Chicago Sun-Times

Spielberg calls ‘ Ready Player One’ a feel- good experience

- BY BRYAN ALEXANDER

LOS ANGELES — Picture this: When Steven Spielberg wants to really zen out, he hovers in deep space through the rings of Saturn. The view’s amazing.

Seriously, the heralded filmmaker, 71, straps into his virtual reality rig inside his airy Los Angeles spread and mentally disconnect­s from life’s chaos into the cosmos.

“Sometimes I put the VR goggles on, and I’m simply floating among the planets and the stars, maybe going through the rings of Saturn,” he says. “It’s a very, very welcome escape.”

Its just the kind of diversion Earth’s depressed population in 2045 craves in Spielberg’s “Ready Player One” ( now in theaters), which he’s wagering will entertain 2018 audiences, even if they’ve never donned VR goggles before.

“I made this movie to make people feel really good,” says Spielberg, who took to heart one fan’s suggestion to make the film’s slogan # MakeAmeric­aFeelGoodA­gain. “I felt like I was in the audience directing, with the audience collaborat­ing with me on how to give them what they wanted and needed.”

“Ready,” based on Ernest Cline’s best- selling 2011 novel, is an adventure set in a virtual- reality universe known as the Oasis. It’s a future saturated with nostalgia, populated with beloved characters and references from mainly the 1970s and ’ 80s — from Chucky the killer doll to “Back to the Future’s” DeLorean time machine; from the “Iron Giant” robot to Freddy Krueger.

“My analogy is: The story is straight- ahead out your windshield, and all the cultural references are simply in your peripheral vision,” Spielberg says. “The audience is free to glance all around the screen to find their favorite Easter eggs.”

Seamlessly combining the intertwini­ng story involving the 2045 real set and the motion- capture world of the Oasis gave the technicall­y masterful Spielberg headaches during the 2016 shoot.

“I rank this right up there behind ‘ Saving Private Ryan’ and ‘ Jaws’ as the third most- challengin­g film I have ever made,” says Spielberg, because he was “trying to create something nobody had ever seen before. An entire virtual universe.”

Spielberg told only his wife of 26 years, Kate Capshaw, how unsure he was that the project would come together.

“I’d come home at the end of the day and say to Kate, ‘ I don’t know what I’m making. And I don’t know how the hell this is going to turn out.’ ” he says. “And she’d say, ‘ Well, as long as you figure it out before the movie’s released.’ ”

At the end of the threeyear process, including nearly two years of intricate computer animation, the perfection­ist director can chuckle heartily about the ultimate irony — that sound problems almost derailed the film’s South By Southwest world premiere on March 11. Two sound breakdowns lead to excruciati­ng interrupti­ons as the film’s climax was screened.

“My heart actually stopped in my chest. It was time to bring in the paddles and for somebody else to yell ‘ clear!’ ” he laughs.

Yet those delays only fueled the wild reaction from the boisterous crowd, which Spielberg likens to a Bruce Springstee­n concert.

“I told everybody later, ‘ Isn’t this really so amazing? ‘ Ready Player One’ blew a circuit in Austin,’ ” he says beaming. “That’s actually a good thing.”

 ?? | JORDAN STRAUSS/ INVISION/ AP ?? Steven Spielberg arrives at a Los Angeles premiere of “Ready Player One” on Monday.
| JORDAN STRAUSS/ INVISION/ AP Steven Spielberg arrives at a Los Angeles premiere of “Ready Player One” on Monday.

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