A Nice Jewish Boy? Jewish Self-Image in The Fabelmans

 

Unlike most of Steven Spielberg’s films, The Fabelmans has a pronounced autobiographical tone (the script was written by Steven Spielberg and Tony Kushner). The film closely mirrors Spielberg’s own childhood from the ages of 5 to 18. Key scenes in the movie are grounded in the life of his family, portraying his relationships with his parents, their marriage and subsequent divorce, the family’s relocation to Arizona and California, and his experiences with anti-Semitism. The heart of the film is the mental process which ultimately makes Spielberg a filmmaker. However, it also explores the complexities of Jewish self-image during the 1950s and 1960s.

The film opens with a scene that later seems quite telling. Sammy, the main character, is a five-year-old boy going to the cinema with his parents for the first time. He is anxious about sitting in the theater and watching the movie. When his father asks him why he is scared, Sammy responds, “The characters are gigantic…you said they are gigantic.” His father attempts to reassure him, explaining that the characters only appear gigantic because they are on the cinema screen.

The unsuspecting viewer does not realize how illuminating this scene is in foreshadowing a side of Sammy’s life that will develop in a fascinating way: Sammy is aware of the physical gap between himself as a young child and the “gigantic” characters he fears. Although his father assures him that they are only an illusion created by the projector, at the age of five, Sammy already senses that they represent a reality external to the cinema, with clear physical advantage over him. When the family returns home after the movie, it becomes evident that their house, the only home of a Jewish family on the street, is not adorned with Christmas lights. Sammy’s mother asks him what he wants for Hanukkah, and he quickly answers, “Christmas lights.” For the young boy, being Jewish means not only being different from his environment but also lacking something others have—in this case, the developed aesthetics that add beauty to his Christian neighbors’ homes.

Sammy’s mother lets him use his father’s 8mm camera, which opens up a new perspective for him. He recreates a violent scene he witnessed in a movie to overcome his fear. He documents his family’s move to Arizona, accompanied by a close friend. Through the lens, Sammy uncovers his mother’s affair with the friend, which she has carried out unbeknownst to his father. The camera is also a way to find his place among his peers as they join in his filmmaking projects, which he showcases at school.

When the family relocates to California, Sammy is confronted with overt anti-Semitism. First, we observe that he is surrounded by very tall and strong boys who are physically different from him. He tells his sisters, “It’s like we got parachuted into the land of the giant sequoia people.” At school, he faces bullying from two boys because he is Jewish. Chad is openly anti-Semitic and physically assaults Sammy in front of everyone. Logan, a handsome and muscular boy and a leader, embodies a more subdued form of anti-Semitism. Although he tells Sammy that no one likes Jews except other Jews, he still intervenes to stop Chad from beating Sammy. Spielberg’s indictment of the anti-Semitic environment is clear and unequivocal: Sammy lies beaten in the schoolyard, and no one steps in to help. However, a fascinating aspect of the film is Sammy’s psychological and spiritual struggle with anti-Semitism. Near the end of high school, he is given an opportunity to get back at his anti-Semitic classmates by filming a social event, “ditch day,” which is then shown at the school’s prom. The film, however, contains some surprising elements. Chad, as expected, is portrayed unfavorably and is laughed at by his peers. Feeling humiliated, he attempts to hit Sammy again. Logan, on the other hand, is depicted as physically impressive—handsome and muscular. Sammy strays from a strictly accurate physical portrayal, and it is evident that he views Logan with admiration, even if only as a director, despite Logan having embarrassed and humiliated him.

Sammy’s feeling of physical inferiority to Logan can be interpreted in various ways. Firstly, the phenomenon of a victim admiring their abuser comes to mind. This is a well-known psychological defense mechanism, where victims internalize the negative image imposed on them, and view their abuser as admirable. It’s easier to handle the humiliations this way. This mechanism can easily be applied to Logan since, in certain situations, he also defended Sammy.

On another register, Sammy’s portrayal of Logan may echo the Nazi ideal of the Aryan as a superior human. The weak Jewish character looks with admiration at the non-Jewish young man, who resembles an image from a Nazi pamphlet: fair-skinned with straight facial features and a muscular body. The film highlights Logan’s athletic prowess—we see him winning a running competition, in contrast to Sammy, who struggles with sports. Although the Nazi ideal of a superior human has been widely rejected, arguably this image has nonetheless permeated Jewish consciousness and perhaps become part of it. Even though Sammy was born and raised after World War II, these masculine ideals have become an unavoidable point of reference. It is possible that Jews, against their conscious will, have collectively internalized the belief that they are physically inferior to other groups.

Another interpretation of this scene derives from Sammy’s evolution into a filmmaker. The artist within him perceives beauty and seeks to capture it on film. This age-old artistic inclination to depict human perfection runs as a consistent theme throughout Western art. Sammy’s admiration for Logan’s beauty is, in a way, conceptual rather than personal. The artist in him is drawn to physical beauty and wishes to display it in all its splendor. Interestingly, Logan feels hurt by his portrayal because he feels it is unrealistic. He thinks he is not as handsome as Sammy made him out to be, interpreting this as a subtle attempt at revenge by the Jewish boy, who he thinks aims to embarrass him now that Logan has been depicted almost as an idol, any real-life encounter with him will inevitably be disappointing.

Sammy’s interaction with the Christian world which explicitly identifies Jews also has an entirely different dimension: he has a romantic relationship with Monica, a devout Christian girl. While Spielberg has stated that most events in the film are based on real-life experiences, he has not commented on the romance with Monica. The viewer observes two teenagers drawn to each other—Sammy is anxious, and Monica is giggling. However, their relationship reflects a fundamental insight about anti-Semitism.

Monica’s room is adorned with pictures of Jesus, whom she describes as “sexy,” alongside images of Paul McCartney, John Lennon, and Pat Boone. She is surprised that Sammy doesn’t believe in Christ and suggests that they pray together to Jesus. Once it is clear that Monica sees Jesus as an attractive and appealing man, her attraction to Sammy makes perfect sense. She admits that she likes him because she thinks he looks like how Jesus looked; like “a handsome Jewish boy, just like you [Sammy].” She then turns to an image of Jesus and says, “Jesus, I’m here with my good friend Sam, who’s Jewish. He’s a nice boy, Lord. He’s good, brave, and funny, and I like him.”

The film depicts various Christian attitudes towards Sammy: alongside a physical threat, there is also an attraction to the Jewish boy. His peers perceive him as a Jew living in the first century. This facet of the film provides a fundamental insight into the roots of anti-Semitism: the shared origin of Judaism and Christianity is the source of the distorted attitude towards Jews. For Sammy’s classmates, there is almost no historical distance between the events believed to have taken place in the first century and their current reality; the Jewish boy is expected to apologize for crucifying Jesus and is also desirable because he resembles Jesus. Sammy is acutely aware of this historical misconception—he points out that he is not two thousand years old and that no one knows what Jesus looked like. Yet, he realizes that to them, he is a representative of the Jewish people. This perception can be threatening, frightening, and sometimes rewarding.

The final scene, captivating and enigmatic, relates to the beginning of the film. Sammy meets the renowned director John Ford in Hollywood. Ford asks him to describe two pictures hanging in his office. As Sammy starts to describe them, Ford abruptly interrupts, telling him he is wrong and explaining that in one picture, the horizon is at the bottom, and in the other, it is at the top. Before sending Sammy off, he offers him this piece of advice: “Now remember this! When the horizon’s at the bottom, it’s interesting. When the horizon’s at the top, it’s interesting. When the horizon’s in the middle, it’s boring as shit! Now good luck to you.” Sammy exits the office, and the camera follows him. He briefly turns around before we see him from behind, walking into the distance (perhaps a subtle nod to the final scene of Charlie Chaplin’s The Circus?). Then, the camera angle shifts, placing the horizon at the bottom of the frame instead of the center. In this final scene, Spielberg himself becomes an invisible actor in the film, adjusting the camera angle. The scene is an illustration of the importance of perspective.

If the film begins with a Jewish boy feeling threatened by the characters on the movie screen because they seem to represent a real-world threat, then the final scene reflects Spielberg’s development as a person and an artist: he realizes the importance of perspective in understanding the world. Anything can be seen—and presented—from different angles, including the experience of a Jewish boy in the United States during the 1950s and 1960s. Sammy’s childish anxiety, which is somewhat amorphic, and his sense of deprivation gradually transform into an understanding that reality, including anti-Semitism, is complex and multi-faceted and can be viewed and portrayed in various ways. Dealing with anti-Semitism involves changing one’s perspective; it means replacing the basic and intuitive feeling of being weak and disadvantaged with a clear and sharp view of the diverse attitudes toward Jews.

 

 

Emanuela Barasch Rubinstein is an Israeli writer and academic in the humanities. Her forthcoming novel, Intimate Solitude, explores the transformation of Israeli society.

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