Steven Spielberg
Below is a complete filmography (list of movies he's appeared in) for Steven Spielberg. If you have any corrections or additions, please email us at corrections@meninmovies.com. We'd also be interested in any trivia or other information you have.

Movie Credits
Interstellar (2009)
[ John Williams ]
The Talisman (2008)
[ Stephen King ]
Jurassic Park IV (2008)
[ John Williams ][ Michael Crichton ][ Joe Johnston ]
When Worlds Collide (2008)
Lincoln (2008)
[ Liam Neeson ][ John Williams ]
Transformers (2007)
[ John Turturro ][ Jon Voight ][ Dane Cook ][ Peter Cullen ][ Shia LaBeouf ]
Disturbia (2007)
[ Shia LaBeouf ][ David Morse ][ Ivan Reitman ][ Matt Craven ]
Untitled Ukrainian Holocaust Project (2006)
Flags of Our Fathers (2006)
[ Jesse Bradford ][ John Benjamin Hickey ][ Robert Patrick ][ Ryan Phillippe ][ Paul Walker ]
Letters from Iwo Jima (2006)
[ Ken Watanabe ]
Monster House (2006)
[ Steve Buscemi ][ Fred Willard ][ Jon Heder ][ Jason Lee ][ Mitchel Musso ]
Munich (2005)
[ Yvan Attal ][ Geoffrey Rush ][ Daniel Craig ][ Eric Bana ][ Moritz Bleibtreu ]
Memoirs of a Geisha (2005)
[ Ken Watanabe ][ Ted Levine ][ Mako ][ Paul Adelstein ][ Cary-Hiroyuki Tagawa ]
The Legend of Zorro (2005)
[ Antonio Banderas ][ Rufus Sewell ][ Michael Emerson ][ Nick Chinlund ][ Adrian Alonso ]
Dan Finnerty & the Dan Band: I Am Woman (2005)
The Terminal (2004)
[ Tom Hanks ][ Diego Luna ][ Stanley Tucci ][ Chi McBride ][ Jude Ciccolella ]
Voices from the List (2004)
Burma Bridge Busters (2003)
Catch Me If You Can (2002)
[ James Brolin ][ Leonardo Dicaprio ][ Tom Hanks ][ Martin Sheen ][ Christopher Walken ]
Men in Black II (2002)
[ Tommy Lee Jones ][ Johnny Knoxville ][ Will Smith ][ Rip Torn ][ Rosario Dawson ]
Price for Peace (2002)
We Stand Alone Together (2001)
Jurassic Park III (2001)
[ William H Macy ][ Sam Neill ][ William H. Macy ][ Alessandro Nivola ][ Trevor Morgan ]
Artificial Intelligence: AI (2001)
[ Clark Gregg ][ William Hurt ][ Ben Kingsley ][ Jude Law ][ Chris Rock ]
Evolution (2001)
[ David Duchovny ][ Seann William Scott ][ Dan Aykroyd ][ Ethan Suplee ][ Ted Levine ]
Shrek (2001)
[ Vincent Cassel ][ John Lithgow ][ Eddie Murphy ][ Mike Myers ][ Jim Cummings ]
Semper Fi (2001)
[ Terry O'Quinn ][ Michael Pena ][ Steve Burton ][ Scott Bairstow ][ James Pickens Jr. ]
Shooting War (2000)
A Holocaust szemei (2000)
Wakko's Wish (1999)
[ Frank Welker ][ Maurice LaMarche ][ Rob Paulsen ][ Ben Stein ][ Jeff Bennett ]
The Haunting (1999)
[ Bruce Dern ][ Liam Neeson ][ Owen Wilson ][ M.C. Gainey ][ Travis Tedford ]
The Last Days (1998)
[ Hans Zimmer ]
Saving Private Ryan (1998)
[ Dylan Bruno ][ Matt Damon ][ Jeremy Davies ][ Vin Diesel ][ Tom Hanks ]
The Mask of Zorro (1998)
[ Antonio Banderas ][ Anthony Hopkins ][ Joaquim de Almeida ][ Martin Campbell ]
Deep Impact (1998)
[ James Cromwell ][ Robert Duvall ][ Blair Underwood ][ Elijah Wood ][ Morgan Freeman ]
Amistad (1997)
[ Peter Firth ][ Anthony Hopkins ][ Djimon Hounsou ][ Matthew McConaughey ][ Tomas Milian ]
Men in Black (1997)
[ Chuck Berry ][ Tommy Lee Jones ][ Elvis Presley ][ Will Smith ][ Rip Torn ]
The Lost Children of Berlin (1997)
Twister (1996)
[ Jake Busey ][ Jeremy Davies ][ Cary Elwes ][ Anthony Kiedis ][ Bill Paxton ]
Survivors of the Holocaust (1996)
The Best of Roger Rabbit (1996)
[ Frank Welker ][ Corey Burton ][ Charles Fleischer ]
Balto (1995)
[ Kevin Bacon ][ Bob Hoskins ][ Jim Cummings ][ Phil Collins ]
Tiny Toon Adventures: Night Ghoulery (1995)
[ Frank Welker ][ Maurice LaMarche ][ John Kassir ][ Danny Cooksey ]
Casper (1995)
[ Eric Idle ][ Bill Pullman ][ Devon Sawa ][ Brad Garrett ][ Dan Aykroyd ]
A Pinky & the Brain Christmas Special (1995)
[ Frank Welker ][ Maurice LaMarche ][ Rob Paulsen ]
Tiny Toon Adventures: Spring Break Special (1994)
Tiny Toons Spring Break (1994)
[ Frank Welker ]
Yakko's World: An Animaniacs Singalong (1994)
[ Frank Welker ][ Rob Paulsen ][ Jim Cummings ]
The Flintstones (1994)
[ Kyle MacLachlan ][ John Goodman ][ Rick Moranis ][ Jay Leno ][ Jonathan Winters ]
I'm Mad (1994)
[ Rob Paulsen ]
Schindler's List (1993)
[ Ralph Fiennes ][ Ben Kingsley ][ Liam Neeson ][ John Williams ]
We're Back! A Dinosaur's Story (1993)
[ John Goodman ][ Martin Short ][ Jay Leno ][ Charles Fleischer ][ Kenneth Mars ]
Class of '61 (1993)
[ Christien Anholt ][ Dan Futterman ][ Clive Owen ][ Josh Lucas ][ Stephen Root ]
Trail Mix-Up (1993)
[ Frank Welker ][ Corey Burton ][ Charles Fleischer ]
SeaQuest DSV (1993)
[ Frank Welker ][ Jonathan Brandis ][ Ted Raimi ][ Roy Scheider ]
It's a Wonderful Tiny Toons Christmas Special (1992)
[ Frank Welker ][ Danny Cooksey ]
Tiny Toon Adventures: How I Spent My Vacation (1992)
[ Frank Welker ][ Maurice LaMarche ][ Rob Paulsen ][ Jonathan Winters ]
An American Tail: Fievel Goes West (1991)
[ John Cleese ][ Jon Lovitz ][ James Stewart ][ Dom DeLuise ]
Cape Fear (1991)
[ Rod Ball ][ Martin Balsam ][ Nick Nolte ][ Robert De Niro ][ Martin Scorsese ]
A Brief History of Time (1991)
A Wish for Wings That Work (1991)
[ Robin Williams ][ Dustin Hoffman ][ Frank Welker ]
Roller Coaster Rabbit (1990)
[ Frank Welker ][ Corey Burton ][ Charles Fleischer ]
Back to the Future Part III (1990)
[ Michael J. Fox ][ Christopher Lloyd ][ Thomas F. Wilson ][ Flea ][ Marc McClure ]
Yume (1990)
Joe Versus the Volcano (1990)
[ Tom Hanks ][ Dan Hedaya ][ Elvis Presley ][ Nathan Lane ][ Abe Vigoda ]
Warner Bros. Celebration of Tradition, June 2, 1990 (1990)
Arachnophobia (1990)
[ Jeff Daniels ][ Julian Sands ][ John Goodman ][ Frank Sinatra ][ Stuart Pankin ]
Gremlins 2: The New Batch (1990)
[ Raymond Cruz ][ Tony Randall ][ Christopher Lee ][ Frank Welker ][ John Astin ]
Always (1989)
[ John Goodman ][ Richard Dreyfuss ][ John Williams ][ Robert Urich ][ Dale Dye ]
Back to the Future Part II (1989)
[ Michael Jackson ][ Jason Scott Lee ][ Billy Zane ][ Michael J. Fox ][ Elijah Wood ]
Dad (1989)
[ James Caan ][ Ethan Hawke ][ Jack Lemmon ][ Kevin Spacey ][ Ted Danson ]
Tummy Trouble (1989)
[ Corey Burton ][ Charles Fleischer ]
The Land Before Time (1988)
[ George Lucas ][ Gabriel Damon ][ Diana Ross ][ Pat Hingle ]
Who Framed Roger Rabbit (1988)
[ Bob Hoskins ][ Christopher Lloyd ][ Frank Welker ][ Frank Sinatra ][ Jim Cummings ]
Family Dog (1987)
*batteries not included (1987)
[ James LeGros ][ Hume Cronyn ][ Ed Quinn ]
Empire of the Sun (1987)
[ Christian Bale ][ John Malkovich ][ Paul McGann ][ Joe Pantoliano ][ Ben Stiller ]
Three O'Clock High (1987)
[ Jeffrey Tambor ][ Casey Siemaszko ][ Philip Baker Hall ][ Aaron Spelling ][ Mitch Pileggi ]
Innerspace (1987)
[ Corey Michael Eubanks ][ Dennis Quaid ][ Rod Stewart ][ Martin Short ][ Robert Picardo ]
Harry and the Hendersons (1987)
[ John Lithgow ][ Kevin Peter Hall ][ Don Ameche ][ M. Emmet Walsh ][ David Suchet ]
An American Tail (1986)
[ Christopher Plummer ][ Dom DeLuise ]
The Money Pit (1986)
[ Tom Hanks ][ Michael Jeter ][ Joe Mantegna ][ Frankie Faison ][ Mike Starr ]
The Color Purple (1985)
[ Laurence Fishburne ][ Danny Glover ][ Leon Rippy ][ Lionel Richie ]
Young Sherlock Holmes (1985)
[ Anthony Higgins ]
Back to the Future (1985)
[ Billy Zane ][ Michael J. Fox ][ Crispin Glover ][ Christopher Lloyd ][ Thomas F. Wilson ]
The Goonies (1985)
[ Steve Antin ][ Sean Astin ][ Josh Brolin ][ Corey Feldman ][ John Matuszak ]
Fandango (1985)
[ Kevin Costner ][ Elton John ][ Judd Nelson ][ George Harris ][ Eric Clapton ]
Gremlins (1984)
[ Corey Feldman ][ Judge Reinhold ][ Peter Cullen ][ Frank Welker ][ Nicky Katt ]
Twilight Zone: The Movie (1983)
[ Albert Brooks ][ John Lithgow ][ Dan Aykroyd ][ Burgess Meredith ][ Scatman Crothers ]
Poltergeist (1982)
[ Craig T Nelson ][ Craig T. Nelson ][ Tobe Hooper ]
E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial (1982)
[ Peter Coyote ][ Henry Thomas ][ C. Thomas Howell ][ John Williams ]
Continental Divide (1981)
[ John Belushi ]
Used Cars (1980)
[ Kurt Russell ][ Michael McKean ][ Marc McClure ][ Jack Warden ][ Joe Flaherty ]
I Wanna Hold Your Hand (1978)
[ Marc McClure ][ Jeffrey Weissman ][ Eddie Deezen ]

 

The most commercially successful filmmaker in Hollywood history, Steven Spielberg was born December 18, 1946, in Cincinnati, OH. A lifelong cinema buff, he began directing his first short movies while still a child, later studying film at California State University and winning notice for his 1969 short feature Amblin'. He first made his mark in television, directing Joan Crawford in the pilot for Rod Serling's Night Gallery and working on episodes of Columbo and Marcus Welby, M.D. Spielberg's first feature-length effort, 1971's Duel, a taut thriller starring Dennis Weaver, was widely acclaimed as one of the best movies ever made for television. The film proved so successful on the small screen, in fact, that it later was the recipient of theatrical distribution throughout Europe, where it proved to be a major box-office hit. Spielberg permanently graduated to feature films with 1974's The Sugarland Express, but it was his next effort, Jaws, which truly cemented his reputation as a rising star. The most successful film of 1975, this tale of a man-eating Great White shark was widely recognized as the picture which established the summer months as the film industry's most lucrative period of the year, heralding a move toward big-budget blockbusters which culminated two years later with his friend George Lucas' Star Wars. Spielberg's follow-up, 1977's Close Encounters of the Third Kind, was another staggering success, employing state-of-the-art special effects to document its story of contact with alien life. With the 1979 slapstick-war comedy 1941, Spielberg made his first major misstep, as the star-studded picture performed miserably at the box office. However, he swiftly regained his footing with 1980's Raiders of the Lost Ark, a homage to the serial cliffhangers of yesteryear. Produced by Lucas, the film was one of the biggest hits of the decade, later launching a pair of sequels as well as a short-lived television series. However, it was Spielberg's next effort which truly asserted his position as the era's most popular filmmaker: 1982's E.T. the Extra Terrestrial, the touching tale of a boy who befriends an alien, was hailed upon release as an instant classic, ultimately becoming one of the most commercially successful movies of all time. After 1984's Raiders of the Lost Ark sequel, Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom, Spielberg went against type to direct The Color Purple, an adaptation of Alice Walker's much-honored novel exploring the lives and struggles of a group of African-American women during the Depression years. The film went on to gross over 0 million at the box office, later securing 11 Academy Award nominations. On Oscar night, however, it won nothing, a shut-out widely attributed to industry resentment over Spielberg's staggering success. A 1987 dramatization of J.G. Ballard's novel Empire of the Sun was his next picture, and was one of his few box-office disappointments. A similar fate met the sentimental Always, a remake of the wartime weeper A Guy Named Joe, but Spielberg returned to form with 1989's Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade.With 1991's 60-million-dollar production of Hook, Spielberg again fell victim to negative reviews and lackluster box-office returns, but in 1993 he returned with a vengeance with Jurassic Park, a special-effects extravaganza which ranked among the most aggressively marketed films of all time. The result was a global blockbuster of mammoth proportion, with receipts coming in at over one billion dollars. That same year, he released Schindler's List, an epic docudrama set during the Holocaust. Again, a number of Oscar nominations were forthcoming, but this time Spielberg was rewarded for his accomplishments — the picture won seven Academy Awards, including Best Picture and Best Director honors. As befitting his role as a major Hollywood player, Spielberg and his company, Amblin Entertainment, also produced a number of highly successful features, including 1982's Poltergeist, 1985's Back to the Future, and 1988's groundbreaking Who Framed Roger Rabbit? He also diversified into television, beginning in 1985 with the anthology series Amazing Stories and later supervising the animated series Tiny Toon Adventures and the underwater adventure Seaquest DSV. However, in the wake of Schindler's List, Spielberg's status as a power broker grew exponentially with the formation of Dreamworks SKG, a production company he headed along with former Disney chief Jeffrey Katzenberg and music mogul David Geffen; consequently, Spielberg spent much of the mid-'90s behind the scenes, serving as executive producer on films such as Twister (1996), Men in Black (1997), and two 1998 films, Deep Impact and The Mask of Zorro. He returned to the director's chair with the 1997 smash The Lost World, the inevitable sequel to Jurassic Park. The same year, he was rewarded with several Oscar and Golden Globe nominations for Amistad, a slavery epic for which he served as both director and producer. Whatever disappointment Spielberg may have felt over not actually winning any of the above awards was most likely mollified the following year with Saving Private Ryan. The World War II epic, which Spielberg both directed and produced, won international acclaim, garnering a staggering 11 Academy Award nominations. Eventually winning five, including Best Director, Best Cinematography (for Janusz Kaminski), and Best Editing (for Michael Kahn), the film lost out to Shakespeare in Love for Best Picture, a slight that was the subject of a heated feud between Dreamworks and Miramax, the company behind Shakespeare. Ryan did win a Golden Globe for Best Picture (in the Drama category), as well a Best Director nod for Spielberg. After taking the helm for a short documentary chronicling American history for the milleninial New Years Eve celebration broadcast, Spielberg took another shot at summer blockbuster success with the sci-fi drama A.I.. Featuing Oscar nominated child actor Haley Joel Osment in the role of a robot boy who longs to be human, and adapted from an original idea from Stanley Kubrick, the high-concept film recieved a decidedly mixed reception at the box office. Though critics and audiences seemed intrigued by the ideas presented in the film and the collaboration between Kubrick and Spielberg, its unconventional pacing and execution ultimately prevented the polarizing film from becoming the classic that it may have had it been ever slightly more accessible. The following year, however, would find Spielberg once again coming out on top with two remarkably upbeat chase films. Adapted from a short story by revered science fiction author Phillip K. Dick and starring Tom Cruise as a the head of an elite "pre-crime division" of police officers who use a trio of psychics to predicts criminals' crimes so that they can be arrested before they have a chance to commit them, Minority Report proved an exhilarating sci-fi action epic that left audiences hungering for more. Arguably even more high concept that A.I. and undoubtedly better paced and executed, the film fared remarkably well among the heated summer box office competition. Hitting with a powerful one-two punch a mere six-months later, Spielberg's fast-paced crime adventure Catch Me If You Can adapted the real life exploits of legendary con artist Frank Abagnale, Jr. to the big screen to the delight of audiences hungering for an entertaining and lightweight holiday release. With heartthrob Leonardo DiCaprio starring as Abagnale and Tom Hanks as the FBI agent who remains tirelessly on the trail of the elusive scammer, the film, combined with the success of Minority Report, swiftly proved that it would be some time before Spielberg gave up his reigns as a master blockbuster filmmaker.2004 saw Spielberg team with Hanks yet again, this time for the lighthearted comedy The Terminal. Also starring Catherine Zeta Jones, the film centered on a man without a country who takes up residence in an American airport. The following year found the director diving back into the big-budget sci-fi genre with War of the Worlds. Starring Tom Cruise, the ambitious film was adapted from H.G. Wells classic alien-invasion novel of the same name. After this Hollywood juggernaut, Spielberg cinematically visited his Jewish heritage for the first time since Schindler's List with 2005's critically acclaimed Munich. Beginning with the 1972 Munich Olympics at which 11 Israeli athletes were kidnapped and later murdered by the Palestinian terrorist group Black September, the film follows the small group of Mossad agents recruited to track down and assassinate those responsible. Praised for its sensitive and painful portrayal of ordinary men grappling with their new lives ask killers, Munich earned Spielberg a Golden Globe nomination, reminding audiences and critics alike of the filmmaker's ability to go far beyond the realm of simple adventure and fantasy.


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