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Jonas 2022-02-04 08:22:54
I wish my friends are healthy
First published on WeChat public account: movie432, there is a QR code at the end of the article~
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Rebeka 2022-02-04 08:22:54
Oriental Morning Post: He speaks for American films
Roger Ebert was born on June 18, 1942 in Illinois, United States. In 1967 he gave up his Ph.D. in English from the University of Chicago to write film criticism and won the Pulitzer Prize for Criticism in 1975. The "thumb up" evaluation method he pioneered in TV shows has become the quality...

Stephen Stanton
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Madelyn 2022-03-27 09:01:23
Roger Ebert's review has always been on the audience's side, arguing that everyone has a movie. His presence established the professional standards and values of film critics. Everyone expects him to speak for the movie, and he lives in his own movie. This is an excellent book about the creative career of a film critic.
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Arturo 2022-03-25 09:01:23
There are only 8 days left until the end of 2021. The movies I have watched this year are neither too many nor too few, the horizons are broadened, and there are more doubts. Everyone is counting the top ten of the year, and I am looking for a movie with a retrospective nature. Before the text is formed, I let the image put my emotions first.
It is a story that Roger completed with his own life. In my opinion, it is more difficult to answer what life is than what movies are, so he spends his life interpreting what movies bring to his life. "I'm leaving, but I'm always here", just like movies can transcend time and space, Roger's words, the youth movies he supports, and the cinephile culture he cultivates are scattered like dandelion seeds, no matter when and where , can grow new life.
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Roger Ebert: From the day the Chicago Tribune made Gene Siskel its film critic, we were professional enemies. For the first five years we knew one another, Siskel and I hardly spoke. When Gene and I were asked to work together on a TV show, we both said we'd rather do it with someone else. Anyone else.
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[Siskel and Ebert are on "The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson" seated next to Chevy Chase]
Johnny Carson: Is there something out there that is really so bad?
Roger Ebert: I can't really recommend ¡Three Amigos!. It's the Christmas picture I like the least.
[audience groans]
Johnny Carson: This is the happy hour. I don't think I'd ask you if I knew you were gonna say that.
Roger Ebert: Chevy Chase has made a lot of good movies, and God willing, he will make a lot more good movies in the future.
Chevy Chase: With your help.
[as Ebert continues to talk, Chevy begins miming Ebert behind his back mockingly; the audience is giggling]
Roger Ebert: There is a tendency for somebody... who is naturally funny, as Chevy is, to try to get laughs by standing there and ad-libbing when somebody else is trying to talk!