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New book tells the story of film critics Roger Ebert and Gene Siskel 

CBS Mornings
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Roger Ebert and Gene Siskel are two of the most influential film critics ever, often making or breaking movies with their reviews. Now, a new book by film critic Matt Singer takes a look at their impact and professional rivalry. CBS News' Dana Jacobson has more.
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2 окт 2024

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Комментарии : 321   
@joebesenjak6095
@joebesenjak6095 10 месяцев назад
Wow. I watch Roger and Gene on RU-vid all the time. They were the real thing. I still value their reviews, their chemistry and their honesty. The new book is now at the top of my Christmas list! I still love Siskel & Ebert! PS, I just got a copy the first volume of Ebert’s The Great Movies. It’s an amazing reference of 100 great movies, showcased in 100 great Roger Ebert reviews. Well worth checking out. 👍🏼👍🏼 🤷🏽‍♂️
@Gatorfan_Cavon
@Gatorfan_Cavon 10 месяцев назад
My childhood unlocked! I used to watch them every weekend for the latest movies when i was a kid
@CR41489
@CR41489 10 месяцев назад
I’m about 150 pages into the book so far and it’s extremely entertaining. Matt Singer has done a great job with this book. Thumbs up. 👍
@ChilliCheezdog
@ChilliCheezdog 10 месяцев назад
In England, I grew up with film critic 'Barry Norman' on TV. Everyone, of a certain age, remembers cuddly old Barry Norman. When I discovered Siskel and Ebert, in recent years, I was stunned by their reviews. These guys were laser-guided. They made Barry Norman appear like a novice. Every review is a masterclass in the art of critiquing. Honestly, America, you were witness to the absolute best in the business.
@mindeloman
@mindeloman 10 месяцев назад
You can go back and read all of Roger's old reviews. They're all posted on his website. I think beyond find what makes a film good or bad, he was an amazing writer and knew how to wrote and convey his impressions.
@mrchopsticks3
@mrchopsticks3 10 месяцев назад
@@mindeloman The guy didn't win a Pulitzer by accident.
@sarahm.5356
@sarahm.5356 10 месяцев назад
I grew up watching them on Chicago public television, before they went network. I loved the show. I liked Gene as a reviewer better than Roger, but I didn't like how condescending Gene was to Roger,. I always wanted Roger to tell Gene to back the F off! He never did. Then when Gene got sick, he started being nicer to Roger. Finally.
@jdj830
@jdj830 10 месяцев назад
Actually Siskel and Ebert had a predecessor here in the States too: Gene Shalit, he of the big mustache, who would review movies for the Today Show in the 60s and 70s in his schlocky way. He sounds a bit like your Barry Norman. Siskel and Ebert changed the game.
@ricardocantoral7672
@ricardocantoral7672 10 месяцев назад
I haven't seen much of Barry Norman but I wasn't impressed by him. He was an okay critic.
@gheller2261
@gheller2261 10 месяцев назад
I have always loved that Gene Siskel loved Saturday Night Fever so much that he bought the Travolta outfit at auction. He understood that it was not some silly disco picture but a slice of life film about dreams and making something of your life, no different than a film like Rocky.
@MothGirl007
@MothGirl007 10 месяцев назад
I agree - it's adorable.
@nrkgalt
@nrkgalt 10 месяцев назад
There would be a Rocky influence on Saturday Night Fever because initially the director was John Avildsen, who directed Rocky. And then the sequel, Staying Alive, was directed by Sylvester Stallone.
@jdraven0890
@jdraven0890 10 месяцев назад
It is a surprisingly good movie in many respects, especially as you said the accurate slice of life from that era and the ppl who lived it
@peterdarker1
@peterdarker1 10 месяцев назад
Yep. It was his personal favorite film of all time.
@alanvallazza9781
@alanvallazza9781 10 месяцев назад
​@@nrkgaltJohn was also dumped in the Rocky series in favor of the star Stallone directing them. However he came back and directed the one film nobody likes which was Rocky V.
@kt9166
@kt9166 10 месяцев назад
As a movie lover since the early 1970s, I was a fan of Roger and Gene since the AT THE MOVIES days on our PBS station, channel 6, in Denver. I only agreed with them about half the time, but they were so much fun to watch and their honest sparring was marvelous.
@markadams7046
@markadams7046 10 месяцев назад
It was Sneak Previews that was on PBS. At The Movies was their first syndicated show.
@FitzArias
@FitzArias 10 месяцев назад
From their celebrated lives to their tragic deaths, these guys deserve a biopic of their own someday. 2 thumbs up to both. Sorely missed. 👍👍
@007Julie
@007Julie 10 месяцев назад
I’d absolutely love a biopic of Siskel & Ebert, they deserve their stories to be told. But with the state of how awful movies are now I doubt anyone could make a movie worthy of these two giants.
@reneedennis2011
@reneedennis2011 10 месяцев назад
I agree.
@GodLovesComics
@GodLovesComics 10 месяцев назад
I still miss them both and always enjoy watching old clips of them on RU-vid. You didn't have to agree with them on every movie (I certainly didn't) to thoroughly enjoy their banter and passion for cinema. No one has replicated it on television since.
@jeshkam
@jeshkam 10 месяцев назад
Miss them both, makes me laugh so hard when they're either funny or fighting.
@JoeVideoed
@JoeVideoed 10 месяцев назад
My parents were South Siders and Siskel & Ebert were required viewing in the household. We even saw them when they were on late night. The 1st time was on Carson. The 2 actually got into an argument that lasted about 5 minutes. They were so centered on their debate they had completely cut Johnny out of their minds & when the camera finally cut him, he had that look of "Where did i lose control?" The audience (& me and my family) were just howling w/ laughter upon seeing that. Wish that was here on YT; y'all would love it.
@meo21626
@meo21626 10 месяцев назад
That sounds great!
@lynnturman8157
@lynnturman8157 10 месяцев назад
I used to watch their show religiously. For any serious movie fan in the 80s & 90s, it was appointment television. Not only was it very entertaining watching them argue & make their case for why they liked or didn't like a movie, but you watched their show to find out what movies were coming out. Two thumbs up from Siskel & Ebert was a seal of approval that no marketing campaign could buy. And two thumbs down could literally destroy a movie's chance at the box office or in home rentals resulting in losses of millions of dollars.
@SteveBrant55
@SteveBrant55 10 месяцев назад
I watched them all the time back in the day. And I remember when Gene died... and when Roger struggled with cancer as well. Thank you for profiling them. I'm happy their story is being told in this new book.
@007Julie
@007Julie 10 месяцев назад
I grew up in Chicago and it was absolutely heartbreaking how Siskel and then Ebert passed away from horrible diseases. I was a huge fan of them.
@mykal.7424
@mykal.7424 10 месяцев назад
When Gene passed you could tell it crushed Roger. He didn't seem the same after Gene passed . It's heartbreaking how these guys passed . Long live the memories they gave us .
@BruceLee-t9n
@BruceLee-t9n 6 месяцев назад
The show ended when Siskel ended
@batmarlowe
@batmarlowe 10 месяцев назад
They did start out genuinely disliking each other. But it grew to grudging respect to deep respect to friendship. Not the closest of friendships, but friendship. At the end of his life, Siskel had Ebert promise to take his (Siskel's) children to see The Phantom Menace because Siskel knew he wasn't going to be around when it was released. I really wish Roger had written a memoir about their relationship; it's such a unique story. Also, they agreed 70+ percent of the time.
@WorldsWorstBoy
@WorldsWorstBoy 10 месяцев назад
I miss them both..... I think of them often still. Rest In Peace.
@VideoHeadMan
@VideoHeadMan 10 месяцев назад
I LOVED Siskel and Ebert growing up. I watched films just based on their recommendation alone. Then, when Siskel passed away, I admired Roger Ebert so much. He was my favorite of the duo and I was so glad we had him for so long. He should still be with us, but BOTH gone too soon.
@sidharthchand8072
@sidharthchand8072 10 месяцев назад
Roger lived a long life, sad how he died in a wheelchair and everything, but like all things nothing last forever.
@DavidLLambertmobile
@DavidLLambertmobile 10 месяцев назад
They once did a special SNL ep reviewing short videos. Skits. 🎬
@jillcnc
@jillcnc 10 месяцев назад
I miss Roger Ebert every time I read a movie review (and I used to write reviews for seven years in the early 2000s). No one was better able to evaluate a movie in terms of WHAT IT WAS TRYING TO DO, rather than as compared to Ingmar Bergman or some auteur from Slovakia. He was always my go-to reviewer when a new movie came out.
@jtstacey83
@jtstacey83 10 месяцев назад
I watched Siskel and Ebert all the time while growing up. Even now, I still look up these old shows to get recommendations for films I might not have been interested in when I was a teenager. Hollywood could use a duo like this again because they were honest, hard to find today with movie critics who give glowing reviews for films after attending special starstudded premieres or special early screenings.
@tims4694
@tims4694 10 месяцев назад
I watched their show every Saturday afternoon in college before I went to my part-time job. Plus their appearances on Letterman were legendary.
@angelcastaneda529
@angelcastaneda529 10 месяцев назад
Well, now I know which book I’m going to get for Christmas. I miss them dearly, can’t believe it’s been ten years since Roger passed away. And I’m so glad the filmmaker who directed Hoop Dreams got to do the Ebert documentary, Life Itself and that deserves a 👍
@ht6743
@ht6743 10 месяцев назад
The way I still seek out old Ebert reviews to this day. He was THE opinion on film for decades. I miss him dearly. 😢 Can't wait to read this book!
@StevenTorrey
@StevenTorrey 10 месяцев назад
Hollywood who spends Milliona on a movie, don't want film critics panning their movies. No one has yet to replace them.
@igoryankilevich9941
@igoryankilevich9941 10 месяцев назад
Their reviews helped champion alot of films that otherwise would have been forgotten
@rhyancoleman6462
@rhyancoleman6462 10 месяцев назад
We miss those two so much.
@marcusdamberger
@marcusdamberger 10 месяцев назад
Growing up in Champaign-Urbana you would see Roger in town every so often. He went to the same high school as myself (albeit decades before) and the University of Illinois for his BA that my brothers went to. Enjoyed seeing him at Ebertfest at the Virginia Theater for many years; that was the inspiration for the phrase they used at the end of the show, "Until then, 'The balcony is closed'. You would see that sign at the Virginia when walking in and looking over to the stairway that led to the balcony. From what I gathered he tended to be in town to visit his mother, especially around holidays. Remember being in the same bookstore as him one December. People were cool, they wouldn't bother him.
@bmiller949
@bmiller949 10 месяцев назад
I was watching Sneak Previews in college. My love of film exploded, because of them and their intellectual discourse.
@sm5574
@sm5574 10 месяцев назад
The show ultimately ended in 2010, and I think it would have done so anyway, even if Siskel and Ebert had been able to continue. They would have been pushing 70 years of age, and the movie industry was changing radically by then, as was the role of criticism, with the explosion of the Internet and the popularity of Rotten Tomatoes. The show certainly wouldn't be around today, even if the ratings were there, because the movies they loved aren't being made so much anymore. Take this weekend (Nov. 17, 2023) for example: Hunger Games prequel, Trolls sequel, and a slasher flick. The guys would have retired the show because the landscape simply isn't there. Most original content these days is in the form of serialized television on streaming platforms, and the format of Siskel and Ebert wouldn't fit that. They were a product and a celebration of the last great age of cinema. And it's only fitting we remember both together.
@ricardocantoral7672
@ricardocantoral7672 8 месяцев назад
I agree. I honestly would not like to have seen them active,bpushing 80 because they most likely would not have had the same spark. I know it sounds rather callous but I sort of glad their partnership ended when it did.
@Karla_Marie
@Karla_Marie 10 месяцев назад
How I loved Sneak Previews. They're taking me back now. I loved Siskel and Ebert. They were great.
@Iggystar71
@Iggystar71 10 месяцев назад
The show came on at weird hours in my city and I’d set an alarm clock when it aired at 2am. I miss them so much.
@marywatkins6798
@marywatkins6798 10 месяцев назад
I watched Siskel & Ebert all the time on PBS and then syndicated. I learned about movies from them: how to discern a good film from a bad one re: acting, directing, cinematography, etc. I learned to be my own film critic from them. Thank you, gentlemen. Great story.
@DavidLLambertmobile
@DavidLLambertmobile 10 месяцев назад
I met & spoke briefly to Ebert. UVA film festival. 🎥
@NateGerardRealEstateTeam
@NateGerardRealEstateTeam 10 месяцев назад
For me the show was on Sunday afternoon. It helped ignite my love for movies. Miss those guys and I miss the variety of movies they had the chance to review.
@auntvesuvi3872
@auntvesuvi3872 10 месяцев назад
I was 7 or so when I first saw them in SNEAK PREVIEWS on PBS. I loved watching them debate on the merits of movies, performers' talents and industry trends. My own interpretations usually aligned with Mr. Ebert... but I treasure them both as appreciators of an artform I love so dearly. 🎦
@richardszablewski1420
@richardszablewski1420 10 месяцев назад
Such Great Memories, Thanks.
@joememphis1571
@joememphis1571 10 месяцев назад
Siskel and Ebert pulled no punches with their forthright approach to reviewing movies.
@jdraven0890
@jdraven0890 10 месяцев назад
This was great. I grew up watching these two as well as reading Ebert's reviews rught up to his passing. Their appreciation for each other definitely came through, and I never once felt that their subdued rivaly was an act, since they just as often agreed.
@dannycalifornia4983
@dannycalifornia4983 10 месяцев назад
They should make a movie about these two. Legends.
@Vampirebear13
@Vampirebear13 10 месяцев назад
I watched Siskel & Ebert on PBS before they went into syndication, both my Dad & I quickly learned, whatever they liked was a movie to be avoided & if they hated a movie, THAT was the movie to see.
@randeman
@randeman 10 месяцев назад
Weren't friends? According to Ebert in 1999: Gene was a lifelong friend, and our professional competition only strengthened that bond. I can't even imagine what will it be like without him. ...As a critic, Siskel was passionate and exacting. I think it was important to Gene that this was the only serious film criticism on television. That made him proud. We had a lot of big fights. We were people who came together one day a week and, the other six days, we were competitors on two daily newspapers and two different television stations. So there was a lot of competition and a lot of disagreement. Ebert once said of his relationship with Siskel: Gene Siskel and I were like tuning forks. Strike one, and the other would pick up the same frequency. When we were in a group together, we were always intensely aware of one another. Sometimes this took the form of camaraderie, sometimes shared opinions, sometimes hostility.
@tomloft2000
@tomloft2000 10 месяцев назад
A friendly rivalry.
@Thunderchild-gz4gc
@Thunderchild-gz4gc 10 месяцев назад
I heard when Siskel died they rarely socialized outside the show. The Critic poked fun that they were a almost gay couple
@crazyman8472
@crazyman8472 10 месяцев назад
Ah, the good old days… 😎
@SproutMeansGrow
@SproutMeansGrow 10 месяцев назад
They were like my childhood best friends. When I grew up and got a journalism internship at a small magazine in Chicago the first thing I did was make a pilgrammage to the Sun Times and Tribune for tours.
@newwavepop
@newwavepop 10 месяцев назад
i honestly have never had any idea how much their reviews actually mattered in a films success, and OFTEN i highly disagreed with their takes on a lot of films. but i loved the show because it usually showed a bunch of clips that gave you a far better idea of whether or not you wanted to see a film than the often vague and confusing trailers did. and most importantly they would review films i had no idea existed otherwise and i learned about a lot of films i really liked that way. films that otherwise had little promotion and i thank them for that.
@minnae.1747
@minnae.1747 10 месяцев назад
This book is on my Christmas wish list. Congrats to Matt Singer for having written it!
@ghostwolf1435
@ghostwolf1435 10 месяцев назад
These Two were legends
@ForvoQuizlet
@ForvoQuizlet 10 месяцев назад
Many today will never know a time when movies were not available on any medium (VHS not out yet) let alone on-demand. Sneak Previews was the ONLY way to learn about or see snippets of movies outside of the very limited windows for seeing it at theaters.
@gchsbus
@gchsbus 10 месяцев назад
"Look into the camera and say I was wrong about Cop And a 1/2" "No I'm not doing that" LOL!!!
@rhyancoleman6462
@rhyancoleman6462 10 месяцев назад
WHAT?!?!?!?
@gchsbus
@gchsbus 10 месяцев назад
@@rhyancoleman6462 Only fans of Siskel and Ebert will know
@chrismathis4162
@chrismathis4162 10 месяцев назад
I, as a teenager in the 80’s, stayed up past midnight on Saturdays to watch their show. I cried when Ebert died.
@cf_1204
@cf_1204 10 месяцев назад
I lived in Chicago for a year and had no clue that a Gene Siskel film center was in the theatre district. Will have to visit when I go back to the Second City.
@dhpbear2
@dhpbear2 10 месяцев назад
6:10 - I believe they coined the phrase 'two hours out of my life that I'll never get back!" :)
@tiffanycurtis4794
@tiffanycurtis4794 10 месяцев назад
My generation and remember the days when you had to look at the newspaper and see what time a movie starte🤣🔥😀
@bloqk16
@bloqk16 10 месяцев назад
I recall an episode when that week's theatrical releases were so abysmal, at least by Siskel and Ebert's standards, that they recommended some made-for-TV movies and network shows being televised for that week in the US.
@americangiant1003
@americangiant1003 10 месяцев назад
😂 And if so called movie critics (not a fan of political correctness but I prefer the term “movie/entertainment commentators” myself to describe Roger & Gene)might have gotten fired here in the mid 2020s if they went off script like that. That is of course to mention television movies and tv shows.
@garyinthefrozen
@garyinthefrozen 10 месяцев назад
Whenever I’m about to watch a movie from 80s and 90s I always RU-vid to see what Siskel and Ebert thought of it
@AlexUSAF
@AlexUSAF 10 месяцев назад
I still watch RU-vid downloads of originally taped episodes of those two often. They were the influences I had in reviewing online the movies, tv shows, or the occasional books I would read. I never thought I would miss two guys that I never met so much as I do them. One of my favorite reviews was an example of how two opposing views can be completely correct at the same time, on a movie I still love "Batman 1989", Siskel loved it too but Ebert had some wise commentary on the logic flaws of the movie which got him enough to vote thumbs down. Both men were totally correct. RIP to Siskel & Ebert.
@integral
@integral 10 месяцев назад
We loved their shows like so many millions of people. The show was one of those we would try to get home to watch until VHS came along.
@alanvallazza9781
@alanvallazza9781 10 месяцев назад
I grew up on them. Sometime between 1983 and 1986 when I was real little I used to watch them on PBS. At some point they left PBS and went syndicated. PBS got new people to do a similar show. In my area the show ran Sunday morning on PBS. But Siskel and Ebert were on at different times so at one point in the '90s, when syndicated, I lost track of where they were on. In those days I just went to their new website and looked up the reviews. Eventually I found them on local TV right before Gene's tragic passing. In the '80s and early 90s the family used them as a basis for picking movies to watch and what was good. By 1994 not so much. But I still sought them out. I also remember that the first shows they did, they did not use the thumb up or thumb down system. It was later that they began doing the thumbs up and thumbs down.
@leonardvicari2857
@leonardvicari2857 10 месяцев назад
My brother and I watched Siskel and Ebert on PBS and WDSU channel 6 in Metairie Louisiana on a Saturday night at 10:30 pm
@mililaniman
@mililaniman 10 месяцев назад
I watched Siskel and Ebert every Saturday afternoon. I miss both of them.
@JoshMaxPower
@JoshMaxPower 10 месяцев назад
Thanks for such a great vid about two who were part of millions of people's lives. And congrats to Dana Jacobson on her 2019 marriage... guess I missed my chance! 😍
@isaacgraham5727
@isaacgraham5727 10 месяцев назад
I can’t say enough amazing and great things about Roger Ebert as an early pioneer of the internet and fan communication. I used to have LONG and IN DEPTH back and forth discussions with Roger Ebert himself in the comments section on his own site. And it wasn’t just me or like I was special - he would engage with anyone and everyone who had something to say. That was after he had his jaw removed and couldn’t speak. I always felt like he was talking to the fans on his website so much at least in part because he couldn’t verbally speak anymore - and he was a garrulous guy! So I felt some obligation to be at the very top of my game when arguing/talking to him online. And it was a huge privilege in any case.
@jamesburke4358
@jamesburke4358 10 месяцев назад
Indeed he did. I earnestly hounded him for going on 2 paragraphs about a not quite a semi-gaffe in 2011's Atlas Shrugged. As sharp as he was, he had a curiously selective memory that you can catch time to time.
@keithclifton392
@keithclifton392 3 месяца назад
I never missed en episode of S&E back in the day. Miss those reviews!!
@deveraalmestica5838
@deveraalmestica5838 10 месяцев назад
When i was kid in the 90s i use to watch they show how they use to about talk movies films like professional They iconic movie critics. I getting the book.
@JoseMorales-lw5nt
@JoseMorales-lw5nt 10 месяцев назад
As an 80's baby, one of my earliest pop culture memories was sneaking into my parent's bedroom one night to find Siskel and Ebert critiquing THE 3 AMIGOS on Johnny Carson's late show. Little did I realize the hilarious thing about that moment was the guy sitting next to them. Why, that's Chevy Chase from the movie they're critiquing!
@susanfanning9927
@susanfanning9927 10 месяцев назад
"At the Movies" was required viewing at our house. We never saw a movie without first checking to see what Gene and Roger had to say about it.
@1TexasTV
@1TexasTV 10 месяцев назад
Film criticism is just not the same without Siskel & Ebert.
@annasahlstrom6109
@annasahlstrom6109 10 месяцев назад
I wish we still had them both and that cancer hadn't taken them.
@milfordcivic6755
@milfordcivic6755 10 месяцев назад
Cancer will get nearly every human.
@JaySmith-pv2mw
@JaySmith-pv2mw 10 месяцев назад
I remember watching them every Saturday night at 6:30 on my local PBS station. Roger was my favorite critic. Two of my favorite movies (Ghost World and Almost Famous) are due in large part to Roger's glowing reviews. I've almost memorized them word-for-word by now.
@MrBudNess
@MrBudNess 10 месяцев назад
Thank you for this. Definitely getting this book. Sneak Previews and At the Movies were huge staples for me growing up. Couldn’t wait to see what was coming out bin theaters, and what Siskel and Ebert had to think about it!
@DriveupLife22
@DriveupLife22 10 месяцев назад
Siskel and Ebert are remembered because they have incredibly high batting averages, they got it right much much more than they got wrong. Their tastes were pliable and complementary. These days critics have half the integrity and twice the irrelevant biases.
@reneedennis2011
@reneedennis2011 10 месяцев назад
I grew up watching them as a kid! I looked forward to watching their programs every week!
@sajohnmello
@sajohnmello 10 месяцев назад
Siskel and Ebert, Legends!
@rockturtleneck
@rockturtleneck 10 месяцев назад
Great idea for a book, I'm going to have to read it. I highly recommend reading an anthology of Roger Ebert's film reviews, I think there are several of them. He was a great writer and his printed reviews have more depth than the ones he did on TV.
@ricardocantoral7672
@ricardocantoral7672 10 месяцев назад
Sneak Previews was actually the best incarnation of the show because they had more time to talk about the film. Also, they focused more on independent cinema than they did later when they switched over to At The Movies.
@clocksurfer
@clocksurfer 10 месяцев назад
Growing up on the north side of Chicago, I watched MANY movies in the same theater where Gene had. Having moved downstate as a young adult, I now live a block down across the street from Roger's childhood home. Having seen (and briefly made contact with) each of them, I've felt an odd sort of connection to both.
@marylinjohnson4474
@marylinjohnson4474 10 месяцев назад
If Roger and ebert were here they will be devastated how Hollywood is now
@bentrend
@bentrend 10 месяцев назад
I’m not usually one for puns and such, but ‘Opposable Thumbs’ is a damn good title, haha
@brian_medlock_collage
@brian_medlock_collage 10 месяцев назад
LOVE THIS STORY!!!! 2 ENTHUSIASTIC THUMBS UP!!!❤B
@jfess1911
@jfess1911 10 месяцев назад
Over the years I learned how to translate what Siskel and Ebert said as compared to my likes and dislikes. It is also when I learned that I needed to read in between the lines. They had watched so many movies that sometimes they would poo-poo a movie because they had seen it done better before.... sometimes by an obscure movie. It didn't necessarily mean that the movie wasn't good. Overall, I realized the Roger Ebert was closer to my view. I miss his reviews. These days, I mainly follow two RU-vid reviewers, Dan Murrell and Jeremy Jahns.
@sha11235
@sha11235 3 дня назад
For those who are wondering, no, Gene and Roger are not buried next to each other, in fact they are buried in different cemeteries.
@richmotroni
@richmotroni 10 месяцев назад
Siskel and Ebert had one mission; making the movies better.
@johndavis48076
@johndavis48076 10 месяцев назад
They also impacted sports tv talk. Pardon The Interruption on ESPN has obvious S&E influences and other similar shows followed.
@americangiant1003
@americangiant1003 10 месяцев назад
Or John even on Sports Talk Radio 📻 as well. While never openly admitting, I am sure the executives at WFAN radio in New York America’s first 365 day a year full time sports talk program, had Roger and Gene in mind when they created the Chris Russo (now currently known here in 2023 as the Co Host/Panelist of ESPN First Take with Stephen Smith & “Mad Dog Radio” streaming program on Sirius) and Mike Francesa aka the “Mike & the Mad Dog” program. If none of you never heard of “Mike & The Mad Dog” especially non sports fans please do a YT search of an ESPN documentary about them.
@LeoWhalen1933
@LeoWhalen1933 10 месяцев назад
That's a great title😂😂😂
@SOLOHeyman
@SOLOHeyman 10 месяцев назад
7:05 OMG Dana, what a ridiculous question. Put down the dumbbells, do some research and listen. They didn't hate each other! They just had immature outbursts and arguments on tv because they were passionate about their work. Also, because it was entertaining and they both weren't sensitive babies.
@JohnADuerk
@JohnADuerk 10 месяцев назад
Watched these guys growing up in the Chicago suburbs.
@DerekDominoes
@DerekDominoes 10 месяцев назад
I think they'd both be handing out a lot of thumbs down for today's movies with the preponderance of superhero movies, remakes and movies with simplistic plots.
@sherylcrawford8201
@sherylcrawford8201 10 месяцев назад
I loved their show! RIP to the best film critics ever.
@Mrtellitlikeitis
@Mrtellitlikeitis 10 месяцев назад
Loved them both. The show was fantastic
@privatepenguin3137
@privatepenguin3137 10 месяцев назад
Wow...I watched them from their PBS days (Sneak Previews incarnation of the show). I had forgotten that Gene was only 52 when he died ☹
@rhyancoleman6462
@rhyancoleman6462 10 месяцев назад
53
@privatepenguin3137
@privatepenguin3137 10 месяцев назад
@@rhyancoleman6462 Ah...correct. 3 weeks after his 53rd birthday.
@WorldwideWyatt
@WorldwideWyatt 10 месяцев назад
Roger Ebert’s written review of Gamera: Guardian of the Universe is perfect. Both these guys were great, but I always loved Roger’s reviews.
@ead630
@ead630 10 месяцев назад
Watching old clips of their is one of my favorite things on RU-vid
@ytugtbk
@ytugtbk 10 месяцев назад
Great show--or series of shows. Watched them since the late 70s. Realized after the first few years why they reached different conclusions about the worthiness of a given film, and it really comes down to personal bias. Siskel placed a higher value on character development and whether he could empathize with any of the characters. Ebert was more about the structure of the film and plot development. Don't remember how they valued the cinematic or photographic elements or things like editing and pacing, but they disagreed on the character vs structure basis. It's an art form so it's all subjective, but the two certainly put film reviewing on the map.
@manut4470
@manut4470 10 месяцев назад
I met Roger Ebert and his wife who came into a shop in Hawaii to buy Hawaiian wear for the Hawaii Film Festival. I was awe struck!
@xyz-ns7ym
@xyz-ns7ym 10 месяцев назад
Should give himself a pat on the back for that book title lol
@MDK2_Radio
@MDK2_Radio 10 месяцев назад
When she spoke about how they could make little movies find an audience, I thought they would mention My Dinner With Andre. Hoop Dreams was every critics' favorite documentary the year it came out (deservedly so) but My Dinner With Andre is part of the culture because of Siskel and Ebert. You may not have seen it per se, but you've seen it parodied on The Simpson and elsewhere, and that was possible because they made it an art house hit when otherwise it probably would have run for two weeks in very limited release, then disappeared.
@ivanb___2217
@ivanb___2217 10 месяцев назад
PTI on ESPN (and all other sports shows) owes Roger and Gene a debt of gratitude.
@jmcg6189
@jmcg6189 10 месяцев назад
I read his column in the Sun-Times. I think he started there while I was in high school. I didn't find out about their tv show until they went on PBS and my brother told me about it. It brought a breath of fresh air to the Tennessee town where I was going to school. As a loyal Sun-Times reader I never agreed with Siskel. It was weird that Siskel got brain cancer shortly after a local sportscaster had died of brain cancer. They had gone to Yale together (possibly college roommates). I still miss Ebert's reviews.
@jedijones
@jedijones 10 месяцев назад
Ebert said he received radiation treatments for ear infections as a child, that led to his cancer. May have been the same with Gene.
@markadams7046
@markadams7046 10 месяцев назад
I first got introduced to Siskel and Ebert's show Sneak Previews that was on PBS in a High School Mass Media class, and I loved watching them from then on.
@tomhools1605
@tomhools1605 10 месяцев назад
Such simple format, and yet they are irreplaceable.
@J4sse
@J4sse 10 месяцев назад
Wished they were still around. They would've torn Hollywood a new one.
@tomloft2000
@tomloft2000 10 месяцев назад
@ 2:17- the paperless office? lol
@joehenry9546
@joehenry9546 10 месяцев назад
I enjoyed watching their show every time it came on. They always made new excited about new movies that came out.
@Bobalicious
@Bobalicious 10 месяцев назад
I loved watching S&E, but did anyone ever notice... once every summer, when the potential 'blockbusters' were all popping up in theaters, Siskel & Ebert would skip one weekend? It was always on the weekend that some huge movie was premiering and they just simply weren't on that week. The next week, they would continue on with new reviews but that big movie from the previous week would never be mentioned. I always wondered what was up with that?
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