Skip to main content

Steven Spielberg to helm sci-fi adventure <em>Ready Player One</em>

The upcoming adaptation of Ernie Cline’s hit novel Ready Player One was already a much-anticipated project, but the announcement of the film’s new director may have propelled it to rock star status. The big-screen spin on the international bestselling sci-fi adventure with a Matrix-style twist will be directed by Oscar-winning filmmaker Steven Spielberg.

Warner Bros. announced Spielberg’s attachment to the project this week, and indicated that the celebrated filmmaker will both direct and produce the film from an adapted screenplay penned by The Avengers and X2: X-Men United screenwriter Zak Penn.

Recommended Videos

Cline’s debut novel, Ready Player One was praised by critics and readers alike for its compelling sci-fi mystery steeped in pop-culture nostalgia. The novel famously sparked a bidding war among studios before it was even published in 2011.

The synopsis for the story reads as follows:

In the near future, outcast teenager Wade Watts escapes from his bleak surroundings by logging in to the OASIS, a globally networked virtual utopia where users can lead idyllic alternate lives. When the eccentric billionaire who created the OASIS dies, he offers up his vast fortune as the prize in an elaborate treasure hunt. Along with gamers from around the world, Wade joins the adventure, and quickly finds himself pitted against powerful corporate foes and other ruthless competitors who will do anything, in the oasis or the real world, to reach the treasure first.

Spielberg is expected to begin work on Ready Player One after he’s finished with the upcoming thriller Bridge of Spies and his adaptation of the Roald Dahl novel The BFG.

“We are thrilled to welcome Steven back to Warner Bros,” said WB’s President of Creative Development and Worldwide Production, Greg Silverman, in a statement accompanying the announcement. “We had an historic series of collaborations in the ’80s and ’90s and have wanted to bring him back for years. As for Ready Player One, we have always felt that Steven was the dream director for this project.”

There’s currently no release date set for the film.

Rick Marshall
A veteran journalist with more than two decades of experience covering local and national news, arts and entertainment, and…
Darkness and dystopia: The sci-fi movie summer of 1982
A "spinner" flies through the futuristic world depicted in Blade Runner.

It must have been a kick to be a science fiction fan in the summer of 1982 when Hollywood released six prominent sci-fi flicks within a few months of each other. The Road Warrior, Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan, E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial, The Thing, Blade Runner, and Tron were so special that they are still considered classics 40 years later. And yet, audiences expecting the buoyant optimism of Star Wars and Close Encounters of the Third Kind from a few years earlier might have been shocked to discover that sci-fi cinema that summer had turned dark, scary, and violent.

Movies of the 1980s often have a reputation for being slick, bright, and flashy, but the movies on our list are a rebuke to all that. They channel the terror of nuclear annihilation thrumming underneath '80s idealism. They also manifest anxiety over the rise of environmental devastation, rapidly changing social values, and exponential advances in computer technology. We examine the collective 40th anniversary of these sci-fi classics and the thread of darkness running between them.

Read more
Steven Spielberg is working on a new film based on Bullitt
Steve McQueen as Bullitt.

Steven Spielberg may be 75-years old, but he's not slowing down anytime soon. According to Deadline, the famed director is now attached to helm a new film featuring Frank Bullitt, a character originally portrayed by screen icon Steve McQueen in one of the greatest movies of the '60s, Bullitt. However, the report notes that this will not be a remake of Bullitt. Instead, it will simply be a new story featuring Frank Bullitt as the main character.

Bullitt was one of the most famous movies made by McQueen during his career. It was based on Robert L. Fish's 1963 novel, Mute Witness. Within the film, Frank Bullitt was a San Francisco police detective who was assigned to protect a mobster named Johnny Ross in order for Ross to give testimony at an organized crime hearing in a Senate subcommittee. After the mob successfully kills Ross ahead of time, Frank hides the evidence of Ross' death in order to give himself more time to investigate and bring the killers to justice.

Read more
Steven Spielberg casts David Lynch in The Fabelmans
David Lynch in Twin Peaks: The Return.

For the first time ever, directors Steven Spielberg and David Lynch are going to collaborate. It's just not happening in the way that anyone expected. Variety is reporting that Lynch has been cast in a role for Spielberg's upcoming film The Fabelmans. Details about Lynch's part were not disclosed in the story.

Lynch is best known as a director of critically acclaimed films including Eraserhead, Blue Velvet, Mulholland Drive, The Straight Story, Wild At Heart, and Lost Highway. He is also the co-creator of Twin Peaks, a wildly popular cult series from the 1990s that was revived by Showtime in 2017 as Twin Peaks: The Return.

Read more