Watch The Trailer For THE FABELMANS, Directed By Steven Spielberg And Starring Michelle Williams, Paul Dano, Seth Rogen And Judd Hirsch

THE FABELMANS had its premiere on Saturday evening at the 2022 Toronto International Film Festival.

The film was met with a standing ovation at the Princess of Wales theater and rave reviews by critics. Read The Hollywood Reporter’s review HERE. Oscar pundit and THR’s executive editor of awards Scott Feinberg writes in his wrap-up, “As for the film itself? It is, at least for now, the one to beat in the best picture race.”

Variety’s Peter Debruge says: “The master of escapist entertainment gets personal in this 150-minute self-portrait, crafting a loving homage to the complicated relationship with his parents that has informed so much of his work.”

Indiewire’s Eric Kohn states: “While Spielberg made history last year as the only director to receive Best Director nominations across six decades, he has never received a nomination for screenwriting. The movie is positioned to elbow its way into a crowded Best Original Screenplay field that includes everything from Martin McDonagh’s “The Banshees of Inisherin,” Todd Field’s “TÁR,” and Billy Eichner’s “Bros.” With a score by John Williams and Janusz Kaminski’s usual elegant lensing, “The Fabelmans” boasts top-shelf crafts to support its small-scale narrative. More than that, the movie will stand out in a wide-open Best Picture field for the way it celebrates the cathartic power of the movies.”

Directed by Steven Spielberg, The Fabelmans is written by Spielberg and Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Tony Kushner (Angels in America, Caroline, or Change), who has earned Oscar® nominations for his screenplays for Spielberg’s Lincoln and Munich.

The film stars Gabriel LaBelle (The Predator, American Gigolo series) as 16-year-old aspiring filmmaker Sammy Fabelman; four-time Academy Award® nominee Michelle Williams (Manchester by the Sea, My Week with Marilyn) as his artistic mother, Mitzi; Paul Dano (The Batman, There Will Be Blood) as his successful, scientific father, Burt; Seth Rogen (Steve Jobs, An American Pickle) as Bennie Loewy, Burt’s best friend and honorary “uncle” to the Fabelman children, and Academy Award® nominee Judd Hirsch (Uncut Gems, Ordinary People) as Mitzi’s Uncle Boris.

On September 6th the American Film Institute (AFI) announced that Universal Pictures’ and Amblin Entertainment’s THE FABELMANS, directed by AFI Life Achievement Award recipient and Academy Award®-winning director Steven Spielberg, will close AFI FEST 2022.

Check out the brand new trailer.

The ensemble cast includes Oscar® nominee Jeannie Berlin (The Heartbreak Kid, Inherent Vice) as Sammy’s paternal grandmother, Hadassah Fabelman; Julia Butters (Once Upon a Time … in Hollywood, 13 Hours) as Sammy’s sister Reggie; Robin Bartlett (Moonstruck, Lean on Me) as Sammy’s maternal grandmother Tina Schildkraut and Keeley Karsten (Hunters, Evil Lives Here) as Sammy’s sister Natalie.

The music is by five-time Academy Award® winner John Williams (Schindler’s List, Jaws), the costume designer is two-time Oscar® winner Mark Bridges (The Artist, Phantom Thread) and the production designer is two-time Oscar® winner Rick Carter (Lincoln, Avatar). The Fabelmans is edited by three-time Academy Award® winner Michael Kahn ace (Saving Private Ryan, Schindler’s List) and Sarah Broshar (West Side Story, The Post). The film’s director of photography is two-time Academy Award® winner Janusz Kaminski (Schindler’s List, Saving Private Ryan).

The film is produced by three-time Oscar® nominee Kristie Macosko Krieger p.g.a. (West Side Story, The Post), Steven Spielberg p.g.a. and Tony Kushner p.g.a. The film is executive produced by Carla Raij (Maestro, co-producer West Side Story) and Josh McLaglen (Free Guy, Logan).

The Fabelmans opens in Select Theaters November 11, everywhere November 23.

CAFÉ SOCIETY – Review

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Woody Allen narrates CAFÉ SOCIETY, his 47th film and at age 80, his voice is sounding sadly geezerish.  Set in the mid-1930’s, CAFÉ SOCIETY has a cool period soundtrack, an older man courting a much younger woman, a Jewish family kibitzing around the dinner table, quotable dialog on love and life, and a neurotic Jewish hero channeling a much younger Woody. In other words, all the elements of a great Woody Allen film. It also has Vittorio Storaro’s rapturous cinematography (a Woody first) and a terrific and complex central performance from Jesse Eisenberg. CAFÉ SOCIETY is the most romantic Woody since ANNIE HALL and one of his best.

Leaving his (very) Jewish family back in the Bronx, young Bobby Dorfman (Jesse Eisenberg) heads west to “learn the movie business” from his Uncle Phil (Steve Carell), a bigtime Hollywood talent agent. Phil assigns his captivating, but romantically unavailable, secretary Vonnie (Kristen Stewart) the job of showing his nephew around town. A disillusioned wannabe actress from Nebraska, Vonnie enjoys taking Bobby to Barbara Stanwyck movies and on a tour of movie star’s homes (actually just their front yards). Bobby falls hard for Vonnie, but soon discovers she’s having an affair with married Uncle Phil. Around CAFÉ SOCIETY’s 40-minute mark, the story moves, along with a heartbroken Bobby, home to the Bronx. There we get to know his unruly family – joyless dad Marty (Ken Stott), strident mom Rose (Jeannie Berlin), sister Evelyn (Sari Lennick) who’s married to Leonard (Stephen Kunken), a proud but depressed Communist, and charismatic older brother Ben (Corey Stoll), a hotheaded gangster who’s opening a nightclub. Bobby finds success managing Ben’s popular business, which soon becomes a hot spot for the Café Society of NYC. Years pass, Bobby takes a beautiful bride named Veronica (Blake Lively), and has a couple of kids, but his heart still belongs to Vonnie, who is destined to re-enter his life.

Woody Allen has delivered his impressive movie-a-year gift for so long now that we fans are accused of declaring “one of Woody’s best!” far too often, but CAFÉ SOCIETY really is! It’s his most visually polished film ever. Storaro’s digital photography (Allen has always shot on film) gives CAFÉ SOCIETY a luminous golden-hued atmosphere no Woody film has achieved. His evocation of ‘30s Hollywood seems authentic thanks to Santo Loquasto’s meticulous production design and Suzy Benzinger’s perfect period costuming.

Allen’s script constantly name-drops Hollywood stars of the period (“Adolph Menjou is threatening to walk off the set!”), but that’s a tease. Unlike the Coen Brother’s HAIL CAESAR from earlier this year (which on the surface covers some of the same ground), the movie stars never actually materialize in CAFÉ SOCIETY as Woody wisely keeps the story focused on the love triangle.

No director works better with actors than Woody Allen (has anyone else directed seven Oscar-winning performances?) and CAFÉ SOCIETY is no exception. It’s Jesse Eisenberg’s second Woody (he was part of the TO ROME WITH LOVE ensemble) but the first he’s had to carry. His Bobby Dorfman is at the center of almost every scene as the Woody Allen surrogate, a tricky challenge which can be a disaster if done poorly (Kenneth Branagh’s lazy parroting in CELEBRITY) and sincere when done well (my fave is Larry David in WHATEVER WORKS), but Eisenberg proves up to the challenge. In an early scene the virgin Bobby hires a hooker (Anna Camp) who herself has never turned a trick. It’s a lengthy, sharply-written scene and in it the actor mimics Woody’s tics and mannerisms. I rolled my eyes and confess to have brought a personal bias against Eisenberg. I’ve never been sold on his fussy anti-charisma and his Lex Luthor was the worst element of the recent BATMAN VS SUPERMAN (and that’s saying a lot!), but a fascinating thing happens as CAFÉ SOCIETY progresses. As Bobby grows and matures, the nebbish-ness melts away convincingly and he becomes his own, more naturally confident character (Woody shoots his films sequentially and deserves some of the credit). By the time the film was over, I could not imagine another actor as Bobby. The wonderful Jeannie Berlin (whose Lila in THE HEARTBREAK KID is one of the great comic creations of the ‘70s) as momma Rose gets the funniest lines including a gutbuster that ends with the phrase “What have I done to deserve this?!”. Berlin is such a natural in the Woody universe, you wonder why he’s never cast her before (though he did use her mother Elaine May hilariously in SMALL TIME CROOKS). Sari Lennick (who has a great face I immediately recognized from the Coen Brother’s A SERIOUS MAN where she played Michael Stuhlbarg’s wife) is also a standout as Bobby’s sister Evelyn. She gets her own subplot (the only scenes sans Bobby) where she regrets asking her mobster brother Ben to intervene in a feud with a hostile neighbor. It’s a tangent that has nothing to do with Bobby’s story but I’m glad it’s there as it allows Woody to revisit one of his favorite themes: the ethics of guilt and murder he’s presented with such substance in CRIMES AND MISDEMEANORS, MATCH POINT, and last year’s IRRATIONAL MAN. Corey Stoll is priceless as one of the most likeable cold-blooded murderers you’d want to meet while a couple of bloody gangland killings are a bit shocking to see in a Woody Allen film. Steve Carell and Blake Lively are fine in less colorful roles. End-of-year Oscar buzz may swirl around Kristen Stewart and for good reason. Like Bobby, you miss Vonnie when she’s not on screen and her spirit is at the center of CAFÉ SOCIETY’s perfect, melancholy final shot. I don’t know how many films Woody Allen has left in him so savor and celebrate while you can something as perfect as CAFÉ SOCIETY. Did I mention that it’s one of Woody’s best?

5 of 5 Stars

CAFÉ SOCIETY opens in St. Louis July 28th at, among other places, The Hi-Pointe Theater

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The First Poster And Trailer Are Here Woody Allen’s Bittersweet Romance CAFÉ SOCIETY

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Watch the first trailer for Woody Allen’s CAFÉ SOCIETY.

The movie will have its world premiere on opening night of the 69th Cannes Film Festival.

Amazon Studios & Lionsgate will release CAFÉ SOCIETY on July 15, 2016.

Set in the 1930s, Woody Allen’s bittersweet romance CAFÉ SOCIETY follows Bronx-born Bobby Dorfman (Jesse Eisenberg) to Hollywood, where he falls in love, and back to New York, where he is swept up in the vibrant world of high society nightclub life.

Centering on events in the lives of Bobby’s colorful Bronx family, the film is a glittering valentine to the movie stars, socialites, playboys, debutantes, politicians, and gangsters who epitomized the excitement and glamour of the age.

Bobby’s family features his relentlessly bickering parents Rose (Jeannie Berlin) and Marty (Ken Stott), his casually amoral gangster brother Ben (Corey Stoll); his good-hearted teacher sister Evelyn (Sari Lennick), and her egghead husband Leonard (Stephen Kunken). For the hooligan Ben, there are no questions that can’t be answered with brute force, but the others are more likely to ponder deeper matters, like right and wrong, life and death, and the commercial viability of religion.

Seeking more out of life, Bobby flees his father’s jewelry store for Hollywood, where he works for his high-powered agent uncle Phil (Steve Carell). He soon falls for Phil’s charming assistant Vonnie (Kristen Stewart), but as she’s involved with another man, he settles for friendship. Bobby also befriends Rad (Parker Posey), a model agency owner, and her husband Steve (Paul Schneider), a wealthy producer.

When Vonnie’s boyfriend breaks up with her, Bobby seizes the opportunity to romance her, and she ultimately returns his affections. When he asks her to marry him and move to New York, she is tempted, but things do not go as smoothly as planned.

Heartbroken, Bobby returns to New York, where he begins working for Ben, who has muscled his way into owning a nightclub. Bobby displays natural talents as an impresario and swiftly promotes the club into the hottest in town, renaming it “Les Tropiques.” Rad introduces him to the beautiful socialite Veronica (Blake Lively) and he courts her assiduously. Although he is still carrying a torch for Vonnie, when Veronica reveals she’s pregnant, they marry and begin a genuinely happy life together.

Everything seems to have fallen into place for Bobby until the night Vonnie walks into “Les Tropiques.”

Poignant, and often hilarious, CAFÉ SOCIETY, a film with a novel’s sweep, takes us on a journey from pastel-clad dealmakers in plush Hollywood mansions, to the quarrels and tribulations of a humble Bronx family, to the rough-and-tumble violence of New York gangsters, to the sparkling surfaces and secret scandals of Manhattan high life.

With CAFÉ SOCIETY, Woody Allen conjures up a 1930s world that has passed to tell a deeply romantic tale of dreams that never die.

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