I am 61. Close Encounters is still the best Sci-fi movie of all time. The special effects still stand up. But what made the movie special was Devils Tower National Monument. I had the same reaction as Roy Neery coming over a hill in Wyoming three years ago during Pandemic. I cried as it meant so much to me. The funny part was it was closed due to pandemic- sort of fitting.
@anastasiabeaverhausen82206 ай бұрын
I had never heard of it before and initially thought they had built it for the movie!
@shawnbingley54336 ай бұрын
Equal first place I’d say..Close Encounters and 2001..it’s for sure my favourite Spielberg movie though..
@ciadella19714 ай бұрын
I just went to see Close Encounters last night in a movie theater. All I could think of was how practical effects are so much better than CGI. I think part of that is because practical effects are real and organic. Our eyes can tell the difference.
@jars777428 күн бұрын
So, one could say that yours was a closed encounter of the first kind, huh?
@gluonjck6326 күн бұрын
@@jars7774 that is the literally the single greatest reply you could give me. I love it regardless.
@freqenc6 ай бұрын
His movies by far out does any today. He has made my childhood so much richer. I will forever watch his movies. He's a legend.
@SteveBrant556 ай бұрын
I saw Close Encounters of the Third Kind at the Ziegfield Theater in NYC when it first came out! That huge screen and incredible sound system meant that when the UFO's arrived at Devil's Tower (as especially when one was hovering above the scientists) the entire theater was shaking. I really felt like I was there! One of the most incredible audio-visual experiences I've ever had while watching a film!
@TTM96916 ай бұрын
WHOAH!!!! I saw it when it first came out also, and had the same experience......but I did not see it at the Ziegfeld!!! Holy moly! But yeah, best movie theatre experience of my life, by far. Certainly way more mindblowing than "Star Wars", which had come out six months earlier. And I was 8 years old for both, and even then I knew. The audience was almost like.....stoned when the movie ended and the lights came up! And with this happy spirit, like Christmastime or something! Like we'd all gotten off the mothership together! And it was old people, kids, teenagers, couples, people in their 40s, all backgrounds, it was the whole gamut. It wasn't just a room full of kids and their parents. But wow, to see it at the Ziegfeld, I'm just shaking my head. We won't see a movie - or a movie theatre - like that ever again.
@vernonbrown92756 ай бұрын
I was there too! At the Ziegfeld theater! Just as you describe!
@rodneyadderton10772 ай бұрын
Melinda Dillon looked good on that big screen I bet. 😊
@richardthelionheart55946 ай бұрын
How great was that !!!! Both of them. Ben's father, grandfather and great uncle would be very proud. Masterful.
@danbaranowski6 ай бұрын
Steven Spielberg’s work is a thing to behold. From Jaws to the first 4 Indiana Jones films to the first 2 Jurassic Park films to Schindler’s List and beyond, Steven Spielberg is my second favorite director of all-time (8-time Godzilla franchise director Ishiro Honda is my first). Spielberg’s collaboration with composer John Williams is the greatest collaboration in Hollywood history
@susanbinzer33956 ай бұрын
It starts with Duel
@MrWel6846 ай бұрын
I was fortunate enough to see a screening of the fablemans where Steven came out for a q and a. As someone that’s been inspired by his films since before I can remember, it was truly wonderful experience. You could tell that even he was feeling vulnerable and had a hard time telling a story about his family. But at the end of the day, he’s a true storyteller and had to tell that story.
@yvonneplant94346 ай бұрын
Most of his movies still work....years later. He's a genius. It's time we said so. 🎉
@yvonneplant94346 ай бұрын
@@susanbinzer3395Don't forget the Night Gallery episode that starred Joan Crawford. 🎉
@deckofcards876 ай бұрын
My favorites are E.T., Close Encounters, Jurassic Park and Jaws. Saving Private Ryan, Schindler's List and Minority Report are also very good films.
@DelightLovesMovies6 ай бұрын
The moment Close Encounters starts to play, the combination of story, music, and characters pulls you right in. Close encounters is great on so many levels. Anyone who loves films needs to see it.
@TTM96916 ай бұрын
I love when he asks the audience to raise their hands if they hadn't seen it before.....and you could hear audible gasps in the crowd of how many hands must have been raised! Even Mankiewitz says something like "Yeah, it always amazes me...." and then quickly adds "A majority have seen it but still.....", lol
@YouTube-tied5 ай бұрын
If ever a Spielberg movie were deserving of a sequel, it's this one, with updated special effects. I saw this twice on opening weekend in 1977, I was 12 years old and it blew my mind.
@danielmcglothlen22154 ай бұрын
I don't remember where I read it... I think maybe a Rolling Stone interview? I can't say for sure... but at some point Spielberg's flat response when asked if he was going to do a sequel to Close Encounters was: "I _have_ made the sequel. It's called ET."
@charmawow5 ай бұрын
I remember going to see Close Encounters for its very first showing, at midnight, in my hometown at the Gaumont Cinema, which was the second biggest screen in the U.K. After Star Wars I thought it was just ok(!) but something made me go watch it again, a week or so later, in fact I went to see it 5 times on that first release, so I suppose that was when I fell in love with Spielberg as a film maker…….and little did I know, that two decades later I would end up working on three Spielberg movies!
@DyenamicFilms6 ай бұрын
Saw Close Encounters in the theater when I was a kid Christmas Day 1977. Already a huge fan of Jaws, I remember mainly wanting to see it because "the guy who directed Jaws made it", I was a fan of science fiction and the subject of UFO's intrigued me. Jaws is still my all time favorite movie. Close Encounters is in my top ten. I was also a huge John Williams fan by that point. The Jaws soundtrack was the first record album I ever owned. Still have it. Also still have my Close Encounters soundtrack on 8 track from back then. I just rewatched Close Encounters on 4k disc. It's just as good if not better than I remember. The "dated" 70's aesthetic now only adds to its charm if you ask me. Like Jaws, John Williams brilliant score brings it to another level.
@imaginationworkshopstudio6 ай бұрын
Steven is a #MasterofCinema that has made countless #Masterpieces of Cinema. One of my all-time favorite Directors that played a big part in influencing me.
@benbishop11315 ай бұрын
Close Encounters was as amazing as it is because of a perfect combo, Spielberg's storytelling and Douglas Trumbull's skills.
@JustHackingAround6 ай бұрын
Such an incredible guy and a blessing in this world!
@dwaiting8835 ай бұрын
I grew up on this film. Got to see it at an old theater for the first time a few years ago, in an audience of fans, and I felt like a little kid.
@ChristianKrogh-Denmark6 ай бұрын
I’m so freaken psyched to find out more about his next film, which is said to also be centered around UFO’s!! Obviously it’s a very big project, and I have a feeling it’s gonna have something to do with today’s view on that very subject. No doubt it’s gonna have a beautiful message 🫶
@NicholasWingComposer5 ай бұрын
These Spielberg interviews are a treasure. Cincy City should have an endowment to screen Spielberg Films outdoors forever, and also to ensure that John Williams' film scores play on at Adventure Express to inspire all future generations. I am so grateful for those precious memories, and the artistic legacy of the greatest director and filmmaker in American history, Steven Spielberg.
@JackSilbert6 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for sharing these wonderful festival moments with us!
@hanscombe722 ай бұрын
His movies will always hold a special place for me. Not being able to stop crying after ET. Watching Jim graham’s eyes finally close in the arms of his mother. Watching Celie’s reaction to meeting the grown children in colour purple. “Oh there you are Peter!” In hook. “I don’t know I’m making this up as I go.” In raiders. The silent death of the soldiers underwater in private Ryan. Sam Neill struggling with his sunglasses in Jurassic park. All the pop culture references in ready player one. The shadows in west side side story. The shiny splatter proof coats and stethoscopes of the SS in Schindler. When he finally takes his journey aboard the mother ship we will have lost something irreplaceable.
@TheJereld6 ай бұрын
I have the movie poster right above me looking down at me in my office. Thanks for the experience, Steven!
@ice85314 ай бұрын
He literally did the 8 best movies of all time. Jaws, Close Encounters, ET, Indiana Jones, Jurasic Park, Schindlers List, Private Ryan, Lincoln.
@voicetube6 ай бұрын
I do remember being at the Cinerama Dome in Hollywood on opening day of CE! At the time, next to Star Wars, it was the most impressive motion picture I'd ever seen. I only learned from this video that it was only being shown in that theater in LA and that other theater in New York! Very cool :-) As a side note, I was an extra in The Lost World and got lucky enough to be a stand-in arm for Vince Vaughn in the scene where the motorhome is about to go over the cliff and he's holding onto the (huge) satellite mobile phone. Steven Spielberg actually directed me while holding onto that phone etc., while it was slipping through my fingers, etc. Quite an honor (unfortunately, not had a chance to get into any conversation with him, obviously, because it was such a busy time). I also learned in later years that he used to visit down the block from us to our neighbors house (I think it was his cousins) with his 8 mm camera (in Canoga Park California in the early 60s - as he mentions in one of the books he wrote). Would have been cool to meet him as a kid, yet I was just an infant at the time.
@Avery_42726 ай бұрын
Steven Spielberg is a true artist who creates movies based on his passions, not what he thinks the box office numbers will be or whether he can top his last film. He's a wonderful storyteller inspired by what's in his heart. He's the real deal.
@davidmckayii7526 ай бұрын
I love his movies, they are so heart felt, and inspiring. Much love. ❤
@NZkiwi-6 ай бұрын
The psychological aspect in Close Encounters was what struck me, when I first watched it as a youngster. It was way ahead of its time. Mr. Spielberg had certainly done his research!
@1rwjwith6 ай бұрын
One of my favorites films ever. Love it, its brilliantly written and filmed..and it turns out accurate as far as people seeing UFOS . I know this by the related experience of two childhood friends in the late 60’s ..long before this film came out. They were not out looking for things in the sky. This is off the east coast of central Florida… one night they snuck out of their houses in the wee hours of the morning.I did not go that night. So what they described and what they still say they saw 50 years later they did not make up . Anyway it was pretty much identical to the scene depicted in the film where civilians and some military are waiting in a field and the UFOS show up. I believe them..the UFOS DID show up..they happened upon it.
@davidlloyd99806 ай бұрын
The scope and the mystery were Epic. Your attention was fixed on what was not being said. Amazing film experience, a true cinema movie.❤❤❤
@Galacticpurveyor6 ай бұрын
The first 10 minutes is one of the great opening sequences of a movie and a favorite. I appreciate that as he matured his films did as well. The color purple and empire of the sun was the start of it.
@aliensoup24206 ай бұрын
Same. Color Purple was his definitive break from action/adventure into serious drama.
@Mr.Goodkat6 ай бұрын
His films didn't "mature" fun, light hearted action movies aren't less mature than serious drama, they're also what the world needs more of, there's enough misery out there, escapist films offer us something greater than the dramas, an escape from it.
@Galacticpurveyor6 ай бұрын
@@Mr.Goodkat I guess you don’t believe the man himself. It’s not like he hasn’t talked about this before. SPIELBERG I hadn’t made what I’d call my first “adult” film, and I was terrified of Schindler’s List being my first, because what if I wasn’t mature enough? I was certain I wasn’t ready to deal with the gravitas of that subject matter, morally or cinematically, and I felt I lacked the wisdom to be able to discuss the story in the inevitable conversations that all of us have after our films are ready to be released. But I didn’t want to stop the story from getting out into the zeitgeist, so I went to Sydney Pollack. He tried and decided he wasn’t able to do it. I might’ve mentioned it to Barry Levinson at one point; I think Barry passed. And I went to Marty [Scorsese], and Marty was intrigued. It was Marty who hired Steve Zaillian, so the greatest contribution Marty made was finding the best screenwriter to adapt Keneally’s book.
@Mr.Goodkat6 ай бұрын
@@Galacticpurveyor I've heard this before but that's his opinion on his films it isn't mine and he didn't give me any reason to reconsider mine.
@Galacticpurveyor6 ай бұрын
@@Mr.GoodkatThere’s not much to say when you don’t believe the man himself. Sayonara.
@rubbersoul37236 ай бұрын
Watching from the State of Rhode Island-Thanks for turning out Steven! Fan forever-great discussion guys! Peace all! 😇
@chefduane37427 күн бұрын
Mankiewicz makes a very good point at 6:35. As one who saw CE when it first came out (HS senior in 1977) and became involved intellectually and from a storytelling and character perspective, its impossible to image anyone else playing Neary other than Dreyfuss.
@jeanster10004 ай бұрын
Steven is a child in his heart when he needs to be..
@alexbrunner19006 ай бұрын
He’s made more good films than bad films and possibly some of the most iconic ones too.
@jamesraffoul19096 ай бұрын
Love the Carey Guffey wonderment story!
@tubalcain10392 ай бұрын
One of my short-listed favourite films.
@nilo706 ай бұрын
I won tickets on a radio show and my wife and I were were stoked . Then we had a severe dust storm in my area with zero visibility lasted for a day. We eventually got to see it and we were strongly moved . We bought the VHS TAPE when it came out for sale. An amazing experience.
@Luke_E_Babyy6 ай бұрын
That present unwrapping story is a great example of why he is who he is.
@Hhhhhhhhhhh3713 ай бұрын
I love the Close Encounters picture book/tie in movie book based on said movie. I have got it on my shelf. I am Australian and three of Spielberg's movies are my favourites.
@imaginationworkshopstudio6 ай бұрын
To meet Steven here in Jersey would be great.
@YuenXii6 ай бұрын
Fiending for that Fincher Q&A
@thefincheranalyst6 ай бұрын
I second that emotion!
@patrickgrengs75944 ай бұрын
The interviewer seriously needs about six months in Toastmasters. Other than that, it's a fine interaction; Spielberg has ample opportunity to offer his perspective on the history in developing and filming Close Encounters of the Third Kind.
@BearbearbearbearbearbearRarrrr6 ай бұрын
It's always a treat to hear from the Maestro.
@melstuder2326 ай бұрын
This was such a privilege to attend❤
@piratesasus44536 ай бұрын
He is a genius!❤
@robertcunningham19446 ай бұрын
In the interview, Steven Spielberg says his father woke him up to view the Leonid meteor shower. He also said it was in the summertime. That would have been the Perseid meteor shower, which occurs in August. The Leonid meteor shower is every November. That fact may have already been mentioned in the comments, but I did not read them, so I don't know.
@kfc_bucket51726 ай бұрын
Nerd
@1ouncebird6 ай бұрын
@@kfc_bucket5172 My thanks to the nerd for that information. My disregard to you for your childish input.
@Teeveepicksures5 ай бұрын
thats some cool info
@ZulcanPrime6 ай бұрын
I recently bought CE3K on Bluray but it is the theatrical version. I saw the theatrical version when I was in high school in 1977. I still have not seen the new added scenes version yet. The movie was a big hit in Australian cinemas.
@repboy16 ай бұрын
Still one of my favorite movies went to see it aged 7 in 1977
@auntvesuvi38726 ай бұрын
Huge thanks to Ben and Steven! 🤩
@BlackPantherStudios6 ай бұрын
Steven Spielberg is the greatest 📽️. TCM is the greatest. Great video 📸📷
@RamZar505 ай бұрын
Steven Spirlberg’s best sci-fi movie isn’t Close Encounters of the Third Kind (1977) nor E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial (1982). It is in fact the thriller Minority Report (2002).
@aliensoup24206 ай бұрын
CE3K is provocative and stunning on first viewing, and holds up over time, but after time and maturity, I find it more sentimental and poetic than hard science fiction. Upon more rational analysis, it becomes silly, but it works as drama and cosmic intrigue. As a pure cinematic experience it is spectacular.
@anastasiabeaverhausen82206 ай бұрын
I saw CE3K at the Ziegfeld in NYC when it opened. The seats actually vibrated with the deep tones of the music and sound fx, esp. when the Mothership appears.
@robinm.19616 ай бұрын
I love this channel so much, for so many years. Since Warner Brothers stepped in, they have changed. They are not showing anywhere near as many great classics. What happened to 24 hours dedicated real movie stars. Also, they are showing some films way too much.
@1locust125 күн бұрын
I ended up seeing Close Encounters four times in the movie theatre.
@denisefreitas67276 ай бұрын
Love Spielberg! Movie genius! ❤🎬
@IndieCabaretNYC5 ай бұрын
I'd love to see a sequel to CESK. My idea is this: It takes place in the present day...The Mothership lands and a group of humans walk off (just like towards the end of the original) and one of those humans is Roy Neary who hasn't aged in almost 50 years. He goes to debriefing with the military/science officials and he tells them the moment he took off in the Mothership, he's been living with the regret of leaving his family behind. The rest of the movie is him trying to find out if his family is still alive, and trying to find a way to see them and somehow explain what happened and how he hasn't aged in 40 years because he left Earth with aliens decades ago. It would not be a sci-fi adventure, but more of a serious drama about a sci-fi theme.
@stevej713932 ай бұрын
I don't think a proper sequel could work because it would need to continue with the original's themes of mysterious visitors, coverups, etc., while also addressing the implications of the first film, such as the fact that the government made actual contact with aliens. Roy coming back as if nothing changed would not be a proper follow-up in my opinion.
@thaisgoncalvessanto57546 ай бұрын
Steven is Briliant 💐💖🎭
@RegenerativeHomes6 ай бұрын
None of the revised or special editions were necessary. True with any film. One could update Forbidden Planet too, or Metropolis, but there's value in seeing what the filmmakers did given the budget, technology and studio meddling, after all, that's the version that connected with audiences and became a classic. What makes anything a classic is that it stays original. There was a bit of well-deserved ribbing when asked "what version will we be seeing tonight." How refreshing if the response was "the original that audiences first saw that made it a hit.".
@AlanSmitheeman5 ай бұрын
I read somewhere that Francis Ford Coppola is making a movie based on METROPOLIS but I don't know if it is truth or just a rumour.
@votemonty18156 ай бұрын
I enjoyed "The Post" from his later years.
@christianmorales59743 ай бұрын
Very interesting to see Bob Lazard hand scanner, cases of Lockheed Martin and TRW… who the hell helped make that movie?
@TheJonnyzeus6 ай бұрын
Ben Mankievicz is always great. Enthusiastic but never sycophantic; always well prepared; and prepared to just listen.
@davehart98875 ай бұрын
A sequel needs to be made. With Dreyfus coming back.
@SuperLuminalElf3 ай бұрын
THAT .. would be INTERESTING
@buda3d20075 ай бұрын
This movie changed my brain chemistry, I mean that in the best way possible
@nunyabizness65955 ай бұрын
"Al Pacino lacks childhood wonder." Just visualizing Dryfus saying that makes me laugh cause i can totally see him doing that.😂😂😂
@kaukomarsu6 ай бұрын
Brilliant film, brilliant filmmaker.
@RH18126 ай бұрын
Those of us of a certain age, based on the comments, were lucky to be young when CE3K came out.
@theplothickens6 ай бұрын
Which version is this then? Is it available?
@archelaus15986 ай бұрын
It was the Director's Cut.
@theplothickens6 ай бұрын
@@archelaus1598 Thank you!
@jeshkam6 ай бұрын
So how much longer is this version? Because all known deleted scenes are about 25 minutes long altogether. And does it include the Air East 31 airport scene?
@permanentmajority20246 ай бұрын
There is a version that approximates the theatrical cut now available. But it's not exactly what was seen in theaters in 1977. Because the process of recompositing that was done for the 1979 "Special Edition" release destroyed the original effects. So, we can't see the effects exactly as they appeared to audiences in 1977. Also, there are a few shots that are different, and some of the music cues are slightly different. Supposedly, Columbia still holds one original release print. But I have no idea what shape it is in.
@permanentmajority20246 ай бұрын
It should also be noted that although the Director's Cut is longer than the theatrical cut, and has scenes not found it the theatrical cut, it is also MISSING SCENES that you can only be found in the theatrical cut.
@jamescampion78806 ай бұрын
Spielberg saved Hollywood, lets be honest. No motion picture got everyone excited like Jaws. Theatres were empty until June of 1975. I was there. Thank you Steven. The congressional medal of honor awaits.
@siddharthnaagar70286 ай бұрын
I need a movie with jodie foster & steven speilberg asap
@BenjaminThomas-me3nm6 ай бұрын
How do I find this version of the film?
@kthx11385 ай бұрын
"Toys! Toy-ees!"
@VIzuFNmS6 ай бұрын
I would like to know Roy's subsequent story I want you to produce PART 2 🔭
@gluonjck636 ай бұрын
It is a striking visage.
@adrienbenson6 ай бұрын
Sure, CEOTTK is a masterpiece, but is Mankiewicz not even going to address the bombshell that Stevie is now repping On Running sneakers over HOKAs???
@christ.85474 ай бұрын
TerriGaRR! is 🆒!!!!!...💯🎯💙🌎✌🏽😇.
@jedijones6 ай бұрын
That was a bit awkward. I don't think Steven was kidding when he said he wishes he had been talking to Jodie Foster instead. 😆
@dizmix6 ай бұрын
Mankiewicz needs a script.
@kthx11382 ай бұрын
Why Columbia initially only released CE3K to two theaters: Probably because they were so broke, they could only afford two film prints!
@docbrown65506 ай бұрын
Back when movies were made to entertain instead of pushing agendas.
@YuenXii6 ай бұрын
What? 1967 - 1979 is when people were pushing messages the most. Studio heads and filmmakers have been pushing political messages since the inception of the film industry. Just look at all the political messaging in Thalberg’s productions.
@docbrown65506 ай бұрын
@@YuenXii This movie was not pushing any agendas, especially if you compared them to today. 1967 - 1979 doesn't even compare to what's being pushed on people in today's time. What???
@eb89676 ай бұрын
@@YuenXii Evidently you haven't been keeping up with current events, just a small example of pushing agendas, Disney, as to Marvel, Star Wars, and Indiana Jones, Batgirl or Batwoman, Mad Max, I can go on and these are a very very small examples. Don't forget what Disney done to Johnny Depp for no reason, Everything being made today is pushing agendas, Everything.
@eb89676 ай бұрын
@@YuenXii There are agendas today being pushed that makes 67 and 79 look tame, Disney's Star Wars, Marvel, and the last Indiana Jones, The latest Mad Max, The way Disney has treated Gina Carano and Johnny Depp, the last few Terminators, I can go on.
@serhatyigit13216 ай бұрын
💪💪💪
@sun1310896 ай бұрын
Which sneakers is Steven Spielberg wearing can anyone point out the brand
@andrewtaylor9404 ай бұрын
They look like Brooks
@JoeScottish6 ай бұрын
Spielberg when he still made good movies....... amazing....
@StickFigureStudios6 ай бұрын
Boo.
@JoeScottish6 ай бұрын
@@StickFigureStudios YAY!!
@BMeneau6 ай бұрын
His last two movies undoubtetly rank among his best. 🙂
@JoeScottish6 ай бұрын
@@BMeneau Do you mean the efficient. if pointless, remake of a classic musical, and the efficient vanity project movie about himself? 😁 Both are well made but hardly pushing himself, or creating anything new. What a shadow of himself he is now.
@BMeneau6 ай бұрын
@@JoeScottish Yes, these two masterpieces are EXACTLY what I meant. :-)
@scottmansfield40386 ай бұрын
How is the 420th like what did I win😊
@jackprescott96525 ай бұрын
I think Steve McQueen would be the right choice to play Roy Neary. Richard Dreyfuss was good, but he was too young and too loud for the part.
@gartwilliams33476 ай бұрын
I’m curious about his feeling in regards to what’s happening on university campuses recently?
@jedgould55316 ай бұрын
ᴘᴏᴏʀ ʜᴏsᴛ
@ussgrissom6 ай бұрын
Had Ben M. been drinking?
@Psyclonus76 ай бұрын
LOTS of stammering in this interview
@HarryPotter874 ай бұрын
E.T.'s 100x better. Fact.
@SuperLuminalElf3 ай бұрын
One Opinion …
@Bailey2006a6 ай бұрын
re,me,do,do,sol
@zantigar6 ай бұрын
What is it with Ben Mankiewicz, man? He's usually so sharp. Here he seems out of it or something, like he's suffering from a mental condition... I hope he's ok.
@thewedgev26 ай бұрын
Well, he said he got called in at the last minute, and it showed.
@OllieMiller-vh6bf6 ай бұрын
Interviewer should think first, then talk.
@kfc_bucket51726 ай бұрын
UGH, the host thinks he's funny and he's not. He is INSUFFERABLE
@JM-wn1gr4 ай бұрын
This man is a disappointment in so many ways
@michaelkuhlman8833 ай бұрын
Yeah? Name one.
@JM-wn1gr3 ай бұрын
First of all he supports Kamala and he is turned woke
@guitaoist5 ай бұрын
So the aliens were nice in the end even though they were purposefully terrifying an entire town, thats not a plot twist its just bad writing
@richschmitt1004 ай бұрын
The host ruins the whole interview by speaking too much, and he stutters, very annoying and frustrating to watch him.
@kfc_bucket51726 ай бұрын
i hate the arrogant host
@decencywarrior95986 ай бұрын
Him and his roving band of financially insecure auteurs , are killing me . Even If Marlon offered me a Colt 45 I wouldn't have touched that swill either, smart move Steve.
@richardthelionheart55946 ай бұрын
Yeah, BUT this was Steve McQueen offering !
@Maxwell-mv9rx6 ай бұрын
Steven Spielberg movies are business. It is means his movies are NOT quite value movies. Spielberg movies keep them out in waste basket It looks like Coke.
@Galacticpurveyor6 ай бұрын
That’s just plain wrong but hey, anyone can have an opinion.
@FrancisXLord6 ай бұрын
@@Galacticpurveyor You understood that? I can't tell what he's trying to say at all. I would guess English is not his first language, if his construction of sentences is anything to go by.
@Galacticpurveyor6 ай бұрын
@@FrancisXLord I gleaned that it meant his movies are business not art. But it’s a mess.
@janbart20276 ай бұрын
What a stupid introduction of Mr. Spielberg by this eh ee eh guy. And the sound is awful.