I tweeted this theory earlier today and it seemed to go down pretty well (Sasha Stone and Ryan Adams from Awards Daily retweeted it!), so I thought I’d expand upon it here.

To explain: I think Spielberg uses science fiction in the way John Ford used the Western - as a canvas to tell large scale stories about contemporary America.

Spielberg is, of course, a huge fan of Ford’s, and has spoken repeatedly of the influence of The Searchers on his career. There is a notable reference to Ford’s The Quiet Man in E.T. and, a little less directly, in the opening of Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade, which uses a craggy Western landscape as expressively as Ford used Monument Valley.

Spielberg’s use of science fiction as a canvas on which to tell stories about America can be seen in all his sci-fi films. Close Encounters of the Third Kind, for example, can be seen as a story of American hopes and dreams, the story of a man who looks up into the stars and receives the call of extra-terrestrial life.

If Ford used the craggy landscape of Monument Valley to represent old, unshakable moral values, Spielberg uses the mysterious, star-spotted expanses of space to represent optimism. John Williams’s quotation of When You Wish Upon A Star only emphasises this point. “Anything your heart desires will come to you…”

Spielberg performs a similar trick in E.T., showing Elliott’s salvation as, quite literally, descending from the stars. Here the use of the blue-black expanses of space as a representation of hopes and dreams is more explicit, with Spielberg openly admitting that he was drawing on the ‘Mother Night’ sequences of Fantasia to create a night that was “very inviting” and comforting.

E.T. also makes use of terrestrial nature to represent life (think of the flower that wilts and blooms again when E.T. dies and is resurrected), and Spielberg does the same again in his two Jurassic Park films, which show the invasion of man into nature. Both films are indictments of Capitalism gone awry, both are dark twists on the optimism of Close Encounters and E.T., showing what happens with optimism loses touch with pragmatism.

A.I. Artificial Intelligence and Minority Report show the responsibility we must take for our ambitions. Here, space, and indeed nature as a whole, is notable through its absence, or twisted and dark (think of the Moon-shaped air balloon in A.I. or the living garden owned by Pre-Crime innovator Iris Hineman in Minority Report). It has been done away with, replaced by wondrous technology that humanity shows precious little accountability for it - robot children are abandoned and clairvoyants enslaved under the guise of keeping the public safe.

And when the public can’t be kept safe - as in War of the Worlds - Spielberg shows the anger that arises. Robbie’s story is one of desperate rage and futile revenge. He wants to defeat the Tripods, to do to them what they have done to us, but it’s pointless. The Tripods are destroyed not by the might of armed retaliation, but by chance and biology. The clear black skies of Close Encounters are here covered by the dust, dirt and debris of a country crumbling into ashes.

Spielberg, of course, explores America in other genres (see Saving Private Ryan and Lincoln), but sci-fi seems to hold a particularly significant place in his heart. It is a genre he has made his own, and one which he uses to turn a mirror on the country he came from.

“Revolvers like this one were given to Generals at the end of the Civil War by their troops. The cylinders were loaded with six gold-plated bullets to symbolize the end of the destruction and death that had ripped the country apart for six years.”

Lamar Burgess is given a ceremonial Civil War-era revolver to mark the success of Pre-Crime in a scene from the end of Minority Report.

It is the second of two references Spielberg makes to the period he would depict in Lincoln. The first comes in the opening scene, when pre-criminal Howard Marks is seen cutting the eyes out of an Abe Lincoln mask for his son to wear in a school play.

“Minority Report offers a sobering scenario of how dangerous it is to exchange individual freedoms for governmental assurances. A dire warning lies at the heart of the film: because human beings create and control the necessary machines, as well as the system that employs them, no safeguards can infallibly shield citizens from violence. Even more importantly, all mechanisms, however sophisticated and refined, remain open to human interpretation and, by virtue of that fact, such devices are inherently susceptible to corruption and misuse.”

Lester D.  Friedman discusses Minority Report in this excerpt from his book, Citizen Spielberg, published on Senses of Cinema.

I’ve written before about how Minority Report is at least in part a metaphor for cinema and the power of seeing, with Spielberg focusing on eyes and circles in many key scenes.

In the above scene, Spielberg first introduces the link, as he shows Anderton slowly, painfully realising that he is now a target of the Pre-Crime operation he spearheads.

Anderton operates the touchscreen like a film director marshalling a scene, using his fingers to control it in the way a director makes a frame out of his fingers to set up a shot. The screen itself also brings to mind film, curving around like a cinema screen does.

When Anderton first makes the discovery, Spielberg shoots his reaction with the camera behind the screen. We see Anderton move towards the screen and stop just as his eyes line up with his on-screen eyes.

Finally, as Anderton’s mood becomes more frantic, Spielberg cuts to an extreme close up of his eyes, panicked as he realises he will have to go on the run to clear his name.

Spielberg’s cinematographer Janusz Kaminski talks about filming Minority Report and why he doesn’t like the film as much as its predecessor, A.I. Artificial Intelligence.

“Everybody runs…”

Trailer for Minority Report.