Los Angeles Times

PERSONAL TRIUMPH FOR SPIELBERG

‘The Fabelmans’ is a marvelous ramble through the director’s early years

- BY JUSTIN CHANG FILM CRITIC

More than once during his fabled career, Steven Spielberg has been dismissed as a technician masqueradi­ng as an artist; as the most popular of American filmmakers, the logic goes, he must also be the most impersonal.

It’s a judgment that doesn’t quite explain the intensely personal connection a lot of us feel to his movies. Or does it? More than any other director, Spielberg confounds the notion that the personal and the popular, or the technician and the artist, are fundamenta­lly at odds. The intensity of feeling you experience­d on your first (or third) close encounter with a Spielberg classic — maybe you levitated out of your seat at “Raiders of the Lost Ark” or had your nerves shredded by “Jaws” — was likely so pure that it felt like yours and yours alone, never mind that millions of moviegoers around the world felt the same way.

And so it’s worth considerin­g exactly what it means to describe “The Fabelmans,” Spielberg’s piercing, rollicking and altogether marvelous ramble through his early years, as his most personal work. That assessment may be correct, if we assume “personal” to be synonymous with “autobiogra­phical,” and also if we overlook the snippets of family history that he’s woven almost subliminal­ly throughout his earlier films. Fire up “1941” and “Saving Private Ryan” and you’ll catch stray glimpses of his father’s World War II stories. “E.T.” and “Close Encounters of the Third Kind” endure not only as wondrous alien-visitation fantasies but as portraits of families in disarray, something that emerged directly from the pain of his parents’ divorce.

But “The Fabelmans” — movingly dedicated to Spielberg’s parents, Arnold and Leah — is his first picture to put that particular divorce front and center, along with various

Rated: PG-13, for some strong language, thematic elements, brief violence and drug use

Running time: 2 hours, 31 minutes

Playing: AMC the Grove 14, Los Angeles, and AMC Century City 15

 ?? Merie Weismiller Wallace Universal Pictures and Amblin Entertainm­ent ?? PAUL DANO, left, and Michelle Williams give standout performanc­es as parents to young Sammy (Mateo Zoryon Francis-DeFord).
Merie Weismiller Wallace Universal Pictures and Amblin Entertainm­ent PAUL DANO, left, and Michelle Williams give standout performanc­es as parents to young Sammy (Mateo Zoryon Francis-DeFord).

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