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Home » StarTalk: w/ Steven Spielberg & David Koepp on Disclosure Day (Transcript)

StarTalk: w/ Steven Spielberg & David Koepp on Disclosure Day (Transcript)

Read the full transcript of Steven Spielberg’s interview on StarTalk Podcast, June 16, 2026. Screenwriter David Koepp joins later in the program.

Editor’s Note: In this episode of StarTalk, Neil deGrasse Tyson sits down with legendary director Steven Spielberg and screenwriter David Koepp to discuss their latest film, Disclosure Day. The conversation explores the intersection of extraterrestrial life, the evolution of empathy in storytelling, and the public’s complex relationship with truth in the modern age.

Neil’s New Book and Steven’s Early Fascination with Aliens

NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: Why do UFO sightings persist? Are at least some of them figments of our imagination? Or are we missing something? In my latest book, Take Me to Your Leader,” I actually explore what’s possible in this universe, given the universal laws of physics. If the aliens are out there, the laws of physics will dictate how they find us. I also narrated the audiobook, so I’m duly informed that the audiobook and the print version are available now wherever books are sold.

Steven, good to see you again. Good to see you too. Thanks for coming onto the podcast. We did a little bit of homework, and I did not know your first student film was about aliens.

STEVEN SPIELBERG: Yeah, it was called Firelight. I made it in 8mm, on 8mm film. I was 17 years old, I was in high school.

NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: So aliens have just been a thing.

STEVEN SPIELBERG: Well, it was more about UFOs, and it wasn’t peace-loving aliens. The first one I did was much more of the formulaic monogram movie exploitation, but it was in an area of interest ever since I was a kid.

NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: And I mean, why wouldn’t it be? Because everybody’s interested in aliens at some point. But you have the power to bring it to life on levels that no one could have imagined.

STEVEN SPIELBERG: Well, it’s not really so much my interest in aliens, it’s been my interest in the unknown. And the feeling I’ve had for a very long time, having been a consumer of everything involving the unknown — not the unknown a million light years from here, but the unknown right here. And it’s always been something that’s really interested me. And I’ve always wondered, if the unknown is known by a very small group of people, the injustice of not everyone knowing what they know is kind of what drives me, especially to tell the story of Disclosure Day.

NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: It never occurred to me to think of people left out as being the consequence of an injustice.

STEVEN SPIELBERG: An inequity maybe is a better word for it. Yeah, no, but still, I’m applauding.

The Power of Eyes in Storytelling

NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: Using the term because when it’s an injustice, you want to correct that as a viewer. You want to right the wrong. And you clearly established that in Disclosure Day. I mean, it was — that was the greatest feeling any of us had as we watched this.

A question that I’ve always had as a director: what is the value of the eyes of whatever it is you’re looking into? Not only in Disclosure Day was there a lot of eye contact from animal to non-human animal to human animal, but also human to human, where you’re kind of seeing into their soul, imparting a bit of empathy — I guess, for lack of a better word there.

STEVEN SPIELBERG: That is the word.

NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: That is the word of the day.

STEVEN SPIELBERG: That is the key word of the day.

NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: But aliens tend to, as we now think of them, they all have big eyes, and eyes seem to matter. Can you just speak a little bit as a director? And let me throw in the mix the eye contact with a Velociraptor.

DAVID KOEPP: Yeah.

NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: Right? I mean, at my museum, the Velociraptor is not much bigger than a big dog, but they were sort of pumped up in Jurassic Park so that you’re making eye contact with something that’s going to eat you. So, not only as a source of fear, but as a potential source of empathy. Just, how does that feel to you?

STEVEN SPIELBERG: Well, with human beings, eyes are the mirrors of the soul. And to animals, I guess eyes are the mirrors of the appetite. But they both serve a similar purpose — they both give a kind of satiation. And I think everything is in the eyes. It’s in the eyes. From any movie experience anybody’s ever had, it’s all about E.T.’s eyes in my film. That was critically important. The design of those eyes were critically important.

It’s a little bit harder with what people report when they report non-human entities. There’s no iris or pupil. So it’s —

NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: I never thought about that. They’re never drawn with anything inside the eye.

STEVEN SPIELBERG: No, but there are other things happening when people have close encounters of the third kind — which is how that sort of defines itself — that there is something that is also a psychic part of looking into an eye of a non-human, as has been reported, and still feeling something without needing the pupil or the iris.

The Context Behind Disclosure Day

NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: So in Disclosure Day, because they actually had an alien, I always felt like, what’s the need to even disclose any video if you’ve got the alien? What do you need the video for?

STEVEN SPIELBERG: You need the context. You’ve got to have 80 years of context. He steals 80 years of the truth that has been hidden from the public and even from the government, because it’s very hard for elected officials to keep secrets.