Metacritic Film

E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial (re-release)

Starring Dee Wallace-Stone, Henry Thomas, Peter Coyote, Robert MacNaughton, Drew Barrymore, K.C. Martel, Sean Frye, and C. Thomas Howell

MPAA RATING: PG for language and mild thematic elements

Universal Pictures
Sci-fi
120 minutes | Color
USA
Released In Theaters March 22, 2002

The 20th Anniversary re-release of Steven Spielberg's classic tale of an extra-terrestrial who is accidentally left behind on earth and befriends a young boy and his family.

WRITTEN BY
Melissa Mathison

DIRECTED BY
Steven Spielberg

Overall Metascore

This is a weighted, normalized average of all individual scores given by critics, on a scale of 0 (worst) to 100 (best).

94 / 100

Critic Reviews

100 New York Post Lou Lumenick
An all-time classic that seems even better after two decades.
100 The Onion (A.V. Club) Keith Phipps
Unchecked goodness has its price, after all, and childhood wonder wouldn't be nearly as sweet if it didn't fade. That may explain the film's appeal. It trapped that feeling, and its sense of possibility, in amber -- then, now, and for any time.
100 Washington Post Desson Thomson
A sophisticatedly sappy masterpiece that bucked the prevailing Hollywood vision of aliens as nasty invaders and recast them as friendly collectibles for children.
100 Charlotte Observer Lawrence Toppman
Just as moving, uplifting and funny as ever in its slightly modified form.
100 Chicago Sun-Times Roger Ebert
This movie made my heart glad. It is filled with innocence, hope, and good cheer. It is also wickedly funny and exciting as hell.
100 Baltimore Sun Michael Sragow
The least fussy great movie ever made.
100 Variety Todd McCarthy
Had the aura of an instant classic when it was released, and the good news is that it looks at least that good, if not better, on the eve of its 20th anniversary reissue.
100 The New York Times Dana Stevens
Watching E.T now, in an era dominated by cold, loud special-effects-laden extravaganzas, one is struck less by its lavish grandeur than by its intimacy and precision.
100 Chicago Tribune Michael Wilmington
Always a magical film. For its anniversary rerelease, though, it's been extensively restored and even partly reshot by Spielberg. It now looks better than it did back then.
100 Los Angeles Times Kenneth Turan
Seeing E.T. again reminds us of how much we've remained the same, how gratified we still are by a film that connects so beautifully to our sense of wonder and joy.
100 New York Daily News Jami Bernard
Beaming back on screens for its 20th anniversary, holds up spectacularly well.
100 The Globe and Mail (Toronto) Liam Lacey
It's one modern film worthy of being called a contemporary classic.
100 Boston Globe Jay Carr
Music for the eyes. That's why it has become a treasured classic. That's why we'll see it again and again.
100 The New Yorker Anthony Lane
Spielberg wrote a poem. And all the best movies are poems. [25 Mar 2002, p. 86]
100 Entertainment Weekly Owen Gleiberman
In E.T., Spielberg proved a herald of the age when moviegoers would make full-time friends with fantasy, but his most special effect was taking us into ourselves.
100 Salon.com Charles Taylor
One of the loveliest and happiest of American movie entertainments.
100 Philadelphia Inquirer Carrie Rickey
If we approach with sympathy and curiosity, we will be rewarded with same. And our souls, not to mention our bicycles, will soar to the heavens.
90 LA Weekly Paul Malcolm
The film's real power to move flows from its low, childlike angles, which, rather than infantalize its audience, bring it down to where the hurt and fear, and hence the comfort, loom larger.
83 Portland Oregonian Kim Morgan
It's a fascinating look into what Spielberg truly loves, but it's not so much a masterpiece as a nice milestone.
80 Rolling Stone Peter Travers
When E.T. debuts on DVD, you can choose between the new version, which better matches E.T.'s words to his lips, and the sweetly clunky, digitally deprived version redolent of penis breath. I don't need to phone home to know which one I'm buying.
80 TV Guide Staff (not credited)
One of the most popular movies ever made, E.T. translates religious myth into cute, familiar terrain.
80 New Times (L.A.) Gregory Weinkauf
We're told that this new version is tweaked and enhanced, with the E.T. puppet digitally smoothed out, and the guns in the meanies' hands removed (silly, but bravo).
75 San Francisco Chronicle Mick LaSalle
A fine picture because it can still, without fail, make an entire audience of children shut up and fall in love with a little green alien with big eyes and a turtlelike body.
75 Christian Science Monitor David Sterritt
Doesn't make it a masterpiece, but it's fun.
60 Film Threat Rick Kisonak
The story itself holds up fairly well though, twenty years later, does come off as thinner than I recalled.
60 Village Voice Don McKellar
E.T. is a dog movie. Genre-wise, I mean. It's about a boy meeting a dog, naming it, taming it, learning from it, and growing up. Of course, the genre is superficially disguised as science fiction, as was the fashion at the time.

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