Yorkshire Post - YP Magazine

FILM PICK OF THE WEEK

- The Fabelmans Sky Cinema Premiere, review by Yvette Huddleston

Steven Spielberg’s most personal movie yet is a semi-autobiogra­phical coming of age drama loosely based on his own childhood and adolescenc­e and his formative years as a filmmaker.

The Fabelmans are electrical engineer dad Burt (Paul Dano), free-spirited mom Mitzi (Michelle Williams), teenage son Sammy (Gabriel LaBelle) and his three younger sisters. The family often have to move around because of Burt’s work, something which Mitzi finds difficult. She is warm, creative and imaginativ­e, but her mental health is fragile and the marriage under strain. Relocating from New Jersey, the Fabelmans settle briefly in Arizona and then California, where young Sammy is subjected to anti-Semitic bullying at high school.

At the same time, he is becoming aware that lovely family friend ‘uncle’ Benny (a nice understate­d performanc­e from Seth Rogen), who is often around, is becoming more than just a friend to Mitzi. The script addresses, without sentimenta­lity or emotional manipulati­on, the painful legacy of separation and divorce – and especially the effect it has on the children. As well as being a totally engaging family drama, the film also offers an insight into Spielberg’s processes as a filmmaker. In an early scene we see Sammy, as a young child, being taken to the cinema to see The Greatest Show on Earth, watching wide-eyed and totally transporte­d, then obsessivel­y trying to recreate the train crash that features in the movie, with his own toy train set at home. Later Sammy applies this same tenacity and problem-solving to create impressive special effects in a comedy western made with a group of high school friends.

The narrative makes the link too between storytelli­ng, outsider status and observatio­n – those who are on the sidelines watching are often the ones who tell the best stories. And it doesn’t sidestep the uncomforta­ble truth that pain is frequently the catalyst for creativity.

Williams has the showiest role, and she is magnificen­t, but the performanc­es from the whole cast are superb – LaBelle is outstandin­g, channellin­g the young Spielberg impressive­ly and Dano’s quiet, hurt and dignified Burt is very affecting. This is a movie which is, as much as anything, a beautiful, moving tribute to Spielberg’s abiding love of film and to the magic of cinema.

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