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"Movies are dreams that you never forget."
Mitzi Fabelman

The Fabelmans is a coming-of-age film directed by Steven Spielberg, who co-wrote the screenplay with Tony Kushnernote . The film is inspired by Spielberg's childhood and teenage years in Arizona and California in the 1950s and 1960s, with a focus on the events that led to his parents' divorce.

The film stars Gabriel Labelle as Author Avatar Sammy Fabelman, Michelle Williams and Paul Dano as Sammy's parents Mitzi and Burt, Julia Butters as Sammy's sister Reggie, and Seth Rogen as Burt's best friend (and the Fabelman children's surrogate uncle) Bennie Loewy. It follows the Fabelmans' two major cross-country moves as Sammy confronts anti-Semitism at his high school, discovers a talent and love for filmmaking, and struggles to navigate his parents' contrary natures and goals for both him and their marriage.

Premiering at the 47th Toronto International Film Festival on September 10, 2022, the film received a limited theatrical release in the United States on November 11, 2022, before opening wide on November 23, by Universal Picturesnote .


The Fabelmans contains examples of:

  • The '50s: Sammy's childhood takes place during this period, starting when his parents take him to see the 1952 film The Greatest Show on Earth.
  • The '60s: Sam's teen years takes place during this period, culminating in him graduating with the class of 1964.
  • '60s Hair: The girls are sporting long hair held by ponytails or headbands, short flips, and bouffants, Sammy's date wears her hair in the then-trendy Beehive Hairdo, and Sammy's hair grows into a Beatle cut by the time the movie ends in 1966.
  • Actor Allusion: Judd Hirsch's character arrives by, and leaves by, a Taxi.
  • Age Cut: 7-year-old Sammy is filming the family car pulling into their Phoenix house for the first time. He directs his father into the driveway, says "Aaaaaaaand—", and the film cuts to 14-year-old Sammy saying "—stop!", as he films his Boy Scout friends.
  • All of the Other Reindeer: The Fabelmans are Jewish, and when they move to California, Sam unfortunately faces some anti-Semitic bullying, e.g. calling him Bagelman, demanding he apologize for killing Jesus, and physical assaults. This is in direct contrast to his life in Arizona where he was accepted for who he was and had a close group of friends.
  • Amicable Exes: Burt and Mitzi, despite the rocky reasons of the split, seem amicable enough to each other.
  • Anachronism Stew: In the background of a shot that has vinyl soundtracks, the Deluxe Letterbox Laserdisc release of The Great Escape can be spotted. The format wouldn't be invented for another 13 years.
  • Answer Cut: While Sammy and his friends in Arizona are watching The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance, one of them asks Sammy, "So, what kind of movie are we going to make?" Cut to another one of his friends dressed up as an outlaw in the western Sammy is making.
  • Artistic License – History: While Sammy Fabelman's story is based on Steven Spielberg's own life, there are a few differences between them:
    • While going to school in California, Sammy briefly dates a Christian girl named Monica, before ultimately breaking up with her near the end of the last day of school. Steven Spielberg himself never had a girlfriend during his teenage years.
    • Logan continues to be a Jerkass after watching how the Senior Skip Day film glorified him, and angrily asks why Sammy would make him look that good. In real life, according to Spielberg's biographer Joseph McBridge, the bully actually approached him "a changed person". He found the film Actually Pretty Funny and wished he'd gotten to know him better.
    • After meeting with John Ford, Sammy is shown being grateful for the man's tough love attitude and the advice he gives him, happily walking into the sunrise to start his own film career. In real life, Spielberg admitted that he was actually traumatized by the meeting at the time, as he believed that he'd made a fool of himself in front of Ford due to misunderstanding him, not helped by him telling Spielberg to "get the fuck out" of his office shortly after. It wouldn't be until years later that Spielberg realized what Ford's advice meant.
  • Author Avatar: Sammy Fabelman is one for Steven Spielberg.
  • Barbaric Bully: Chad is very casual with his threats of violence towards Sammy, so much so that even Logan has to reign him in periodically. Unlike Logan, Chad doesn't reevaluate himself after seeing Sammy's Senior Ditch Day and attempts to physically assault Sammy.
  • Based on a True Story: The movie is a riff on Spielberg's real-life childhood, with particular attention paid to his parents' divorce, his childhood film work, and his early career path, with the details of the people involved roughly accurate. However, there are a number of notable changes made in order to both make it a better story and capture the emotional takeaways a little better.
  • Bilingual Bonus: Just like "Spielberg" has some meanings related to storytelling (it's German for play-mountain, 'spieler' is 'actor' in Yiddish, and a 'spiel' is a speech), "Fabelman" was chosen specifically for featuring the German word for 'fable'.
  • Bird-Poop Gag: Sammy's movie of the class trip invokes it, by filming a person laying in the sand, and as the camera is raised to film a flying seagull, dropping ice cream on the face.
  • Birds of a Feather: Played for tragedy. Despite being an engineer like Burt, Bennie is a very spontaneous and fun-loving man who likes to entertain others, just like Mitzi. This leads to them carrying out an affair. Mitzi tries her hardest to stick with Burt because he is a kind and hardworking man who she knows doesn't deserve what she's putting him through, but she ultimately realizes that Bennie just offers her more emotionally, leading to Burt and Mitzi getting divorced.
  • Bittersweet Ending: Burt and Mitzi divorce and split up the family, with Sammy going to live with Burt and Mitzi marrying Bennie. However, Burt finally gives his blessing to Sammy pursuing a filmmaking career and, having secured some work on Hogan's Heroes and getting advice from John Ford, Sammy's future in the field looks very bright.
  • Boyish Short Hair: Mitzi has the late Leah Adler's (Spielberg's mother) Peter Pan-style haircut, which was cutting-edge for women of her generation.
  • Call to Adventure: After the death of Mitzi's mother, the Fabelmans get a visit from Mitzi's uncle Boris, a former lion-tamer and filmmaker. While staying the night in Sammy's room, he says his dad maybe isn't going to understand his art, but people in his family like himself and his mother are good at it, and he's got to pursue it despite the obstacles.
  • The Cameo: None other than David Lynch pops up in the end as John Ford.
  • Censorship by Spelling: As the Fabelmans drive home from the movie and Burt and Mitzi discuss if it was too much for the young Sammy:
    Burt: I told you this wasn't a good idea, what with all of his A-N-X-I-E-T-I-E-S.
    Mitzie: Kids his age have big I-M-A-G-I-N-A-T-I-O-N-S.
  • Central Theme:
    • Art versus Technology. Sammy's mother is creative and emotional but also rather flighty, while his father is brilliant and responsible but sometimes rather detached. Many the Fabelmans' conflicts are a result of it. Becoming a filmmaker is how Sammy combines the two.
    • Masculinity. The role of the male in 20th century society is examined, from positive aspects to toxic. Sammy has a number of key masculine role models in his life.
  • Cool Uncle: Sammy's great-uncle Boris is a former lion tamer who has lived an exciting life and even has experience with filmmaking. He also shows support for Sammy's dream.
  • Establishing Character Moment: In the first scene, both Burt and Mitzi's personalities are demonstrated by how they try to reassure Sammy that there's nothing to be afraid of at the movies, Burt by scientifically explaining how a projector works and Mitzi by comparing movies to dreams.
  • Fantasy-Forbidding Father: Downplayed. Burt is fairly supportive of Sam's filmmaking... but as a hobby, not a vocation. Mitzi calls this out:
    Mitzi Fabelman: You dismiss what he does as "playful" or "imaginative" [...] you could afford to be a little encouraging.
  • Foreshadowing: It's not hard to realize Bennie and Mitzi are in love with each other, even before Sammy does. Mitzi being distressed upon moving to Phoenix without him and fighting Burt about it is the first big sign. Likewise, in the scene where she dances in front of the headlights, you can see Bennie watching her with the same adoration that Burt does.
  • Gentile Jew-Chaser: Monica, a devout Christian, is instantly interested in Sammy when she learns from Claudia that he's Jewish (because she loves Jesus, and Jesus was Jewish). The relationship creates not an insubstantial amount of drama.
  • Heel Realization: Logan has this after watching Sammy's Senior Ditch Day and realize how mean he has been to Sammy. Averted with Chad, who doesn't take the film well and seeks out Sammy to physically retaliate.
  • High School: The latter portion of the film has Sam at a new high school in Saratoga, CA, after the family has moved. He has a miserable experience there, being bullied by anti-Semitic jocks.note 
  • High-School Dance: Sam shows his "Ditch Day" film to the students at the Saratoga High senior prom—right after Monica broke up with him after Sam proposed marriage.
  • Honorary Uncle: Bennie is referred to as "Uncle Bennie" despite not being related to either of Sammy's parents. He eventually does become Sammy's stepfather.
  • I Never Said It Was Poison: Sammy tells Claudia that Logan cheated on her with a redheaded girl. Logan punches Sam in the nose and tells him that if he doesn't go back and tell Claudia he was lying, Logan will hurt him worse. Sam duly goes back to Claudia and says he was lying—but Claudia isn't fooled, noting that there was no way Sam could have known Logan's ex-girlfriend Renee has red hair.
  • Inferiority Superiority Complex: It's implied that Logan has some self-esteem issues, as he takes issue with the borderline-heroic portrayal of himself in Sammy's Ditch Day film, feeling that he can never live up to that in reality.
  • Jerkass Has a Point: A humorous example. Despite coming off as grouchy, John Ford gives Sammy good advice on frame making. The last frame's Meta approach shows Ford was right.
    • Burt's mom is standoffish towards Mitzi and Bennie. Considering that the two are later revealed to be having a affair, she is right to not like or trust either of them.
  • Jerk Jock: At Saratoga High, Sam is relentlessly bullied by a gang of jocks led by Logan and Chad, who hurl anti-Semitic insults. On one occasion Logan punches Sammy in the nose.
  • Jerk with a Heart of Gold: After giving Sammy some tough love and telling him to get the fuck out of his office, John Ford goes back to his cigar. Sammy drops back in to sincerely thank him, and the old man cracks a genuine smile, saying it was his pleasure.
  • Leaning on the Fourth Wall: Sammy and Logan's final conversation is a borderline example of this when Sammy jokingly says no one will never know of their conversation unless he makes it into a movie.
    • The final shot is this with the camera being adjusted the way John Ford had recommended how you should do a camera angle in the previous scene.
  • Logo Joke: The Amblin Moon passes by Universal's Earth, making for a seamless transition between logos.
  • Lost in Character: Played for Laughs. While making Sammy's World War II film, his friend Angelo gets so deep into character as he walks off into the distance that he doesn't hear Sammy and the others yelling to him that they've finished the shot and he can come back.
  • Malicious Misnaming: The anti-Semitic bully Chad repeatedly calls Sammy "Bagelman."
  • Meaningful Name: A kid called Fabelman wants to become a storyteller. The name is also a hidden pun, as Kushner revealed in interviews.
    Tony Kushner: "Spielberg" in German means "Play Mountain"; and in German, "der Fabel" is the outline that you make of a play.
  • Mischief-Making Monkey: Sammy's mother buys one at one point, simply because she "needed a laugh." It immediately climbs on his father's head and wrecks the house. While at times played for laughs, it also stands as a symbol of Mitzi's instability, particularly when she names him Bennie.
  • Musical Gag: The song on the soundtrack as we open on ditch day (which Sam has agreed to film) is "Goodbye Cruel World" (I'm off to join the Circus). A callback to Uncle Max's speech.
  • Mythology Gag:
  • Off-into-the-Distance Ending: Sam skipping away down what appears to be the Universal lot, having started his new career in show business.
  • Parents as People: Besides Sam, Mitzi and Burt Fabelman are the protagonists of the film, and are suitably complex.
    • Burt is an excellent provider and a caring father and husband, but he also doesn't understand Mitzi or Sammy's artistic sides very well, is oblivious to the negative results the family's relocations have on his children, and doesn't have the guts to address his wife's affair.
    • Mitzi is a loving mother but simply isn't emotionally satisfied with Burt and is having an emotional affair with his best friend. She's also prone to emotional outbursts and rash decisions that hurt the rest of the family.
  • Precision F-Strike: John Ford tells Sammy to "Get the fuck" out of his office.
  • Quitting to Get Married: Mitzi quit performing piano professionally to marry Burt. She still does it occasionally, but her doomed dream is one of Sammy's motivators not to end up like her.
  • The Reason You Suck: Sammy has one with Logan after Logan sees the movie and calls out for making him look like a hero in the movie:
    Sammy Fabelman: I wanted you to be nice to me for five minutes! Or maybe I did it to make my movie better. I don't know why. You're the biggest jerk I've ever met in my entire life. I have a monkey at home that's smarter than you! YOU DUMB ANTI-SEMITIC ASSHOLE! ...I made you look like you could fly.
  • Shell-Shocked Veteran: Downplayed. When Sam starts talking to Burt about the World War II movie he's making, referring to WWII as "your war", Burt quickly changes the subject, and later when somebody asks Sam if it was inspired by his father's stories, Sam says Burt doesn't talk about his service much.
  • Shout-Out:
  • Significant Background Event: In-Universe. Sammy is looking at a clip of his home movie of the family camping trip, with his sisters goofing around sword fighting with sticks. He notices, in the background, Benny and Mitzi briefly holding hands and then Benny slipping an arm around Mitzi's waist. He realizes that his mother is having an affair.
  • Simple, yet Awesome: When watching Sammy's western film for his Boy Scout merit badge, everyone is impressed that Sammy managed to make the actor's toy pistols flash as they fired like real firearms. Sammy explains to his dad that he accomplished this by simply using a pin to poke holes in the film strip so the projector's light would shine through.
  • Sympathetic Adulterer: A variation in that the adultery is a serious flaw with terrible consequences but the characters involved with it are sympathetic. Neither Bennie nor Mitzi are bad people despite them carrying out an emotional affair behind Burt's back. Bennie legitimately loves Mitzi's children, and Mitzi has repeatedly attempted to come clean about it to Burt only for him to engage in Oblivious Guilt Slinging every time. Bennie doesn't even hold it against Sammy when Sammy starts giving him the cold shoulder upon finding out, continuing to encourage him to follow his dream of becoming a filmmaker.
  • Took a Level in Kindness: As shown above under Heel Realization, Logan realizes how cruel he has been to Sammy and while he isn't necessarily friends with Sammy by the end, he still reaches an understanding with him and even defends Sammy by punching out Chad when Chad attempts to attack him.
  • Two-Timing with the Bestie: Mitzi is having an emotional affair with her husband's best friend and subordinate Bennie.
  • We Named the Monkey "Jack": Mitzi buys a pet monkey after the family moves from Phoenix to Saratoga. Naming the monkey "Bennie" causes some tension in the already-stressed household, and she offers to change its name as a placating gesture.
  • Why Did You Make Me Hit You?: Mitzi slaps Sammy on the back after their argument, and looks horrified. The film doesn't side with her, but she is shown sympathetically.
  • You Hate What You Are: When Sammy is ranting about hating Mitzi for her selfishness after his parents announce their divorce, his sister points out that he, of all the siblings, is the most like her by a long shot.


 
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John Ford's Rule of Horizons

In character as legendary director John Ford, fellow legendary director David Lynch gives Sam Fabelman (Gabriel LaBelle) advice on framing a scene.

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