The Fabelmans
The Fabelmans is a 2022 American coming-of-age drama film directed by Steven Spielberg, who co-wrote the screenplay with Tony Kushner.[1] Loosely based on Spielberg's own adolescence, the story centers on Sammy Fabelman, a young aspiring filmmaker in post-World War II Arizona who grapples with family tensions while discovering his passion for cinema.[2] The film stars Gabriel LaBelle as Sammy, alongside Michelle Williams as his mother Mitzi, Paul Dano as his father Burt, and Seth Rogen as a family friend.[1] Premiering at the Toronto International Film Festival on September 10, 2022, where it won the People's Choice Award, The Fabelmans received wide release in the United States on November 23, 2022, distributed by Universal Pictures and Amblin Entertainment.[3] It earned critical acclaim for its performances, particularly Williams's portrayal of Mitzi, and Spielberg's direction, achieving a 92% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 398 reviews.[3] The film grossed $17.3 million domestically and received seven Academy Award nominations, including Best Picture and Best Director for Spielberg.[3][4]Synopsis
Plot Summary
In 1952, young Sammy Fabelman attends a screening of The Greatest Show on Earth with his parents, Mitzi and Burt, becoming obsessed with recreating the film's train crash scene using his toy train set.[5] Impressed by his fixation, Mitzi purchases a Super 8 camera for him, sparking Sammy's passion for filmmaking as he begins producing short films featuring his sisters during family gatherings like Hanukkah.[5] Burt, a pragmatic computer engineer, supports the family practically but views Sammy's hobby skeptically, while Mitzi, a gifted but unfulfilled concert pianist, enthusiastically encourages his creativity; the family friend Bennie Loewy often visits, forming a close bond with Burt.[5] The family relocates from New Jersey to Arizona for Burt's job at a defense contractor, where Sammy joins the Boy Scouts and continues filmmaking despite his father's reservations about its practicality.[5] During a camping trip, Sammy captures footage revealing an intimate connection between Mitzi and Bennie, which he later edits into a reel that exposes the affair, precipitating family confrontation and Mitzi's emotional turmoil following her mother's death.[5] Another move to California for Burt's career advancement lands the family in a new high school environment where Sammy faces antisemitic bullying but earns respect by producing an ambitious "Ditch Day" film with classmates, including his girlfriend.[5] As tensions escalate, Burt and Mitzi announce their divorce, attributing it to her irreconcilable feelings for Bennie, prompting Sammy to grapple with loyalty and artistic truth while forging ahead with his ambitions.[5] Living primarily with Burt, Sammy screens his student films in Hollywood but struggles for opportunities until a chance encounter with legendary director John Ford provides pivotal advice on composition and perseverance, solidifying his resolve to pursue a career in cinema.[5]Cast and Characters
Gabriel LaBelle plays Sammy Fabelman, the teenage protagonist modeled after a young Steven Spielberg, who discovers his passion for filmmaking amid family tensions in post-World War II Arizona and later California. [6] [7]
Michelle Williams portrays Mitzi Fabelman, Sammy's vivacious and artistic mother, whose enthusiasm for the arts influences her son's creative pursuits while her personal dissatisfaction strains family dynamics. [6] [3]
Paul Dano depicts Burt Fabelman, Sammy's pragmatic father and a computer engineer whose career drives frequent relocations, creating friction with Mitzi's free-spirited nature. [6] [7]
Seth Rogen appears as Bennie Loewy, a kind-hearted family friend and business associate of Burt who forms a close bond with Mitzi, complicating household relationships. [6] [8]
Judd Hirsch embodies Uncle Boris, Mitzi's eccentric great-uncle and a former lion tamer who imparts life lessons on art and perseverance during a family visit. [6]
| Actor | Character | Role Description |
|---|---|---|
| Gabriel LaBelle | Sammy Fabelman | Aspiring teen filmmaker and protagonist. [1] [6] |
| Michelle Williams | Mitzi Fabelman | Artistic mother encouraging creativity. [1] [3] |
| Paul Dano | Burt Fabelman | Engineer father focused on stability. [1] [6] |
| Seth Rogen | Bennie Loewy | Supportive family friend. [1] [8] |
| Judd Hirsch | Uncle Boris | Inspirational great-uncle. [6] |
| Julia Butters | Reggie Fabelman | Sammy's sister. [9] [8] |
| Mateo Zoryan | Young Sammy | Younger version of the protagonist. [8] |
Production
Development and Writing
The development of The Fabelmans originated from Steven Spielberg's long-contemplated desire to depict his semi-autobiographical experiences of childhood, family dynamics, and the onset of his filmmaking passion, a story he had avoided committing to film for decades.[11] The project gained momentum through collaboration with Tony Kushner, his screenwriter on prior films including Munich (2005), Lincoln (2012), and West Side Story (2021); Kushner had first inquired about a personal Spielberg narrative during Munich's production, but serious discussions intensified after West Side Story's completion.[12] Kushner conducted in-depth interviews with Spielberg, amassing detailed notes on real events like his parents' divorce and early home movies, which were then fictionalized into the Fabelman family saga.[13] In September 2020, Kushner distilled the interview material into an 81-page outline, setting the stage for screenplay drafting.[14] Actual writing began on October 2, 2020, conducted remotely via Zoom amid the COVID-19 pandemic, with Kushner typing the script while Spielberg dictated contributions—a process both described as their first joint original screenplay authorship, diverging from their earlier adaptation-based collaborations.[15] The resulting 130-page script balanced empirical recollections with dramatic invention, emphasizing causal tensions between artistic pursuit and familial obligation, and was finalized by late 2020 to enable production.[16]Pre-production and Casting
Pre-production for The Fabelmans commenced in March 2021 after Steven Spielberg's announcement as director and co-writer with Tony Kushner, marking the transition from development to active planning.[17] The production, budgeted at around $40 million and financed by Amblin Partners, focused on constructing most sets in Los Angeles, California, to recreate mid-20th-century environments.[14] [18] Research efforts included examining Spielberg's childhood home movies, early films, and family photographs to ensure historical accuracy in props and costumes.[19] Casting occurred concurrently from March through May 2021, with Spielberg personally overseeing selections for the semi-autobiographical roles.[17] Paul Dano was chosen for the role of the protagonist's father, a computer engineer modeled after Spielberg's own parent, evoking an emotional response from the director during the process.[20] Gabriel LaBelle secured the lead as teenage Sammy Fabelman—Spielberg's youthful alter ego—following auditions that highlighted his ability to embody the aspiring filmmaker's passion.[21] Michelle Williams was cast as the eccentric mother, a character inspired by Spielberg's parent, while Seth Rogen portrayed her supportive friend, noting his surprise at receiving the direct call from Spielberg.[22] Judd Hirsch played the great-uncle, adding familial depth drawn from real-life influences.[23] For the cameo as legendary director John Ford, Spielberg pursued David Lynch after an initial refusal, leveraging the filmmaker's distinctive presence to capture Ford's gruff demeanor.[24] These choices emphasized authenticity, with actors drawing from provided personal artifacts to inform their performances.[19] Principal photography followed in July 2021, wrapping after 59 days.[14]
Filming
Principal photography for The Fabelmans took place from July 17, 2021, to September 27, 2021, primarily in and around Los Angeles, California.[1] The production utilized a mix of practical locations and constructed sets, with many interior scenes built on soundstages in the Los Angeles area to recreate mid-20th-century family homes and studios.[18] Filming occurred at diverse sites including Malibu Beach and Point Dume for coastal sequences, Santa Clarita's Golden Oak Ranch for ranch and outdoor scenes, Whittier for urban street shots on Bailey Street, and Sequoia National Park for forested exteriors.[25][26] Additional locations encompassed Universal Studios Hollywood, Tucson and the Sonoran Desert in Arizona for desert and early family settings, and La Puente for period-specific street corners.[27][28] Cinematographer Janusz Kamiński shot the film on Kodak 35mm for principal footage, with 16mm and Super 8mm stocks employed to evoke the protagonist's amateur filmmaking experiments and period authenticity.[25] Certain sequences incorporated virtual production methods, such as LED walls displaying stitched 360-degree background plates, to enhance environmental immersion without extensive location scouting.[29] The schedule adhered closely to COVID-19 protocols, enabling a contained shoot despite the pandemic's ongoing impact on Hollywood productions.[30]Technical Production Elements
Cinematography for The Fabelmans was handled by Janusz Kamiński, a frequent collaborator with director Steven Spielberg since Schindler's List (1993), marking their 20th joint project.[31][32] The film was primarily shot on 35mm film using Panavision cameras with Kodak Vision3 500T 5219, 500D 5218, and 50D 5203 stocks to evoke a filmlike texture, supplemented by 16mm and 8mm formats for diegetic home movies and flashbacks.[32][25] The aspect ratio is 1.85:1, with Kamiński employing techniques like hot light sources, overexposures, and lens flares consistent with his style in prior Spielberg films.[33][34] Editing was led by Michael Kahn, ACE, Spielberg's editor since Close Encounters of the Third Kind (1977), alongside Sarah Broshar, marking their 16-year partnership.[35][36] At 92 years old during post-production, Kahn focused on emotional pacing, enhancing family drama sequences while integrating the protagonist's amateur films to mirror Spielberg's youth.[35] The process involved refining cuts based on Spielberg's reactions to dailies, beefing up key scenes for dramatic impact.[37] Production design by Rick Carter, an Oscar winner for prior Spielberg works, emphasized an "interior epic" approach, recreating three primary family homes from Spielberg's Arizona and California childhoods without drawing overt attention.[38][39] Sets were largely built in Los Angeles, prioritizing intimate authenticity over spectacle to support the film's semi-autobiographical tone.[18][40] Visual effects, supervised by Pablo Helman at Industrial Light & Magic (ILM), were minimal but innovative, including the film's first use of LED walls via ILM's StageCraft technology for the tornado sequence.[41][42] This virtual production method, borrowed from The Mandalorian, captured real-time actor reactions against a 360-degree stitched background plate, shot with an ARRI Alexa Mini LF camera and Panavision PVintage lenses, blending seamlessly with practical 35mm footage.[29] Sound design incorporated Dolby Digital mixing, with layers evoking mid-20th-century film production, such as splicing, camera whirs, editing machines, and projectors, to immerse viewers in the era's analog filmmaking process.[34][43]Music and Soundtrack
Composition and Score
The musical score for The Fabelmans was composed by John Williams, who conducted the recording sessions with a chamber ensemble emphasizing piano to reflect the film's intimate family narrative and the protagonist's journey learning the instrument.[44] Williams adopted this restrained approach deliberately, stating that a large orchestra would overwhelm the story's personal scale, opting instead for solo piano motifs that evoke nostalgia and emotional vulnerability.[44] The celesta also recurs prominently, underscoring tender moments such as the young Sammy Fabelman's creative awakening.[44] The main theme, "The Fabelmans," unfolds as a lyrical solo piano piece characterized by hopeful, reflective melodies that capture the warmth of childhood memories and familial bonds within the film.[45] Williams crafted the score as a personal tribute to Spielberg's parents, Leah and Arnold, infusing it with poignant lyricism to mirror the director's semi-autobiographical exploration of artistic drive amid domestic turmoil.[46] This collaboration marked Williams's 31st with Spielberg, coinciding roughly with the 50th anniversary of their partnership beginning with Jaws in 1975, during which Williams has shaped the emotional contours of Spielberg's films through bespoke music.[46] The original motion picture soundtrack, featuring Williams's cues alongside select classical interludes like Clementi's sonatinas performed in the film, was released by Sony Classical on November 11, 2022, the day of the film's theatrical debut.[47] Williams's work earned him his 53rd Academy Award nomination for Best Original Score in 2023, making him the oldest nominee in Oscars history at age 90.[48]Key Musical Contributions
The film's use of diegetic popular music from the 1950s and 1960s underscores key transitional moments in the protagonists' lives, particularly Sammy Fabelman's entry into adolescence and his family's relocation to California. Tracks such as Link Wray's instrumental "Rumble" (1958) accompany scenes of youthful rebellion and emerging independence, while The Crystals' "Da Doo Ron Ron" (1963) and Chubby Checker's "The Twist" (1960) evoke the era's rock 'n' roll energy during social gatherings and teen activities.[49] These selections, drawn from authentic hit records, ground the semi-autobiographical story in verifiable cultural touchstones of the period, amplifying themes of generational shifts without overshadowing John Williams' original score.[50] Central to Mitzi Fabelman's character arc are her piano performances of classical pieces, personally chosen by director Steven Spielberg to reflect her suppressed artistic inclinations amid domestic strife. Notable inclusions comprise Ludwig van Beethoven's Piano Sonata No. 1 in F minor, Op. 2 No. 1 (first movement, 1795), which conveys emotional depth in intimate family settings; Friedrich Kuhlau's Sonatina in A minor, Op. 88 No. 3 (third movement, Allegro burlesco, c. 1820s), highlighting playful yet conflicted energy; and Erik Satie's Gymnopédie No. 1 (1888), a melancholic staple underscoring vulnerability. Additional works like Johann Sebastian Bach's adaptation from Concerto in D minor, BWV 974 and Muzio Clementi's sonatinas further illustrate Mitzi's proficiency, with performances recorded by pianist Joanne Pearce to maintain period-appropriate restraint and technical accuracy.[51] [52] These pieces, integrated as source music, serve as diegetic motifs linking Mitzi's musical talent to the family's creative tensions, performed on-screen by actress Michelle Williams with pre-recorded audio overlays for realism.[51] Source cues from film scores also feature prominently in Sammy's amateur productions, blending seamlessly with the narrative's focus on early filmmaking. Elmer Bernstein's main theme from The Magnificent Seven (1960) appears in Sammy's western shorts, evoking Hollywood influences, while Victor Young's "The Greatest Show on Earth" (1952) ties into inspirational circus imagery drawn from Spielberg's childhood memories.[53] Such borrowings not only authenticate the protagonist's stylistic experiments but also causally connect personal aspiration to broader cinematic heritage, with Williams' underscoring adapting to these elements for cohesive emotional layering.[45]Thematic Analysis
Family Dynamics and Infidelity
The Fabelman family is depicted as a middle-class household led by Burt Fabelman, an electrical engineer whose career at companies like General Electric and Lockheed necessitates frequent relocations from New Jersey to Arizona and eventually California in the 1950s and 1960s.[54] This mobility underscores underlying tensions, as Burt's pragmatic focus on professional advancement clashes with Mitzi's artistic temperament and emotional volatility, stemming from her background as a former concert pianist who abandoned her ambitions after marriage.[55] Mitzi's dissatisfaction manifests in impulsive behaviors, such as driving toward a tornado with the children during a family outing, symbolizing her chaotic influence amid Burt's stability.[56] Central to the family's unraveling is Mitzi's extramarital affair with Bennie Loewy, a jovial associate of Burt who becomes a surrogate family member, assisting with household tasks and bonding closely with Mitzi over shared frustrations with their unfulfilling lives.[55] The relationship escalates from emotional intimacy to physical infidelity, with Bennie representing an escape for Mitzi from her marital ennui, though it exploits Burt's trust as his longtime friend and colleague.[57] Protagonist Sammy inadvertently exposes the affair by reviewing 8mm footage he shot during a family camping trip to northern California, where visual cues—such as Mitzi and Bennie's isolated tent—reveal their liaison, shattering Sammy's illusions about his parents' marriage.[55] The discovery precipitates a family crisis, culminating in Burt and Mitzi's announcement of their divorce, attributed to Mitzi's depression exacerbated by the affair, which leaves the children—Sammy, Reggie, Natalie, and older brother Frank—in emotional turmoil.[58] Reggie confronts the parents angrily, while Natalie withdraws; Sammy internalizes the pain through filmmaking, editing the incriminating footage into a short film titled "The Vigil" to process the betrayal.[55] Burt, portrayed as oblivious yet ultimately perceptive, responds with quiet devastation, prioritizing family unity until the evidence forces acknowledgment, highlighting causal links between suppressed marital discord and eventual breakdown.[59] These elements draw from Spielberg's real-life experiences, where his mother Leah Adler left his father Arnold for Bernie Adler after an affair discovered by teenage Spielberg via home movies, mirroring the film's narrative without full fidelity—Bennie is a composite, and the affair's details are dramatized for emotional impact.[57][60] Spielberg has stated the film served as catharsis, reckoning with decades of blaming his father for the divorce while grappling with his mother's choices as rooted in her unmet creative drives rather than mere caprice.[57] The portrayal avoids romanticizing the infidelity, emphasizing its destructive ripple effects on familial bonds and individual psyches, informed by Spielberg's firsthand observation that such betrayals stem from personal incompatibilities amplified by life's pressures.[61]Artistic Ambition versus Familial Duty
In The Fabelmans, the protagonist Sammy Fabelman grapples with the tension between his burgeoning passion for filmmaking and the demands of family loyalty, a conflict that intensifies as his hobby evolves into an all-consuming pursuit. Initially sparked by a traumatic yet inspiring train crash scene witnessed at age seven in 1958, Sammy's early experiments with an 8mm camera evolve into more ambitious projects, such as family documentaries and school films, which consume his time and attention during adolescence.[62] This dedication strains his relationships, particularly with his father Burt, a pragmatic computer engineer who prioritizes stability and relocation for career advancement over artistic whims, repeatedly urging Sammy toward practical professions.[63][64] Sammy's mother Mitzi embodies a contrasting artistic spirit, having abandoned her own piano aspirations for marriage and motherhood, yet her emotional volatility and affair with the family friend Bennie underscore the personal costs of unfulfilled creativity within familial constraints. Sammy's obsessive filming inadvertently documents this infidelity during a camping trip, forcing him to edit footage that exposes family secrets and accelerates the parents' divorce, highlighting how artistic tools can both preserve and dismantle domestic harmony.[55][2] Actor Gabriel LaBelle, portraying Sammy, characterized this as an inherent "conflict between family and passion," where the young filmmaker must navigate betrayals uncovered through his lens while maintaining duties to siblings and parents.[65] The film culminates this dichotomy through Uncle Boris, a bohemian Holocaust survivor who fled to join the circus, advising Sammy that true art demands relentless commitment at the expense of comfort: "Dreams are like the photos you never take," and "art will break your heart" if not pursued without compromise. Boris's counsel propels Sammy to reject a stable job offer from his father's colleague, opting instead to relocate alone to Hollywood in 1965, symbolizing the prioritization of individual ambition over collective family obligations amid the backdrop of familial dissolution.[66][67] This resolution reflects Spielberg's semi-autobiographical reckoning with how his own filmmaking origins exacerbated parental tensions, though the narrative avoids moral judgment, presenting the choice as an inevitable trade-off between creative fulfillment and relational stability.[68][69]Autobiographical Parallels and Spielberg's Self-Portrait
The Fabelmans draws directly from Steven Spielberg's early life, presenting protagonist Sammy Fabelman as a fictionalized version of the director himself, who discovered filmmaking as a child after being inspired by Cecil B. DeMille's The Greatest Show on Earth during a family outing in 1952. [54] Sammy's father, portrayed as a pragmatic computer engineer, mirrors Spielberg's own father, Arnold Spielberg, an electrical engineer who worked on early computing projects for General Electric and later RCA. [55] In contrast, Sammy's mother, Mitzi, embodies the artistic temperament of Spielberg's mother, Leah Adler, a concert pianist and restaurateur whose creative frustrations strained the family dynamic. [55] The film's depiction of familial discord centers on the parents' divorce, which in reality occurred in 1967 when Spielberg was 19, though the narrative compresses events for dramatic effect to align with Sammy's teenage years. [54] Spielberg has noted that for decades he attributed the split primarily to his father, but collaboration with co-writer Tony Kushner prompted a reevaluation, leading the film to portray his mother's infidelity and unhappiness as key factors, drawn from family discussions and home movies. [70] This shift reflects Spielberg's stated intent to confront long-avoided personal truths, describing the process as cathartic after hiding from his story since age 17. [56] Other parallels include the family's relocations—from New Jersey to Arizona in 1953, then to California—mirroring Spielberg's own moves, during which he shot amateur films like a 16mm war epic at age 12 using his father's golfing friends as actors. [54] Uncle Boris, the eccentric relative urging Sammy toward art over science, is based on Spielberg's maternal uncle, who emphasized creative passion amid familial pressures for stability. [63] An antisemitic bullying incident at school, where Sammy faces violence from peers, parallels Spielberg's real experiences of prejudice, which he links to broader themes of Jewish identity in America. [71] As a self-portrait, the film examines Spielberg's emergence as an artist through Sammy's lens, highlighting tensions between artistic ambition and familial duty, as well as the use of filmmaking to process trauma—evident in Sammy's decision to edit a raw video exposing his mother's affair, forcing confrontation. [56] Spielberg has described this as his most personal work, embedding elements of his psyche across prior films but here directly mythologizing his origin as a director who prioritized cinema over reconciliation, culminating in a meta-encounter with a John Ford surrogate advising persistence in personal vision. [57] The narrative underscores causal links between childhood disruptions and creative drive, portraying Spielberg's path not as escapist fantasy but as a deliberate response to real emotional fractures. [11]Release Strategy
Theatrical Rollout
The Fabelmans premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival on September 10, 2022.[72] It followed with additional festival screenings, including closing the AFI Fest at the TCL Chinese Theatre in late October 2022.[73] Universal Pictures initiated a limited theatrical release in the United States on November 11, 2022, screening in four theaters across New York City and Los Angeles to build awards momentum.[74] [75] This platform strategy, common for prestige films, yielded an estimated $160,000 in its opening weekend, averaging $40,000 per screen.[76] The film expanded to a wide release nationwide on November 23, 2022, coinciding with the Thanksgiving holiday period to capitalize on family audiences and extended viewing opportunities.[75] International rollout began concurrently in select markets, such as Canada and parts of Europe following festival play.[72]Marketing and Promotion
Universal Pictures handled the marketing for The Fabelmans, emphasizing the film's semi-autobiographical roots and Steven Spielberg's personal involvement through targeted promotional materials and festival premieres. The campaign began with the release of the first official poster on September 7, 2022, which featured a collage of film strips, a silhouetted figure approaching studio lights, and the tagline "Capture Every Moment."[77] The initial trailer debuted online on September 11, 2022, immediately following the film's world premiere at the Toronto International Film Festival on September 10.[78] This teaser highlighted key cast members including Michelle Williams, Paul Dano, and Seth Rogen, alongside themes of family and filmmaking ambition, set against nostalgic 1950s and 1960s imagery.[79] Promotional efforts leaned on the festival circuit for early buzz rather than aggressive wide-release advertising, as Spielberg noted the film required "a little more care" than standard blockbusters.[64] Supporting materials included behind-the-scenes videos showcasing production insights and cast interviews, released in the lead-up to the limited theatrical rollout on November 11, 2022, and wide release on November 23.[80] This awards-season-oriented approach aimed to build critical acclaim over mass-market hype, aligning with the film's intimate narrative.Home Media Distribution
The Fabelmans became available for digital purchase and rental on January 17, 2023, through platforms including Amazon Prime Video, Apple TV, Google Play, and Vudu, priced at approximately $19.99 to buy and $5.99 to rent in HD or 4K quality.[81][82][83] The digital edition included bonus features such as "The Fabelmans: A Personal Journey," a featurette with director Steven Spielberg discussing the film's autobiographical inspirations, along with deleted scenes and a making-of documentary.[84] Physical home media distribution followed on February 14, 2023, via Universal Pictures Home Entertainment, offering the film in 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray, standard Blu-ray, and DVD formats.[85][86][87] These editions replicated the digital bonus materials and supported Dolby Atmos audio and HDR10 for enhanced viewing.[84] The releases coincided with the film's awards season momentum, including Oscar nominations announced shortly after.[82] As a Universal Pictures production, the film entered subscription streaming windows post-physical release, appearing on services like Showtime through licensing agreements, though no fixed Peacock premiere date was publicly confirmed by mid-2023.[88] Digital rental and purchase options remained widely available thereafter on major video-on-demand platforms.[89]Commercial Performance
Box Office Analysis
The Fabelmans premiered in limited release in the United States on November 11, 2022, across four theaters, generating an opening weekend gross of $161,579.[4] Distributed by Universal Pictures, the film expanded to wider release but achieved a total domestic gross of $17,348,945, reflecting modest audience turnout amid competition from major holiday releases.[4] Internationally, earnings totaled $28,265,268, with notable contributions from markets including the United Kingdom ($4.3 million) and France, contributing to a worldwide theatrical gross of $45,614,213.[4] Produced on a budget of $40 million, the film's box office performance yielded a return of approximately 1.14 times its production cost, though theatrical profitability typically requires grosses closer to double the budget to account for distributor splits (around 50% domestic, lower internationally) and marketing expenses not recouped solely through ticket sales.[90] [4]| Territory | Gross |
|---|---|
| Domestic | $17,348,945 |
| International | $28,265,268 |
| Worldwide | $45,614,213 |