Steven Spielberg

Steven Spielberg

Steven Allan Spielberg, KBE (born December 18, 1946) is a four time Academy Award winning American film director (three OSCARS and 1 Lifetime Achievement Award), and among the most successful filmmakers in history. He is noted in recent years for his willingness to tackle emotionally powerful issues, such as the horrors of the Holocaust in Schindler's List, slavery in Amistad, hardships of war in Saving Private Ryan, and terrorism in Munich. One consistent theme in his family friendly work is a childlike, even naïve, sense of wonderment and faith, as attested by works such as Close Encounters of the Third Kind, E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial, Hook and A.I., and the challenging role of a father-figure.

The director

Spielberg is the most financially successful motion picture director of all time. He has directed and/or produced an astounding number of major box office hits, giving him enormous influence in Hollywood. As of 2004, he has been listed in Premiere and other magazines as the most "powerful" and "influential" figure in the motion picture industry.

In 2005, Empire magazine created a list of the 50 greatest film directors of all time. Spielberg was number one on the list.

He has been nominated for seven Academy Awards for Best Director, winning two of them (Schindler's List and Saving Private Ryan), and four of the films he directed were up for the Best Picture Oscar (Schindler's List won). He is seen as a figure who has the influence, financial resources, and acceptance of Hollywood studio authorities to make any movie he wants to make, be it a mainstream action-adventure movie, Jurassic Park or a three-hour-long black and white drama about the Holocaust, Schindler's List.

In 2001 he was given the honor of Knight Commander of the British Empire (KBE) by Queen Elizabeth II.

His beginnings

Spielberg was born to a Jewish American family in Cincinnati, Ohio; he was raised in the suburbs of Haddonfield, New Jersey and Scottsdale, Arizona. His German last name comes from the name of the Austrian city where his Hungarian Jewish ancestors lived in 17th century: Spielberg. He is known by film historians as one of the famous "film-school generation" (also known as "the movie brats" or "the New Hollywood") of the 1970s: along with fellow filmmakers (and personal friends) George Lucas, Francis Ford Coppola, Martin Scorsese, John Milius, and Brian De Palma, Spielberg grew up making movies. He was making amateur 8mm "adventure" movies with his friends as a teenager (scenes from these amateur films have been included on the DVD edition of Saving Private Ryan), and he made his first short film for theatrical release, Amblin', in 1968 at the age of twenty one. (Spielberg's own production company, Amblin Entertainment, was named after this short film.) His maiden directorial work was a segment of the pilot film to Rod Serling's Night Gallery. While working on this segment its star Joan Crawford collared a production executive and said, "Keep an eye on this kid, he's going places." After directing episodes of various TV shows, including an early Columbo TV movie and a feature-length science fiction episode of The Name of the Game written by Philip Wylie and called "L.A. 2017", Spielberg directed his first well-known feature with a 1971 TV "movie-of-the-week" entitled Duel (later released to theatres overseas and eventually in the U.S.). This film, about a truck mysteriously terrorizing an average citizen, has become a cult classic, having been released on video several times over the years. Much of his early success was due to Sidney Sheinberg who is credited with discovering him; Spielberg also received an honorary degree from Brown University in 1999.

1970s: Spielberg's move to theatrical films

The Sugarland Express (1974)

Spielberg's debut theatrical feature film, based on the true story of a married couple who lead the Texas police on a highway chase as they embark on a journey to regain custody of their baby. Welcomed with warm reviews, the film nevertheless failed to catch on at the box office. Nevertheless his producers Richard Zanuck and David Brown were prepared to offer Spielberg a more ambitious directing assignment.

Jaws (1975)

Jaws, a horror film based on the Peter Benchley novel about a killer shark that attacks people off the coast of a New England isle community. The giant great white shark would lurk in wait until a mortal was foolish enough to enter the water and then he would messily devour them leaving only body fragments. . Jaws won three Academy Awards (for editing, original score and sound), and grossed over USD$100 million at the box office, setting the domestic record for box office gross. It was also nominated for Best Picture and featured Spielberg's first of three collaborations with actor Richard Dreyfuss.

To this day, Spielberg still maintains that Jaws was the hardest film he ever had to make. He would decline offers to direct its sequel by using his new influence to pursue more personal projects.

Close Encounters of the Third Kind (1977)

Rejecting an offer to direct Jaws 2, Spielberg and actor Richard Dreyfuss re-convened to work on a pet project Spielberg had had in mind since his youth: a film about UFOs, which became Close Encounters of the Third Kind (1977). The film remains a cult sci-fi classic among its fans.

A hit at the box office, the film also garnered Spielberg his first Best Director nomination from the Academy. Close Encounters of the Third Kind not only earned Spielberg his first Best Director nomination, but was nominated for six other Academy Awards, taking home Oscar in two (Cinematography -- Vilmos Zsigmond, and a Special Achievment Award for Sound Effects Editing -- Frank E. Warner)

1941 (1979)

The success Spielberg was beginning to enjoy, as well as his eventual tendency to make films with wide mainstream and commercial appeal, also subjected him to disdain in critical circles by film reviewers. For example, Spielberg's next film was 1941, a big-budgeted World War II comedy farce set in L.A. days after the attack on Pearl Harbor, with the two top stars from Saturday Night Live, Dan Aykroyd and John Belushi, along with other all-stars. An exercise in excess, the film provided just the ammunition cynical critics would require to take down the young director. Over-budget, over-long, the film flopped with both audiences and critics alike. Desperately in need of quick redemption, Spielberg would next team with Star Wars creator George Lucas on a new action adventure film. Expanded versions of 1941 have been shown on network television and later on Laserdisc and DVD.

1980s: Spielberg conquers Hollywood

Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981)

What some would consider Spielberg's greatest film work was still to come, beginning in the 1980s. In 1981, Spielberg teamed up for the first time with his friend George Lucas to make Raiders of the Lost Ark, his homage to the cliffhanger serials of the Golden Age of Hollywood, with Harrison Ford (whom Lucas had previously cast in his Star Wars films) as the dashing hero Indiana Jones. The biggest film at the box office in 1981, and recipient of numerous Oscar nominations including Best Director (Spielberg's 2nd nom) and Best Picture (2nd Spielberg film to do so), Raiders is still hailed as a landmark in action cinema.

E.T.: The Extra-Terrestrial (1982)

One year later, Spielberg returned to his alien visitors motif with E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial, this is the story of a boy and the alien whom he befriends (and is trying to get back "home" to outer space). E.T. went on to become the top-grossing film of all time for many years. It was also nominated for many academy awards including Best Picture and Best Director. It is considered by Spielberg to be his own personal favorite film from his works.

E.T. originated as a sci-fi suspense thriller called Night Skies. Night Skies also gave birth to Poltergeist, a film that Spielberg co-wrote , co-produced (and some people who worked on the film claim directed) and was released only a week before E.T..

Spielberg also negotiated an unusually lucrative video game licensing deal with Atari for an E.T. video game. This was a famously expensive failure which contributed to the video game crash of 1983.

Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom (1984)

As if Spielberg could use even more commercial success, his friend George Lucas immediately pulled Spielberg back in as part of their friendly agreement to make more Indiana Jones movies. Plagued with uncertainty for the material, the saving grace for Spielberg during the making of this film would be the meeting of his future wife Kate Capshaw, who was cast as Indiana's new love interest.

Predictably the film would be another blockbuster hit though the reviews would be less positive than they were for its predesessor. It was criticized for lacking the energy of the original, as well as for its grossly inaccurate and ignorant depiction of Indian culture. The extreme violence and gore would also inspire the PG-13 rating the following year.

The Color Purple (1985)

Spielberg on the cover of the July 15, 1985 issue of TIME.

In 1985, Spielberg made The Color Purple, an adaptation of Alice Walker's Pulitzer Prize-winning novel. Many critics were unsure of whether or not Spielberg could handle such serious material, as his output to that point had been viewed as "lighter" entertainment. Indeed, this proved to be Spielberg's trial by fire in presenting the story of a generation of oppressed African-American women (Whoopi Goldberg and Oprah Winfrey) during depression-era America. Danny Glover played the abusive patriarch.

The film was another box office smash and hailed by critics as Spielberg's successful foray into the dramatic genre. Roger Ebert entered it into his Great Films archive. It received 11 Academy Award nominations including two for Whoopi Goldberg and Oprah Winfrey. However in one of the most controversial instances in the History of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, Spielberg himself went without a Best Director nomination despite the multitude of nominations the picture received.

Empire of the Sun (1987)

1987 was a time when the Chinese economy was beginning to boom, and as the Chinese gates began to open to the world, Spielberg took advantage by shooting the first American movie in Shanghai since the 1930s. The result was an adaptation of J.G. Ballard's autobiographical novel, Empire of the Sun, which told the story of a young boy named Jim (Christian Bale) who is separated from his parents during the sacking of Shanghai in 1938, and is forced to survive through the rest of the war. Spielberg wanted to convey a heartfelt message of innocence being shattered as a result of war, as audiences saw the transformation of Jim from sheltered taipan to a struggling and resourceful war refugee. The film garnered numerous praise from critics, was nominated for several Oscars, but did not attract the kind of box office power that Spielberg's films usually get.

Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade (1989)

After two forays into dramatic films, Spielberg returned to familiar territory by re-uniting "one last time" for another Indiana Jones film. With the inclusion of star Sean Connery, Spielberg vicariously fulfilled a lifelong dream to make a James Bond movie. Lucas himself heralded his Indiana Jones creation as an alternative to Bond back when they first discussed films to work on together.

The father-son issues in the picture are congruent with much of Spielberg's work, making this Indy film the most personal of the three. Receipient of glowing reviews and big box office receipts, Spielberg, Lucas and Ford left the franchise on a high mark. The development of a fourth Indiana Jones film has been promised but is still pending.

Always (1989)

1989 would mark the first year in which Spielberg would direct two movies. Following on the heels of his last Indiana Jones movie, he would re-unite with actor Richard Dreyfuss with Always. Inspired by the film A Guy Named Joe, Always is the story of Pete, a daredevil pilot who extinguishes forest fires. When killed on his last mission, he becomes something of a guardian angel for a young man named Ted. But when Ted falls in love with the girlfriend Pete left behind, Pete must learn to let go of her and do what's best to influence these characters as they themselves approach another potential tragedy.

Always marked Spielberg's first foray into the romantic genre. A box office flop and victim of mixed reviews, Always stands out (or more precisely doesn't) as arguably Spielberg's most overlooked and forgotten film.

1990s: Spielberg comes of age

Hook (1991)

After the failure of Always, Spielberg headed back to safer waters. In many ways, a Peter Pan story directed by Steven Spielberg seemed like a forgone conclusion. He had tried numerous times to film a live action version of Peter Pan without success. When writer James V. Hart pitched an alternate idea about Peter Pan returning to Neverland as an adult, Spielberg switched gears. Hook focused on a middle-aged Pan (played by Robin Williams), who returns to Neverland to face the title character (Captain Hook, played by Dustin Hoffman). However, by the time the film began shooting, innumerable rewrites and creative changes made by the numerous major Hollywood players attached to the project resulted in a film regarded by most critics as hit-or-miss at best. The film was made for $70 million (at that time a huge amount) and made $119 million domestically, but it was not as successful as some had hoped. Though Peter Pan had grown up, some were wondering if Spielberg himself ever would.

Jurassic Park (1993)

In 1993, Spielberg decided to once again tackle the adventure genre, as he directed the movie version of Michael Crichton's novel Jurassic Park, about killer dinosaurs rampaging through a tropical island resort. The adaptation muted somewhat the novel's message about the consequences of mankind tampering with nature, instead focusing on the adventure aspects of the story. With the aid of revolutionary special effects provided by friend George Lucas' Industrial Light and Magic, the film became an instant classic. It would eventually overtake E.T. as the all-time top grossing film - a position it held for several years (until James Cameron's Titanic).

Spielberg has stated in interviews at the time that the Japanese Godzilla movies provided inspiration for Jurassic Park.

Schindler's List (1993)

It was in that same year that Jurassic Park was released that Spielberg finally received the critical acclaim he had long sought for making Schindler's List (based on the true story of Oskar Schindler, a man who sacrificed himself to save 1,100 people from the wrath of the Holocaust). The screenplay, adapted from Thomas Keneally's novel, was originally in the hands of fellow director Martin Scorsese, but Spielberg negotiated with Scorsese to trade scripts (at the time, Spielberg held the script for a remake of Cape Fear). Schindler's List earned Spielberg his first Academy Award for Best Director (it also won Best Picture). While the film made a killing in the box office, Spielberg claimed not to have partaken in the profits, and instead used the money to set up the Shoah Foundation. Critics maintain that Schindler's List is the most accurate portrayal of the Holocaust, and in 1999 the American Film Institute listed it among the 10 Greatest Films ever Made (#9). The picture also brought Spielberg his first Best Director and Best Picture wins at the Oscars. Though Spielberg admits it is definitely his most important film, he still holds it second to E.T. as his masterwork. Critics on the other hand don't share Spielberg's sentiment and it is universally regarded as his finest and most mature film.

The Lost World: Jurassic Park (1997)

1993 was Spielberg's biggest year with the success of Jurassic Park and Schindler's List. Taking a four-year hiatus from directing to spend more time with his family and build his new studio DreamWorks, Spielberg found himself back in the director's chair in 1997. This time, he was helming the sequel to 1993's gigantic Jurassic Park, Michael Crichton's The Lost World. The film was critically panned, but did manage to generate nearly $230 million in domestic box office, giving it the third-highest total for 1997 behind Titanic and Men in Black. In hindsight Spielberg expressed his view that this sequel was a movie he wanted to see, but didn't necesarily want to make himself. Fatigued by the production, he would relinquish the opportunity to direct any more Jurassic Park films.

Amistad (1997)

Spielberg followed his 1993 formula of releasing a dinosaur movie followed by a historical drama by doing it again in 1997. If Lost World was his bid to conquer the box office, Amistad (like Schindler's List) was his bid to win over the critics come awards season. Spielberg released Amistad under the banner of his new studio DreamWorks (formed with former Disney animation exec Jeffrey Katzenberg and media mogul David Geffen). Based on a true story about African slaves who rebelled against their captors, the film received lavish praise from the critics, but was noted for its violent massacre scenes. It did not do well at the box office however, and has been overlooked since its release. It would mark Spielberg's second essay on the treatment of Blacks in American History (the first being The Color Purple in 1985).

Saving Private Ryan (1998)

Another of Spielberg's critically acclaimed films, the World War II drama Saving Private Ryan, was released in 1998. The film follows a platoon of soldiers led by Capt. Miller (Tom Hanks), from the landing at Omaha Beach in Normandy to the heart of French resistance, in order to retrieve a missing private (Matt Damon), whose brothers were lost to the war. Spielberg considered it one of his finest works, yet in a highly publicized "showdown", it lost the Best Picture Oscar at the 1999 Academy Awards to Shakespeare in Love. However, Spielberg would win his second Academy Award for his direction in the war epic.

The completion of this film would mark a marathon of filmmaking for Spielberg who shot The Lost World, Amistad, and Saving Private Ryan back-to-back-to-back. By decade's end, Spielberg still remained arguably the most influential and powerful filmmaker in Hollywood.

This would also mark the first of three collaborations with star Tom Hanks.

Later on, Spielberg and Hanks, overwhelmed with the success of the film's subject, decided to team together to produce a TV mini-series based on Stephen Ambrose's historical novel, Band of Brothers. The ten-part HBO mini-series follows the trials and accomplishments of the 101st Airborne Division, or Easy Company, also starting from the landing in Normandy, to the Battle of the Bulge, to the capture of Hitler's Eagle's Nest in Germany itself. The series was hailed as the greatest TV event of all time, winning a slew of awards both at the Golden Globes and the Emmys.

2000s: Spielberg's experimental period

A.I.: Artificial Intelligence (2001)

In 2001, Spielberg filmed fellow director and friend Stanley Kubrick's final project, A.I.: Artificial Intelligence, a project planned by the two directors for many years but which Kubrick was unable to begin during his lifetime. The futuristic story of a humanoid android longing for love, A.I. featured groundbreaking visual effects and a multi-layered, allegorical storyline in keeping with Kubrick's original vision. It starred William Hurt, Jude Law, Frances O'Connor, and child actor Haley Joel Osment as the android boy David. The film polarized both critics and audiences, some stating that the film was overly long and a pretentious impression of Kubrick, while others believing it to be a masterpiece. The legendary director Billy Wilder called A.I. "the most underrated film of the past few years". The film failed to recoup its budget at the US box office.

Minority Report (2002)

Following A.I., Spielberg came upon the sci-fi short story written by Philip K. Dick about the future of crime-fighting using precognitive vision. In 2002, Spielberg and actor Tom Cruise collaborated for the first time in the futuristic neo-noir Minority Report, which features Cruise as a D.C. police captain who has been foreseen to murder a man he has not even met. The film was a futuristic homage to film noir, with its intelligent premise, thrilling chase scenes, and whodunnit structure. In typical Spielberg fashion the film earned over $300 million dollars worldwide while earning signficant critical acclaim. Roger Ebert, who named it the best film of 2002, praised the film for its breathtaking vision of the future as well as for the way Spielberg blended CGI with live-action. [1] It is regarded as one of Spielberg's best sci-fi films by critics.

Catch Me If You Can (2002)

Shortly after the release of Minority Report, Spielberg and Co. immediately went to work on Catch Me If You Can, a story of the daring adventures of a youthful con artist. The film stars Leonardo DiCaprio in the lead role, with Saving Private Ryan star Tom Hanks as the FBI agent out to catch him. The movie marked a turn of genre for Spielberg, who was at this point seen to be branching out to different kinds of film genres aside from the usual sci-fi fare he was known for. It is arguably his most offbeat film to date. It earned significant critical acclaim and box office success. It also earned Christopher Walken a nomination for Best Supporting Actor. The film is particularly known for John Williams' score and an unique title sequence.

The completion of this film once again marked another conclusion to a marathon run of film-making as it closed the hectic back-to-back-to-back filmings of A.I., Minority Report and Catch Me If You Can. A trio regarded as Spielberg's 'running-man' trilogy since it shares the common theme of a character fleeing authority.

The Terminal (2004)

Spielberg collaborated once again with Tom Hanks along with Catherine Zeta-Jones and Stanley Tucci in The Terminal, a warm-hearted comedy about a man of Eastern European descent who is stranded in an airport after his home country suffers a civil war during his flight, essentially invalidating his passport. It received mixed reviews and performed relatively bad at the box office.

War of the Worlds (2005)

A modernized adaptation of War of the Worlds, featuring Tom Cruise and Dakota Fanning, was released in the U.S. on June 29, 2005. As with past Spielberg films, Industrial Light and Magic (ILM) provided the special effects.

In his films E.T. and Close Encounters of the Third Kind, Spielberg portrayed alien visitors as potentially friendly for human beings willing to connect with them. War of the Worlds marked a departure from those optimistic themes; more violent alien invaders wreak havoc upon Earth. The film was a major box office success though critical opinions were mixed. This may have been due to the negative publicity surrounding star Tom Cruise at the time of the release.

Munich (2005)

Spielberg on the cover of the December 12, 2005 issue of TIME.

On the same day as the release of War of the Worlds, Spielberg began shooting Munich, a film about the events following the 1972 Munich Massacre. Munich stands as Spielberg's second film essaying Jewish relations in the world (the first being Schindler's List). The film is based on Vengeance: The True Story of an Israeli Counter-Terrorist Team, a book by Canadian journalist George Jonas. The book, although promoted as non-fiction, has been largely discredited by journalists. It was previously adapted into the 1986 made-for-TV movie Sword of Gideon. [2] [3] The film received strong critical praise, but failed at the US box-office.

The screenplay for Munich was co-written by Eric Roth and Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Tony Kushner. The movie is said to be an examination of the murder of 11 Israeli athletes at the 1972 Munich Olympics by the Black September organization, followed by the event's aftermath in which Israel's intelligence agency hunted down and killed the perpetrators. The protagonist, Avner, is believed to be the invention of Jonas' source, Yuval Aviv.[4]

On January 31, 2006, Munich received five Academy Awards nominations, including Best Picture, Film Editing, Original Music Score (by John Williams), Best Adapted Screenplay, and Best Director for Spielberg. This is Spielberg's sixth Best Director nomination.

According to Jonas and Aviv, the Israeli team suffered misgivings about their assignment, two were killed, and the others were abandoned or treated badly by Mossad. None of these claims have been verified by other sources.

Upcoming projects

Also in the works are an Abraham Lincoln bio-pic starring Liam Neeson as the 16th President of the United States, and a 4th Indiana Jones film. Currently the former is under the title Abraham Lincoln Project and scheduled for release in 2007.

Spielberg also served as the executive producer of Memoirs of a Geisha, an adaptation of the best-selling novel by Arthur Golden, a film he was previously attached to as director. He is also an executive producer on the critically acclaimed 2005 TV miniseries Into the West, as well as co-executive producing the new Transformers live action film with Brian Goldmer, an employee of Hasbro. A 4th Jurassic Park film is in development for him to produce as well as a CGI kids-movie called Monster House, which will be co-executive produced with famed filmmaker Robert Zemeckis, marking their first collaboration together since 1990's Back to the Future Part III.

In October 2005, Spielberg announced that he had been signed by Electronic Arts to direct three video game projects.

Films by Steven Spielberg

  • Indiana Jones 4 (2007)
  • Munich (2005)
  • War of the Worlds (2005)
  • The Terminal (2004)
  • Catch Me If You Can (2002)
  • Minority Report (2002)
  • A.I.: Artificial Intelligence (2001)
  • Saving Private Ryan (1998) (Academy Award, Best Director)
  • The Lost World: Jurassic Park (1997)
  • Amistad (1997)
  • Schindler's List (1993) (Academy Award, Best Director, Best Picture)
  • Jurassic Park (1993)
  • Hook (1991)
  • Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade (1989)
  • Always (1989)
  • Empire of the Sun (1987)
  • The Color Purple (1985)
  • Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom (1984)
  • E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial (1982)
  • Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981)
  • 1941 (1979)
  • Close Encounters of the Third Kind (1977)
  • Jaws (1975)
  • The Sugarland Express (1974)

See also: List of Steven Spielberg films

Salaries

  • Jurassic Park III (2001) $72,000,000
  • Schindler's List (1993) $0 (Asked not to be paid)
  • Jurassic Park (1993) $250,000,000 (gross and profit participations)
  • Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981) $10,500,000 + % of gross

Side projects

Spielberg has produced (without directing) a considerable number of films, including early hits for Joe Dante and Robert Zemeckis that he is often over-credited for, considered to have had more input than that of a producer, with the general public - ie; Stephen Spielberg's Back to the Future for example. He is also a lover of animated cartoons, and has produced several hit cartoons (and a few flops), including Tiny Toon Adventures, Animaniacs, Pinky and the Brain and Freakazoid!.

He was also, for a short time, the executive producer of the long-running medical drama ER which currently airs on NBC.

In 1989 he brought the concept of The Dig to LucasArts. He contributed with the project from that time to 1995 when the game was released.

He is one of the co-founders of DreamWorks Pictures (DreamWorks SKG, with Jeffrey Katzenberg and David Geffen providing the other letters in the company name), which has released all of his movies since Amistad in 1997.

Following the critical and box office success of Schindler's List in 1993, Spielberg founded and continues to finance the Shoah Foundation, a non-profit organization with the goal of providing an archive for the filmed testimony of as many survivors of the Holocaust as possible, so that their stories will not be lost in the future.

When one of his projects fell through, George Lucas let him design a few animatics for several sequences in Star Wars Episode III: Revenge of the Sith.

Personal life

Spielberg has been married to actress Kate Capshaw, whom he met when he cast her in Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom since 12 October 1991. He has seven children—four biological: Max Spielberg (by actress Amy Irving, whom he married on 27 November 1985), Sasha, Sawyer, and Destry (by Capshaw); two adopted (Theo and Mikaela); and one stepdaughter (Jessica Capshaw). Irving received a US $100 million settlement from Spielberg in their 1989 divorce.

Criticism

Perhaps the most prominent critic of Steven Spielberg is American artist and actor Crispin Glover. In a 2005 essay titled What Is It? Glover says that Spielberg has “wafted his putrid stench upon our culture, a culture he helped homogenize and propagandize.” Among Glover’s accusations are that Spielberg purchased the Rosebud sled used in Orson Welles’ 1941 film Citizen Kane for $50,000 but refused to hire Welles to write a screenplay in the later years of his life, that he received money from the United States government to promote his personal religious and cultural beliefs, that his films do not take risks, that he exploited tragedy for personal gain in the films Schindler’s List (although Spielberg was not paid for Schindler's List) and Saving Private Ryan, and that he, as a co-owner of DreamWorks, considered building a studio on the last remaining wetland in Southern California.

Another prominent criticism by several movie-goers (both professional and public) is that Spielberg's films lean towards sentimentalism at the expense of the theme of the film. An instance often cited by science fiction fans is the ending of A.I.: Artificial Intelligence which they believed was too 'happy'. This being a collaboration with Stanley Kubrick whose films such as Dr. Strangelove and A Clockwork Orange are often tinged with pessimism drew a heated debate as to whether or not Kubrick would have liked it or not. However, both Kubrick's long-time assistant Jan Harlan and the film's original story writer Ian Watson have said that the ending is exactly what Kubrick intended. A related criticism is that Spielberg's films lack depth and do not take risks, the most prominent person with this viewpoint is anti-mainstream film theorist Ray Carney.

French New Wave giant Jean-Luc Godard famously and publicly slammed Spielberg at the premier of his film In Praise of Love. Godard, who has continuously complained about the commercial nature of modern cinema held Spielberg responsible for the lack of artistic merit in mainstream cinema. Through his film, Godard accused Spielberg of making a profit of tragedy while Schindler's wife lived in poverty in Argentina.

Such criticisms are often rejected by many knowledgable film-makers and film critics. Critic Roger Ebert once stated that 'If only people could look past his popularity they would see how talented he really is.' Some of Spielberg's most famous fans include film legends Ingmar Bergman and François Truffaut.

Spielberg's unabashed support for Israel has also put him in the hot seat. In 2002, a rumor circulated that Spielberg was planning a film about Palestinian suffering during the Israeli/Palestinian feud. The director's spokesman, Marvin Levy, called the report "an obvious, vicious hoax." Spielberg did release Munich, however, a highly controversial project [5] which deals with the Israeli retaliation to the massacre of the Israeli Olympic athletes during the 1972 Munich Games. In order to deflect claims of bias, the filmmaker retained Arad Communications, a crisis communications firm in Tel Aviv and consulted various sources in creating the film.

Trivia

  • While the films that Steven Spielberg directed have won numerous awards, no actor or actress has won an Academy Award for a performance for one of his films.
  • Spielberg had a cameo role as the Cook County assessor in the last minutes of the 1980 film The Blues Brothers.
  • In 1982 Ben Kingsley won Best Actor and Richard Attenborough won Best Director for the film Gandhi, which beat Steven Spielberg's film E.T. for Best Picture. Eleven years later, in 1993, Steven Spielberg cast Richard Attenborough as John Hammond in Jurassic Park (his first performance in 13 years) and Ben Kingsley in Schindler's List. Steven Spielberg won Best Director and Best Picture Oscars that year.
  • Spielberg, an Eagle Scout and recipient of the Distinguished Eagle Scout Award from the Boy Scouts of America, designed the requirements for the Boy Scout Cinematography merit badge.
  • While attending college at Long Beach State in the 1960s, Spielberg was a member of Theta Chi Fraternity. He left school in 1969, only to return to get his "non-honorary degree" in Film in 2002.
  • The asteroid 25930 Spielberg is named in his honour.
  • Supports the U.S. Democratic Party.
  • Attended Arcadia High School in Scottsdale, Arizona and graduated from Saratoga High School in Saratoga, California in 1965.
Spielberg in Tiny Toon Adventures with Babs and Buster Bunny.
  • In the Warner Bros. animated series Tiny Toon Adventures and Animaniacs (both of which were executive-produced by Spielberg), Spielberg was a semi-recurring character. In some episodes, Spielberg voiced himself, and in others, veteran voice-over artist Frank Welker did Spielberg's voice. In the Japanese dub of Animaniacs, Spielberg was voiced by Hiroyuki Shibamoto.
  • On attending Saratoga High School, he said that it was the "worst experience" of his life and "hell on Earth". [6]
  • He first enrolled at California State University in Long Beach in 1965, quit in 1969 to take a television director contract at Universal Studios, and much later, as a returning student, was awarded a B.A. in Film Production and Electronic Arts with an option in Film/Video Production in 2002.
  • Attempted at admission to the University of Southern California's School of Cinema-Television three separate times, and the prominent school later awarded Spielberg an honorary degree in 1994. Two years later, Spielberg became a Trustee of the University and has since tirelessly devoted himself to supporting USC.
  • The A&E Network is expected to announce that it will produce a two-hour drama about the relationship between filmmakers George Lucas and Steven Spielberg. According to Daily Variety, the biopic, tentatively titled Celluloid Titans, is being executive produced by Jody Brockway.
  • For his work on the Survivors of the Shoah Visual History Foundation since 1994, he was awarded with the Great Cross of Merit with Star, the German version of the Great Officer's Cross, in September 1998 for "a very noticeable contribution to the issue of the Holocaust".
  • Spielberg is expected to make a cameo appearance in a second-season episode of Extras, the BBC comedy TV series written and directed by Ricky Gervais and Stephen Merchant.[7]
  • Steven Spielberg is recreated as a LEGO minifigure in the LEGO Studios series of sets.
  • His mother, the former Leah Adler, owns a Kosher restaurant in Los Angeles, California.
  • In the 2005 edition of Forbes' "400 Richest People in America", his net worth is estimated at $2.7 billion, a $100 million improvement over 2004 (due mostly to his share of the DreamWorks Animation public stock offering). He, and good friend George Lucas (net worth: $3.5 billion) are the only filmmakers on the list.
  • Every Spielberg-directed film since and including The Sugarland Express, with the exception of The Color Purple and his segment of The Twilight Zone the Movie, has been scored by John Williams. See also List of noted film producer and composer collaborations.
  • Janusz Kaminski has shot every Spielberg film since Schindler's List.
  • Spielberg sometimes employs renowned directors as actors in his films such as François Truffaut in Close Encounters of the Third Kind, Tim Robbins in War of the Worlds, Edward Burns in Saving Private Ryan, Richard Attenborough in Jurassic Park, Tim Blake Nelson in Minority Report, and Mathieu Kassovitz in Munich.

Urban legends

Spielberg started a fanciful story of how he broke into Hollywood by sneakily squatting in an unoccupied office on the Universal Studios lot. In fact, he had an unpaid summer job on the lot.

Bibliographies

  • Steven Spielberg Bibliography (via UC Berkeley)

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In fact, he had an unpaid summer job on the lot. In the following cases, the sword stands for arms in general, and has often been retained as a symbol even after it had in operational practice been replaced with firearms etcetera. Spielberg started a fanciful story of how he broke into Hollywood by sneakily squatting in an unoccupied office on the Universal Studios lot. Another example of this metaphorical significance comes in the old saying "The pen is mightier than the sword" -- attributed to Edward Bulwer-Lytton. In order to deflect claims of bias, the filmmaker retained Arad Communications, a crisis communications firm in Tel Aviv and consulted various sources in creating the film. Ewart Oakeshott in The Sword in The Age of Chivalry (1964, revised 1981) introduced a system of classification for medieval sword blades into types, numbered X – XXII as a continuation of Wheeler's system. The director's spokesman, Marvin Levy, called the report "an obvious, vicious hoax." Spielberg did release Munich, however, a highly controversial project [5] which deals with the Israeli retaliation to the massacre of the Israeli Olympic athletes during the 1972 Munich Games. Jan Petersen in De Norske Vikingsverd ("The Norwegian Viking Swords", 1919) introduced the most widely-used classification.

In 2002, a rumor circulated that Spielberg was planning a film about Palestinian suffering during the Israeli/Palestinian feud. Certain martial arts styles, such as kendo, use shinai as their primary weapons, both in training and in competition. Spielberg's unabashed support for Israel has also put him in the hot seat. Special sparring weapons, such as the bamboo shinai and the steel federschwerter, were also devised and used. Critic Roger Ebert once stated that 'If only people could look past his popularity they would see how talented he really is.' Some of Spielberg's most famous fans include film legends Ingmar Bergman and François Truffaut. These were known as wasters in Europe and bokken in Japan. Such criticisms are often rejected by many knowledgable film-makers and film critics. In both Europe and Asia, wooden "swords" were created to practice fencing without the physical danger of a real sword.

Through his film, Godard accused Spielberg of making a profit of tragedy while Schindler's wife lived in poverty in Argentina. A machete as a tool resembles such a single-edged sword and serves to cut through thick vegetation, and indeed many of the terms listed above describe weapons that originated as farmers' tools used on the battlefield. Godard, who has continuously complained about the commercial nature of modern cinema held Spielberg responsible for the lack of artistic merit in mainstream cinema. Many of these essentially refer to identical weapons, and the different names may relate to their use in different countries at different times. French New Wave giant Jean-Luc Godard famously and publicly slammed Spielberg at the premier of his film In Praise of Love. Other terms include falchion, scimitar, cutlass, or mortuary sword. A related criticism is that Spielberg's films lack depth and do not take risks, the most prominent person with this viewpoint is anti-mainstream film theorist Ray Carney. Europeans also frequently refer to their own single-edged weapons as swords--generically backswords, including sabres.

However, both Kubrick's long-time assistant Jan Harlan and the film's original story writer Ian Watson have said that the ending is exactly what Kubrick intended. However, general usage of the term remains inconsistent and it has important cultural overtones, so that commentators almost universally recognize the single-edged Asian weapons (dāo 刀, Katana 刀) as "swords", simply because they have very similar prestige to that which is attached to the European sword. Strangelove and A Clockwork Orange are often tinged with pessimism drew a heated debate as to whether or not Kubrick would have liked it or not. One strict definition of a sword restricts it to a double-edged weapon used for both slashing and stabbing. This being a collaboration with Stanley Kubrick whose films such as Dr.
. An instance often cited by science fiction fans is the ending of A.I.: Artificial Intelligence which they believed was too 'happy'. As noted above, the terms longsword, broad sword and great sword (and Gaelic claymore) are used relative to the era under consideration and do themselves designate a particular type of sword.

Another prominent criticism by several movie-goers (both professional and public) is that Spielberg's films lean towards sentimentalism at the expense of the theme of the film. For any other type than listed below, and even for uses other than as a weapon, see the article Sword-like object. In a 2005 essay titled What Is It? Glover says that Spielberg has “wafted his putrid stench upon our culture, a culture he helped homogenize and propagandize.” Among Glover’s accusations are that Spielberg purchased the Rosebud sled used in Orson Welles’ 1941 film Citizen Kane for $50,000 but refused to hire Welles to write a screenplay in the later years of his life, that he received money from the United States government to promote his personal religious and cultural beliefs, that his films do not take risks, that he exploited tragedy for personal gain in the films Schindler’s List (although Spielberg was not paid for Schindler's List) and Saving Private Ryan, and that he, as a co-owner of DreamWorks, considered building a studio on the last remaining wetland in Southern California. The main distinguishing characteristics include blade shape (cross-section, tapering and length), shape and size of hilt and pommel, age and place of origin. Perhaps the most prominent critic of Steven Spielberg is American artist and actor Crispin Glover. Swords can fall into categories of varying scope. Irving received a US $100 million settlement from Spielberg in their 1989 divorce. The tang consists of the extension of the blade structure through the hilt.

He has seven children—four biological: Max Spielberg (by actress Amy Irving, whom he married on 27 November 1985), Sasha, Sawyer, and Destry (by Capshaw); two adopted (Theo and Mikaela); and one stepdaughter (Jessica Capshaw). It may also have a tassel or sword knot. Spielberg has been married to actress Kate Capshaw, whom he met when he cast her in Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom since 12 October 1991. The pommel in addition to improving the grip, can also be used as a blunt instrument at close range. When one of his projects fell through, George Lucas let him design a few animatics for several sequences in Star Wars Episode III: Revenge of the Sith. The hilt is the collective term of the parts allowing the handling of the blade, consisting of the grip, the pommel, and in post-Viking Age swords usually a crossguard (called cruciform hilts). Following the critical and box office success of Schindler's List in 1993, Spielberg founded and continues to finance the Shoah Foundation, a non-profit organization with the goal of providing an archive for the filmed testimony of as many survivors of the Holocaust as possible, so that their stories will not be lost in the future. Middle Eastern swords, intended for use with the arm bent, had a smaller radius.

He is one of the co-founders of DreamWorks Pictures (DreamWorks SKG, with Jeffrey Katzenberg and David Geffen providing the other letters in the company name), which has released all of his movies since Amistad in 1997. European swords, intended for use at arm's length, had a radius of curvature of around a meter. He contributed with the project from that time to 1995 when the game was released. This allowed the blade to have a sawing effect rather than simply delivering a heavy cut. In 1989 he brought the concept of The Dig to LucasArts. with an edge, have been curved with the radius of curvature equal to the distance from the swordman's body at which it was to be used. He was also, for a short time, the executive producer of the long-running medical drama ER which currently airs on NBC. From the 18th century onwards swords intended for slashing, i.e.

He is also a lover of animated cartoons, and has produced several hit cartoons (and a few flops), including Tiny Toon Adventures, Animaniacs, Pinky and the Brain and Freakazoid!. On Japanese blades the mark appears on the tang under the handle. Spielberg has produced (without directing) a considerable number of films, including early hits for Joe Dante and Robert Zemeckis that he is often over-credited for, considered to have had more input than that of a producer, with the general public - ie; Stephen Spielberg's Back to the Future for example. The ricasso normally bears the maker's mark. See also: List of Steven Spielberg films. On some large weapons, such as the German zweihander, a leather cover surrounded the ricasso, and a swordsman might grip it in one hand to make the weapon more easily wielded in close-quarters combat. In October 2005, Spielberg announced that he had been signed by Electronic Arts to direct three video game projects. Many swords have no ricasso.

A 4th Jurassic Park film is in development for him to produce as well as a CGI kids-movie called Monster House, which will be co-executive produced with famed filmmaker Robert Zemeckis, marking their first collaboration together since 1990's Back to the Future Part III. The ricasso or shoulder identifies a short section of blade immediately forward of the guard that is left completely unsharpened, and can be gripped with a finger to increase tip control. He is also an executive producer on the critically acclaimed 2005 TV miniseries Into the West, as well as co-executive producing the new Transformers live action film with Brian Goldmer, an employee of Hasbro. The section in between the CoP and the CoB is the middle. Spielberg also served as the executive producer of Memoirs of a Geisha, an adaptation of the best-selling novel by Arthur Golden, a film he was previously attached to as director. The part of the blade between the Center of Percussion (CoP) and the point is called the weak of the blade, and that between the Center of Balance (CoB) and the hilt the strong. Currently the former is under the title Abraham Lincoln Project and scheduled for release in 2007. The blade may taper more or less sharply towards a point, used for thrusting.

Also in the works are an Abraham Lincoln bio-pic starring Liam Neeson as the 16th President of the United States, and a 4th Indiana Jones film. The blade may have grooves or fullers for the purpose of lightening the blade while allowing it to retain its strength, in the same manner as an "I" beam in construction. None of these claims have been verified by other sources. Some hilt designs define which edge is the 'long' one, while more symmetrical designs allow the long and short edges to be inverted by turning the sword. According to Jonas and Aviv, the Israeli team suffered misgivings about their assignment, two were killed, and the others were abandoned or treated badly by Mossad. The blade is usually double-edged; when handling the sword, the long or true edge is the one used for straight cuts or strikes, while the short or false edge is the one used for backhand strikes. This is Spielberg's sixth Best Director nomination. Three types of attacks can be performed with the blade: striking, cutting, and thrusting.

On January 31, 2006, Munich received five Academy Awards nominations, including Best Picture, Film Editing, Original Music Score (by John Williams), Best Adapted Screenplay, and Best Director for Spielberg. The name scabbard applies to the case which houses the sword when not in use. The protagonist, Avner, is believed to be the invention of Jonas' source, Yuval Aviv.[4]. The sword consists of the blade and the hilt. The movie is said to be an examination of the murder of 11 Israeli athletes at the 1972 Munich Olympics by the Black September organization, followed by the event's aftermath in which Israel's intelligence agency hunted down and killed the perpetrators. Cavalry charges still occurred as late as World War II during which Japanese and Pacific Islanders also occasionally used swords, but by then an enemy armed with machine guns, barbed wire and armored vehicles would usually completely outmatch swordsmen. The screenplay for Munich was co-written by Eric Roth and Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Tony Kushner. The last units of British heavy cavalry switched to using armoured vehicles as late as 1938.

[2] [3] The film received strong critical praise, but failed at the US box-office. For example, the British Army formally adopted a completely new design of cavalry sword in 1908, almost the last change in British Army weapons before the outbreak of the war. It was previously adapted into the 1986 made-for-TV movie Sword of Gideon. Swords continued in use, but increasingly limited to military officers and ceremonial uniforms, although most armies retained heavy cavalry until well after World War I. The book, although promoted as non-fiction, has been largely discredited by journalists. Even as a personal sidearm, the sword began to lose its pre-eminence in the late 18th century, paralleling the development of reliable handguns. The film is based on Vengeance: The True Story of an Israeli Counter-Terrorist Team, a book by Canadian journalist George Jonas. The sword served more as a weapon of self-defence than for use on the battlefield, and the military importance of swords steadily decreased during the Modern Age.

Munich stands as Spielberg's second film essaying Jewish relations in the world (the first being Schindler's List). The French martial art la canne developed to fight with canes and swordsticks and has now evolved into a sport. On the same day as the release of War of the Worlds, Spielberg began shooting Munich, a film about the events following the 1972 Munich Massacre. Some examples of canes—those known as swordsticks—incorporate a concealed blade. This may have been due to the negative publicity surrounding star Tom Cruise at the time of the release. As the wearing of swords fell out of fashion, canes took their place in a gentleman's wardrobe. The film was a major box office success though critical opinions were mixed. Both the smallsword and the rapier remained popular dueling swords well into the 18th century.

War of the Worlds marked a departure from those optimistic themes; more violent alien invaders wreak havoc upon Earth. During the 17th and 18th centuries, the shorter smallsword became an essential fashion accessory in European countries, and most wealthy men carried one. In his films E.T. and Close Encounters of the Third Kind, Spielberg portrayed alien visitors as potentially friendly for human beings willing to connect with them. Both the rapier and the Italian schiavona developed the crossguard into a basket for hand protection. As with past Spielberg films, Industrial Light and Magic (ILM) provided the special effects. The rapier evolved from the Spanish espada ropera in the 16th century. on June 29, 2005. The sword in this time period was the most personal weapon, the most prestigious, and the most versatile for close combat, but it came to find a greater role in civilian self-defense than in military use as technology changed warfare.

A modernized adaptation of War of the Worlds, featuring Tom Cruise and Dakota Fanning, was released in the U.S. In the 16th century, the large Zweihänder concluded the trend of ever increasing sword sizes (mostly due to the beginning of the decline of plate armor and the advent of firearms), and the early Modern Age returned to lighter one-handed weapons. It received mixed reviews and performed relatively bad at the box office. Though capable of penetrating even the thickest armor, it ultimately proved too unwieldy for common use. Spielberg collaborated once again with Tom Hanks along with Catherine Zeta-Jones and Stanley Tucci in The Terminal, a warm-hearted comedy about a man of Eastern European descent who is stranded in an airport after his home country suffers a civil war during his flight, essentially invalidating his passport. His "Vervierfachen Sie hat gereicht Blatt" was a sword nearly twelve feet in length, requiring two men to wield effectively. A trio regarded as Spielberg's 'running-man' trilogy since it shares the common theme of a character fleeing authority. The largest recorded sword was that forged by Gustav Heinshreck in the 16th century.

The completion of this film once again marked another conclusion to a marathon run of film-making as it closed the hectic back-to-back-to-back filmings of A.I., Minority Report and Catch Me If You Can. Though light blades were retained by cavalry for some time, the infantry blade was eventually abandoned entirely. The film is particularly known for John Williams' score and an unique title sequence. As armor thickened, blacksmiths labored to increase the size of the sword, resulting in such weapons as the bastard and two-handed sword. It also earned Christopher Walken a nomination for Best Supporting Actor. This sword gradually became obsolete as thicker forms of armor rendered the piercing blade ineffective. It earned significant critical acclaim and box office success. The estoc became popular because of its ability to thrust into the gaps in-between plates of armor.

It is arguably his most offbeat film to date. The longsword became popular due to is extreme reach and cutting and thrusting abilities. The movie marked a turn of genre for Spielberg, who was at this point seen to be branching out to different kinds of film genres aside from the usual sci-fi fare he was known for. Another variant was the specialization of armour-piercing swords of the Estoc type. The film stars Leonardo DiCaprio in the lead role, with Saving Private Ryan star Tom Hanks as the FBI agent out to catch him. By 1400 this type of sword, at the time called langes Schwert (longsword) or spadone, were common, and a number of 15th and 16th century "fechtbucher" teaching their use survive. immediately went to work on Catch Me If You Can, a story of the daring adventures of a youthful con artist. The main transition was the lengthening of the grip, allowing two-handed use, and a longer blade.

Shortly after the release of Minority Report, Spielberg and Co. From around 1300, in concert with improved armour, innovative sword designs evolved more and more rapidly. [1] It is regarded as one of Spielberg's best sci-fi films by critics. 900 AD (see Japanese sword), is also derived from the Dao. Roger Ebert, who named it the best film of 2002, praised the film for its breathtaking vision of the future as well as for the way Spielberg blended CGI with live-action. The Japanese Katana (刀; かたな), production of which is recorded from ca. In typical Spielberg fashion the film earned over $300 million dollars worldwide while earning signficant critical acclaim. Derived from the Chinese Dao, the Korean Hwandudaedo are known from the early medieval Three Kingdoms.

The film was a futuristic homage to film noir, with its intelligent premise, thrilling chase scenes, and whodunnit structure. Single-edged weapons became popular throughout Asia. police captain who has been foreseen to murder a man he has not even met. However when a knight thrusts his sword, his defense is completely down, and a stab is easier to dodge than a slice. In 2002, Spielberg and actor Tom Cruise collaborated for the first time in the futuristic neo-noir Minority Report, which features Cruise as a D.C. A stab is more fatal than a slice and difficult to parry. Dick about the future of crime-fighting using precognitive vision. The swords were made to be for thrusting.

Following A.I., Spielberg came upon the sci-fi short story written by Philip K. During the Crusades of the 12th to (13th) century, this cruciform type of arming sword remains essentially stable, with variations mainly concerning the shape of the pommel. The film failed to recoup its budget at the US box office. It is only from the 11th century that Norman swords begin to develop the quillion or crossguard. The legendary director Billy Wilder called A.I. "the most underrated film of the past few years". The Viking Age sees again a more standardized production, but the basic design remains indebted to the Spatha. The film polarized both critics and audiences, some stating that the film was overly long and a pretentious impression of Kubrick, while others believing it to be a masterpiece. Vendel Age Spathas decorated with Germanic artwork (not unlike the Germanic bracteates fashioned after Roman coins).

It starred William Hurt, Jude Law, Frances O'Connor, and child actor Haley Joel Osment as the android boy David. The Spatha type remained popular throughout the Migration period and well into the Middle Ages. The futuristic story of a humanoid android longing for love, A.I. featured groundbreaking visual effects and a multi-layered, allegorical storyline in keeping with Kubrick's original vision. The Chinese Dao (刀 pinyin dāo) is single-edged, sometimes translated as sabre or broadsword, and the Jian (劍 pinyin jiàn) double edged. In 2001, Spielberg filmed fellow director and friend Stanley Kubrick's final project, A.I.: Artificial Intelligence, a project planned by the two directors for many years but which Kubrick was unable to begin during his lifetime. Chinese steel swords make their appearance from the 3rd century BC Qin Dynasty. The series was hailed as the greatest TV event of all time, winning a slew of awards both at the Golden Globes and the Emmys. The late Roman Empire introduced the longer Spatha (the term for its wielder, spatharius, became a court rank in Constantinople), and from this time, the term "long sword" is applied to swords comparatively long for their respective periods.

The ten-part HBO mini-series follows the trials and accomplishments of the 101st Airborne Division, or Easy Company, also starting from the landing in Normandy, to the Battle of the Bulge, to the capture of Hitler's Eagle's Nest in Germany itself. The Greek Xiphos and the Roman Gladius are typical examples of the type, measuring some 60 to 70 cm. Later on, Spielberg and Hanks, overwhelmed with the success of the film's subject, decided to team together to produce a TV mini-series based on Stephen Ambrose's historical novel, Band of Brothers. By the time of Classical Antiquity and the Parthian and Sassanid Empires in Iran, iron swords were common. This would also mark the first of three collaborations with star Tom Hanks. Over time different methods developed all over the world. By decade's end, Spielberg still remained arguably the most influential and powerful filmmaker in Hollywood. Several different methods of swordmaking existed in ancient times, including most famously pattern welding.

The completion of this film would mark a marathon of filmmaking for Spielberg who shot The Lost World, Amistad, and Saving Private Ryan back-to-back-to-back. Eventually smiths learned that by adding an amount of carbon (added during smelting in the form of charcoal) in the iron, they could produce an improved alloy (now known as steel). Spielberg considered it one of his finest works, yet in a highly publicized "showdown", it lost the Best Picture Oscar at the 1999 Academy Awards to Shakespeare in Love. However, Spielberg would win his second Academy Award for his direction in the war epic. Early Iron swords were not comparable to later steel blades, being brittle and soft, they were even inferior to good bronze weapons, but the easier production, and the better availability of the raw material for the first time permitted the equipment of entire armies with metal weapons. Miller (Tom Hanks), from the landing at Omaha Beach in Normandy to the heart of French resistance, in order to retrieve a missing private (Matt Damon), whose brothers were lost to the war. Iron has the advantage of mass-production due to the wider availability of the raw material. The film follows a platoon of soldiers led by Capt. The Hittites, the Mycenean Greeks, and the Proto-Celtic Hallstatt culture figured among the early users of iron swords.

Another of Spielberg's critically acclaimed films, the World War II drama Saving Private Ryan, was released in 1998. Iron swords became increasingly common from the 13th century BC. It would mark Spielberg's second essay on the treatment of Blacks in American History (the first being The Color Purple in 1985). However Areliux, a celtian chief, made the "simitar" a sword that could kill with one hit. It did not do well at the box office however, and has been overlooked since its release. All in all, these primitive weapons functioned more like sharpened bludgeons. Based on a true story about African slaves who rebelled against their captors, the film received lavish praise from the critics, but was noted for its violent massacre scenes. They were without later incorporated features, such as hilts and pommels.

Spielberg released Amistad under the banner of his new studio DreamWorks (formed with former Disney animation exec Jeffrey Katzenberg and media mogul David Geffen). Historians debate the exact size of this first sword, but it is generally accepted that the weapons were bronze bars, sharpened along a single edge, between one and two feet in length. If Lost World was his bid to conquer the box office, Amistad (like Schindler's List) was his bid to win over the critics come awards season. These were later dubbed machaira, or sword. Spielberg followed his 1993 formula of releasing a dinosaur movie followed by a historical drama by doing it again in 1997. When a regiment of Periphero Chortos arrived and witnessed the tanner's use of this curious blade, they requested duplicates of the "arm-length knife" for their own use. Fatigued by the production, he would relinquish the opportunity to direct any more Jurassic Park films. Hephastus hit upon the idea of making larger "knives" to assist the local tanner in skinning animals of their hides.

In hindsight Spielberg expressed his view that this sequel was a movie he wanted to see, but didn't necesarily want to make himself. Although numerous origin accounts exist, the first sword is believed to have been forged by the Greek bronzeworker Hephastus (2800 B.C.), who would later be deified as the Grecian god of blacksmiths. The film was critically panned, but did manage to generate nearly $230 million in domestic box office, giving it the third-highest total for 1997 behind Titanic and Men in Black. Sword production in China is attested from the Bronze Age Shang Dynasty. This time, he was helming the sequel to 1993's gigantic Jurassic Park, Michael Crichton's The Lost World. 1400 BC show characteristic spiral patterns. Taking a four-year hiatus from directing to spend more time with his family and build his new studio DreamWorks, Spielberg found himself back in the director's chair in 1997. Swords from the Nordic Bronze Age from ca.

1993 was Spielberg's biggest year with the success of Jurassic Park and Schindler's List. Bronze Age swords with typical leaf-shaped blades first appear near the Mediterranean and the Black Sea, and in Mesopotamia. Critics on the other hand don't share Spielberg's sentiment and it is universally regarded as his finest and most mature film. The hilt at first simply allowed a firm grip, and prevented the hand from slipping onto the blade when executing a stab. Though Spielberg admits it is definitely his most important film, he still holds it second to E.T. as his masterwork. The sword developed from the dagger when the construction of longer blades became possible, from the early 2nd millennium BC. The picture also brought Spielberg his first Best Director and Best Picture wins at the Oscars. Humans have manufactured and used bladed weapons from the Bronze Age onwards.

Critics maintain that Schindler's List is the most accurate portrayal of the Holocaust, and in 1999 the American Film Institute listed it among the 10 Greatest Films ever Made (#9). . While the film made a killing in the box office, Spielberg claimed not to have partaken in the profits, and instead used the money to set up the Shoah Foundation. The names given to many swords in mythology, literature, and history reflect the high prestige of the weapon (see list of swords). Schindler's List earned Spielberg his first Academy Award for Best Director (it also won Best Picture). The basic intent and physics of swordsmanship remain fairly constant, but the actual techniques vary between cultures and periods as a result of the differences in blade design and purpose. The screenplay, adapted from Thomas Keneally's novel, was originally in the hands of fellow director Martin Scorsese, but Spielberg negotiated with Scorsese to trade scripts (at the time, Spielberg held the script for a remake of Cape Fear). Sword (Old English: sweord; akin to Old High German: swerd, "wounding tool"; Proto-Indo-European: *swer-, "to wound, to hurt") is a term for a long-edged, bladed weapon, consisting in its most fundamental design of a blade, usually with two edges for striking and cutting, a point for thrusting, and a hilt for gripping.

It was in that same year that Jurassic Park was released that Spielberg finally received the critical acclaim he had long sought for making Schindler's List (based on the true story of Oskar Schindler, a man who sacrificed himself to save 1,100 people from the wrath of the Holocaust). It is also not unusual for swords to represent reason - as in "cutting through" a series of elements in a problem in order to leave only those with proven relevance, for example. Spielberg has stated in interviews at the time that the Japanese Godzilla movies provided inspiration for Jurassic Park. regiment) of such a corps - as these are numerous, inevitably many variations and combinations (two crossed swords, or with a laurel wreath, crown, national or founder/patron's emblem etcetera) are used. It would eventually overtake E.T. as the all-time top grossing film - a position it held for several years (until James Cameron's Titanic). as symbol of armed force, or of a corps entitled to use force as the strong arm of the law, as in military and police insignia, or of a unit (e.g. With the aid of revolutionary special effects provided by friend George Lucas' Industrial Light and Magic, the film became an instant classic. as symbol of power, such as a Sword of State and a Sword of Justice (both can be used as regalia);.

The adaptation muted somewhat the novel's message about the consequences of mankind tampering with nature, instead focusing on the adventure aspects of the story. Swords are also used as emblem or insignia (in or on formal dress such as uniforms, badges, various objects, even coats of arms), especially:

    . In 1993, Spielberg decided to once again tackle the adventure genre, as he directed the movie version of Michael Crichton's novel Jurassic Park, about killer dinosaurs rampaging through a tropical island resort. For example, "sword swallowing" is used as an euphemism of fellatio. Though Peter Pan had grown up, some were wondering if Spielberg himself ever would. The sword often functions as a symbol of masculinity and particularly -since its form lends itself to this, especially in erect position- as a phallic symbol of virility. The film was made for $70 million (at that time a huge amount) and made $119 million domestically, but it was not as successful as some had hoped. Swords form a suit in the Tarot deck (replaced by spades in the French deck of playing cards).

    However, by the time the film began shooting, innumerable rewrites and creative changes made by the numerous major Hollywood players attached to the project resulted in a film regarded by most critics as hit-or-miss at best. Jesus' statement, "Those who live by the sword shall die by the sword" uses the term in this sense. Hook focused on a middle-aged Pan (played by Robin Williams), who returns to Neverland to face the title character (Captain Hook, played by Dustin Hoffman). The sword can symbolise violence, combat, or military intervention. Hart pitched an alternate idea about Peter Pan returning to Neverland as an adult, Spielberg switched gears. The shinai, a practice sword, is also used in Japan as a spanking implement, more common in prized private extracurricular schools (illustrated in these 1975 and 1977 articles [2] & [3]) than the US school paddling; in fact hundreds of cases of illegal corporal punishment were reported from public schools as well. When writer James V. For example, the Chinese movie Farewell to my concubine (1993 - see IMDb [1]) shows how a flat, not even very hard type of paddle, called the master's sword, is used intensively to discipline young opera trainees both on the (usually bared) buttock and on the hand (even drawing blood).

    He had tried numerous times to film a live action version of Peter Pan without success. Similarly paddle-like sword-like devices for physical punishment are used in Asia, in western terms for paddling or caning, depending whether the implement is flat or round. In many ways, a Peter Pan story directed by Steven Spielberg seemed like a forgone conclusion. Real swords can be used to administer various physical punishments: to perform either capital punishment by decapitation (the use of the sword, an honourable weapon on military men, was regarded a privilege) or non-surgical amputation. After the failure of Always, Spielberg headed back to safer waters. The 16th century Zweihänder. A box office flop and victim of mixed reviews, Always stands out (or more precisely doesn't) as arguably Spielberg's most overlooked and forgotten film. The longsword (and bastard sword) of the Middle Ages and Renaissance.

    Always marked Spielberg's first foray into the romantic genre. Light duelling swords, like the rapier and the smallsword, in use from Early Modern times. But when Ted falls in love with the girlfriend Pete left behind, Pete must learn to let go of her and do what's best to influence these characters as they themselves approach another potential tragedy. The cut & thrust swords of the Renaissance, similar to the older arming sword but balanced for increased thrusting. When killed on his last mission, he becomes something of a guardian angel for a young man named Ted. The late medieval Swiss baselard and the Renaissance Italian Cinquedea and German Katzbalger essentially re-introduce the functionality of the Spatha, coinciding with the strong cultural movement to emulate the Classical world. Inspired by the film A Guy Named Joe, Always is the story of Pete, a daredevil pilot who extinguishes forest fires. 110 cm.

    Following on the heels of his last Indiana Jones movie, he would re-unite with actor Richard Dreyfuss with Always. The classical arming sword of the Crusades, measuring up to ca. 1989 would mark the first year in which Spielberg would direct two movies. 80–90 cm. The development of a fourth Indiana Jones film has been promised but is still pending. Spatha, measuring ca. Receipient of glowing reviews and big box office receipts, Spielberg, Lucas and Ford left the franchise on a high mark. Iron Age swords like the Xiphos, Gladius and Jian 劍, similar in shape to their Bronze Age predecessors.

    The father-son issues in the picture are congruent with much of Spielberg's work, making this Indy film the most personal of the three. 60 cm, leaf shaped blade. Lucas himself heralded his Indiana Jones creation as an alternative to Bond back when they first discussed films to work on together. Bronze Age swords, length ca. With the inclusion of star Sean Connery, Spielberg vicariously fulfilled a lifelong dream to make a James Bond movie. In European or Asian swords sold today, many advertised "full" tangs may actually involve a forged rat-tail tang. After two forays into dramatic films, Spielberg returned to familiar territory by re-uniting "one last time" for another Indiana Jones film. In a "full" tang (most commonly used in knives and machetes) the tang has about the same width as the blade.

    The film garnered numerous praise from critics, was nominated for several Oscars, but did not attract the kind of box office power that Spielberg's films usually get. Modern lower quality replicas often feature a "screw-on" pommel or a pommel nut which holds the hilt together and allows dismantling. Spielberg wanted to convey a heartfelt message of innocence being shattered as a result of war, as audiences saw the transformation of Jim from sheltered taipan to a struggling and resourceful war refugee. Swordsmiths peened such tangs over the end of the pommel, or occasionally welded the hilt furniture to the tang and threaded the end for screwing on a pommel. Ballard's autobiographical novel, Empire of the Sun, which told the story of a young boy named Jim (Christian Bale) who is separated from his parents during the sacking of Shanghai in 1938, and is forced to survive through the rest of the war. Traditional tangs go through the handle: this gives much more durability than a rat-tail tang. The result was an adaptation of J.G. In traditional construction, the swordsmith forged the tang as a part of the sword rather than welding it on.

    1987 was a time when the Chinese economy was beginning to boom, and as the Chinese gates began to open to the world, Spielberg took advantage by shooting the first American movie in Shanghai since the 1930s. Traditional sword-making does not use this construction method, which does not serve for traditional sword usage as the sword can easily break at the welding point. However in one of the most controversial instances in the History of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, Spielberg himself went without a Best Director nomination despite the multitude of nominations the picture received. This occurs most commonly in decorative replicas, or cheap sword-like objects. It received 11 Academy Award nominations including two for Whoopi Goldberg and Oprah Winfrey. In the case of a rat-tail tang, the maker welds a thin rod to the end of the blade at the crossguard; this rod goes through the handle (in 20th-century and later construction). Roger Ebert entered it into his Great Films archive.

    The film was another box office smash and hailed by critics as Spielberg's successful foray into the dramatic genre. Danny Glover played the abusive patriarch. Indeed, this proved to be Spielberg's trial by fire in presenting the story of a generation of oppressed African-American women (Whoopi Goldberg and Oprah Winfrey) during depression-era America. Many critics were unsure of whether or not Spielberg could handle such serious material, as his output to that point had been viewed as "lighter" entertainment.

    In 1985, Spielberg made The Color Purple, an adaptation of Alice Walker's Pulitzer Prize-winning novel. The extreme violence and gore would also inspire the PG-13 rating the following year. It was criticized for lacking the energy of the original, as well as for its grossly inaccurate and ignorant depiction of Indian culture. Predictably the film would be another blockbuster hit though the reviews would be less positive than they were for its predesessor.

    Plagued with uncertainty for the material, the saving grace for Spielberg during the making of this film would be the meeting of his future wife Kate Capshaw, who was cast as Indiana's new love interest. As if Spielberg could use even more commercial success, his friend George Lucas immediately pulled Spielberg back in as part of their friendly agreement to make more Indiana Jones movies. This was a famously expensive failure which contributed to the video game crash of 1983. Spielberg also negotiated an unusually lucrative video game licensing deal with Atari for an E.T. video game.

    Night Skies also gave birth to Poltergeist, a film that Spielberg co-wrote , co-produced (and some people who worked on the film claim directed) and was released only a week before E.T.. E.T. originated as a sci-fi suspense thriller called Night Skies. It is considered by Spielberg to be his own personal favorite film from his works. It was also nominated for many academy awards including Best Picture and Best Director.

    E.T. went on to become the top-grossing film of all time for many years. the Extra-Terrestrial, this is the story of a boy and the alien whom he befriends (and is trying to get back "home" to outer space). One year later, Spielberg returned to his alien visitors motif with E.T. The biggest film at the box office in 1981, and recipient of numerous Oscar nominations including Best Director (Spielberg's 2nd nom) and Best Picture (2nd Spielberg film to do so), Raiders is still hailed as a landmark in action cinema.

    In 1981, Spielberg teamed up for the first time with his friend George Lucas to make Raiders of the Lost Ark, his homage to the cliffhanger serials of the Golden Age of Hollywood, with Harrison Ford (whom Lucas had previously cast in his Star Wars films) as the dashing hero Indiana Jones. What some would consider Spielberg's greatest film work was still to come, beginning in the 1980s. Expanded versions of 1941 have been shown on network television and later on Laserdisc and DVD. Desperately in need of quick redemption, Spielberg would next team with Star Wars creator George Lucas on a new action adventure film.

    Over-budget, over-long, the film flopped with both audiences and critics alike. An exercise in excess, the film provided just the ammunition cynical critics would require to take down the young director. days after the attack on Pearl Harbor, with the two top stars from Saturday Night Live, Dan Aykroyd and John Belushi, along with other all-stars. For example, Spielberg's next film was 1941, a big-budgeted World War II comedy farce set in L.A.

    The success Spielberg was beginning to enjoy, as well as his eventual tendency to make films with wide mainstream and commercial appeal, also subjected him to disdain in critical circles by film reviewers. Warner). Close Encounters of the Third Kind not only earned Spielberg his first Best Director nomination, but was nominated for six other Academy Awards, taking home Oscar in two (Cinematography -- Vilmos Zsigmond, and a Special Achievment Award for Sound Effects Editing -- Frank E. A hit at the box office, the film also garnered Spielberg his first Best Director nomination from the Academy.

    The film remains a cult sci-fi classic among its fans. Rejecting an offer to direct Jaws 2, Spielberg and actor Richard Dreyfuss re-convened to work on a pet project Spielberg had had in mind since his youth: a film about UFOs, which became Close Encounters of the Third Kind (1977). He would decline offers to direct its sequel by using his new influence to pursue more personal projects. To this day, Spielberg still maintains that Jaws was the hardest film he ever had to make.

    It was also nominated for Best Picture and featured Spielberg's first of three collaborations with actor Richard Dreyfuss. Jaws won three Academy Awards (for editing, original score and sound), and grossed over USD$100 million at the box office, setting the domestic record for box office gross. The giant great white shark would lurk in wait until a mortal was foolish enough to enter the water and then he would messily devour them leaving only body fragments. Jaws, a horror film based on the Peter Benchley novel about a killer shark that attacks people off the coast of a New England isle community.

    Nevertheless his producers Richard Zanuck and David Brown were prepared to offer Spielberg a more ambitious directing assignment. Welcomed with warm reviews, the film nevertheless failed to catch on at the box office. Spielberg's debut theatrical feature film, based on the true story of a married couple who lead the Texas police on a highway chase as they embark on a journey to regain custody of their baby. Much of his early success was due to Sidney Sheinberg who is credited with discovering him; Spielberg also received an honorary degree from Brown University in 1999.

    This film, about a truck mysteriously terrorizing an average citizen, has become a cult classic, having been released on video several times over the years. 2017", Spielberg directed his first well-known feature with a 1971 TV "movie-of-the-week" entitled Duel (later released to theatres overseas and eventually in the U.S.). While working on this segment its star Joan Crawford collared a production executive and said, "Keep an eye on this kid, he's going places." After directing episodes of various TV shows, including an early Columbo TV movie and a feature-length science fiction episode of The Name of the Game written by Philip Wylie and called "L.A. (Spielberg's own production company, Amblin Entertainment, was named after this short film.) His maiden directorial work was a segment of the pilot film to Rod Serling's Night Gallery.

    He was making amateur 8mm "adventure" movies with his friends as a teenager (scenes from these amateur films have been included on the DVD edition of Saving Private Ryan), and he made his first short film for theatrical release, Amblin', in 1968 at the age of twenty one. He is known by film historians as one of the famous "film-school generation" (also known as "the movie brats" or "the New Hollywood") of the 1970s: along with fellow filmmakers (and personal friends) George Lucas, Francis Ford Coppola, Martin Scorsese, John Milius, and Brian De Palma, Spielberg grew up making movies. His German last name comes from the name of the Austrian city where his Hungarian Jewish ancestors lived in 17th century: Spielberg. Spielberg was born to a Jewish American family in Cincinnati, Ohio; he was raised in the suburbs of Haddonfield, New Jersey and Scottsdale, Arizona.

    In 2001 he was given the honor of Knight Commander of the British Empire (KBE) by Queen Elizabeth II. He is seen as a figure who has the influence, financial resources, and acceptance of Hollywood studio authorities to make any movie he wants to make, be it a mainstream action-adventure movie, Jurassic Park or a three-hour-long black and white drama about the Holocaust, Schindler's List. He has been nominated for seven Academy Awards for Best Director, winning two of them (Schindler's List and Saving Private Ryan), and four of the films he directed were up for the Best Picture Oscar (Schindler's List won). Spielberg was number one on the list.

    In 2005, Empire magazine created a list of the 50 greatest film directors of all time. As of 2004, he has been listed in Premiere and other magazines as the most "powerful" and "influential" figure in the motion picture industry. He has directed and/or produced an astounding number of major box office hits, giving him enormous influence in Hollywood. Spielberg is the most financially successful motion picture director of all time.

    . the Extra-Terrestrial, Hook and A.I., and the challenging role of a father-figure. One consistent theme in his family friendly work is a childlike, even naïve, sense of wonderment and faith, as attested by works such as Close Encounters of the Third Kind, E.T. He is noted in recent years for his willingness to tackle emotionally powerful issues, such as the horrors of the Holocaust in Schindler's List, slavery in Amistad, hardships of war in Saving Private Ryan, and terrorism in Munich.

    Steven Allan Spielberg, KBE (born December 18, 1946) is a four time Academy Award winning American film director (three OSCARS and 1 Lifetime Achievement Award), and among the most successful filmmakers in history. Steven Spielberg Bibliography (via UC Berkeley). Spielberg sometimes employs renowned directors as actors in his films such as François Truffaut in Close Encounters of the Third Kind, Tim Robbins in War of the Worlds, Edward Burns in Saving Private Ryan, Richard Attenborough in Jurassic Park, Tim Blake Nelson in Minority Report, and Mathieu Kassovitz in Munich. Janusz Kaminski has shot every Spielberg film since Schindler's List.

    See also List of noted film producer and composer collaborations. Every Spielberg-directed film since and including The Sugarland Express, with the exception of The Color Purple and his segment of The Twilight Zone the Movie, has been scored by John Williams. He, and good friend George Lucas (net worth: $3.5 billion) are the only filmmakers on the list. In the 2005 edition of Forbes' "400 Richest People in America", his net worth is estimated at $2.7 billion, a $100 million improvement over 2004 (due mostly to his share of the DreamWorks Animation public stock offering).

    His mother, the former Leah Adler, owns a Kosher restaurant in Los Angeles, California. Steven Spielberg is recreated as a LEGO minifigure in the LEGO Studios series of sets. Spielberg is expected to make a cameo appearance in a second-season episode of Extras, the BBC comedy TV series written and directed by Ricky Gervais and Stephen Merchant.[7]. For his work on the Survivors of the Shoah Visual History Foundation since 1994, he was awarded with the Great Cross of Merit with Star, the German version of the Great Officer's Cross, in September 1998 for "a very noticeable contribution to the issue of the Holocaust".

    According to Daily Variety, the biopic, tentatively titled Celluloid Titans, is being executive produced by Jody Brockway. The A&E Network is expected to announce that it will produce a two-hour drama about the relationship between filmmakers George Lucas and Steven Spielberg. Two years later, Spielberg became a Trustee of the University and has since tirelessly devoted himself to supporting USC. Attempted at admission to the University of Southern California's School of Cinema-Television three separate times, and the prominent school later awarded Spielberg an honorary degree in 1994.

    in Film Production and Electronic Arts with an option in Film/Video Production in 2002. He first enrolled at California State University in Long Beach in 1965, quit in 1969 to take a television director contract at Universal Studios, and much later, as a returning student, was awarded a B.A. [6]. On attending Saratoga High School, he said that it was the "worst experience" of his life and "hell on Earth".

    In the Japanese dub of Animaniacs, Spielberg was voiced by Hiroyuki Shibamoto. In some episodes, Spielberg voiced himself, and in others, veteran voice-over artist Frank Welker did Spielberg's voice. animated series Tiny Toon Adventures and Animaniacs (both of which were executive-produced by Spielberg), Spielberg was a semi-recurring character. In the Warner Bros.

    Attended Arcadia High School in Scottsdale, Arizona and graduated from Saratoga High School in Saratoga, California in 1965. Democratic Party. Supports the U.S. The asteroid 25930 Spielberg is named in his honour.

    He left school in 1969, only to return to get his "non-honorary degree" in Film in 2002. While attending college at Long Beach State in the 1960s, Spielberg was a member of Theta Chi Fraternity. Spielberg, an Eagle Scout and recipient of the Distinguished Eagle Scout Award from the Boy Scouts of America, designed the requirements for the Boy Scout Cinematography merit badge. Steven Spielberg won Best Director and Best Picture Oscars that year.

    Eleven years later, in 1993, Steven Spielberg cast Richard Attenborough as John Hammond in Jurassic Park (his first performance in 13 years) and Ben Kingsley in Schindler's List. In 1982 Ben Kingsley won Best Actor and Richard Attenborough won Best Director for the film Gandhi, which beat Steven Spielberg's film E.T. for Best Picture. Spielberg had a cameo role as the Cook County assessor in the last minutes of the 1980 film The Blues Brothers. While the films that Steven Spielberg directed have won numerous awards, no actor or actress has won an Academy Award for a performance for one of his films.

    Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981) $10,500,000 + % of gross. Jurassic Park (1993) $250,000,000 (gross and profit participations). Schindler's List (1993) $0 (Asked not to be paid). Jurassic Park III (2001) $72,000,000.

    The Sugarland Express (1974). Jaws (1975). Close Encounters of the Third Kind (1977). 1941 (1979).

    Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981). the Extra-Terrestrial (1982). E.T. Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom (1984).

    The Color Purple (1985). Empire of the Sun (1987). Always (1989). Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade (1989).

    Hook (1991). Jurassic Park (1993). Schindler's List (1993) (Academy Award, Best Director, Best Picture). Amistad (1997).

    The Lost World: Jurassic Park (1997). Saving Private Ryan (1998) (Academy Award, Best Director). A.I.: Artificial Intelligence (2001). Minority Report (2002).

    Catch Me If You Can (2002). The Terminal (2004). War of the Worlds (2005). Munich (2005).

    Indiana Jones 4 (2007).