SXSW 2026: On aliens and UFOs, Spielberg says, ‘We are not alone’
AUSTIN, Texasย โย One of the most anticipated events at this yearโs SXSW Film & TV Festival wasnโt a movie at all, but a speaking appearance by director Steven Spielberg. The talk, a live taping of the podcast โThe Big Pictureโ lead by co-host Sean Fennessey, covered many aspects of the Hollywood legendโs career, with a through line of sci-fi and space aliens in conjunction with Spielbergโs upcoming alien invasion thriller โDisclosure Day,โ due June 12.
Though no real details about the new film were revealed, references to it peppered the conversation as if it were very much on Spielbergโs mind โ the film he was ostensibly there to promote.
To an audience that included filmmakers Robert Rodriguez and Daniel Kwan, the event began with a clip reel that served as a reminder (as if anyone in the packed hotel ballroom needed one) of just how influential the 79-year-old filmmaker is. A selection of Spielbergโs work plays like a trailer for the idea of movies themselves; this one included โJaws,โ โRaiders of the Lost Ark,โ โE.T.โ โSchindlerโs List,โ โJurassic Park,โ โThe Sugarland Express,โ โCatch Me If You Can,โ โMunichโ and many more.
Fennessey noted that Spielberg wanted to make 1977โs โClose Encounters of the Third Kind,โ his first sci-fi movie about the existence of aliens from other worlds, even before making 1975โs โJaws.โ Spielberg went further, saying he had actually wanted to make โClose Encountersโ โ then just referred to as โThe UFO Movieโ โ even before 1974โs โSugarland Express.โ
Asked about President Obamaโs recent comments about the possible existence of intelligent life elsewhere in the universe and how his own feelings may have evolved over the years, Spielberg said, โI think that for one thing, when President Obama made that comment, I thought, โOh my God, this is so great for โDisclosure Day,โโ and then, two days later, he stepped back the comment and said what he believed in was life in the cosmos, which of course everybody should believe that because no one should ever think that we are the only intelligent civilization in the entire universe. So Iโve always believed, even as a kid, that we were not alone. So that just goes without saying. The big question is: Are we alone now?โ
He added this interest was โreinvigoratedโ by a 2017 New York Times article about U.S. Navy pilots seeing unexplained aerial phenomenon, then by a 2023 Congressional subcommittee hearing on the topic.
โI donโt know any more than any of you do,โ Spielberg said, โbut I have a very strong, sneaking suspicion that we are not alone here on Earth right now. And I made a movie about that.โ
Spielberg and โThe Big Pictureโ co-host Sean Fennessey taping a live podcast at SXSW on Friday.
(Tibrina Hobson / Getty Images)
As to how he feels about that possibility, Spielberg added, โIโm not afraid of any aliens, there or here. I have no fears about that, whatsoever. I think our movie does take into consideration, without giving too much away, the social dislocation that could occur, theologically, if it would be announced that thereโs evidence โ not only evidence, where itโs interaction thatโs has been going on for decades, that we are not just now finding out about. It is going to cause a disruption in a lot of belief systems, but I donโt think itโs a lethal disruption at all.โ
Among other topics that were discussed, Spielberg revealed he is developing a western that would shoot in Texas, though he was reluctant to discuss it in any further detail except to say it would contain โno tropes.โ
He also said he is not on any social media, but did install Instagram on his phone once for two weeks and felt as if he had been abducted by aliens for the amount of time he lost.
To that end, he also noted, with comic frustration, how he himself has never had any sort of alien encounter.
โI made a movie called โClose Encounters of the Third Kind.โ I havenโt even had a close encounter of the first or second kind,โ Spielberg said. โWhereโs the justice in that? If youโre listening out there, Iโm talking to you.โ
There was a brief moment of confusion when Fennessey asked Spielberg for his thoughts on AI and Spielberg wasnโt clear if he was asking about his own 2001 movie or the broader topic of artificial intelligence.
Once that was cleared up (Fennessey meant the latter, a serious labor issue in Hollywood), Spielberg noted he has not used AI on any of his own films. โI donโt want to go into a whole rant about AI because I am for AI in many different disciplines. I am not for AI if it replaces a creative individual.โ
Speaking to the theatrical experience, Spielberg made a brief allusion to the flare-up around comments by Timothรฉe Chalamet regarding the popularity of opera and ballet in relation to the movies.
He noted that he does not decry the at-home streaming experience and that he works with Netflix, but that โfor me, the real experience comes when we can influence a community to congregate in a strange dark space. All us are strangers and, at the end of a really good movie experience, we are all united with a whole bunch of feelings that we walk into the daylight with or into the nighttime with. And thereโs nothing like that. I mean, it happens in movies, it happens at concerts and it happens in ballet and opera.โ
Here there was a round of applause from the audience. โAnd we want that sustained and we want that to go forever.โ
Spielberg noted how many of his favorite filmmakers, including David Lean and Billy Wilder and more recent examples such as Paul Thomas Anderson and Christopher Nolan, are always making films that feel different from what they have done before. He sees himself as part of that same school.
โIf weโre just not making the same sequel over and over and over again and theyโre not the same Marvel title over and over and over again, we all get a real chance to experience something, which is freshness,โ Spielberg said. โAnd that is why I donโt judge my accomplishments based on a single film.โ