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 





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