TIME 100
The Moviemaker
Steven Spielberg
No director or producer has ever put together a
more popular body of work. That's why the movies we're now seeing
are made in his image
BY ROGER EBERT
Steven Spielberg's first films were made at a time when directors
were the most important people in Hollywood, and his more recent
ones at a time when marketing controls the industry. That he has
remained the most powerful filmmaker in the world during both
periods says something for his talent and his flexibility. No
one else has put together a more popular body of work, yet within
the entertainer there is also an artist capable of The Color Purple
and Schindler's List. When entertainer and artist came fully together,
the result was E.T., the Extra-Terrestrial, a remarkable fusion
of mass appeal and stylistic mastery.
Spielberg's most important contribution to modern movies is his
insight that there was an enormous audience to be created if old-style
B-movie stories were made with A-level craftsmanship and enhanced
with the latest developments in special effects. Consider such
titles as Raiders of the Lost Ark and the other Indiana Jones
movies, Close Encounters of the Third Kind, E.T. and Jurassic
Park. Look also at the films he produced but didn't direct, like
the Back to the Future series, Gremlins, Who Framed Roger Rabbit
and Twister. The story lines were the stuff of Saturday serials,
but the filmmaking was cutting edge and delivered what films have
always promised: they showed us something amazing that we hadn't
seen before.
Directors talk about their master images, the images that occur
in more than one film because they express something fundamental
about the way the filmmakers see things. Spielberg once told me
that his master image was the light flooding in through the doorway
in Close Encounters, suggesting, simultaneously, a brightness
and mystery outside. This strong backlighting turns up in many
of his other films: the aliens walk out of light in Close Encounters,
E.T.'s spaceship door is filled with light, and Indy Jones often
uses strong beams from powerful flashlights.
In Spielberg, the light source conceals mystery, whereas for many
other directors it is darkness that conceals mystery. The difference
is that for Spielberg, mystery offers promise instead of threat.
That orientation apparently developed when he was growing up in
Phoenix, Ariz. One day we sat and talked about his childhood,
and he told me of a formative experience. "My dad took me
out to see a meteor shower when I was a little kid," he said,
"and it was scary for me because he woke me up in the middle
of the night. My heart was beating; I didn't know what he wanted
to do. He wouldn't tell me, and he put me in the car and we went
off, and I saw all these people lying on blankets, looking up
at the sky. And my dad spread out a blanket. We lay down and looked
at the sky, and I saw for the first time all these meteors. What
scared me was being awakened in the middle of the night and taken
somewhere without being told where. But what didn't scare me,
but was very soothing, was watching this cosmic meteor shower.
And I think from that moment on, I never looked at the sky and
thought it was a bad place."
There are two important elements there: the sense of wonder and
hope, and the identification with a child's point of view. Spielberg's
best characters are like elaborations of the heroes from old Boy's
Life serials, plucky kids who aren't afraid to get in over their
head. Even Oskar Schindler has something of that in his makeup--the
boy's delight in pulling off a daring scheme and getting away
with it.
Spielberg heroes don't often find themselves in complex emotional
entanglements (Celie in The Color Purple is an exception). One
of his rare failures was Always, with its story of a ghost watching
his girl fall in love with another man. The typical Spielberg
hero is drawn to discovery, and the key shot in many of his films
is the revelation of the wonder he has discovered. Remember the
spellbinding first glimpse of the living dinosaurs in Jurassic
Park?
Spielberg's first important theatrical film was The Sugarland
Express, made in 1974, a time when gifted auteurs like Scorsese,
Altman, Coppola, De Palma and Malick ruled Hollywood. Their god
was Orson Welles, who made the masterpiece Citizen Kane entirely
without studio interference, and they too wanted to make the Great
American Movie. But a year later, with Jaws, Spielberg changed
the course of modern Hollywood history. Jaws was a hit of vast
proportions, inspiring executives to go for the home run instead
of the base hit. And it came out in the summer, a season the major
studios had generally ceded to cheaper exploitation films. Within
a few years, the Jaws model would inspire an industry in which
budgets ran wild because the rewards seemed limitless, in which
summer action pictures dominated the industry and in which the
hottest young directors wanted to make the Great American Blockbuster.
Spielberg can't be blamed for that seismic shift in the industry.
Jaws only happened to inaugurate it. If the shark had sunk for
good (as it threatened to during the troubled filming), another
picture would have ushered in the age of the movie best sellers--maybe
Star Wars, in 1977. And no one is more aware than Spielberg of
his own weaknesses. When I asked him once to make the case against
his films, he grinned and started the list: "They say, 'Oh,
he cuts too fast; his edits are too quick; he uses wide-angle
lenses; he doesn't photograph women very well; he's tricky; he
likes to dig a hole in the ground and put the camera in the hole
and shoot up at people; he's too gimmicky; he's more in love with
the camera than he is with the story.'"
All true. But you could make a longer list of his strengths, including
his direct line to our subconscious. Spielberg has always maintained
obsessive quality control, and when his films work, they work
on every level that a film can reach. I remember seeing E.T. at
the Cannes Film Festival, where it played before the most sophisticated
filmgoers in the world and reduced them to tears and cheers.
In the history of the last third of 20th century cinema, Spielberg
is the most influential figure, for better and worse. In his lesser
films he relied too much on shallow stories and special effects
for their own sake. (Will anyone treasure The Lost World: Jurassic
Park a century from now?) In his best films he tapped into dreams
fashioned by our better natures.
http://www.scruffles.net/spielberg/articles/article-010.html
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