Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Entertainment
  3. Audio / Video
  4. Reviews

‘Ready Player One’ review

With ‘Ready Player One,’ Spielberg digs up real feels in a virtual universe

Add as a preferred source on Google
Ready Player One best new movie trailers
Image used with permission by copyright holder

“Why you can trust Digital Trends – We have a 20-year history of testing, reviewing, and rating products, services and apps to help you make a sound buying decision. Find out more about how we test and score products.“

READY PLAYER ONE - Dreamer Trailer [HD]

Nostalgia is a powerful force.

Recommended Videos

In 2011, a deep-rooted love for our pop-culture past propelled Ernest Cline’s novel Ready Player One onto bestseller lists, and the success of his sci-fi homage to ’80s media eventually put it in the hands of Steven Spielberg, one of Hollywood’s most prolific producers of cinematic nostalgia.

It seemed like the perfect pairing of story and filmmaker, but one question loomed large over the project: Could any director — even a three-time Oscar winner and director of genre-defining classics such as ET and Raiders of the Lost Ark — prevent a Ready Player One movie from collapsing under the weight of its own reverence for, well … just about everything ’80s?

It seemed like the perfect pairing of story and filmmaker.

Directed by Spielberg from a script by Cline and Zak Penn (The Avengers), Ready Player One casts Tye Sheridan (X-Men: Apocalypse) as Wade Watts, a young resident of the Ohio slums in the year 2045 who gets caught up in a race to find the keys to a virtual universe known as OASIS. The treasure hunt pits him against a powerful corporation bent on owning OASIS (and its vast potential to create wealth), and allies him with a mysterious fellow treasure hunter and a group of other colorful heroes in a virtual environment where anything is possible.

In the wrong hands, a big-screen adaptation of the sprawling, fandom-fueled Ready Player One had flop written all over it, but Spielberg has rarely (if ever) been the wrong hands for any project he took on.

Luckily for us, despite the film’s heavy reliance on computer-generated visuals, Spielberg does an amazing job of filling the story’s virtual avatars with as much emotional depth as their live-action counterparts.

Where other films involving virtual universes typically have trouble maintaining the audience’s emotional connection to a character as the story shifts between live-action and virtual elements, Ready Player One makes the transition look easy. Spielberg has always had a deft touch when it comes to forging a relationship between the audience and his characters, human or otherwise, and Ready Player One is a great reminder of how important that skill is for a filmmaker.

There isn’t a single avatar in Ready Player One that feels soulless or robotic.

To that point, there isn’t a single avatar in Ready Player One that feels soulless or robotic, and even the most inhuman-looking avatars of OASIS feel fully inhabited by the human cast portraying them.

What might be an even greater accomplishment, however, is that Spielberg manages to strike a satisfying balance between the more overdone, fandom-fueled elements of Cline’s story and the nostalgia the story is intended to evoke.

Where Cline’s original story seems to be content to occasionally get mired in its own adoration of the ’80s-era touchstones that inspired it, Spielberg and the Ready Player One movie’s creative team wisely avoid getting lost in the weeds by keeping the references more subtle. (Granted, subtlety is relative when adapting a story so deeply rooted in obsessive fandom.)

Devotees of the book need not worry, though, as Wade (and his avatar, Parzival) is still prone to rapid-firing ’80s media references at the slightest provocation. These moments, however, are framed as character-developing scenes in the film rather than the extended dissertations on ’80s-culture minutia that the book provided.

The film’s entire cast gives strong performances as both their human and virtual characters, but it’s Mark Rylance’s portrayal of OASIS creator James Halliday that particularly stands out in Ready Player One. Cline’s novel was ostensibly about Wade discovering Halliday’s deeply personal reasons for creating OASIS, but that aspect of both the character and the story itself is more fully realized in the film due to Rylance’s outstanding performance.

Fans of the novel may be pleasantly surprised by how much they enjoy the film’s willingness to diverge from the source material.

Hardcore loyalists generally don’t have the best reputation when it comes to embracing change — especially when it comes to online discourse — but fans of Cline’s novel may well be pleasantly surprised by how much they enjoy the film’s willingness to diverge from the source material. The script takes Wade, his allies, and his enemies to some places in the pop-culture landscape that weren’t part of the original novel’s narrative, but these alterations end up making the story feel less homogenous in the end.

It was always assumed that the film wouldn’t be able to sample from as many media touchstones as the novel due to the complicated licensing issues that exist for big-screen projects, but Ready Player One casts a surprisingly wide net that should offer a little something for everyone — even if the ’80s weren’t your primary cultural touchstone.

That Spielberg is able to take a story as unwieldy as Cline’s original novel and craft it into something as easily digestible and emotionally resonant as Ready Player One speaks volumes to his still-vibrant talents as a filmmaker.

Ready Player One doesn’t reach enough heights to be considered a cultural touchstone itself, and it doesn’t stand shoulder-to-shoulder with Spielberg’s most iconic films, either, but that shouldn’t detract from its many charms.

Spielberg’s latest cinematic adventure is a fantastic, thrilling, and wonderfully fun film that not only pays satisfying homage to the many works that inspired it, but also tells a compelling story on its own about life, creativity, and the profound impact of the choices we make.

Rick Marshall
Former Contributing Editor, Entertainment
A veteran journalist with more than two decades of experience covering local and national news, arts and entertainment, and…
EXCLUSIVE: Lockbox Cast and Director Reveal How They Adapted the Knifepoint Horror Podcast for the Big Screen
Daniel Stamm, Lou Taylor Pucci, and Katharine Isabelle discuss creating Lockbox and collaborating with Carla Gugino
Katherine Isabelle screaming with white eyes in the horror film, Lockbox.

Director Daniel Stamm's new movie Lockbox adapts the acclaimed Knifepoint Horror podcast into a feature-length nightmare. Produced by Capstone Pictures (Obsession), the movie sees The Haunting of Hill House star Carla Gugino as a woman fighting to protect her veteran cousin, played by Lou Taylor Pucci (Evil Dead), from a demonic presence linked to her mysterious neighbor, portrayed by Katharine Isabelle (Backrooms)

In an interview with Digital Trends, Stamm, Pucci, and Isabelle discussed collaborating with each other and Carla Gugino in taking a popular podcast and turning it into an unsettling and unpredictable horror film.

Read more
You can make the Ghostface do whatever you want on this Scary Movie website
The Subservient Ghostface website for Scary Movie lets fans boss around the masked killer on screen.
scary-movie-6-subservient-ghostface-website

Scary Movie 6 returned after more than a decade, and the gamble paid off at the box office. The sixth installment debuted to $55 million domestically, the best opening weekend in the series' history, and went on to gross over $215 million worldwide as of late June.

Ahead of the movie's June 5 theatrical release, Wayans Bros. Entertainment launched a website called Subservient Ghostface, where you type a command and watch the masked killer carry it out on screen. It's a clever campaign that borrows directly from Burger King's famous Subservient Chicken stunt from 2004, swapping the chicken suit for the horror icon Ghostface from Scream.

Read more
EXCLUSIVE: Obsession star Michael Johnston reacts to the horror hit’s record-breaking success: ‘It doesn’t feel real’
Michael Johnston opens up about Obsession’s breakout success, Bear’s fan reactions, cast friendships, and sequel possibilities
Bear (Michael Johnston) while Nikki (Inde Navarrette) watches in the background in the horror film, Obsession.

Actor Michael Johnston has become a household name as the lead actor in the horrifying summer blockbuster, Obsession. Written and directed by Curry Barker, Obsession depicts Johnston as Bear, a lonely young man who uses the One Wish Willow to make his crush, Nikki (Inde Navarrette), love him more than anyone in the world, only to realize that his wish comes at a horrifying price.

At this time, Obsession has made over $371 million in theaters worldwide, according to Box Office Mojo, making it one of the highest-grossing horror movies of all time. Following the movie's surprising success, the main cast's careers have taken off, with Johnston set to star in season 2 of Marvel's hit series, X-Men '97.

Read more