed to do that for people in difficult times.

I read the script and it made me forget the five screenplays I'd read before it. I thought it was an amazing idea and I had an immediate affinity for Viktor's story. I believe all of us have felt a little bit like Viktor at some time in our lives - this displaced person in search of a life.

And I don't know anyone who hasn't, at some point, spent longer sitting in an airport chair than on the airplane ride itself. Airports have become small microcosms of society: they're places to eat, shop and meet people.

Page 15 of 16
Page 15 of 16
The tagline for The Terminal reads 'Life Is Waiting' - Viktor's stuck in limbo. How did you ensure the movie kept its momentum?

The tagline for The Terminal reads 'Life Is Waiting' - Viktor's stuck in limbo. How did you ensure the movie kept its momentum?

Viktor's stuck but everything happening around him is a blur. There's a tremendous volume of travellers moving to and fro while Viktor, by contrast, stands still. There's one shot where he's just standing there and, as the camera pulls back, he becomes invisible.

You lose him in this sea of people moving in every direction of the compass. So there is an energy to the story. Waiting can be exciting. Waiting can be entertaining.

Page 16 of 16
Page 16 of 16
GamesRadar
See more Movies Features
Read more
The Shrouds
It may feature corpses, missing limbs, and AI, but with The Shrouds, legendary director David Cronenberg has made the ultimate meditation on grief: "To me, there is no afterlife"
 
 
Roy Scheider as Martin Brody in Jaws
Jaws may be 50 years old, but Steven Spielberg's shark thriller is still a blockbuster in a league of its own
 
 
Steven Spielberg
Steven Spielberg says he thought his "career was virtually over" during the making of Jaws: "Everybody was saying to me, 'You are never going to get hired again'"
 
 
Abraham's Boys: A Dracula Story
New indie horror Abraham's Boys: A Dracula Story is Frailty meets There Will Be Blood with a haunting focus on family – and I have no complaints
 
 
Leonardo DiCaprio as Bob in One Battle After Another
Legendary director Steven Spielberg praises Leonardo DiCaprio's new "bizarre" action thriller at early screening: "What an insane movie, oh my God"
 
 
Caleb Landry Jones as Walter in Harvest
I loved the folk horror elements of 28 Years Later, and this new nightmarish medieval movie follows in its footsteps in all the right ways
 
 
Latest in Movies
The Sims
The Sims movie starring Margot Robbie will exist "somewhere between both The Lego Movie and Barbie," says producer: "It's going to be unique"
 
 
Cailee Spaeny in Alien: Romulus
Fede Alvarez says he never planned to direct Alien: Romulus 2, but he was adamant about writing it: "We want to make sure no one kills them right at the beginning"
 
 
Reed and Sue in the Fantastic Four movie
Marvel reveals The Fantastic Four: First Steps deleted scenes that you'll soon be able to watch at home, including Thanksgiving and birthday moments
 
 
Brad Pitt as Sonny Hayes in F1
Apple CEO says a sequel to the Brad Pitt box office hit F1: The Movie is "definitely" being discussed: "We can't wait to bring it to the surface"
 
 
The cast of Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery
Jeremy Renner says his Knives Out 3 character "has no idea" who Jeremy Renner is, confusing us even more following Glass Onion's hot sauce gag
 
 
Elektra
Marvel star Jennifer Garner suits up as Elektra in new behind-the-scenes snap, and fans think she's returning for Avengers: Doomsday
 
 
Latest in Features
Borderlands 4 tips picture showing enemies drawn into a singularity vortex while the player watches
Borderlands 4 does what Destiny couldn't: I'm finally back on the looter shooter train, and it feels like reliving my 60 hours in Borderlands 2
 
 
The key art for Lego Batman: Legacy of the Dark Knight showing a shadowed Batman superimposed in front of a neon and spotlight lit Gotham City
I briefly mistook the new Lego Batman for modded Arkham footage, genuinely bamboozling me while making me more excited for the game than ever
 
 
A screenshot of a character looking bored during a cutscene in the trailer for Fire Emblem: Fortune's Weave
September's Nintendo Direct told us a lot about the Switch 2's future, and I fear 2026 is the year I crack and buy another handheld
 
 
Assassin's Creed Shadows
"You have to design with the time you have": Assassin's Creed Shadows Claws of Awaji had to be a tighter, more focused expansion than anything its devs had made before
 
 
Hollow Knight: Silksong Hornet revel art
My favorite moment in Hollow Knight: Silksong recreates a Bloodborne classic, and I know it's not guaranteed because none of my friends have seen it
 
 
Mario stands next to the queen bee in a bee outfit in the Honeyhive Galaxy in Super Mario Galaxy, from the Nintendo Switch eShop
Super Mario Bros' legendary themes have ensured they're unforgettable after 40 years: "Koji Kondo wrote Mario music with such light-hearted joy"
 
 
  1. Key art for Lego Voyagers showing the two lego heroes with red and blue brick eyes near a rocket
    1
    Lego Voyagers review: "A carefully crafted, playful, and earnest adventure"
  2. 2
    There's now a real version of the Witcher Gwent card game, and it's just as engrossing as the original
  3. 3
    Borderlands 4 review: "Undeniably an excellent looter shooter, but one that requires a bit of tunnel vision to fully enjoy"
  4. 4
    This enormous exploration board game won't be for everyone, but it's a masterclass in narrative and sandbox gameplay
  5. 5
    Hollow Knight Silksong review: "Worth the wait and then some, this isn't just more Hollow Knight but an evolved, spindly beast all its own – even if it's fiddly at times"
  1. Vera Farmiga as 'Lorraine' in The Conjuring: Last Rites
    1
    The Conjuring: Last Rites review: "Not bold or memorable enough for the Warrens' final chapter"
  2. 2
    Demon Slayer: Infinity Castle review: "Roars past Mugen Train as Demon Slayer's best adventure yet"
  3. 3
    The Long Walk review: "One of the best Stephen King adaptations ever made"
  4. 4
    Frankenstein review: "A classy, if somewhat safe, adaptation"
  5. 5
    Weapons review: "A twisted fairytale that bests Barbarian"
  1. The cast of Gen V season 2
    1
    Gen V season 2 review: "As strong as the first season, if not stronger"
  2. 2
    Wednesday season 2 part 2 review: "Ortega shines, but it's a zombie who steals the entire show"
  3. 3
    Peacemaker season 2 review: "Darker and sadder than the first year, but there's still a lot of fun to be had with the 11th Street Kids."
  4. 4
    Wednesday season 2 part 1 review: "Complex and exciting but weighed down by too many subplots"
  5. 5
    Alien: Earth review: "Arguably the franchise's strongest outing since James Cameron's Aliens"

GamesRadar+ is part of Future US Inc, an international media group and leading digital publisher. Visit our corporate site.

  • About Us
  • Contact Future's experts
  • Terms and conditions
  • Privacy policy
  • Cookies policy
  • Advertise with us
  • Review guidelines
  • Write for us
  • Accessibility Statement
  • Careers

© Future US, Inc. Full 7th Floor, 130 West 42nd Street, New York, NY 10036.

Please login or signup to comment

Please wait...