Seth Rogen on what The Fabelmans and his Ninja Turtles movie have in common

For his pivotal role as the uncle figure in Steven Spielberg's autobiographical The Fabelmans, Seth Rogen had to go deep with the legendary filmmaker

Film Features Seth Rogen
Seth Rogen on what The Fabelmans and his Ninja Turtles movie have in common
Seth Rogen as Bennie Loewy in The Fabelmans Image: Merie Weismiller Wallace/Universal Pictures and Amblin Entertainment

Seth Rogen starring in an autobiographically inspired Steven Spielberg drama isn’t quite as random as you might think. Consider how the true-to-life high school classic Freaks & Geeks launched Rogen’s onscreen career, or that he used his own experiences to write Superbad starting at age 13. Spielberg’s The Fabelmans (in select theaters November 11) centers on young Sammy Fabelman (Gabriel LaBelle), an aspiring filmmaker whose upbringing is influenced by an engineer-genius father (Paul Dano), musician-artist mother (Michelle Williams), and their tagalong friend Bennie. As the latter, Rogen had to bring this fictional but truthful depiction of Spielberg’s surrogate uncle to life—a process that meant asking the legendary filmmaker for intimately personal details.

Fresh off three Emmy nominations for Pam & Tommy and The Boys Presents: Diabolical, and with upward of a dozen projects in production, Rogen took time from his packed schedule to chat with The A.V. Club about that process of turning personal experience into art. And don’t worry, the conversation did indeed steer itself toward his upcoming Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles project, too.

The Fabelmans Trailer #1 (2022)

The A.V. Club: So The Greatest Show On Earth is the life-changing creative spark that sets young Sammy Fabelman on his career path. Growing up, did you have an “aha” moment? What was your Greatest Show On Earth?

Seth Rogen: There were a few, I think. Honestly, Ghostbusters was one. Die Hard was a movie I watched a lot. Total Recall, I think, was also one. Yeah, those were some of the movies I remember really responding to. My parents were big comedy fans as well, movies like Meatballs and stuff like that. It was kind of a cumulative effect, I don’t know if there was one moment. Movies were always a big part of my childhood, and kind of the only art my family consumed, like, en masse. We were not big readers.

AVC: I can see where Ghostbusters and Die Hard would, in terms of creative inspiration, lead to…

SR: Me! [Laughs] And This Is The End, for sure.

AVC: So how intensely personal did filming The Fabelmans get? How much are you bringing yourself to this depiction of Spielberg’s uncle figure, versus balancing that with the real man he’s based on?

SR: I did not feel bringing myself to the character would be particularly helpful. Sometimes it is, sometimes it isn’t. It was more like an energy that I was trying to capture that seemed imperative for my role in the film and what happens in the story. There were always these buzzwords that were used whenever I talked to Steven or his family about Bernie, the person who [my character] Bennie is inspired by. And it was that he was “funny and fun and charismatic and loving.” They were all incredibly fond of him, even though, you know, the story plays out the way it does. And that was something that kind of locked it in for me. Like, okay, I have to be someone who you like and who seems light and lovely and warm, and who doesn’t seem like a terrible alternative for how a life could turn out. Who, in fact, seems like an equally valid but just different one. That was where a lot of my thinking went towards and where my work went towards, capturing the energy that seemed important to capture in order for the movie to work in that regard.

AVC: And without revealing details about Spielberg’s childhood, what did talking to him entail? Was there a wariness that this is sensitive, personal material?

SR: Oh, yeah. And I would talk to [The Fabelmans co-writer] Tony Kushner a lot. I would go to him first! Obviously if it felt like, maybe they’ve had this conversation, and I could just get the answer from Tony. And not, you know, ask incredibly probing questions to Steven. But also, we were invited into this and [Spielberg] made it clear it was personal from the get-go. So there were times when we were asking very personal questions, but it very much felt like we had permission to do that. And that we were explicitly invited into an environment where that was what we were doing, you know? So there were times, especially with mine and Michelle’s character, that I had a lot of specific questions as far as how far their relationship had matured and developed in certain parts in the film. That was sensitive stuff. But, honestly, he would give clear, concise answers—and we would move on. [Laughs]

AVC: That’s fascinating because I feel like as an audience member, we don’t know the specifics of that relationship. But you actors did?

SR: For sure. We had to be very aware of those specifics. It’s funny, it’s one of those things where I think if people choose to watch the movie a second time, they’ll see that it’s far more layered in than maybe it appears on first watch.

AVC: Because this story is very much told from a kid’s perspective, and kids aren’t always picking up on such things.

SR: Exactly! But I bet if you rewatch the first dinner scene with all of us, it would play differently on the second viewing.

AVC: Spielberg once said, “I make personal movies even if they do look like big commercial popcorn films.” Are there any commercial projects in your filmography that showed more of yourself than audience members might realize?

SR: Yeah, probably. The first movie, Superbad, was very directly inspired by my life and my childhood, and Evan’s, my writing partner’s, as well. So we kind of were thrown into a personal school of filmmaking. And 50/50 was the first movie we produced. And that was directly taken from my dear friend Will, who had cancer. And the process of writing that movie with him and producing his script writing was really extracting as much personal juice out of him as humanly possible. [Laughs] Even This Is The End, we play ourselves and a lot of the dynamics in the movie are very much based on real things that were happening in our lives. As surreal a direction as the movie [goes], it’s actually very much based on a lot of our real lives. You know, movies take so long to make and they’re so hard to make that we’ve found that unless you deeply care about what they are about, you just burn out on them sometimes. And therefore, the more personal they are, the more you can tie them into yourself, the better they are often. It’s funny, I’m making this Ninja Turtles movie right now. And like, we found a way to make it deeply personal! It’s a teenage movie, we’re putting a lot of our own feelings—of awkwardness and insecurity and a desire to belong and be accepted and all that—into the movie. And it makes it fun. And as I sit around with the other people working on it, I’m like, “We found a way to care about this,” which is great. But yeah, this movie, especially for Steven, is outwardly personal, which I think is also unique for him. And not something that he ever probably needed to do. But I’m glad he did.

AVC: I wanted to ask about your producing, given that you have so many projects in development. How much is that personal touch part of what you decide to pursue?

SR: Yeah, we really do try. Even The Boys, which I don’t have a ton to do with on a day-to-day basis. Like the reason that show exists is because me and Evan went to a comic book store, saw the comic, picked it up, bought it, read it, loved it. And then spent the next decade trying to make it! But it was purely borne out of, like, an afternoon we spent together, you know? And so it’s all borne out of our interests. Ninja Turtles is something I loved as a kid. We have a lot more things like that that we’re working on, this Darkwing Duck show and things like that. That becomes a fun part of the challenge: How do you infuse more and more of yourself into your work? I think the more of yourself you put in, the more people like it.


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25 Comments

  • trevceratops-av says:

    Great interview! Should give fuel for at least three articles tomorrow reporting on this interview

  • evanfowler-av says:

    Not gonna lie, hearing “We found a way to care about this” does not exactly fill me to bursting with confidence for your Ninja Turtles movie.

    • ghboyette-av says:

      Personally, I have no interest in his TMNT film, but nothing fills anyone with confidence if you take comments out of context like that.

      • evanfowler-av says:

        I really don’t think it was out of context. Abbreviated, maybe. It’s a weird thing to say in the first place. All TMNT stories are stories about family and brotherhood and generational trauma. Having a revelation about teenage awkwardness as a way to relate to the story is odd.

        • ghboyette-av says:

          That’s fair. I’m hoping he doesn’t Superbad the thing. Well, actually, now I kind of do.

          • evanfowler-av says:

            Ha. Superbad I can handle. It’s really Preacher that gives me pause.

          • ghboyette-av says:

            Gah, Preacher was terrible. They leaned into Garth Ennis’ worst qualities while having no sense of pacing. I’m really glad The Boys has Eric Kripke.

          • evanfowler-av says:

            I know. It’s bizarre. They dialed way back on the mythic westernism, which was the whole thing that made the comic so cinematic, and then tripled down on trying to out-edge the late-90’s Ennis Pulp Fiction-isms. For some reason. Kripke definitely makes all the difference with The Boys.

          • anathanoffillions-av says:

            I can’t believe they wasted so much of Ruth Negga’s time with that show

          • ghboyette-av says:

            I was really happy for her when she was cast. I enjoyed her work on AoS. Still waiting for her to get the role she deserves. 

          • anathanoffillions-av says:

            check Breakfast on Pluto, she’s not the lead but the whole thing is great

          • ghboyette-av says:

            I’ll check it out. Thanks!

          • bigjoec99-av says:

            That show was absolutely infatuated with her character. With very little justification.I really wanted to like Preacher. The Irish vampire guy (or whatever he was), the actor was awesome. Show just kept getting more and more disappointing though.

    • robgrizzly-av says:

      I’m always accusing adaptations like this for not caring, so this actually does boost my confidence a little. 

  • noisetanknick-av says:

    Both films are an intimate portrait of the Jewish-American experience, though Rogen’s is more light-hearted. (In the first act of TMNT, Michelangelo converts and receives an adult circumcision.)

  • wookietim-av says:

    TBH, Speilberg is one of the few directors whose name makes me notice a movie. Him, Scorsese, David Lynch and Baz Luhrman… that’s about it at this point. With those directors I am not always guaranteed a home run but at the very least I know I’ll get an interesting failure. And odds are I will get a good movie.

    • unfromcool-av says:

      Alex Garland and Robert Eggers are that for me now. 

    • volunteerproofreader-av says:

      No Cronenberg?

      • wookietim-av says:

        Used to be but…. Recently Cronenberg has just been reliably boring. Ever since “A History of Violence” he’s been too respectable to be either good or entreatingly bad.

        • anathanoffillions-av says:

          hey “A Dangerous Method” is a masterpiece, it’s only since then it hasn’t really taken off…he needs to go back to pulp or less abstract horror and get his juice back

          • wookietim-av says:

            I haven’t seen that, TBH. So it may be good.

          • anathanoffillions-av says:

            Did you see Eastern Promises? That ripped. A deathly beat down in a steambath isn’t my first connotation of respectable or boring lolAlso, Cosmopolis has a good scene or two…I think it’s the Samantha Morton one if I recall

          • wookietim-av says:

            ehhh… Wasn’t big on Eastern Promises. It felt like he was trying to be respectable again. If you liked it, I can see why – it’s not like it was a badly done movie or anything, so I’m not saying it was bad. But for me it didn’t click at all – it didn’t hit me as good and for me it wasn’t bad enough to be interesting.

  • frasier-crane-av says:

    It honestly looks like this will be heavily comprised of a record every-single-character (rather than the usual 2-3) making the trademark cliche “Spielberg faces” – i.e. “primarily facing camera looking upwards in enraptured awe, tracking in for extreme close-up”.

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