Laden...
Laden...



Steven Spielberg schuf in seiner beinahe 50-jährigen Karriere unzählige bahnbrechende Meisterwerke - von "Der weiße Hai" über "E.T. - Der Außerirdische" bis "Schindlers Liste". In der faszinierenden Dokumentation gewährt er tiefen Einblick in die Arbeit an seinen Filmen und lässt sein Lebenswerk Revue passieren.
Avis de la communauté (7)
This flick is a _tad_ long to tell you this little. You have to figure people that watch this will be familiar with his work. Well, this tells you the bare minimum and really reveals little an E! True Hollywood Story couldn't except it is so light, it doesn't dare criticize the subject (though, I would be intimidated, too.) Some of the early material is good, but once it gets past the one hour mark it stops being fun and becomes tedious.
An overwhelming positive retrospective of Spielberg that reinforced what I already knew, that he is great. I'm a total sucker for these kinds of documentaries. The ones that review a director's, actor's, musician's, or author's career from start to finish. So this had me hooked from the get-go.
For something that runs this long it's so unfocused and average. There's nothing in it I haven't heard before.
A bit disappointing. After watching _De Palma_ where the director revealed much of his inspiration, meaning and difficulties behind his movies, this documentary didn't say much more than what was already said. The last quarter of the movie was more about Spielberg's reputation rather than his movies. Spielberg may not be as technical as De Palma but expanding more on his sentiments and reasons for directing the films he chose would have added much more. For example, during the shooting of Omaha Beach in _Saving Private Ryan_, Hanks brings up the issue where the sun was in the wrong position but Spielberg was able to overcome it and film it differently. It would have been better if Spielberg spoke about this instead.
A very interesting documentary. I wish it would of covered ever film at least a little but this was already a long movie so I get why they skipped some. I wanted to watch this before I started to watch his filmography again. I plan to watch all his movies in between The Post and Ready Player One.