Showing posts with label Roger Ebert. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Roger Ebert. Show all posts

Monday, July 21, 2014

Life Itself










Ebert with his longtime personal assistant Carol Iwata


















LIFE ITSELF             A-                     
USA  (115 mi)  2014  d:  Steve James             Official site

Gatsby’s house was still empty when I left — the grass on his lawn had grown as long as mine. One of the taxi drivers in the village never took a fare past the entrance gate without stopping for a minute and pointing inside; perhaps it was he who drove Daisy and Gatsby over to East Egg the night of the accident, and perhaps he had made a story about it all his own. I didn’t want to hear it and I avoided him when I got off the train.

I spent my Saturday nights in New York because those gleaming, dazzling parties of his were with me so vividly that I could still hear the music and the laughter, faint and incessant, from his garden, and the cars going up and down his drive. One night I did hear a material car there, and saw its lights stop at his front steps. But I didn’t investigate. Probably it was some final guest who had been away at the ends of the earth and didn’t know that the party was over.

On the last night, with my trunk packed and my car sold to the grocer, I went over and looked at that huge incoherent failure of a house once more. On the white steps an obscene word, scrawled by some boy with a piece of brick, stood out clearly in the moonlight, and I erased it, drawing my shoe raspingly along the stone. Then I wandered down to the beach and sprawled out on the sand.

Most of the big shore places were closed now and there were hardly any lights except the shadowy, moving glow of a ferryboat across the Sound. And as the moon rose higher the inessential houses began to melt away until gradually I became aware of the old island here that flowered once for Dutch sailors’ eyes — a fresh, green breast of the new world. Its vanished trees, the trees that had made way for Gatsby’s house, had once pandered in whispers to the last and greatest of all human dreams; for a transitory enchanted moment man must have held his breath in the presence of this continent, compelled into an aesthetic contemplation he neither understood nor desired, face to face for the last time in history with something commensurate to his capacity for wonder.

And as I sat there brooding on the old, unknown world, I thought of Gatsby’s wonder when he first picked out the green light at the end of Daisy’s dock. He had come a long way to this blue lawn, and his dream must have seemed so close that he could hardly fail to grasp it. He did not know that it was already behind him, somewhere back in that vast obscurity beyond the city, where the dark fields of the republic rolled on under the night.

Gatsby believed in the green light, the orgastic future that year by year recedes before us. It eluded us then, but that’s no matter — to-morrow we will run faster, stretch out our arms farther. . . . And one fine morning ——

So we beat on, boats against the current, borne back ceaselessly into the past.

—F. Scott Fitzgerald, The Great Gatsby finale, 1925, Ebert’s favorite literary passage

Arguably the most powerful documentary seen so far this year, as it’s like witnessing the passing of a close personal friend, adapted from Ebert’s 2011 autobiographical memoirs, written five years after thyroid cancer left him unable to speak, eat, or drink, but he “began to replace what I lost with what I remembered,” making a resurgence on the Internet with his interactive Ebert blog where he only became more prolific and influential as a writer, where his legacy is contained on his revamped website (www.rogerebert.com) that currently receives 110 million visits per year, where there are some 70 writers offering diverse opinions and views carrying on his name.  The only film critic with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, and for almost 30 years he was the only film critic to ever win the Pulitzer Prize back in 1975 for outstanding criticism.  Ebert was also an honorary member of the Director’s Guild of America, working as the film critic for The Chicago Sun-Times from 1967 until his death in 2013, his reviews were syndicated to more than 200 newspapers in the United States and Canada.  Ebert also appeared on television for four decades, including twenty-three years as cohost of Siskel & Ebert & the Movies (1986–99), becoming the most popular and best known film critic of our time, eventually accepted as a familiar household name.  While the sadness of his death was a tragic loss, much of it expressed in an outpouring of affirmation at his public funeral service (Roger Ebert), much of this film captures behind-the-scenes glimpses of Roger and his wife Chaz while he was undergoing extensive rehabilitation treatment in the hospital, which includes the dramatic mood swings that come with the territory of reaching the end stage of one’s life, where this film doesn’t sugar coat it, showing the depths of exasperation and depression, where despite his overall positive attitude, there were times when he preferred to end it.  This is no movie version of death, but brings the viewer into the wrenching personal moments when he was simply overcome by the devastation of his illness.   As he is unable to speak, Chaz acts as the narrator of his thoughts, reading personal notes that he writes or recounting his innermost feelings that he shared.  His death serves as the backdrop to what is otherwise an exposé of his life. 

Born as a middle class kid from Urbana, a small Midwestern town in central Illinois, his father was an electrician and his mother a housewife, where they subscribed to three newspapers to accommodate Roger’s voracious interest.  While he hoped he could follow in the Kennedy’s footsteps to Harvard, his working class family could only afford the nearby University of Illinois where he became the editor of the school newspaper, spending late evening hours setting the type press, a notable experience to others who remember Roger as he already knew how to write in a distinctively mature style, as evidenced by an article he wrote after a Birmingham church bombing (16th Street Baptist Church bombing) killed four young black girls on September 15, 1963, beginning with a quote from Reverend Martin Luther King, Jr. who told then white separatist Alabama Governor George Wallace “The blood of four little children…is on your hands.”  At only 21, Ebert took issue with King’s comments, suggesting in The Daily Illini that the blood was on the hands of not just one man, but many, as legislated white separatism must pass through the minds and thoughts of hundreds, then voted upon by hundreds of thousands and perhaps millions more voters before it is enacted into law, enforced by still more police, sheriffs, district attorneys, juries, and ultimately judges who sit upon the wisdom of such racially divisive practices.  While he moved to Chicago as a doctoral student in graduate school at the University of Chicago, the economic reality meant he also needed money, so while he intended to be a freelance reporter with the Chicago Sun-Times while still attending classes, he was actually hired as a reporter and feature writer.  In less than a year, without asking for the position and without so much as an interview he was offered the job as full-time movie critic when Eleanor Keane left the paper in April 1967, becoming the youngest film critic in the nation at age 24, a job he never relinquished until his death.  Enriched by old black and white archival photographs, narrated by a few old clips of Ebert himself, but mostly voice actor Stephen Stanton as Ebert, there are plenty of recollections from friends, colleagues, and drinking buddies, recounting tales from Ebert’s drinking days at O’Rourke’s Pub near Old Town where a bartender recalls, “Back in the old days, Roger had the worst taste in women of probably any man I’ve ever known.  They were either gold diggers, opportunists, or psychos.”

Improbably, or perhaps not, Roger developed a close association with schlock sexploitation maestro Russ Meyer, writing the screenplay for the cult film BEYOND THE VALLEY OF THE DOLLS (1970), which captured the thoughts of young director Martin Scorsese, who started amusingly with the title, claiming they meant it when they say it goes “Beyond…Far Beyond,” always remembering the editing sequence when the girl has sex in a luxury Bentley car, which edits the grill of the Bentley into the middle of the sex act.  Scorsese recalls the interest a young Ebert took in one of his earliest efforts, WHO’S THAT KNOCKING AT MY DOOR (1967), seen when it was entitled I CALL FIRST, already recognizing the talent behind the camera, which he recalls in his book here, Scorsese by Ebert by Roger Ebert, an excerpt.  In one of the lowest periods of Scorsese’s life in the early 80’s, after several failed marriages, he acknowledges he was actually contemplating suicide, but before he had the chance to act, he received an invite from Siskel & Ebert to join them in a retrospective panel discussion about his works at the Toronto Film Festival, something he never forgot, as it literally saved his life.  Scorsese’s comments were particularly heartfelt, even as Ebert lambasted his film THE COLOR OF MONEY (1986), which struck a nerve, but he insisted that even when writing a negative review, Ebert never lost his professionalism or went for the juggler, a trait that describes his innate humaneness.  Similarly, Errol Morris attributes much of his success to Ebert’s enthralling endorsement of his first documentary film GATES OF HEAVEN (1978), a small film about pet cemeteries that Roger championed throughout his life.  The same could be said about Werner Herzog, who calls Ebert a “soldier of cinema, a wounded comrade,” but it is Morris who acknowledges, “Here I had someone writing about my work who was a true enthusiast.  His enthusiasm has kept me going over the years, and the memory of his enthusiasm will keep me going for as long as I make movies.”  The director’s own association with Ebert dates back to 1994 when Siskel & Ebert used their television show as a platform to endorse his unheralded urban basketball documentary HOOP DREAMS (1994) as one of the best films of the year, where both listed it as their #1 Best Film.  All of this attests not only to his influence, but his personal generosity, reflected by countless others who recall how Ebert took the time to acknowledge their work when nobody else was, like Charles Burnett’s KILLER OF SHEEP (1979) or Gregory Nava’s EL NORTE (1983), where kindness is a recognizable human attribute one never forgets. 

After winning the Pulitzer Prize, The Washington Post editor Ben Bradlee tried to lure him away with a big-money offer, but Ebert continually refused, replying, “I’m not gonna learn new streets.”  Much is made of Ebert’s professional legacy, specifically the thumbs up/thumbs down shorthand of film criticism, a technique that film critic Jonathan Rosenbaum dismisses, claiming it is not film criticism, which Ebert is not ashamed to acknowledge, as television time restraints demand a simplistic rating system, a short cut style of divulging sufficient information for viewers to make an intelligent choice.  But other serious cinephiles were equally appalled by the system, including this erudite March/April 1990 Film Comment attack by Richard Corliss, All Thumbs: Or, Is There a Future for Film Criticism? that attacks the dumbing down, sound bite mentality of movie reviews as little more than television marketing.  In the next edition of the magazine, Ebert's reply may be as meticulously detailed, lengthy, and well-argued as the original piece, delivering a strong defense for the show.  This perfectly illustrates Ebert’s clear-headedness, as according to newspaper colleagues and friends, Ebert never spent more than a half hour writing a review, that he comes from a newspaper background where the secret is outlining the ideas in your head before you start to write.  Ebert had the ability to write, and speak, in whole paragraphs while retaining the ability to remain clear and concise, displaying old-fashioned Midwestern logic and common sense.  Even when writing about complex artists like Bergman, Dreyer, or Bresson, Ebert never wrote above the heads of the audience by describing often incomprehensible film theory (which he was known to do in classrooms, spending hours dissecting movies shot by shot), always aware that he was writing for the widest possible readership.  When paired with philosophy major and Yale graduate Gene Siskel, a man who never met one of his own opinions he didn’t prefer, Ebert was often stunned by his inability to convince his partner of the error of his thinking, where both stubbornly refused to acquiesce to the other, which provided the fireworks for the show.  As someone ingeniously acknowledged, “Gene was a rogue planet in Roger’s solar system.”  Of course there are film clips from the show, including inflammatory shouting matches objecting about the incredibly poor taste of their partner, over BENJI THE HUNTED (1987), of all films, where Ebert strains to yell over another Siskel snide remark, “I disagree particularly about the part you like!”  But the worst behavior occurs during a series of outtakes where both are seen continually trading personal insults, captured on camera as they dutifully flub line after line of promo shots, eventually walking off the set in a huff.  Eventually, perhaps because of the amount of time they spent in such close quarters together, they grew a special affection for one another.   

Among the many surprises of the film is not about Roger, but Gene Siskel, former playboy, who was part of Hugh Hefner’s inner circle of the early 70’s before he became a movie critic, seen jet setting around the country with a bevy of beautiful models on the Playboy private jet.  And who would have guessed that among Roger’s favorite literary works was a special affection for The Great Gatsby, often asking his lifelong friend Bill Nack to recite the final lines in the book from memory, which he proudly does onscreen, as he has done hundreds of times, where the overriding hope and optimism of a new and better world ahead seems to have been Roger’s guiding light.  At the beginning of the film he offers his description of cinema as “a machine that generates empathy,” which has an almost science-fiction feel to it, suggesting there is a healing power in cinema, which may have transformed his life.  He wasn’t particularly proud of his reckless behavior on display during the 70’s while working for The Chicago Sun-Times, describing himself as “tactless, egotistical, merciless, and a showboat,” where he was also a preeminent storyteller that could hold a room, a womanizer, and an alcoholic, eventually joining Alcoholics Anonymous, where he remained sober since 1979.  In his book, Ebert claims Ann Landers introduced him to his eventual wife Chaz at a restaurant in Chicago, but the film tells another story, that he met the love of his life at age 50 in an A.A. meeting.  A former chair of the Black Student Union at her college, and perhaps the least likely person to choose a white man for a husband, Chaz steadfastly remains at Roger’s side throughout his most difficult ordeals, often understanding the underlying anguish and despair even as Roger tends to remain optimistic.  Despite the graphically uncomfortable moments where Roger has to continually return to the rehab hospital five times, each time thinking it would be his last, that it would lead him on the road to recovery, where he was initially informed, “They got it all.  Every last speck,” only to realize the cancer had continued to spread elsewhere.  This stream of medical news is exhausting and demoralizing, none of which is hidden from view, where among Roger’s more acute observations was his wife’s inextinguishable support, “To visit a hospital is not pleasant.  To do it hundreds of times is heroic.”  In a startling revelation, Chaz describes the final moment when they finally decide to let go, easily the most heartbreaking moment in the entire film, where death has rarely felt more genuine.  Yet it is this heartfelt intimacy that carries us through this film that helps us understand the power of love, where it nearly has the capacity to raise the dead, perhaps best expressed by Kenneth Turan from The Los Angeles Times:

If you had asked me ahead of time what I would have found most interesting about Life Itself, I would have guessed that it would be the parts I knew least about, specifically Roger’s harum-scarum days as a young film critic about town in high-spirited Chicago.  Paradoxically, the opposite was true, (where perhaps most surprising are) the sections that enlarged my understanding of Roger’s relationship with his remarkable wife, Chaz, particularly as their vibrant marriage took on the cataclysmic series of illnesses that marked the final decade of Roger’s life.  The cascading surgeries that Roger went through would have toppled a less indomitable man, and it was difficult for me to watch the scenes that show Roger in obvious discomfort and pain.  But having a behind-the-scenes look at the truth of Roger’s remark that Chaz’s love was ‘like a wind pushing me back from the grave’ genuinely brought tears to my eyes.

Roger loves Chaz | Roger Ebert's Journal | Roger Ebert  July 17, 2012, a selection from Life Itself: A Memoir:

The greatest pleasure came from annual trips we made with our grandchildren Raven, Emil and Taylor, and their parents Sonia and Mark.  Josibiah and his son Joseph came on one of those trips, where we made our way from Budapest to Prague, Vienna and Venice.  We went with the Evans family to Hawaii, Los Angeles, London, Paris, Venice, and Stockholm.  We walked the ancient pathway from Cambridge to Grantchester.  Emil announced that for him there was no such thing as getting up too early, and every morning the two of us would meet in a hotel lobby and go out for long walks together.  I took my camera.  One morning in Budapest he asked me to take a photo of two people walking ahead of us and holding hands.

“Why?”

“Because they look happy.”

Ramin Setoodeh 5 of the Film’s Most Surprising Moments, from Variety at Sundance, January 19, 2014

Roger Ebert knew that he wouldn’t live to see “Life Itself,” the documentary based on his 2011 memoir. In one of the most touching scenes of the riveting film by director Steve James (“Hoop Dreams”), Ebert learns that his cancer has metastasized to his spine. The doctors estimate he only has six to 16 months to live, although he doesn’t make it that long. Ebert died in April 2013 at 70.

“It is likely I will have passed when the film is ready,” Ebert calmly predicts on-camera.

At the Sunday premiere of “Life Itself,” James broke into tears as he introduced his film, which will air on CNN. The next two hours were a sobfest, as most of the audience cried — and often laughed, too. When the credits rolled, Ebert’s wife Chaz took the stage joined by Marlene Iglitzen, the wife of Ebert’s longtime movie sparring partner Gene Siskel.

Chaz talked about how people called her a saint for taking care of Roger as his health failed after a thyroid cancer diagnosis in 2002. “What they didn’t know is how much my heart grew from having been with him for all those years, for loving him, for taking care of him, for having him take care of me,” Chaz said. During the Q&A, an audience member asked what Ebert would have thought of “Life Itself.” Chaz knew that “he would say two thumbs up.”

The stirring documentary, which was shot during what would be the last five months of Ebert’s life, includes interviews with Ebert’s director friends Martin Scorsese, Werner Herzog and Errol Morris, as well as critics A.O. Scott and Richard Corliss. Here are five of the film’s most surprising moments.

1. Ebert never got to say good-bye to Gene Siskel. In the documentary, Marlene talks about how Gene hid his brain cancer diagnosis in 1998, out of fear that Disney would replace him on ABC’s “Siskel & Ebert.” Ebert had planned to visit Gene at the hospital, but he passed two days before the visit. Chaz said that Ebert was so heartbroken, he was determined to share the details of his own health after he got sick.

2. Ebert signed “a do not resuscitate.” In the final days of his life, he sent James emails like “i’m fading” and “i can’t.” He said his hands were so swollen, he wasn’t able to use a computer. He secretly signed a DNR at the hospital without telling Chaz, which she learned about on the day of his death. In the film, she described the moment of his passing as “a wind of peace” and “I knew it was time to accept it.”

3. Ebert met Chaz at Alcoholics Anonymous. In his memoir, Ebert claims to have first talked to her at a Chicago restaurant, after an introduction by Ann Landers. In the film, Chaz says she met Roger at AA, a fact that she had never publicly revealed. And until he started dating her, Ebert had a wild bachelor streak–according to one pal, he used to court “gold diggers, opportunists and psychos.” Another buddy recalls that Roger introduced him to a prostitute he was seeing.

4. Laura Dern once gave Ebert a present that belonged to Marilyn Monroe. After Ebert presented Dern with a Sundance tribute, Dern sent him a heartfelt letter with a special memento. It was a puzzle that Lee Strasberg had given her, a gift from Alfred Hitchcock to Marilyn Monroe. Ebert later gave the puzzle to director Ramin Bahrani, with the instructions that one day, “You have to give it to someone else who deserves it.”

5. Ebert loved “The Great Gatsby.”It was his favorite book. He had his journalist friend Bill Nack recite the final lines back to him hundreds of times. Here it is, Roger: “So we beat on, boats against the current, borne back ceaselessly into the past.”

Ebert compiled "best of the year" movie lists beginning in 1967, thereby helping provide an overview of his critical preferences.  His top choices were:

1969: Z
1975: Nashville
1977: 3 Women
1984: Amadeus
1986: Platoon
1990: Goodfellas
1991: JFK
1992: Malcolm X
1996: Fargo
1998: Dark City
2003: Monster
2005: Crash
2007: Juno
2012: Argo

Tuesday, April 23, 2013

To the Wonder
































TO THE WONDER                B+  
USA  (112 mi)  2012  ‘Scope  d:  Terrence Malick            Official site

Why must a film explain everything? Why must every motivation be spelled out? Aren’t many films fundamentally the same film, with only the specifics changed? Aren’t many of them telling the same story? Seeking perfection, we see what our dreams and hopes might look like. We realize they come as a gift through no power of our own, and if we lose them, isn’t that almost worse than never having had them in the first place? 
—Roger Ebert, final film review Chicago Sun-Times [Roger Ebert]

No one but Terrence Malick makes films like this, and if anyone else but Malick made this film, we’d all be thinking of it as a breakthrough work.  But from this director we expect so much more, as he simply works and operates at a different artistic level than other mortal humans.  Perhaps David Gordon Green early in his career could fill the screen with luminescent, wordless sequences that are equally breathtaking, but his films had dialogue and a more recognizable narrative sweep to them.  This film continues an artistic design originating with 2011 Top Ten Films of the Year #1 The Tree of Life (2011), filling the screen with a blitzkrieg of non-narrative, abstract images underlined by gloriously chosen classical music, while at the same time asking the transcendental questions that search for life’s meaning.  Not everyone responds to this kind of personalized, philosophic inquiry, some rejecting it out of hand for not telling a recognizable story, others finding it interesting to a degree, but overly pretentious and too arty, while still others would like to appreciate it, but get lost in the ever elusive grandiosity of the filmmaking.  Suffice it to say, while it’s a more simplistic film, this *is* the film Malick intended to make, despite feeling at times like an offshoot of his previous film, perhaps a smaller and more perfectly concise work, as it’s largely an agonizing and soul searching stare into the existential void, asking whether or not love exists?  Unlike all his other films except for brief moments in The Tree of Life, this is Malick’s first contemporary film, contrasting the immensity of the natural world around us with the tiny, claustrophobic space we actually inhabit, even featuring a Sonic Drive-in and an Econo Lodge, living lives of routine, literally walking the very same steps each day.  Malick always loves to show an overpowering presence that exists both in the beauty of nature and in the unseen forces of either God or the mysteries of the universe, where each of us must find our way.  While other films have transcendent moments, this entire film is about that transcendence, wondering if love can sustain the crush of human disappointment and misery.  Using multiple storylines that are advanced through voiceover narration, the film opens with the maternal love of a mother for her child, a kind of universal expression of the permanence of love that exists throughout all cultures and societies, much like the all encompassing love of the Blessed Virgin Mary or Holy Mother in Christian theology.     

While the entire story is told with a near wordless expression, Marina (Olga Kurylenko) is a Ukrainian divorcée raising her 10-year old daughter Tatiana (Tatiana Chiline) in Paris, which is where she meets a traveling American, Neil (Ben Affleck).  They fall in love while basking in the glow of Mont-Saint-Michel, an abbey rising out of the sea, like an apparition, on a rocky tidal island just off the Normandy coast.  It is this Edenesque perfection, where the buildings on the northern side are known as “La Merveille,” the French word for “the Wonder,” that gives the film its title.  He invites them to come live with him in his Oklahoma home where Neil works as an environmental inspector, finding poisonous traces in the soil located close to local industry, where the poorest residents continue to live in close proximity.  Though Neil lives in a boxed house with a boundary dividing fence located in a subdivision of tract housing, the two are initially excited to be there, continuously seen dancing and almost floating through air, where both Marina and Tatiana seem to adore the taciturn Neil, who barely utters a word throughout the entire film, and often his head is not even in the picture.  In a Tarkovsky film, expect an absent father and a loving, over-affectionate mother, while in a Malick film the father is present, but silent and uncommunicative, usually angry or frustrated by the stifling effects of the relationship, while the mother is again the nurturing provider.  Kurylenko is lovely and quite charming, a free spirit balancing her time and affection with her daughter and Neil, but she grows impatient when Neil is unable to express his feelings or hold any longterm interest, and seems content to leave her hanging, even as Marina’s visa is about to expire.  When they have fights, Tatiana quickly loses interest in Neil, or any man who disrespects her mother, so they quietly exit the country, leaving the house an empty shell of what it once was, one of the truly sad moments of the film.  On a similar tract, Javier Bardem plays Father Quintana, most likely a stand-in for the director, a Catholic priest undergoing a crisis of faith, where he finds it hard to feel the presence of God’s spirit with such troubled parishioners, preaching to a more than half-empty church, catering to the most poor and dispossessed, while also making visits to those serving prison sentences, one of the more chilling sequences in the film, but certainly an eloquent expression of how utterly lost and alone certain individuals can become. 

Neil rekindles his lost love with Jane (Rachel McAdams), a childhood sweetheart, now a divorced rancher who acknowledges she lost a child and is looking to fill that void.  Again, her needs outweigh his, as in each segment the women are the aggressors, and the camera finds them both in resplendent beauty, where it’s hard to understand what’s holding him back.  One of the best transition shots is a moment of intimacy followed by Jane in a bright red dress running through the wheat fields, where the red color just takes one’s breath away.  But when he receives word that Marina is unhappy in Paris, that Tatiana is living with her father and she’s now alone, he mysteriously agrees to marry her, perhaps to offer her legal resident status, where the church witnesses are, humorously enough, prison inmates wearing their uniforms, like something you’d see in a Coen brothers movie.  But she’s suffocating being locked up in the house all day with nothing to do, where the two of them are miserable together, often seen bitterly furious.  An unfamiliarly strange and unusual sequence shows an Italian girlfriend (Romina Mondello) calling herself a gypsy urging Marina to run away with her, as this two-bit town is dead and has nothing to offer, screaming for all to hear, but instead Marina allows herself to be lured into a cheap affair with a local guy, where the motel room is just a smaller box than the house, where the sense of confinement is overwhelming, as is her sense of disorientation afterwards.  This is a film of only fleeting moments of happiness, where Kurylenko and McAdams are archetypal women shown with sun-drenched faces, where their beauty and sensuality are aglow in the light, but by the end the light goes out in the world and humans appear lost without it.  The crisis of faith shows itself throughout in both Affleck and Bardem, afflicted spirits in the modern world, where with a priest it’s the absence of faith, seen in a religious context, unable to find hope in the wretched lives of the rural poor, as how does one preach divine forgiveness for those dying of industrial poisoning?  But to his credit, the priest keeps searching.  With Affleck, what’s missing is the ability to place any trust or faith in love, as he continually squanders his opportunities, usually appearing small and petty and unforgiving, where all around him are spectacular images of beauty, as Malick shows him the way and the light, but he remains an empty vessel living in an existential wasteland, a prisoner of his own human ineptitude. 

Friday, April 5, 2013

Roger Ebert





































































































































































CINE-FILE: Cine-List - CINE-FILE Chicago  Friday, APR. 5 - Thursday, APR. 11, Managing Editor Patrick Friel, on behalf of all of the volunteer contributors at Cine-File

ROGER EBERT (1942-2013)
We at Cine-File are extraordinarily saddened at the passing yesterday of legendary Chicago film critic Roger Ebert. Mr. Ebert was a passionate and vocal advocate for cinema, a remarkable writer, and an example of how film criticism could still be smart, affecting, political, and personal even in a large city daily newspaper and on a shifting series of television programs. Mr. Ebert never forgot his roots and never forgot his early cinema loves. He was the rare popular critic (and no one has ever been as popular) who really knew cinema history. His writing was informed by this knowledge and deep love for classic Hollywood and myriad foreign films. He was a true Chicago critic: feisty, opinionated, unapologetic. He didn't suffer fools, or foolish films. But he was also someone who maintained a humility and humbleness throughout his career. He was approachable. He supported small and independent film venues and series in many ways. He relished new talent—filmmakers and critics both. He had a sharp wit—one that he often turned on himself. He connected directly with his fans and readers via his website, Facebook, and, especially, his Twitter account. In the last few years, after the unimaginable series of cancer occurrences, other medical issues, and surgeries left him unable to speak and severely disfigured, he did not shy away from his problems. He continued to put himself out publicly, challenging people to deal with his appearance, working to de-stigmatize his disease and the drastic repercussions it can have. He also became more vocal politically, using his celebrity to champion causes he believed in, carrying though his uncompromising work as a critic to broader areas of human life. These past several years, since his initial cancer diagnosis and especially since his surgery to remove his lower jaw, are his most triumphant accomplishments. The example of his indomitable spirit, strong work ethic, unabated love for watching, thinking about, and writing about film, and the grace with which he dealt with his misfortunes are inspiring and a legacy worth more than his fame, his Pulitzer Prize, and his many accolades. Rest in peace, Mr. Ebert. And thank you.

Roger Ebert honored by Hollywood stars - chicagotribune.com  Mark Caro from The Chicago Tribune, April 12, 2013

“Roger, this is your happening, and it's freaking me out.”

This is how Chaz Ebert, after receiving a standing ovation from the Chicago Theatre crowd with her hand over her heart, introduced Thursday's tribute to her late husband —by invoking a line from his screenplay to 1970’s campy cult film “Beyond the Valley of the Dolls.”  Later in “Roger Ebert: A Celebration of Life,” clips from the Russ Meyer film would be shown, and tears would be shed, though not at the same time.

It was that kind of night.

If Roger Ebert's funeral Monday at Holy Name Cathedral — following his death April 4 at age 70 after a long cancer battle — represented his formal, religious farewell, complete with speeches from the governor and mayor, then Thursday's event at the Chicago Theatre was more of a laughter- and sorrow-filled send-off from the entertainment and media worlds.

There were clips this time, of Ebert and his late TV partner Gene Siskel arguing on the sets of their and others’ (such as Johnny Carson’s) shows, as well as interviews that the Chicago Sun-Times film critic gave before and after cancer claimed his jaw and ability to speak, even as his writing gained depth and vigor. There were also speakers and more speakers.

Ebert famously said, “No good movie is too long, and no bad movie is short enough,” and in the scheme of things, Ebert was more than a very good movie. So it’s no wonder that the people who loved him wanted to talk about him and not to let go. Even at the end of a 2-hour-and-45-minute program, Chaz Ebert told actors Chris Tucker and Scott Wilson in the audience that she was sorry that they didn’t have a chance to speak.

Others did, such as Evanston native/sibling actors Joan and John Cusack. Joan revealed that she'd been asked to read a letter that turned out to be from President Barack and First Lady Michelle Obama, who offered their sympathies to those gathered and praised Ebert's “remarkable tenacity” and “zest for life.”

John Cusack shared memories of reading Ebert while growing up, and he recalled visiting New York (and “Late Night with David Letterman”) as a 17-year-old to promote his first lead turn in “The Sure Thing” and winding up seated at a table next to one shared by Ebert and Siskel at the Carnegie Deli. The young Cusack was sweating bullets, he said, until Ebert leaned over and told him, “I liked your movie.”

John Cusack also recalled the studios always stressing to him the importance of his interviews with Ebert, who “reeked of integrity” and thus couldn’t be bought. “He was always supportive of artists and always gave you a fair shake,” Cusack said.

Marlene Iglitzen, Siskel's widow, candidly related how Siskel and Ebert genuinely didn’t like each other so much in the early days, with Siskel having to be persuaded to invite Ebert to their wedding only for Ebert not to show up. The big difference maker, in her view, was Chaz, who helped her husband — and his heart — grow to the point that all were much closer by the time Siskel died at age 53 in 1999.

Up till that point, Siskel and Ebert had been inseparable as far as their professional identities went, but Iglitzen praised Ebert for thriving in the years after Siskel was gone, saying she felt a bit of her husband was alive as long as Ebert was.

Filmmaker Gregory Nava lauded the late critic for his championing of non-mainstream films, such as his own “El Norte” (1983), and for his “great heart. The world of movies has lost its heart.”

Nava recalled being invited to Ebert’s bedside in the days before he died only to see the writer scribbling supportive messages to him and other visitors.

“Roger didn’t ask us to be with him to comfort him,” Nava said, choking back tears. “He wanted us to be with him to give us something.”

Other filmmakers — Chicagoan Andrew Davis (“The Fugitive”), Julie Dash (“Daughters of the Dust”) and Ava DuVernay (“Middle of Nowhere”) — told stories of friendship and encouragement, with the latter two singling out Ebert’s dedication to African-American filmmakers.

On the more ribald side, Old Town Ale House owner Bruce Elliott told an anecdote to illustrate Ebert's love of large breasts, and activist/comedian Dick Gregory, 80, showed he’s still got razor-sharp timing as he somehow managed to work a joke about Kobe Bryant’s sexual assault accusations into a zippy tribute that ended with him comparing Ebert to a turtle: “hard on the outside, soft on the inside and willing to stick your neck out.”

Newscaster Bill Kurtis (who provided Ebert’s voice on the recent “Ebert Presents At the Movies” show), TV producer Thea Flaum (creator of Siskel & Ebert’s PBS show “Sneak Previews”), Sony Pictures Classics co-president Michael Barker, Sun-Times columnist and former Ebert TV partner Richard Roeper, Facets executive director Milos Stehlik, former Playboy chairwoman Christie Hefner, Ebert Digital co-founder Josh Golden, disabilities-rights activist Marcia Bristo, Hollywood Reporter film critic Todd McCarthy, new Variety film critic Scott Foundas, film industry veteran Tom Luddy, and Tribune reporter Monica Eng and her sister Magan (both of whom maintained a close relationship with Ebert long after their mother had stopped dating him) also offered testimonials. The gospel groups Walt Whitman and the Soul Children of Chicago and Charles Jenkins and Fellowship Chicago opened and closed the show.

By my unofficial non-count, the word that came up second most often was “empathy.”

The word that came up most often was “heart.”

And in the end there was Chaz, on the stage with her family, Roger’s stepchildren and grandchildren, opening hers.

“I have a capacity for love that is very deep,” she said plainly, noting that she knew she had to fill a hole that had been in Ebert’s life. So she did, for more than 20 years of marriage.

And when he was diagnosed with cancer in 2002 and lost his jaw and ability to speak and to eat solid foods in 2006, she willed him on, saying she knew he had more important things to do. But when the cancer returned again recently, “this time he said, ‘I’m tired. You must let me go,’” she recounted. “I thought we had two more years to go. I did not know he would go so quickly.”

Still, she said, she hoped that everyone could experience a love like theirs, even when times were tough.

“When he was disfigured, when I looked at him, I saw beauty,” she said. 

On this point there would be no argument.


Reviews  Ebert’s regular site at the Chicago Sun-Times, also seen here:  rogerebert.com :: Movie reviews, essays and the Movie Answer Man ...

Great Movies  Ebert’s Great Movies site








His 1969 Profile of Paul Newman  Newman's Complaint, by Roger Ebert, Esquire magazine, September 1969

The Best Story Roger Ebert Ever Wrote for Esquire  Ebert interview of Lee Marvin from Esquire, November 1970, republished February 18, 2010

The New York Times > Magazine > Domains: A Film Critic's Windy ...  A Film Critic's Windy City Home, by Edward Lewine, February 13, 2005

Catching a Movie With an Old Friend  Stephen Hunter from The Washington Post, June 12, 2005

Roger Ebert's Farewell to "Ebert and Roeper"   The Balcony Is Closed, Chicago Sun Times, July 24, 2008

Roger Ebert Is the Essential Man  Chris Jones from Esquire, February 16, 2010, also seen here:  Roger Ebert Cancer Battle - Roger Ebert Interview - Esquire 

A Few More Intimate Moments with Roger Ebert  Chris Jones from Esquire, March 2, 2010

Roger Ebert: Why I Hate 3D Movies - The Daily Beast  Roger Ebert from The Daily Beast, May 9, 2010

The Author Responds to Tea-Party Attacks on Ebert  Chris Jones from The Politics Blog, May 12, 2010

Roger Ebert Pens New Cookbook  CBS News, June 30, 2010

Roger Ebert: Starting Over  Cynthia Bowers from CBS News, January 2, 2011

Why 3D doesn't work and never will. Case closed.  Roger Ebert Blog, January 23, 2011

Roger Ebert's TED Talk: The Internet Saved My Life  Foster Kamer from Esquire, March 8, 2011

I finally won the New Yorker cartoon caption competition  Roger Ebert from The Guardian, May 1, 2011

"I was born inside the movie of my life"  Roger Ebert Journal, August 15, 2011

I do not fear death - Salon.com  Roger Ebert, September 15, 2011

Roger Ebert: A Critic Reflects On 'Life Itself' : NPR  John Powers from NPR, September 21, 2011

Ebert measures up to celluloid's stoic heroes | Michael Miner on ...   Michael Miner reviews Ebert’s new memoir, Life Itself from The Chicago Reader, October 27, 2011

Roger Ebert: 'I'm an optimistic person'   Rachel Cooke from The Observer, November 5, 2011

Women are Better Than Men  Roger Ebert, May 13, 2012

Chaz Ebert Writes to Absent Roger from Cannes  Jen Yamato at Cannes from Movieline, May 21, 2012

Nawazuddin Siddiqui's Tryst With Roger Ebert  Subhash Kjha at Business of Cinema, May 28, 2012

Roger Ebert–a 'bitchy' man hater?  Dennis Byrne from Chicago Now, May 28, 2012

Roger Ebert honored for 'Making History'  ABC News, June 7, 2012

Happy 70th Birthday Roger Ebert!  Gary Susman from Moviefone, June 18, 2012

Two Thumbs Up  Today’s Pictures from Slate, June 18, 2012

Martin Scorsese plans Roger Ebert documentary  Ben Child from The Guardian, September 10, 2012

A Leave of Presence  Roger Ebert’s last post, April 2, 2013

Roger Ebert takes 'leave of presence' to deal with recurrence of cancer   Amanda Holpuch from The Guardian, April 3, 2013

Roger Ebert, film's hero to the end  Steven Zeitchik from The LA Times, April 3, 2013



Roger Ebert: Critic with the soul of a poet  Rick Kogan from The Chicago Tribune, April 4, 2013

Farewell to a generous colleague and friend  Michael Phillips from The Chicago Tribune, April 4, 2013

The unique partnership of Siskel and Ebert  Sid Smith feature from 1999, reprinted from The Chicago Tribune, April 4, 2013

Roger Ebert dead at 70 after battle with cancer  Neil Steinberg from The Chicago Sun-Times, April 4, 2013

Roger Ebert (1942-2013) :: rogerebert.com :: In Memory  Neil Steinberg from Ebert blog, April 4, 2013

Postscript: Roger Ebert, 1942-2013  Richard Brody from The New Yorker, April 4, 2013

A Critic for the Common Man  Douglas Martin from The New York Times, April 4, 2013

Roger Ebert Is Remembered on Twitter, a Place Where He Found a New Voice  Mekado Murphy and Michael Roston from The New York Times, April 4, 2013


Roger Ebert, prolific film critic in print and on TV, dies at 70  Emma Brown from The Washington Post, April 4, 2013

An accessible and empowering critic  Ann Hornaday from The Washington Post, April 4, 2013

Remembering Roger Ebert  Marie Elizabeth Oliver from The Washington Post, April 4, 2013


Remembrance: Roger Ebert, film's hero to the end  Kenneth Turan from The LA Times, April 4, 2013

Roger Ebert dies at 70; Pulitzer Prize-winning film critic  John Horn and Valerie J. Nelson from The LA Times, April 4, 2013

Remembering Roger Ebert through his books  Carolyn Kellogg from The LA Times, April 4, 2013

Fans, celebrities react to death of film critic Roger Ebert  Amy Kaufman from The LA Times, April 4, 2013

Recalling Roger Ebert's influence, on- and off-screen  Oliver Gettell from The LA Times, April 4, 2013

PHOTOS: Roger Ebert - Career in Pictures  The LA Times, April 4, 2013

PHOTOS: Remembering Roger Ebert  WGN TV, April 4, 2013

Remembering the Roger I knew  Jim Emerson from Scanners, April 4, 2013

My Roger Ebert Story  Will Leitch from Deadspin, April 4, 2013

Roger Ebert: Farewell to a Film Legend and Friend  Richard Corliss from Time magazine, April 4, 2013

Editing Roger Ebert: A Former Colleague Reflects on the Journalism Legend  Steven S. Duke from Time magazine, April 4, 2013

Roger Ebert R.I.P.  Michael Scherer from Time magazine, April 4, 2013

Chicago Sun-Times Film Critic Roger Ebert Dies  Caryn Rousseau from Time magazine, April 4, 2013

Edelstein on Roger Ebert: Farewell To the Mayor of Movie Critic-Ville  David Edelstein from The Vulture, April 4, 2013

Some thoughts on the death of Roger Ebert, a man who meant a lot to us   Scott Tobias from The Onion A.V. Club, April 4, 2013

What did Roger Ebert mean to you?  The Onion A.V. Club, April 4, 2013

Roger Ebert: In Memoriam  Richard Starzec from The Wesleyan Argus, April 4, 2013

Daily | Roger Ebert, 1942 – 2013  David Hudson from Fandor, April 4, 2013

Roger Simon: The debt I owe Roger Ebert  Roger Simon from The Chicago Sun-Times, April 4, 2013

A newspaperman's newspaperman  Roger Simon from Politico, April 4, 2013

RIP Roger Ebert: 1942-2013  Tal Rosenberg from The Chicago Reader, April 4, 2013

Roger Ebert, the Enthusiast   Christopher Orr from The Atlantic, April 4, 2013

What Roger Ebert Knew About Writing   Spencer Kornhaber from The Atlantic, April 4, 2013

A Chicago Critic Remembers Roger Ebert  Maureen Ryan from The Huffington Post, April 4, 2013

Funniest Roger Ebert Quotes: His Best Movie Take Downs  The Huffington Post, April 4, 2013

Remembering Roger Ebert  Linda Holmes from NPR, April 4, 2013

Roger Ebert, Legendary Film Critic, Dies  Eyder Peralta from NPR, April 4, 2013


Roger Ebert Dead at 70 | Movies News | Rolling Stone  Jon Blistein from Rolling Stone magazine, April 4, 2013

Peter Travers on Roger Ebert: No One Could Keep Up With Him ...  Peter Travers from Rolling Stone magazine, April 4, 2013

Roger Ebert (1942-2013)  Matt Singer from indieWIRE, April 4, 2013

A Tribute to Roger Ebert  Matt Singer from indieWIRE, April 4, 2013

Go to All the Movies You Can  Dana Stevens from Slate, April 4, 2013

Influential US film critic Roger Ebert dies at 70  Jill Serjeant from Reuters, April 4, 2013

Legendary Film Critic Roger Ebert Dead at 70  Angela Watercutter from Wired, April 4, 2013

Calum Marsh, Film.com  April 4, 2013



Danny King, The Film Stage  April 4, 2013

R.I.P. Roger Ebert (1942-2013)  Adam Cook from Mubi, April 4, 2013

Roger Ebert, 1942-2013  Glenn Kenny from Some Came Running, April 4, 2013

I Will Miss You Roger Ebert  Kim Morgan from Sunset Gun, April 4, 2013

10 Movies Roger Ebert Really Hated | Mental Floss  Stacy Conradt from Mental Floss, April 4, 2013


Roger Ebert, RIP  Bill Pearis remembers many of Ebert’s video reviews from Brooklyn Vegan, April 4, 2013

R.I.P., Roger Ebert  Matt Langdon from BunueL, April 4, 2013

Roger Ebert 1942-2013  Filmleaf, April 4, 2013

Legendary Film Critic Roger Ebert Dead At 70  Joshua Brunsting from Criterion Cast, April 4, 2013

Roger Ebert Reviews: Beloved Movies He Didn't Like (PHOTOS)  Katy Hall from The Huffington Post, April 4. 2013


Critic Roger Ebert Dies at 70 - The Hollywood Reporter  Mike Barnes from The Hollywood Reporter, April 4, 2013


Roger Ebert's Top 20 Best- and Worst-Reviewed Films  The Hollywood Reporter, April 4, 2013

Famed movie critic Roger Ebert dies  Jim Cheng from USA Today, April 4, 2013

First Take: Roger Ebert, forever at the movies  Susan Wloszczyna from USA Today, April 4, 2013

Obama, Scorsese, Winfrey lead tributes to Roger Ebert  Bryan Alexander from USA Today, April 4, 2013

Film critic Roger Ebert dies at 70  Kirt Schlosser from NBC News, April 4, 2013

Roger Ebert, America's Movie Critic, Dead at 70 After Battle With ...  Troy McMullen from ABC News, April 4, 2013

Ebert an Inspiration to Cancer Patients  Sydney Lupkin from ABC News, April 4, 2013

Roger Ebert's 10 greatest films of all time - CBS News  David Morgan from CBS News, April 4, 2013

For Influential Critic Roger Ebert, Life Spent 'At the Movies' Ends at ...  Jeffrey Brown and Hari Sreenivasan from PBS, April 4, 2013

Roger Ebert, renowned film critic, dies at age 70  Alan Duke from CNN News, April 4, 2013

More than just a great critic, Roger Ebert redefined movie criticism ...  Owen Gleiberman from Entertainment Weekly, April 4, 2013

Roger Ebert Dead: Legendary Film Critic Dies at 70 | Variety  Pat Saperstein from Variety, April 4, 2013

Roger Ebert, 70, Has Died: A Look at the Life of Cinema's Great ...  Marlow Stern from The Daily Beast, April 4, 2013

Ebert’s Best Reviews ... and Zingers  Kevin Fallon from The Daily Beast, April 4, 2013

Roger Ebert, the Heart and Soul of the Movies, Has Died  Alexander Abad-Santos and Matt Sullivan from The Atlantic Wire, April 4, 2013

Beloved film critic Roger Ebert dies at 70  Liz Goodwin and Dylan Stableford from Yahoo News, April 4, 2013

Roger Ebert dead at 70: Pulitzer Prize-winning film critic loses long ...  David Hinckley from The New York Daily News, April 4, 2013

Roger Ebert: 1942 –2013  Dan Aronson from Fandor, April 4, 2013


Hammond On Roger Ebert - An Appreciation - Deadline.com  Pete Hammond from Deadline, April 4, 2013


Roger Ebert on politics  Breanna Edwards from Politico, April 4, 2013

Roger Ebert Seized Much Life from Cancer - Forbes  David Kroll from Forbes, April 4, 2013


13 Things Roger Ebert Said Better Than Anybody Else  Ryan Broderick from Buzzfeed, April 4, 2013

'Brown Bunny': A Look Back at Roger Ebert's Famous Pan  Meriah Doty from Movie Talk, April 4, 2013

Roger Ebert: 8 Things You Might Not Have Known  Mark Deming from Movie Talk, April 4, 2013

Roger Ebert: 10 Little-Known Facts About the Great Movie Critic  Patrick Kiger from AARP Blog, April 4, 2013

Werner Herzog on Roger Ebert, 'the good soldier of cinema ...  Emily Rome from Entertainment Weekly, April 4, 2013

Roger Ebert's 'Beyond The Valley Of The Dolls': Remembering The ...  Mallika Rao from The Huffington Post, April 4, 2013

Roger Ebert Is Dead at 70 - Slate Magazine  Josh Voorhees from Slate, April 4, 2013

A Fellow Chicago Critic Remembers Roger Ebert   Keith Phipps from Slate, April 4, 2013

Roger Ebert in Slate  Dan Kois from Slate, April 4, 2013

Roger Ebert Was a Great Champion of Black Film  Aisha Harris from Slate, April 4, 2013

Roger Ebert's Camp Classic  Beyond the Valley of the Dolls, by J. Bryan Lowder from Slate, April 4, 2013



RIP Roger Ebert: Movie criticism’s Great Communicator  Andrew O’Hehir from Salon, April 5, 2013

Roger Ebert obituary  Ronald Bergan from The Guardian, April 5, 2013



Roger Ebert - a life in pictures  The Guardian, April 5, 2013

Roger Ebert, lover of life, taught me to write  Dan Zak from The Washington Post, April 5, 2013

Thank you, Roger Ebert  Alexandra Petri from The Washington Post, April 5, 2013

Roger Ebert: First citizen critic and father to us all  Mary McNamara from The LA Times, April 5, 2013

Five unexpected ways Roger Ebert changed film journalism  Steven Zeitchik from The LA Times, April 5, 2013

Roger Ebert, my mentor  Monica Eng from The Chicago Tribune, April 5, 2013

Roger Ebert through the years  photo gallery from The Chicago Tribune, April 5, 2013

Dear Roger  Ignatiy Vishnevetsky from Mubi, April 5, 2013

On the death of Roger Ebert  Michael Miner from The Chicago Reader, April 5, 2013

How Roger Ebert encouraged me  Ben Sachs from The Chicago Reader, April 5, 2013

Thumbs upward: Roger Ebert, 1942-2013  J.R. Jones from The Chicago Reader, April 5, 2013

An example of the late Roger Ebert's grace  Albert Williams from The Chicago Reader, April 5, 2013

Thumbs upward: Roger Ebert, 1942-2013 | Bleader  J.R. Jones from The Chicago Reader, April 5, 2013

Ebert off-camera  Andrea Gronvall from The Chicago Reader, April 5, 2013

Roger Ebert: 1942 - 2013  Eugene Hernandez from Film Comment, April 5, 2013

On Roger Ebert, 1942-2013  Michelle Dean from The Nation, April 5, 2013

Critics Remember Roger Ebert  Matt Singer from indieWIRE, April 5, 2013

The People's Critic: Remembering Roger Ebert  Wesley Morris from Grantland, April 5, 2013

What Roger Ebert Had to Say About Black Films  Lauren Williams from The Root, April 5, 2013

This Was Roger Ebert's Happening  Bonnie Stiernberg from Paste magazine, April 5, 2013

Roger Ebert, the People's Movie Critic  Tom Carson from The American Prospect, April 5, 2013

AP Critic Remembers Colleague, Friend Roger Ebert  Christy Lemire from The Huffington Post, April 5, 2013

Remembering Roger Ebert  Annette Insdorf from The Huffington Post, April 5, 2013

Roger Ebert - A Remembrance   Melissa Silverstein from Women and Hollywood, April 5, 2013

Roger Ebert's Wife Chaz Says Their Life Together Was 'More ...  Laura Beck from Jezebel, April 5, 2013

Joe Morgenstern Gives a Final Thumbs Up to Roger Ebert  Wall Street Journal, April 5, 2013

When Roger Ebert Was a Cub Critic  Ben Heineman Jr. from The Atlantic, April 5, 2013

The Many Memorable Remembrances of Roger Ebert - Esther ...  Esther Zuckerman from The Atlantic Wire, April 5, 2013

Roger Ebert, R.I.P. - Jonathan Foreman - National Review Online  Jonathan Foreman from The National Review, April 5, 2013

Opinion: What the Internet owes to Roger Ebert - CNN.com  Gene Seymour from CNN News, April 5, 2013

Variety's Scott Foundas Remembers Roger Ebert: A Mentor to the End  Scott Foundas from Variety, April 5, 2013

Roger Ebert's 'quiet, dignified' death came as he was still making plans  Roxanne Roberts and Amy Argetsinger from The Reliable Source from The Washington Post, April 5, 2013

Why Roger Ebert’s Thumb Mattered  James Poniewozik from Time magazine, April 5, 2013

Roger Ebert: Author as well as movie critic  Molly Driscoll from The Christian Science Monitor, April 5, 2013

Seitz: Ebert, the Gateway Drug for Film Lovers  Matt Zoller Seitz from The Vulture, April 5, 2013

Selected Obituaries For Roger Ebert  Forrest Cardamenis from indieWIRE, April 5, 2013


Remembering Roger Ebert, In His Own Words  Katey Rich from Cinema Blend, April 5, 2013

Roger Ebert: Film Critic Trailblazer Let Ideology Get the Better of Him  Christian Toto from Big Hollywood, April 5, 2013

From One Row Back: On Roger Ebert and Loving Movies  Max Barrone from Complex Pop Culture, April 5, 2013

The Humanity of Roger Ebert: Teaching Us How to Love (and Hate ...  Kevin Gosztola from The Dissenter, April 5, 2013


Roger Ebert: 1942-2013  Tim Ryan from Rotten Tomatoes, April 5, 2013

In Memoriam: Roger Ebert  Rotten Tomatoes, April 5, 2013



Roger Ebert on His Appearance  Video (21 seconds)

Roger Ebert Remembers Gene Siskel  Video (25 seconds)