Duel
Hailed as one of the greatest TV movies of all time, this 1971 action thriller chronicles a crazed truck driver who stalks a terrified motorist (Dennis Weaver) through the California desert. Duel was so well received it garnered a theatrical release, catapulting the then-25-year-old Spielberg into features.
Close Encounters of the Third Kind
This 1977 sci-fi epic about humanity's first contact with aliens was one of the few films that year not overshadowed by the phenomenon that was Star Wars. We're guessing the mother ship made quite an impression, not to mention those five musical notes we still can't get out of our head.
Raiders of the Lost Ark
Spielberg joined forces with longtime pal George Lucas for this action adventure that harkened back to their favorite serials of the '30s and '40s; the rollicking film introduced us to a new swashbuckling big screen hero, Indiana Jones, as played by Harrison Ford.
E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial
This 1982 tearjerker about a boy who helps his little alien buddy phone home cemented the filmmaker's reputation as a hitmaker with a heart.
Jurassic Park
This 1993 dinosaur adventure was the first in a one-two punch for the director who made Schindler's List while editing this movie. Jurassic Park was not only a massive hit, it helped popularize computer-generated visual effects which at the time were still a nascent art form.
Schindler's List
Spielberg finally got the respect from his peers he deserved with this unforgettable 1993 drama about the Holocaust, which won seven Academy Awards including Best Picture and Best Director.
A.I. Artificial Intelligence
Based on a story by Stanley Kubrick, Spielberg's 2001 futuristic Pinocchio tale about a little robot boy searching for his mother in an America racked by global warming. Tepidly received at first, it's grown in stature and is considered now one of his most underrated works.
Minority Report
In his 2002 neo-noir sci-fi thriller starring Tom Cruise, Spielberg paid homage to the classic whodunits of the '30s and '40s made by his cinematic forefathers like John Huston and Howard Hawks.
Lincoln
Considered by many to be one of his finest films, this gripping, low-key drama focuses on the 16th president's effort to pass the 13th Amendment abolishing slavery at the end of the Civil War and features a performance for the ages by Daniel Day-Lewis.
Bridge of Spies
The Cold War drama, released in 2015, told the true story of a lawyer (Tom Hanks) who negotiated the release of a U.S. Air Force pilot (Austin Stowell) in exchange for a convicted Soviet KGB spy (Mark Rylance). The movie received six Oscar nominations, and Rylance took home the award for Best Supporting Actor.
Ready Player One
It's adults vs. kids again in the dystopian sci-fi flick, set in the year 2045 and released in 2018. The adventure begins when an orphaned teenager finds the first clue to a hidden game in a virtual reality universe called the OASIS. If he can find the other two before anyone else does—and without getting killed by the rival IOI team—he will win the game and control of the OASIS.

