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The Popcorn King: The Top 10 Steven Spielberg Summer Blockbusters

Tuesday, Jun 7, 2011
The 10 Greatest Examples of Summer Movie Magic By the Filmmaker Who Created the Reason for the Season...

He is one of our greatest filmmakers, and yet he is constantly dismissed for one ever-present and undeniable fact: no one has been more successful as a director than Steven Spielberg. From his career defining work in Jaws to his latter day triumphs of dramatics and depth, he has been unfairly criticized for being more populist than exclusive, working in genres that don’t typically define “art” and avoiding the risk and the experiment to play in more common, commercial territory. He is the very definition of the mainstream, a moviemaker who has understood what the public wants in each of the five decades he has sat behind the lens. Sure, there have been some flops (Always, 1941) and some less than special triumphs (Hook, Catch Me If You Can), but there is one thing that even critics cannot deny—when it comes to the Summer movie season, nobody is a better perennial poster boy.


Looking over his vast catalog, it’s interesting to note how many of this biggest triumphs ended up as part of the May to August rush. A few classics—Close Encounters of the Third Kind, Schnidler’s List, Munich—came out during what it usually considered Awards Season, but for the most part, Spielberg is a sunbeam and lemonade film fixture. His muse is specifically set to combine fireworks and emotion into a heady stew of movie magic. It’s with this in mind—and the arrival of the obvious homage Super 8—that we narrow down his oeuvre into the Top 10 Spielberg Summer Blockbusters of all time. Without him, the popcorn season would never have been the same. With him, the entire landscape of the modern movie industry was changed forever. It’s a imprint that continues on to this day (doesn’t it, J.J. Abrams???):
  


#10: Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade (1989)

It what was supposed to be the final film in a haphazard trilogy, with everyone’s favorite archeologist given the prologue/epilogue treatment to round out his persona. At the beginning was a flashback featuring a young Indy (the later River Phoenix) just learning the ropes. The ending saw our hero save his aging father (Sean Connery) and ride off into the ultimate quest sunset. As with all good things, it wasn’t meant to last (aliens and their crystal skull saw to that) but Spielberg still delivered the kind of action derring-do which made Indiana Jones a seminal cinematic figure. Blame George Lucas for failing to leave well enough alone.


 
#9: Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom (1984)

After the skyrocketing success of Raiders, Spielberg was stuck on where to go next. Audiences demanded more Indiana Jones, and so a script was commissioned and the genre jumping began. This unusual pre-sequel starts out as a musical, works itself back into action, then falls into a slice of surreal Indian folklore involving missing magic rocks, kidnapped kids, and a cult of heart extracting zealots. Oh yeah, and everyone’s favorite hero has a new love and a small Asian kid in his life. Toward the, the spectacle saves the day, including one of the most memorable mining car chases ever. Who cares if it doesn’t always work or make sense? It’s still DOCTOR Jones, doll.


 
#8: Saving Private Ryan (1998)

Leave it to the man who made the Holocaust commercial to find a way to infiltrate the popcorn movie season with one of the bloodiest, most realistic war films ever. Audiences just couldn’t get enough of Spielberg’s splatterific opening recreation of D-Day, using it as ballast to break up the rest of the narrative’s necessary non-erotic male bonding. In between, we learn about sacrifice, duty, and above all, honor. One imagines if anyone other than Mr. ET stepped into a studio pitch meeting and said they wanted to make an authentic and brutal WWII war epic for Summer release, they’d be laughed out into the lot. In the case of Spielberg, a new classic was born.


 
#7: War of the Worlds (2005)

Having already found success working with Tom Cruise in the brilliant high tech future shock thriller Minority Report, Spielberg decides to use the fading superstar for another big picture event. Always looking to expand his repertoire, the famed filmmaker decided to take on HG Wells with one creative caveat. Instead of showing everything with overblown special effects, Spielberg made the movie’s many set-pieces more personal and smaller in perspective. Sure, highways still explode and massive Martian ships still hover over cities, but there are times when what’s just over the top of the hill remains there… secretive… secluded… suggestive… sensational. 


 
#6: Minority Report (2002)

More prescient now than it ever was, this cautionary sci-fi masterpiece about technology dictating our existence—even in instances and events that have yet to happen—showed that there was more to Spielberg’s sense of wonder than friendly extraterrestrials and cloned dinosaurs. By melding the substance of science with more magical elements like psychic research and precognition, he managed to fire the kind of necessary warning shot over a populace enamored of the latest privacy robbing convenience. For the sequence of Cruise’s character walking through a bevy of individually designed advertisements responding to his retinal scan alone Spielberg deserves some reality check recognition.


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