For many years, there has been speculation within the UFO community that renowned Hollywood director Steven Spielberg has had access to privileged information related to the UFO phenomenon and alleged extraterrestrial activity on Earth.
Many believe he knows more than he lets on, something often pointed out by enthusiasts when analyzing the themes and narratives in his UFO-related films and series. Works such as Close Encounters of the Third Kind, Taken, and now Disclosure Day raise questions that make many wonder: “This guy knows too much…”
Those more familiar with the topic are also aware of the long-standing allegation that Spielberg received a letter from NASA asking him not to release Close Encounters of the Third Kind.
In a 1978 interview with Cinema Papers, Spielberg stated that NASA had sent him a 20-page letter expressing concern about the film’s release, considering it “dangerous.”

And now we know why: apparently, everything is and always has been real, as Steven Spielberg stated.
The director did not hide his personal convictions regarding the universe. Spielberg stated emphatically that he firmly believes that “the cosmos is filled with life,” demonstrating a very clear position on the mysteries of outer space.
The biggest surprise came when the director connected these ideas to his new production. Spielberg stated that he believes absolutely everything presented about alien contact in his film is true and always has been.
Confident in the impact of his work, he declared: “When I made Close Encounters of the Third Kind, I saw it simply as a story and wondered whether it could ever become reality. However, with everything that has happened since then (1977) up to today, I can now present Disclosure Day and say: wouldn’t it be wonderful when people realize, after watching this film, that everything is true and always has been?”
In addition to the revelations about his new film, the interview included a very funny moment when Stephen Colbert recalled the occasion in which he interviewed former President Barack Obama, who jokingly offered himself as humanity’s representative in the event of contact with a non-human intelligence.
However, the filmmaker jokingly claimed that right for himself, pointing out that his friend had already enjoyed his eight years in power. As an argument in his favor, Spielberg joked that, having directed and produced the great science fiction classics of recent decades, he had already been playing a kind of diplomatic role with the cosmos uninterruptedly.
