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  • The 10 Best Movies Based on the Director’s Own Life

    The 10 Best Movies Based on the Director’s Own Life

    Legendary Italian filmmaker Federico Fellini once said, “All art is autobiographical.” It’s true that every artist views the world through their own unique lens, but some pieces of work are simply more “autobiographical” than others. One of the amazing aspects of storytelling is being able to explore lives that aren’t your own — but there’s always some relatable truth at the center of it. For this reason, some directors find that their most honest work comes directly from their own past experiences.

    Of course, not every single movie based on a director’s own journey is a home run. These movies are still subject to criticism, regardless of how personal they are — and one person’s life story can quickly become overwrought and too sentimental. That being said, there are quite a few directors who are able to turn their memories into cinematic gold. From Steven Spielberg to Greta Gerwig, these filmmakers prove that one’s own history can make for compelling fiction.

    READ MORE: Every Steven Spielberg Movie, Ranked From Worst to Best

    Now, these fantastic films aren’t pure documentaries. In fact, they’re far from it. They bend the truth, shaping characters and events into their most compelling form. They’re not so concerned with emulating straight facts as they are with capturing the essence of one’s own life, and the results are incredibly rewarding. After watching these movies, you’ll feel like you’ve gotten a taste of what the directors have lived through — and you may even see some of yourself in their stories, as well. Here are the 10 best movies that are based on their director’s own life.

    The Best Movies That Are Based On The Director’s Own Life

    These movies took their directors’ own lives, and turned them into amazing works of art.

    Directors Who’ve Cast Their Own Kids in Their Movies

    Claire Epting

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  • The Link Between Sammy Fabelman and Dawson Leery

    The Link Between Sammy Fabelman and Dawson Leery

    Despite the many accolades (rightly) showered upon Steven Spielberg’s latest addition to an auteur’s oeuvre, The Fabelmans, quite a few critics seem to be overlooking the fact that the character based on Spielberg himself, Sammy Fabelman (Gabriel LaBelle), bears many similarities to another youthful filmmaking aspirant: Dawson Leery (James Van Der Beek). Granted, the creator of Dawson’s Creek, Kevin Williamson, could have easily modeled Dawson, in certain respects, on Spielberg, perhaps nodding to that very fact by making Dawson (doubling for Williamson as well) obsessed with Spielberg…far more than the latter is with John Ford (memorably played by David Lynch) in The Fabelmans. But what was less public knowledge at the time when Dawson’s Creek first aired in 1998 was the affair Spielberg’s mother had with a man named Bernie Adler—his name changed to Bennie Loewy (played by Seth Rogen) in the movie. Yet, coincidentally, Dawson’s own mother, Gail (Mary-Margaret Humes), is having an affair as well. Like Sammy, it is Dawson who unearths his mother’s indiscretion—one that his father, Mitch (John Wesley Shipp), would prefer to ignore the signs of due to his own worshipful attitude toward his wife.

    This, too, mirrors the way in which Burt Fabelman (Paul Dano), the character based on Spielberg’s father, Arnold Spielberg, worships Mitzi Fabelman (Michelle Williams), based on Spielberg’s mother, Leah. Then, of course, there is the ultimate connection between Dawson’s Creek and The Fabelmans in that Michelle Williams played Dawson’s first major crush (much to Joey Potter’s [Katie Holmes] dismay), Jen Lindley. Not to get too Oedipal, but Sammy clearly does a bit of crushing on his own mom, even if “solely” from the point of view of placing her on a pedestal like some kind of goddess. As Spielberg once said of Leah, “My mom didn’t parent us as much as she sort of big-sistered us. She was Peter Pan [so no wonder he wanted to direct Hook]. She refused to grow up.” Much the way Dawson (and Spielberg, for that matter) does with his fantasies of being a director and remaining in a pre-puberty state wherein Joey doesn’t start to question the “ease” of sleeping in Dawson’s bed anymore. With Dawson as an OG of having the aforementioned Peter Pan Syndrome, it bears noting that Spielberg is, in his own way, certain to remind the Peter Pan Syndromers known as millennials and Gen Zers—via the tagline, “Capture every moment”—that the very existence of the camera has long spurred people to do just that even before the advent of social media. Hence, Sammy’s constant filming of various “snippets of life” from his family’s day-to-day. Some of it even imbued with a vague plotline (as shown in The Fabelmans, a young Sammy uses all the toilet paper in the house to transform his two younger sisters into mummys).

    Like Sammy, Dawson is also an unapologetic cinema geek—his room decorated with movie posters for Schindler’s List, The Color Purple and Always, among others. As Williamson noted of the hyper-specific set design, “Dawson’s bedroom was sort of a temple to Spielberg, and so I had to write a letter to him because he retains the rights to all that stuff. And I was like, ‘Please, Mr. Spielberg, you don’t know me, but I was this kid. I had this bedroom. I had all your posters in my bedroom. Can I please present Dawson the way that he really was?’” Surely, Spielberg knew something about being the film nerd, in addition to wanting a character and his world to come across as authentically as possible.” Thus, Spielberg “wrote back and he wrote the loveliest response. He was like, ‘You can use everything.’ [But] he gave one condition: no mention of his wife or children. ‘Just keep it to me, and you can do whatever you want.’” That stipulation seems especially poignant when understanding, thanks to The Fabelmans, how much making movies ultimately tore Spielberg’s nuclear family apart. To boot, Spielberg is likely protective of his personal life so that he might use it for his own material later. This resulting in The Fabelmans.

    Itself resulting from Spielberg’s dad insisting on “Sammy” cutting their camping trip footage into a movie. But had he not done so, he might never have realized his mother was stepping out on Burt with Bennie. Said camping trip home movie technically being a “Spielberg film,” such a fact cuts to what Dawson tells Jen in season one of Dawson’s Creek: “I believe that all the mysteries of the universe, all the answers to life’s questions, can be found in a Spielberg film. It’s a theory I’ve been working on. You see, whenever I have a problem, all I have to do is look to the right Spielberg movie and the answer’s revealed.” Jen replies, “Have you ever heard of a twelve-step program?” Funnily enough, it’s Sammy’s great-uncle, Boris (played by Judd Hirsch, who steals the movie), that informs his great-nephew, “We’re junkies, and art is our drug.” Dawson is much the same, even if the “art” he made didn’t always come across as quite so promising in the same way that Spielberg’s early 8mm movies did. Yet both adolescents were decidedly “late bloomers” with women because of a combination of their social awkwardness and a preoccupation with turning life into art instead. Things are just so much more controllable that way.

    Boris also states in his foreboding speech to Sammy, “Art will give you crowns in heaven and laurels on Earth, but it’ll tear your heart out and leave you lonely. You’ll be a shanda [a.k.a. disgrace] for your loved ones. An exile in the desert.” This much happens to Dawson when he proceeds to make a movie (called, lamentably, Creek Daze) about his botched romance with Joey, who breaks up with him in season two—after all that hemming and hawing about wanting to be together, too. And so, since he can’t get it right in life, he tries to in art. Much the same way as Sammy, who partially blames himself for unearthing an unwanted reality through film to begin with (something of an irony, considering film was founded on a premise of escapism). Alas, as Spielberg himself remarked of watching what he found on those home movies of the camping trip, “The film told me the truth, where my eyes couldn’t perceive it.”

    That Dawson ends up turning his own life into sellable fodder in the form of a WB series (what else?) called The Creek provides an added element of Spielbergness—what with the auteur eventually unable to resist the urge to tell this story of his mother. Not just of her “affair of the heart” with Bernie, but the fact that Leah was an artist forced to repress that urge for the sake of family. Hence, Boris’ other warning, “Family, art. It’ll tear you in two.”

    Appropriately, Spielberg seemed to have waited for both parents to die before rehashing the tale in cinematic form. Dawson likely wouldn’t have been as generous. But it seemed karma was on his side regardless in the final episode of the series as he tells Joey and Pacey (Joshua Jackson) over the phone, “You’ll never guess who I’m meeting tomorrow.” “Spielberg?!” Joey and Pacey shout at the same time in delight. And maybe Dawson really did meet him…and affect him enough for Steve-o to take some inspiration for his own stylized character. A prime example of those (i.e., Williamson/Dawson) inspired by someone giving unwitting inspiration to that very person later on (à la Billie Eilish with Lana Del Rey). Or maybe Williamson simply had the idea sooner to loosely dramatize Spielberg’s early life.

    Genna Rivieccio

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  • Golden Globes 2023 Recap: Invite Jennifer Coolidge To Every Awards Show

    Golden Globes 2023 Recap: Invite Jennifer Coolidge To Every Awards Show

    In case you missed it, the less important version of the Oscars was last night! The Golden Globes were three and a half arduous hours of acceptance speeches and praise for what felt like the same three movies and shows. If you didn’t get to see the entire awards ceremony, don’t worry. I sure did. Let me catch you up.


    For starters: Austin Butler. No surprise here, Butler won best Actor in a Drama Motion Picture for Elvis. I mean, with a voice permanently stuck in Elvis’ cadence, you’d hope he gets his recognition.

    Austin Butler

    David Fisher/Shutterstock

    There were several awards given to the cast of Abbott Elementary, but the real award of the night goes to Tyler James Williams’ power pantsuit. Quinta Brunson’s mid-speech shoutout to a front-row Brad Pitt will forever live in my memory.

    Tyler James Williams

    Chris Pizzello/AP/Shutterstock

    We’ve all learned that what makes these shows bearable is inviting Jennifer Coolidge and handing her the mic. After warning the crowd that pronunciation wasn’t her strongsuit, the White Lotus favorite stole the show with quite the tearjerker.

    With equally iconic speeches from herself and creator, Mike White, Coolidge credits White for getting her neighbors to speak to her again and giving her life even though he killed her off in the show. Similarly, Mike White called out the audience for “passing onWhite Lotus originally.

    What a year it was for streaming TV shows. Hopeful nominees like Jenna Ortega (Wednesday), Evan Peters (Dahmer), Selena Gomez (Only Murders in the Building), and Jeremy Allen White (The Bear) were notable names in the crowd. Both Jeremy Allen White and Evan Peters received their first ever Golden Globe.

    Michelle Yeoh

    CAROLINE BREHMAN/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock

    Movies like The Fabelman’s, The Banshees of Inisherin, and Everything, Everywhere, All At Once took home multiple awards. My personal favorite speeches came from Michelle Yeoh and Ke Huy Quan, who spoke about second chances in the industry. Yeoh even threatened physical violence when the music turned on to usher her off stage.

    And with the season opener of Awards Season behind us, it’s time to buckle up. We’re just getting started.

    Jai Phillips

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  • Tony Kushner Was a “Really Demented Jeremy Strong Fan” Before They Ever Met

    Tony Kushner Was a “Really Demented Jeremy Strong Fan” Before They Ever Met

    In Reunited, Awards Insider hosts a conversation between two Oscar contenders who have collaborated on a previous project. Today, we speak with Armageddon Time star Jeremy Strong and Tony Kushner, the cowriter of The Fabelmans. They previously worked together on 2012’s Lincoln.

    If you get together two men who were brought up in the theater and remain fervent fans of it still today, be warned: There will be an endless stream of theater references in their conversation. Tony Kushner will reminisce about seeing Brian Cox playing the title role in Titus Andronicus or casually reference A Midsummer Night’s Dream. Jeremy Strong will quote directly from Kusher’s Pulitzer Prize–winning Angels in America more than once. And they’ll both express how vulnerable it can be to work in theater, and what the audience gains from that. “We watch to see someone’s suffering so that we don’t have to suffer,” says Kushner at one point.

    This year, both Strong and Kusher witnessed that sort of personal vulnerability bleed over into their work in film, each of them collaborating with directors to tell stories from their childhoods, centered on uneasy family dynamics. Strong starred in James Gray’s Armageddon Time, playing a character inspired by Gray’s father; Kushner cowrote the script for Steven Spielberg’s The Fabelmans, which chronicles the director’s parent’s divorce and his coming-of-age as a filmmaker. 

    Longtime fans of each other, the pair first worked together on Lincoln, which Kushner wrote and Strong, who had previously worked as Daniel Day Lewis’s assistant, played the role of John Nicolay, a secretary to the US president. They spoke with Vanity Fair about the power and responsibility of art, their awkwardness at receiving compliments, and what they envy about each other’s profession. 

    Vanity Fair: What do you remember about the first time you met?

    Jeremy Strong: Tony, you probably don’t remember this. But the first time I met you, we had dinner. I was with Michelle [Williams] and Linda Emond and we had dinner in Williamstown, when Linda was doing the Cherry Orchard in 2004.

    Tony Kushner: We just came to Williamstown to see that production because Linda’s one of my oldest and dearest friends. But my chronology must be screwed up—was the first time that we actually spoke after The Great God Pan?… I think I had seen you in a couple of things before that and I just hadn’t talked to you…. I sort of have this memory that we met out in the lobby.

    Strong: It was the lobby of Playwrights Horizons.

    Kushner: And I sometimes get scary and scarily intense when I see an actor that I think is really astounding. At that point I had become a really demented Jeremy Strong fan. So I think I came up to you, and you’re one of those people who you look somewhat stricken when people compliment you. It’s like on some level you feel like, “Oh, I’m hurting, I’m inflicting pain.” I know a lot of people who are like that. I mean it’s difficult to have somebody gush at you. But I loved your work in that so much. 

    How much did you two get to spend time together on Lincoln?

    Strong: In a way, I already felt quite connected to you, Tony, coming from the theater myself. It made the whole environment feel safer to me. I hadn’t met Steven [Spielberg] until the first day. I knew Daniel a bit from having worked for him. Joe Cross and I, who played John Hay and John Nicolay, we would take trips to Washington D.C. to go to the Library of Congress or to visit the White House and do research and be texting with Tony. And Tony was a treasure trove of knowledge about everything. So I remember when you wrote 20-page dossiers for every single person in the House of Representatives for their backstory — that whole experience was completely thrilling for me.

    Rebecca Ford

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  • ‘Nope’ Gets Major Oscar Boost as AFI Winner for Best Film

    ‘Nope’ Gets Major Oscar Boost as AFI Winner for Best Film

    If you’re an American movie and you don’t make the American Film Institute’s list of the top 10 films of the year, you’re in the danger zone. Last year no eligible production missed AFI’s list of winners before going on to a best-picture Oscar nod, and generally, only one or two movies ever find the room to beat those odds. 

    So if AFI’s 2022 selections are any indication, this is a major development for Nope, this summer’s commercial and critical hit from Jordan Peele, which has been bubbling around as a potential contender and just picked up a major award for star Keke Palmer last week. The news is also good for She Said, Maria Schrader’s biopic of the New York Times journalists who exposed Harvey Weinstein, which bombed at the box office last month. Meanwhile, contenders that missed out, and now clearly face an uphill climb, include Damien Chazelle’s Babylon, which met divisive reactions out of its premiere a few weeks ago; Rian Johnson’s Glass Onion; and Darren Aronofsky’s The Whale.

    The Banshees of Inisherin will be honored with the group’s annual special award, which recognizes strong Oscar players outside of the AFI’s US-exclusive parameters. (Last year’s winner on the film side was Belfast.) Other hopefuls not eligible here include Living, Triangle of Sadness, and the rising RRR.

    A few other points of note: Reviews are still not out for Avatar: The Way of Water, but its inclusion here and on NBR’s top 10 yesterday—plus the ecstatic reactions coming out of this week’s screenings—affirms it is in the thick of this race. While the AFI ignored Babylon and Glass Onion, that does not mean it dismissed audience-friendly films more broadly: Avatar, Top Gun: Maverick, Elvis, and even The Woman King are all here. And in case there was any doubt, following their dominance with the Spirit Award nominations, the indies leading the Oscar charge right now are Everything Everywhere All at Once, Tár, and Women Talking.

    On the studio front, the two arguable surprises, Nope and She Said, are both distributed by Universal—some cheers likely happening over there this Friday morning, with The Fabelmans also ranking in the top 10. The streamers, meanwhile, were blanked entirely, from Apple TV+’s late-breaking Emancipation to Netflix’s array of hopefuls. The possibility that the Oscars’ 10 will exclude them as well, following CODA’s historic win earlier this year, seems increasingly plausible. 

    The AFI also announces 10 annual winners for television, this year naming newly minted Emmy winners Abbott Elementary and The White Lotus, as well as impending 2023 heavy hitter The Bear. The AFI Awards ceremony, taking place at the Four Seasons in Los Angeles on January 13, will gather creators and stars from each recognized film and show for a luncheon full of schmoozing. It’s a major campaign stop—great news for today’s winners, and a tough break for those left behind.  

    Full list of winners below:

    Film

    • Avatar: The Way of Water
    • Elvis
    • Everything Everywhere All at Once
    • The Fabelmans
    • Nope
    • She Said
    • Tár
    • Top Gun: Maverick
    • The Woman King
    • Women Talking
    • Special award: The Banshees of Inisherin

    TV

    • Abbott Elementary
    • The Bear
    • Better Call Saul
    • Hacks
    • Mo
    • Pachinko
    • Reservation Dogs
    • Severance
    • Somebody Somewhere
    • The White Lotus

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    David Canfield

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  • With ‘The Fabelmans,’ Julia Butters Reaches New Hollywood Heights

    With ‘The Fabelmans,’ Julia Butters Reaches New Hollywood Heights

    She has yet to reach high school, but 13-year-old Julia Butters is already building the career of any actor’s dreams. At the age of 10, she stole scenes opposite Leonardo DiCaprio in Quentin Tarantino’s Once Upon a Time…in Hollywood. It was on that set where Butters would first meet Steven Spielberg, who cast her as a proxy for his eldest sister in his memoir film, The Fablemans

    “I saw Steven walking around the valet [at Universal Studios]. I waved to him through the window, he waved to me, and I was freaking out,” Butters tells Vanity Fair during a recent Zoom. “That was my only interaction with Steven Spielberg ever, and I thought, ‘Oh, my God, that’s the closest I’m ever going to get to him.’” 

    Her prediction didn’t age well. Just a handful of years later, Spielberg and Tony Kushner’s script, emblazoned with the Amblin Entertainment logo, came her way. “I was so excited,” Butters says. “I remember just being like, ‘Don’t blow it. You gotta try your best. You gotta try your hardest. We have to make this worth it.’ And it turned out to be worth it.”

    After securing the role of Reggie, inspired by Spielberg’s real-life sister Anne, Butters had just one question: “Is there a monkey in this movie?” The actor had watched Spielberg, a 2017 HBO documentary about the legendary filmmaker, which recounts the time his mother spontaneously brought a pet monkey home. “I had this joke on set where that was what made me want to do the movie,” she says. “That was the deal—if there was a monkey, I would work on it.” And how was it sharing the screen with an orangutan? Says Butters, “Crystal was such an incredible actress.”

    Spielberg’s love of his sister is clear throughout The Fabelmans, shown through details and observations too specific to be made up—from her likening the family’s Northern California move to being “parachuted into the land of the giant sequoia people” to asking when “Sammy” plans on making movies with roles for girls. Although often in the periphery, Reggie’s protectiveness over her mother, Mitzi (played by Michelle Williams), breaks through. During a camping trip, she shields her inebriated mother, dancing by the fire in a transparent nightgown, from prying eyes. And after learning of her parents’ split, she observes that it must be difficult for their mother to be “loved by someone who worships” her as their father does. 

    “She feels a responsibility to be kind of the mother of the family while her mom is out playing and dancing and having fun and living life,” Butters tells me of Reggie. “Her mother has such a way about her—this innocence, it’s like a breath of fresh air. She feels youthful and young and happy. She just radiates such a glow. Reggie really wants to protect that and keep that fire lit.”

    Butters, who plays Reggie from ages 13 to 16, grew similarly attached to her onscreen Fabelmans family—Williams as free-spirited mother Mitzi, Paul Dano as by-the-numbers father Arnold, fellow sisters Natalie (Keeley Karsten) and Lisa (Sophia Kopera), and Gabriel LaBelle, who plays the Spielberg-inspired character of Sammy. “We all built a safe space where you can say what’s on your mind if you’re feeling anxious or sad or happy,” Butters says. “And I think that was really important with such an intense set,” adding of her younger costars, “We were all geeking out over the fact that we had made our dreams come true, working with Steven.”

    When I ask Butters if she had jitters about meeting the real-life Anne, who would, after the period depicted in the movie, go on to cowrite and produce Big, starring Tom Hanks, she pauses. “I get nervous about everything, so that’s kind of a funny question.” Butters, who played a kid with obsessive-compulsive disorder on the ABC sitcom American Housewife, says she struggles with her own anxieties, which made their own appearance on the set of The Fabelmans.

    One day, a scene involving Reggie and Sammy quickly bantering while washing dishes was placed in front of Butters, who was in the thick of schoolwork, just 30 minutes before it was meant to be filmed. “I was having trouble getting it out on set,” she remembers. “I got super anxious because I was on a Steven Spielberg set and I really wanted to do the best I could. So of course when I couldn’t get it, I got frustrated with myself. And I beat myself up to the point of shaking.”

    Savannah Walsh

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