
COMING SOON
Disclosure Day
When a rogue data analyst steals incontrovertible proof that humanity is not alone in the universe, a small group of whistleblowers races to leak the truth before a shadowy government‑corporate alliance shuts them down—triggering the most turbulent news story, and the most terrifying revelation, in human history.
Director
Steven Spielberg (Close Encounters of the Third Kind)
CAST
Emily Blunt • Josh O’Connor • Colman Domingo • Colin Firth • Eve Hewson
RATING
VA

Violence, offensive language & content that may disturb
RUNTIME
2h 25m
COUNTRY
United States
GENRE
Science fiction, Thriller, Drama
LANGUAGE
English


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BOOKINGS NOT YET AVAILABLE FOR
Disclosure Day
All tickets must be prepaid online or at the counter.
Sales are subject to our cancellation policy. No phone bookings
ncp - no complimentary passes
cap - captioned for hard of hearing

WATCH TRAILER
FILM NOTES
A big‑screen, nerve‑jangling first‑contact thriller that asks what happens when alien life becomes breaking news instead of a secret.
Disclosure Day sees Steven Spielberg return to the territory of Close Encounters and War of the Worlds with a contemporary twist: contact is no longer a rumour or a cover‑up but an event the whole world is about to witness in real time. Emily Blunt plays Margaret Fairchild, a Kansas City meteorologist pulled into a conspiracy when she crosses paths with Daniel Kellner (Josh O’Connor), a cybersecurity expert on the run with leaked footage that proves the existence of extraterrestrial visitors. Backed by a powerhouse ensemble including Colman Domingo, Colin Firth and Eve Hewson, the film blends road‑movie tension, newsroom urgency and political paranoia as governments scramble to control the narrative.

For audiences, this is engineered as a classic Spielberg summer ride: grounded characters, escalating set‑pieces and awe‑struck encounters staged with Janusz Kaminski’s expansive cinematography and a score that nods to the director’s earlier alien epics. The M rating in Aotearoa/NZ reflects moderate but sustained threat, bursts of action violence, some bloody images and occasional strong language, making it best suited to teens and adults comfortable with intense sci‑fi thrills. At 145 minutes it’s a full‑evening, large‑scale cinema experience, ideal for audiences who want both spectacle and a thought‑provoking “what if?” about trust, secrecy and who gets to decide what the world is allowed to know.

