Ready Player One Movie Review

By
Anders — Editorial Lead
Anders is the creative force and technical architect behind Divine Magazine’s editorial identity. Blending Scandinavian minimalism with a sharp instinct for digital storytelling, he shapes the...

From filmmaker Steven Spielberg comes the science fiction action adventure “Ready Player One,” based on Ernest Cline’s bestseller of the same name, which has become a worldwide phenomenon.

The film is set in 2045, with the world on the brink of chaos and collapse. But the people have found salvation in the OASIS, an expansive virtual reality universe created by the brilliant and eccentric James Halliday (Mark Rylance). When Halliday dies, he leaves his immense fortune to the first person to find a digital Easter egg he has hidden somewhere in the OASIS, sparking a contest that grips the entire world. When an unlikely young hero named Wade Watts (Tye Sheridan) decides to join the contest, he is hurled into a breakneck, reality-bending treasure hunt through a fantastical universe of mystery, discovery and danger.

 

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Director: Steven Spielberg

Written by: Zak Penn

Year: 2018

MPAA: PG-13

Rating Tag: Must See

Pros: A nostalgic movie for all things nerdy. A triumph of its time.

Cons: 3D is not as necessary as they would like you to believe, Soundtrack is somewhat derivative. 

Ready Player One: Soundtrack Score + Song Album

Ready Player One review

Ready Player one is a nerds greatest fantasy, and if you haven’t read the book don’t worry, Spielberg makes one of the greatest book-movie adaptations in recent memory. While the book was primarily a call back to 80’s culture, the movie is more cross-generational in that it moves flawlessly from Gundam, Halo, and Overwatch cameos -> to Back to the Future and Star Trek references -> to a zero gravity dance scene set to the Bee Gees ‘Stayin Alive’. Ready Player One has nearly every media minded reference you can imagine mixed with top notch CGI and a plot that translates perfectly into a film (no poorly executed dues ex machinas) that shows not every movie based on a book is orders of magnitude worse. (Let’s be honest, Enders Game movie was trash). If you read Ernest Cline’s book, the film’s scenery matches what you imagined. Kind of like when Harry, Ron, and Hermione on screen somehow looked exactly how you thought they would when you read the book. The 3D features were cool but largely not all that necessary (per usual) and the soundtrack was very ‘Spielbergy’ (if that makes sense). But if you like games, movies, TV, or are a self-proclaimed nerd you will absolutely love this movie, and this time you don’t need to read the book to get the best version of the story.

Rating: 9

Actors Performance: 8

Soundtrack: 6.5

Overall Rating: 8.5

 

Review by Lumumba Mutua

 

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Anders is the creative force and technical architect behind Divine Magazine’s editorial identity. Blending Scandinavian minimalism with a sharp instinct for digital storytelling, he shapes the magazine’s voice, visual rhythm, and structural clarity. His work moves between worlds — part editor, part engineer — ensuring every article is not only beautifully crafted but technically flawless beneath the surface. From SEO frameworks to asset design, from WordPress architecture to the magazine’s cinematic featured imagery, Anders builds the systems that let stories breathe. He curates Divine’s tone with intention: clean lines, honest language, and a commitment to elevating everyday subjects into something quietly extraordinary. Whether refining editorial workflows or sculpting the magazine’s long‑term creative direction, Anders brings a steady hand and an eye for detail — the kind that turns a publication into a signature.
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