Forum - View topicNEWS: Film Critic Roger Ebert Passes Away
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varmintx
Posts: 1235 Location: Covington, KY |
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Literally the only film critic I have consistently watched/read over the past quarter century. Even when I disagreed with him, he writes with such enthusiasm and wit that I could never really get angry about it. I will miss him dearly.
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AbZeroNow
Posts: 519 |
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RIP Roger.
I loved watching your reviews when you were doing them with the late Siskel and I loved seeing you do them by yourself or with whomever you had with you. Ebert had great taste I will miss him. |
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Blood-
Bargain Hunter
Posts: 24170 |
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Very possibly the last human being who will ever become famous as a movie critic. Print film criticism is dying and all the Internet has produced so far is rabid fanboys like Harry Knowles. Not an Ebert or a Kael in the bunch.
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Oneeyedjacks
Posts: 307 |
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One of the best writers and critics we've ever had. Really gonna miss him.
May he RIP. |
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yurixhentai
Posts: 30 |
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I can't believe it, he was the only film critic I actually followed. I have a lot of respect for him. Rest in Peace.
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rheiders
Posts: 1137 Location: Colorful Colorado :) |
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One of the only critics I actually read on a regular basis. His passion for film shined through in every word of his reviews. He will be sorely missed.
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SpacemanHardy
Posts: 2511 |
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Roger, this one's for you. b
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Tuor_of_Gondolin
Posts: 3524 Location: Bellevue, WA |
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I disagreed with his opinions more often than not, but always respected him. Watching Siskel and Ebert back in the day was a real blast.
R.I.P., Mr. Ebert. You will be missed. |
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Thatguy3331
Posts: 1799 |
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I don't keep much consistancy with reviewers, but may he Rest in peace.
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malvarez1
Posts: 2115 |
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Oh my gosh, no! He was my favorite film critic, and the one I respected the most. His film reviews were so well-written, and so was his blog. He seemed like a smart man. Man, the critc industry just lost a very important person.
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Tony K.
Subscriber
Moderator Posts: 11446 Location: Frisco, TX |
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Farewell today to one of the few critics I actually followed. I didn't agree with all of his reviews, as I'm sure a lot of people wouldn't agree with mine (so is the nature of subjective opinion). But as an aspiring lover of movies myself, I think I speak on behalf of most people when I say his unspeakable wisdom and passion for film will truly be missed. Thanks for everything, Mr. Ebert.
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mgosdin
Posts: 1302 Location: Kissimmee, Florida, USA |
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Watched him and Gene Siskel on PBS oh-so-many-years-ago and I always enjoyed his reviews even when he was as far from right as it was possible to be.
Requiescat in pace. May the light be an eternal flicker of a projector... Mark Gosdin |
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jsevakis
Former ANN Editor in Chief
Posts: 1685 Location: Los Angeles, CA |
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Read this, which has nothing to do with reviews or even movies, but about this incredible man.
http://www.salon.com/2011/09/15/roger_ebert/ |
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Aynslesa
Posts: 199 |
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Doesn't matter whether I agreed with his reviews or not; few other reviewers I've read have been able to match him in terms of writing and wit. This was a man who truly loved his craft. R.I.P Mr. Ebert; I'm sure you'll continue to be an icon for many years to come.
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GeorgeC
Posts: 795 |
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Blame it on the downfall of the education system... ... and btw, the problem is NOT isolated to the US. There are more and more people being born into a zombie lifestyle where they go through the motions, eat the same junk, go for whatever the prevailing entertainment trends/culture tells them, and they're just not taught how to think for themselves or enjoy life without accumulating a bunch of junk they don't need! Yes, the films today ARE lousy but I don't know for sure that the percentages of good versus mediocre are that much better than they were in the 1930s and 1940s. It could be that it just appears there were more good films back then because a dollar stretched further back (inflation was nothing like it is today; nor did the government purposefully allow the money to be devalued just for the sake of trade with a few countries) and there were hundreds of movies made per year! Today, between the studios, less than 50-some major films get made and a studio's fortune can depend on one or two films to hit big because of the mega-high budgets. What IS surely different is that you could not get The Godfather, Blazing Saddles, Jaws, and any number of classics made today because of the prevailing climate of political correctness and the pressure to put in "bling" where it doesn't belong. Jaws was infamous for all the troubles with the mechanical shark but it ended being a better, more suspenseful film for the LACK OF APPEARANCES of the shark and camera-view only. Today, the pressure or inclination would be to put a lousy CG shark in all too many frames and the film just couldn't be made the same way or feel like the final 1975 product. It's into that '70s climate and the early period of the Fourth Wing of government (the media) that the better-known critics today got established. And yes, the Internet does allow a lot of uncouth, heavy-breathing, boorish-beyond-words carnival freak bozos (like Harry Knowles) to flourish. The only good thing is that the influence of these guys lasts only a couple seconds by current Internet standards. What is more lasting and damaging is the fact that critical, independent thinking isn't being taught and all too many people are being educated by rote without demonstrating one bit of common sense or ability to survive in the real world. And that's at the college level as well as public school. Society is too tech-focused now. People can't put a thought together, many can't write or spell to save themselves. Sadder yet, typing is being stressed more at public school at the expense of traditional penmanship (cursive writing). Bunches of kids are getting out of school without knowing how to do basic math without calculators, too... You definitely won't get great critics, let alone many historians, out of that group. And again, I stress that this trend is worldwide... It's not just the US, Britain, or other English-speaking nations. This is being seen in Asia and throughout Europe. |
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