Tuesday, June 16, 2026

A Reel 25: A.I. ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE


“Please make me a real boy…”



 

This month marks the 25th anniversary of Steven Spielberg’s A.I. ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE. 

 

Directed by Spielberg and based on the 1969 short story Supertoys Last All Summer by Brian Aldiss, A.I. told the story of David, a childlike android programmed with the ability to love. When he is abandoned by his adoptive parents, he sets out on a journey to become a real boy to earn back their love. 

 

The journey to A.I. began in the early 1970’s, when the famed late great filmmaker Stanley Kubrick acquired the rights to Aldiss’ story. Kubrick hired several writers and the film languished in development for years, partly because Kubrick did not believe computer-generated imagery was not ready yet to bring David to life on the screen, and did not think a child actor could pull off the part. In 1995, Kubrick handed the film off to Spielberg. Kubrick would pass away in 1999, and the film would finally go into production. 

 

The role of David would go to Haley Joel Osment, who had spooked audiences in 1999 in THE SIXTH SENSE. Osment was joined by Frances O’Connor, Sam Robards, Jude Law, William Hurt, and Brendan Gleeson. Voice-over cameos included Robin Williams, Meryl Streep, Chris Rock, and Ben Kingsley. John Williams would provide the score. 

 

Upon release, A.I. would be a modest box office hit, finishing as the 17th highest earner of the year. Reviews were mixed-to-good, and it would earn two Oscar nominations: Best Visual Effects and Music Score. 

 

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A.I. is one of Steven Spielberg’s most fascinating and divisive films. Its greatest strength is its emotional ambition: a futuristic fairy tale about a robot child seeking love, it explores humanity’s fears of technology, loneliness, and the need to be accepted. The film’s visuals, performances, and haunting atmosphere remain powerful. Yet its flaws are equally clear. The pacing shifts awkwardly, the tonal changes feel uneven, and the ending remains controversial. Still, its imperfections are part of what makes it memorable: a strange, ambitious blend of wonder and melancholy that grows more interesting with time. 

 

“…and that is something no machine has ever done before you.”




Friday, June 12, 2026

A Reel Review: DISCLOSURE DAY




Over the years, famed director Steven Spielberg has spent a lot of film telling stories about aliens. From the friendly (E.T. THE EXTRA-TERRESTRIAL), to the not-so-friendly (WAR OF THE WORLDS), and to the mysterious (INDIANA JONES AND THE KINGDOM OF THE CRYSTAL SKULL). Although Spielberg has certainly earned the right keep telling the stories he wants, if he is going to keep returning to little-green-men, it’s on him to make it new. Say hello to DISCLOSURE DAY. 

 

On the eve of WWIII, cybersecurity specialist Daniel (Josh O’Connor), steals a piece of alien technology and related files with the intent of revealing the existence of alien life to the world. Meanwhile, TV meteorologist Margaret (Emily Blunt), suddenly finds herself with psychic abilities and the ability to speak several languages. 

 

DISCLOSURE DAY unfolds as a chase-flick. Daniel and his girlfriend Jane (Eve Hewson), race from location to location, aided by his former co-worker Hugo (Colman Domingo), and chased down by the secret government agency led by Noah Scanlon (Colin Firth). There is a bit of redundancy to the film as it repeats itself often; our characters arrive at a location, provide exposition, get discovered by Noah, run away and be chased, and then arrive at another location. It leads to a very predictable unspooling. 

 

Other plot elements are added in to thicken what seems to be a thin plot. The ethics behind releasing the alien files to the world are often discussed; will mankind embrace them, fight them, or treat them as deities? It’s fascinating talk that does come around in an okay-way by movie’s end. Margaret’s abilities and how she acquired them range from fascinating to ridiculous, and her eventual connection to Daniel loosely works.

 

During the chase scenes, Spielberg shows that he has not lost his edge. The action is breathtaking with a scene involving two freight trains a highlight. Spielberg’s visuals and camerawork is also excellent. John Williams’ score sounds like it’s very good, but it too often gets buried in the mix; we hear it the best during the end credits. 

 

Acting is excellent. Emily Blunt shows once again why she is one of the best actors alive. Josh O’Connor makes the transition to big-time action flicks very well, and Eve Hewson is also very good. The supporting cast of Colin Firth and Colman Domingo…all excellent. 

 

The finale leaves us hanging a little, but it requires us to study what was said earlier in the film to finish connecting all of the dots. DISCLOSURE DAY manages to lightly satisfy by the time those well-scored credits roll, and those of us who have followed Spielberg religiously over the years will not miss that the film bears a too-close resemblance to one of Spielberg’s other alien films. It feels like another version of that previous work, and there just isn’t enough done here to make this arrival new. 

 

BOTTOM LINE: Rent it 





Tuesday, June 9, 2026

A Reel 20: CARS


“I am speed…”



 

This month marks the 20th anniversary of CARS. 

 

Directed by John Lasseter and the seventh feature film by Disney’s Pixar Animation Studios, CARS was set in a fantasy world of anthropomorphic vehicles, and followed a young hotshot racer named Lightning McQueen, who on his way to the biggest race of his career, becomes stranded in a long-forgotten town of Radiator Springs on Route 66. 

 

The road to CARS began in 1998 and was set to be the next Pixar film after A BUG’S LIFE. The original storyline would follow an electric car living in a world of gas guzzlers. The idea was shelved in favor of TOY STORY 2, and later revisited and re-inspired by Lasseter’s cross-country trip across America. The film was inspired by an America of the past, and designers visited the design studios of the Big Three Detroit Automakers.

 

The cast would be stacked. Owen Wilson would take on the voice of McQueen, and the late great Paul Newman would voice Doc Hudson, a famed racer in hiding. The rest of the impressive cast would include Bonnie Hunt, Larry the Cable Guy, Tony Shalhoub, Cheech Marin, Michael Wallis, George Carlin, Jenifer Lewis, Richard Kind, Michael Keaton, Katherine Helmond, and Pixar alums John Ratzenberger and Joe Ranft. Celebrity voice-cameos included Bob Costas, along with real-life race drivers Darrell Waltrip, Dale Earnhardt Jr., and Michael Schumacher. Randy Newman provided the score, while artists Sheryl Crow, Rascal Flatts, John Mayer, and Brad Paisley contributed to the soundtrack. 

 

On release, CARS debuted at no.1, beating out X-MEN: THE LAST STAND. For three years, it held the record for the highest opening weekend for any car-oriented film. It would finish as the sixth highest earner of the year. On the Awards circuit, it would win the Golden Globe for Best Animated Film, and an Oscar nomination for Best Animated. The film would spawn two feature-length sequels, a streaming series, merchandise, and attractions at Disney parks. 

 

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Ever since its first lap in theatres, CARS has been unfairly dented as a film with a recycled storyline, often compared to the Michael J. Fox vehicle DOC HOLLYWOOD from 1991. But old stories in new skins is how Hollywood, and most especially Disney, has stayed in business for 100 years…and a new skin is what CARS does so well. The design of the characters and surroundings is outstanding, the talking cars all have perfect personalities, and the voice-cast is perfect. Despite its age, the animation is still a jaw-dropper, and the opening sequence at a night-time race is still impressive. 

 

The story is familiar, but the fresh paint job makes it new. McQueen discovers the old lesson that what we want to make us happy isn’t always what we need for happiness. This is done with the vanishing America as a backdrop, giving the film an extra emotional gear. It’s a story about slowing down and finding meaning beyond winning, topped off with one of those beautiful, ironic endings where McQueen loses…but wins a lot more. After twenty laps around the sun, CARS does not lose any speed. 

 

“Ka-chow!” 

 




Monday, June 8, 2026

A Reel Review: PRESSURE




Over the years, we have seen countless films focusing on the most exciting professions: cops, doctors, lawyers, pilots…even chefs. But what about meteorologists? The seldom-appreciated, often-mocked job of predicting the weather doesn’t get much love on the big screen. But during a vital few days in 1944, one weather prediction had the pressure of the fate of the world resting on it. 

 

It is June 1944, days before the famed D-Day invasion. General Eisenhower (Brendan Fraser), assigns meteorologist  Captain James Stagg (Andrew Scott), the job of predicting the weather for the invasion…creating a decision to launch or delay. 

 

Directed by Anthony Maras and based on the 2014 stage play, PRESSURE follows the battle of weather-guys with the immense and important invasion waiting to go. Stagg relies on scientific data, while his counterpart, American forecaster Col. Krick (Chris Messina), relies on historical patterns. Stagg sees stormy weather and recommends a delay, while Krick predicts sunny weather and recommends the attack commence. The two battle while Eisenhower and his Allied leaders need to decide and decide soon. 

 

Director Anthony Maras does excellent work in ramping up the tension, and yes…the pressure hanging over the film. The stakes are enormous; the longer the invasion force waits, the higher the risk of the operation being discovered. But invade during a storm, and it could be disaster. It’s real-world high stakes with science saying how things are, versus wishful thinking, giving PRESSURE a modern-day relevancy. 

 

Acting is superb. Brendan Fraser is perfectly cast as Ike, and Andrew Scott plays the socially awkward but brilliant Stagg very well. Kerry Condon plays Ike’s assistant and lights up the screen, and Damian Lewis as Bernard Montgomery is a delight. 

 

PRESSURE is one of those war movies where most of the fighting happens between characters without a shot fired. The invasion eventually happens, and the short but effective sequence we see on the beach is powerful and will have audiences ducking for cover. Science is the real victor here, giving meteorologists the film they have been waiting for. 

 

BOTTOM LINE: See it 

 



Tuesday, June 2, 2026

A Reel Preview: The Year in Film 2026 - Episode VI




The 2026 Summer Movie Season comes in with a roar. This month we have the return of one of the greatest directors who ever lived, a 1980’s icon with another shot at the big screen, and another go-at-it for everyone’s favorite cowboy and astronaut best-friends. We also have re-releases for OCEAN’S 11 (25th anniversary), and TRAINSPOTTING (30th anniversary). Here now is a preview for everything coming to theaters in June: 

 

 

 

MASTERS OF THE UNIVERSE – 1980’s icon He-Man is given another try at the big-screen in this new, live-action adaptation directed by Travis Knight (BUMBLEBEE). The cast includes Nicholas Galitzine as He-Man, Jared Leto as Skeletor, Alison Brie as Evil-Lyn, and Idris Elba as Man-at-Arms. The rest of the cast includes Camila Mendes, James Purefoy, and Morena Baccarin. 

 

 

SCARY MOVIE – The sixth installment of the horror-parody franchise, which has a group of friends reuniting when the masked killer they fought 26 years ago returns. The cast includes Marlon and Shawn Wayans, Anna Feris, and Regina Hall. 

 

 

DISCLOSURE DAY – Famed director Steven Spielberg is back with this sci-fi film about the race to unveil a government cover-up of aliens. The cast includes Emily Blunt, Josh O’Connor, Colin Firth, and Colman Domingo. 

 

 

THE DEATH OF ROBIN HOOD – In this adaptation of the 17th century ballad, an aged Robin Hood grapples with his life of crime and murder. Hugh Jackman plays Robin, and he is joined by Jodie Comer and Bill Skarsgard. 

 

 

TOY STORY 5 – Woody and Buzz are back again, this time helping their gang cope with a new toy: a talking tablet. The cast includes Tom Hanks, Tim Allen, Joan Cusack, Greta Lee, Annie Potts, and John Ratzenberger. 

 

 

JACKASS: BEST AND LAST – The fifth and final (ha), installment in the long-running reality series. Johnny Knoxville returns with Steve-O. 

 

 

SUPERGIRL – Milly Alcock (TV’S HOUSE OF THE DRAGON), dons the cape of Kara/Supergirl, cousin of Superman in this continuation of the new DC Universe, which sees Kara traveling the universe with her dog Krypto before running into tragedy. Jason Momoa co-stars.

 

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Next month, Reel Speak previews the month of July.