What's Inside?
- Steven Spielberg confirms he is developing his first Western, promising a fresh take that avoids familiar genre tropes and stereotypes.
- The legendary director teased the project at SXSW while promoting his upcoming sci-fi film Disclosure Day, set for June 12 release.
- Spielberg’s decades-long admiration for classic Western filmmakers like John Ford continues to influence his vision for this long-awaited project.
For more than five decades, Steven Spielberg has built a career on curiosity. Few directors have moved so comfortably across genres, from shark thrillers and sci-fi spectacles to historical drama and heartfelt coming-of-age stories. Yet even after shaping modern cinema with films like *Jaws*, *E.T. the Extra‑Terrestrial*, and *Jurassic Park*, one classic American genre has remained oddly absent from his résumé. That may soon change. Speaking at the South by Southwest Film & TV Festival, the legendary filmmaker revealed he is actively developing his first Western, a project he teased with enthusiasm while discussing his upcoming sci-fi release, Disclosure Day.
Steven Spielberg’s Western Project Quietly Takes Shape after Decades of Interest

Steven Spielberg’s appearance at SXSW was meant to spotlight Disclosure Day, his next venture into science fiction. But the conversation quickly turned toward unexplored territory in his career. When asked whether he would ever tackle a Western, the director confirmed that the idea is no longer hypothetical.
“I can’t reveal anything right now, but I have something in development. And it kicks ass. There will be horses. There will be guns. There will be no tropes, I can tell you that. There’s going to be no stereotypes.” (Via Deadline)
For a filmmaker who has spent 55 years pushing the boundaries of storytelling, the Western represents one of the few cinematic frontiers he has not fully explored. His filmography spans historical drama, adventure, fantasy, family entertainment, and musicals. He directed the Oscar-winning *Schindler’s List* and the visceral war epic *Saving Private Ryan*. He revisited classic Broadway with *West Side Story* and delivered an intimate family portrait in *The Fabelmans*.
Still, the Western has lingered in the background of his ambitions for decades. Spielberg even hinted that he hopes to shoot the film in Texas, a fitting setting for a genre that thrives on wide landscapes and frontier mythology.
While details remain tightly guarded, his brief description suggests a project that respects the traditions of the genre while avoiding its most familiar patterns. The promise of horses and guns may sound classic, but Spielberg insists the storytelling will move beyond the clichés that have long defined Western cinema.
Steven Spielberg’s Western Inspiration Comes from Classic Hollywood Masters

Steven Spielberg’s fascination with Westerns did not appear overnight. The director has often spoken about the influence of classic filmmakers who helped define the genre. Among them is John Ford, whose visual storytelling left a lasting impression on Spielberg’s own approach to directing.
“I’m very sensitive to the way he uses his camera to paint his pictures and the way he frames things. And the way he stages and blocks his people, often keeping the camera static while people give you the illusion that there’s a lot more kinetic movement when there isn’t. In that sense, he is like a classic painter. He celebrates the frame, not just what happens inside of it.”
That admiration for visual composition and storytelling discipline has shaped Spielberg’s work across genres. It can be seen in the sweeping battlefields of Saving Private Ryan and the emotional intimacy of The Fabelmans.
Although he has never directed a traditional Western, Spielberg has brushed close to the genre before. The frontier spirit surfaces in films like *War Horse* and in certain sequences of *Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade*. He also produced the 2005 miniseries *Into the West*, which explored the complex history of American westward expansion.
Meanwhile, his immediate focus remains on Disclosure Day, scheduled to arrive in theaters on June 12. During the SXSW conversation, Spielberg hinted at the film’s cosmic themes with a playful remark that sparked curiosity across the audience.
“My feeling right now is this… I don’t know any more than any of you do, but I have a very strong sneaking suspicion that we are not alone here on Earth right now. And I made a movie about that.”
Whether looking to the stars or back toward the dusty frontier, Spielberg continues to follow the same creative instinct that has defined his career. Curiosity first, genre second. If his long-awaited Western finally rides onto the screen, it may carry the weight of decades of anticipation and the perspective of a filmmaker who has already reinvented nearly everything else.








