Great opinions! Now, lemme trash 'em... :)
1. Close Encounters (thin stringy aliens)
Since there were no aliens in A.I., I don't see that connection.
2. Raiders (half eaten faces)
Hardly similar, and for vastly different reasons in any case.
3. ET (search lights at night)
Any searches at night require lights.
4. Jurassic Park (Motorcycles teeth chasing robots)
Now that's a bit of a stretch.
5. Tron (motorcycle rider outfits)
See any movie about a dystopian future for similar outfits. Almost universal.
6. Saving Private Ryan (pointless suicide)
Hardly pointless, and a bit of a stretch to equate suicide to SPR.
7. Amistad(robots in cages)
Cages are hardly unique to Amistad.
8. Hook (fairy granting wishes)
An almost universal storyline, on a deep enough level.
9. The Color Purple (I want my mommy)
An even more universal theme.
10. 1941 (crashing ferris wheel)
I'll grant you that one.
11. Always (2000 years?)
LOL, you know that one is absurd.
12, Sugarland Express (chased by bad police)
What bad police?
13. Duel (dueling helicopters)
What dueling helicopters?
14 Jaws (trapped under water)
Who got trapped under water in Jaws for 2,000 years?
Then there are the endless staring scenes with the now typical Spielbergesq poor writing that has taken over all his latest movies. How many times did the little dude say mommy?
Evidently not nearly enough for you to get the theme, eh? :)
It nearly drove me crazy. What was the point of all the around the table endless eating scenes?
First to show David wanting to learn all about his human parents, then to show what the brother did to him. Finally as a symbol of his interest in his parents, even during times that had no relevance to him.
Was there one human in this movie that had any redeeming qualities? All seemed to be selfish and cruel.
Meet Stanley Kubrick! All his movies have this element.
I spent the first half of the movie trying to stay awake and the second half trying to find an excuse for not leaving. I never found it.
Fair enough, can't argue with that and you are welcome to your opinion. However, you can't really criticize Spielberg for a) using universal themes (all stories do), and b) for many things that were Kubrick's or Aldiss's ideas, not Spielberg's.