Culture Watch: Steven Spielberg Says ‘Disclosure Day’ Will Leave Christians Questioning Their Faith in God


Half a century after Steven Spielberg challenged audiences to think about what lies beyond the starry canopy that defines our universe in Close Encounters of the Third Kind, the director is again challenging accepted precepts of faith and singular belief in a supreme being.

His new film Disclosure Day sees him revisit the possibility of aliens: “I absolutely think that they have been here, and they are here,” he outlined in an interview with CBS News.

First he outlined the themes behind the $115 million creation and the answers it (possibly) posed to questions of life, faith and mortality.

“‘Disclosure Day’ is about how, if somebody had the power and if somebody had possession of the entire archive of visual evidence of what’s been happening for the last 80 years, what would happen if they decided to do a data dump across the entire world all at once?” Spielberg said, adding it is as much a “chase” movie as it is a reflection on our very being.

“And the people who are trying to stop that data dump from happening, that is basically the core of this chase movie.”

Then he dived more deeply into God – any God – which acts as a supreme being above and beyond us all. He mused:

The movie takes the position of the believers, or the curious, the ones that have been deeply affected by this. The Emily Blunt character (Margaret Fairchild), you know, something has happened to her. She has no idea what it is. She has to try to understand why this has upended her life.

And the movie also takes the position of the church. What does this do to the fundamental beliefs that many of us have? Is God our God only on this planet? Or is God a god for every system where there’s civilization and intelligent life, and even developing life?

Spielberg – who directed and co-produced the movie – feels Christians will find themselves asking of their faith and their beliefs as the movie takes the absolute position of the Church.

He says the questions need answers or will Christians simply see the work as a piece of entertainment predicated on Hollywood’s self-serving need to make money while touching on personal fears.

Steven Spielberg says his new movie, Disclosure Day, about aliens will have Christians and people of faith second-guessing their own religion.

Spielberg says the movie will take the position of the Church.

"Is God our God only on this planet, or is God a God for every system where there's civilization?"

"That would mess up a lot of people."


Disclosure Day is the 79-year-old’s first summer movie in a decade.

As Breitbart News previously noted, the movie stars Josh O’Connor as a cybersecurity whistle-blower with government evidence, long suppressed, chronicling a history of alien encounters.

Guiding him in his escape from a corporate executive (Colin Firth) trying to keep it all under wraps is the disclosure movement’s leader (Colman Domingo). Meanwhile, a meteorologist named Margaret Fairchild (Emily Blunt) begins having a mysterious epiphany.

Disclosure Day is set to hit theaters June 12. The film also stars Josh O’Connor, Colin Firth, Eve Hewson, Colman Domingo, Wyatt Russell and Henry Lloyd-Hughes.
 
The washed-up Hollywood Jew is so desperate to get you to question your faith that they're roping little green men into the equation. Gleep glarp norp, rabbi?
 
His movies leave me questioning why he still gets to make movies. He hasn't made a good movie since Lincoln and even that was carried by the cast more than anything. Maybe The Post or Munich, but we're still going back to the mid-2010s.
 
We already had the euphoric atheist trend. Spielberg is so late to the party that all he can do is play designated driver for half a dozen hung over party goers.
 
if somebody had possession of the entire archive of visual evidence of what’s been happening for the last 80 years, what would happen if they decided to do a data dump across the entire world all at once?
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There are plenty of non Human sentient beings created by God mentioned in the Bible. In fact to my own limited understanding of His purpose, an entire near infinitely vast cosmos created empty only for us to still likely be trapped in our solar system (or at the most optimistic tiny region of our galaxy) for the rest of our existence makes less sense than a universe teeming with as much life as Earth itself.
 
Old Jew tries to get Christians to question their faith despite the idea of alien life fitting into the bible already having been a point of discussion since the literal fucking Middle Ages.
This is a good chance to recommend the book The High Crusade where some Ayys land at an English barony where a force is gathering for one of the crusades to retake Jerusalem. They hijack the spacecraft to try to deus vult faster and accidently end up deus vulting in space instead. Very fun.
 
Remember when this ancient kike was handed one of the most well-known Broadway musicals to adapt, and it flopped massively because there were extensive foreign language scenes with subtitles omitted ON PURPOSE.
just because aliens exist doesnt mean Jesus did not sacrifice Himself for my sins
What happens when it turns out every Ayylmao civilization received a messiah?
 
I expected that he would fail to deliver on this promise, but it's still quite surprising how bad this movie is. It has little to no theological discussion, it never came anywhere close to making me question my faith. No idea how the dude managed to gas himself up this much.

Fun fact: the movie is called 'Disclosure Day' and the movie ends right before the eponymous disclosure.
 
I've never seen how the existence of aliens has any effect on any religion. Unless your bible has some obscure passage where your god explicitly says "You're the only intelligent life I've created", there should be no issue with aliens existing for it. It just says your god has projects in other places.
 
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