Current:Home > FinanceLove Spielberg movies? Check out never before seen images from his first decade of films -ProsperityStream Academy
Love Spielberg movies? Check out never before seen images from his first decade of films
Oliver James Montgomery View
Date:2025-04-10 07:54:05
Purchases you make through our links may earn us and our publishing partners a commission.
How do you define “Spielbergian,” the special sauce that makes Steven Spielberg a singular artist? A good person to ask is the guy who’s been documenting the iconic director’s movies for 30 years.
“It's all about cinema and storytelling, and in a way that is immediately relatable and accessible,” says filmmaker/author Laurent Bouzereau. “Throughout his career, even to this day, he never really makes the same film twice. He's someone who reinvents himself constantly.”
Featuring never-before-seen photos and interviews with the legend himself, Bouzereau’s new coffee-table book “Spielberg: The First Ten Years” (Insight Editions; out now) is a detailed chronicling of the Oscar-winning filmmaker’s earliest movies from 1971-82, including classics like “Jaws” and “Raiders of the Lost Ark.”
It’s also a personal effort for Bouzereau, who first met Spielberg in 1993 when doing a documentary for a restoration of “1941.” Growing up in France, Bouzereau would watch Spielberg movies – new releases and summer re-releases alike – multiple times in the theater. “I was very lonely as a kid, just because my personality, and I always felt safe with Steven,” he says. “That was always my refuge.”
Check out: USA TODAY's weekly Best-selling Booklist
- "Spielberg: The First 10 Years" at Amazon for $53
- "Spielberg" The First 10 Years" at Bookshop.org for $65
Bouzereau shares with USA TODAY exclusive images from his book and insight into Spielberg’s first decade:
Steven Spielberg went hell on wheels for ‘Duel’ debut
The director’s made-for-TV first film was 1971’s “Duel,” an action thriller starring Dennis Weaver as a salesman on a business trip hunted on the highway by a dangerous mystery driver of a 40-ton tanker truck. The semi, chosen from among seven vehicles by Spielberg because to him “it had a face,” was the filmmaker’s first movie monster – one that terrorized folks before the shark from “Jaws” and Tyrannosaurus rex of “Jurassic Park.” And for Bouzereau, “Duel” was more horror film than road-rage picture. “It has a touch of the supernatural because you never really quite see the driver,” he says.
Steven Spielberg:All of the legendary director's movies, definitively ranked
’Sugarland Express’ connects to a frequent Spielberg theme: The broken home
Spielberg finally made it to the big screen with the 1974 crime drama “The Sugarland Express,” starring Goldie Hawn and William Atherton as a married couple who takes a cop hostage and races across Texas to reunite with their son before he’s put in foster care. Themes relating to a broken family pervade Spielberg’s works, from “Duel” and “E.T.” to last year’s semi-autobiographical “The Fabelmans,” and Bouzereau says he discussed with the filmmaker the connective tissue of home, “whether it’s the sliding home at the end of ‘1941,’ or (Indiana Jones), a man with barely a home. He looked at me and he said, ‘Wow, I guess I've never been far away from home.’ That was just so touching to me. That's something probably he's not conscious about but was clearly there in his storytelling.”
Check out:USA TODAY’s Best-selling Booklist
‘Jaws’ was the movie that took a bite out of Spielberg
There’s so much that’s mythic about the 1975 blockbuster, from John Williams’ foreboding shark theme to the characters to the nightmare production. (The latter even spawned a current Broadway show.) The behind-the-scene struggles “mirrored in some weird way” the story itself, Bouzereau says. “It’s as much a journey for Chief Brody as it is for Chief Spielberg.” “Jaws” is also the one film Bouzereau would love to hop in a time-traveling DeLorean and see for himself. “It was just so hard and so impossible to make to the point where you don't truly know what's true and what's not true anymore,” says Bouzereau. “If I was on the set of ‘Jaws,’ I would finally be able to get the truth and everybody’s perspective.”
Booze, brawls and broken sharks:The shocking true story behind the making of 'Jaws'
Spielberg’s secret wish: ‘Close Encounters’ of the real-life kind
The 1977 film “Close Encounters of the Third Kind,” starring Richard Dreyfus as a Midwestern dad whose run-in with a UFO creates a deep obsession, was Spielberg’s first of many forays into sci-fi. In an interview with his book, the director quips to Bouzereau that he’s “the one person who perhaps deserves a UFO sighting, and yet, it hasn’t happened for me.” Spielberg was “truly a believer” when he made the movie, Bouzereau says, “although I think his approach comes from, yes, at first conspiracy, but then is transformed into something emotional and connecting through storytelling and this incredible ending.”
Pop culture’s come around on ‘1941,’ even if Spielberg hasn’t
After the complicated effort of “Jaws,” Spielberg did something completely different and crafted the raucous 1979 World War II comedy, featuring an all-star ensemble headed by “Blues Brothers” stars John Belushi and Dan Aykroyd. It was a critical disaster compared to his previous darlings before ultimately became a cult classic, and even Spielberg calls it “too much of a demolition derby” in Bouzereau’s book. “I don't think it's a bright light in his filmography,” the author says. “But he often said to me, even at the very beginning, he really realized the love for the film when he went to Europe, where people were actually responding to it a lot more than they did here.”
Like many, Spielberg is a big ‘Raiders of the Lost Ark’ fan
The director launched his successful “Indiana Jones” franchise with 1981’s “Raiders of the Lost Ark,” which debuted Harrison Ford’s beloved globetrotting archeologist. (Spielberg and George Lucas didn’t want Indy to be a superhero; he needed to have weaknesses, and snakes were chosen as his Achilles’ heel.) It’s Spielberg’s greatest hit for a lot of folks, and it ranks pretty high for the man who made it, too. “He says that ‘Raiders’ is one of those movies that he can put on or watch with people, and say, ‘Oh, this is great! This is fun!’ ” Bouzereau reports. “He's very conscious of its impact, because he can enjoy it as an audience member and detach himself from the experience of making it.”
The title alien of ‘E.T.’ was inclusive before that was a thing
Spielberg’s first decade closed out with the 1982 sci-fi family drama “E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial,” which starred a young Henry Thomas as a kid who befriends and then helps an odd little alien get home. In his book, Bouzereau asks Spielberg about E.T.’s gender and the director revealed that was “never a consideration,” instead thinking of the character more as “a cross between a pomegranate and an avocado.” “I think that's where he's so far ahead of all of us,” the author says. “Yes, E.T. can be a boy for a young boy, can be neutral for someone else, can be a girl for a girl, and it doesn't change anything. That is the power of Steven Spielberg.”
- "Spielberg: The First 10 Years" at Amazon for $53
- "Spielberg" The First 10 Years" at Bookshop.org for $65
veryGood! (89)
Related
- British golfer Charley Hull blames injury, not lack of cigarettes, for poor Olympic start
- New Demands to Measure Emissions Raise Cautious Hopes in Pennsylvania Among Environmental Sleuths Who Monitor Fracking Sites
- Why are we so obsessed with polyamory?
- H&R Block wiped out tax data of filers looking for less pricey option, FTC alleges
- Michigan lawmaker who was arrested in June loses reelection bid in Republican primary
- Spotted: Leighton Meester and Adam Brody Enjoying Rare Date Night at 2024 SAG Awards
- Amy Schumer has been diagnosed with Cushing syndrome after criticism about 'puffier' face
- 'Where Is Wendy Williams?': The biggest bombshells from Lifetime's documentary
- Report: Lauri Markkanen signs 5-year, $238 million extension with Utah Jazz
- Vin Diesel to stay with 'Fast and Furious' franchise after sexual assault lawsuit
Ranking
- 'Meet me at the gate': Watch as widow scatters husband's ashes, BASE jumps into canyon
- Mt. Everest is plagued by garbage. These Nepali women are transforming it into crafts
- Decade's old missing person case solved after relative uploads DNA to genealogy site
- Man found guilty in trans woman's killing after first federal gender-based hate crime trial
- Angelina Jolie nearly fainted making Maria Callas movie: 'My body wasn’t strong enough'
- 'SNL' host Shane Gillis addresses being fired as a cast member: 'Don't look that up'
- Shane Gillis struggles in a 'Saturday Night Live' monologue which avoids the obvious
- Man found guilty in trans woman's killing after first federal gender-based hate crime trial
Recommendation
Chief beer officer for Yard House: A side gig that comes with a daily swig.
Decade's old missing person case solved after relative uploads DNA to genealogy site
Barbra Streisand Will Make You Believe in Movie Magic with SAG Life Achievement Speech
Winter Cup 2024 highlights: All the results, best moments from USA Gymnastics event
Hidden Home Gems From Kohl's That Will Give Your Space a Stylish Refresh for Less
Cleats of stolen Jackie Robinson statue to be donated to Negro League Museum
How Jason Sudeikis Reacted After Losing 2024 SAG Award to Jeremy Allen White
Atlanta Hawks All-STar Trae Young to have finger surgery, out at least four weeks