Legendary filmmaker Steven Spielberg is getting a bit more personal with his next project, helping to create a feature-length documentary on the life of long-time friend and fellow Hollywood icon John Williams. As household names on the directing and composing sides, respectively, Spielberg and Williams are pretty much the perfect match for each other, both for this project and the countless others they've collaborated on.

Fresh off the success of Spielberg's daunting recent hit The Fabelmans, the seasoned director and producer has now set his sights on the life and career of Williams. Known by legions of moviegoers for his timeless soundtracks to films like the mainline Star Wars movies and Spielberg's own Indiana Jones (including the upcoming sequel Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny), Williams is easily one of the most recognizable names in Hollywood. So now, after the 90-year-old composer recently returned to Star Wars to work on Obi-Wan Kenobi for Disney+, the world is finally ready for the whole story.

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According to The Hollywood Reporter, while not directing Williams' unnamed documentary, Spielberg is one of several producers spearheading the project. They include Ron Howard and Meredith Kaulfers, the latter of whom also produced Lawrence Kasdan's 2022 ILM documentary Light & Magic. Meanwhile, the director's chair will be filled by French-American filmmaker Laurent Bouzereau, who has collaborated with Spielberg on a number of documentaries in the past.

John Williams on stage with Darth Vader and Stormtroopers

Even if it wasn't for Williams' iconic work on Star Wars, he would still have a mountain of accomplishments propping up his legendary status. Some argue that his work on Jurassic Park is his true greatest achievement. Others stand by his memorable Superman and Jaws themes that still remain in the cultural lexicon to this day, decades after they were originally written. All it takes is humming a bar or two from any of his most treasured tracks and a whole room of people will instantly find themselves singing along, possibly without realizing it. Not bad for an almost entirely instrumental catalog of music.

Spielberg and Williams have worked together for 50 years at this point, and not just in the more popular projects. Even some of Spielberg's more underappreciated movies included music from the renowned composer. From Jaws and Close Encounters of the Third Kind in the 70s all the way to 2021's West Side Story (which Williams obviously didn't score, but did serve on as a musical consultant), they've been thick as melodically satisfying thieves for half a century. So while Spielberg isn't the director, his involvement in the documentary would be a given no matter who made it.

The only downside here would be the idea of certain fans' favorite Williams soundtracks not getting a substantial focus in the feature. Sure, Star Wars and Indiana Jones will definitely feature prominently, as will everyone's favorite alien E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial. But fans of Hook and Memoirs Of A Geisha might have to set aside their biases for a bit. Hard to cram a lifetime's worth of bangers into a single feature, after all. Though maybe James Gunn could figure out a way.

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Source: The Hollywood Reporter