Watch: Steven Spielberg Reveals the Side Hustle That Helped Launch His Filmmaking Career
Steven Spielberg wasn’t even sure anyone would want to watch Saving Private Ryan.
He’d already proved that audiences would pack a theater for the toughest of subject matter with 1993’s Schindler’s List, which won seven Oscars, including Best Picture and his first Best Director statue. But the Holocaust drama was a deeply personal film that he felt his entire career making relentlessly pleasing blockbusters (including Jurassic Park, released the same year) was leading up to.
And maybe, he thought, this new film—with its literally gut-wrenching depiction of the Allies landing at Normandy beach on June 6, 1944—was too much.
Five more Oscars and $483 million later…
“Certain associates and other people in my life were saying that I made it too tough,” Spielberg recalled to the Los Angeles Times in 2018. “I feared that almost nobody would see it because the word of mouth would spread quickly after the first 25 minutes.”
That opening D-Day sequence is indeed one of the harder watches in cinema history, but everyone should see it at least once, a reminder of how ugly combat is and how even a clear-eyed purpose can’t make it glorious.
And for those who have spent the last three decades living under a rock, the war epic is currently streaming for free on Pluto and also available on Paramount+.
After that, how you choose to mine the otherwise very watchable, albeit heartbreaking, treasure that is Saving Private Ryan is up to you.
Though it’s worth noting that Spielberg did have to earn it, when it came to casting his good pal Tom Hanks as the captain tasked with saving Matt Damon‘s Private Ryan.
“I’ve seen friendships that ended because of a bad moviemaking experience, and I was really reluctant to do it because of that,” Hanks explained to Deseret News ahead of the 1998 release. “Sometimes, I’m just astounded that I know this great guy, and that I’m friends with him.”
As the film approaches its 28th anniversary, don’t just sit there and watch someone else read these secrets about the World War II classic:
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