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Great Movies

The Great Movies

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America’s most trusted and best-known film critic Roger Ebert presents one hundred brilliant essays on some of the best movies ever made. 

Roger Ebert, the famed film writer and critic, wrote biweekly essays for a feature called "The Great Movies," in which he offered a fresh and fervent appreciation of a great film. The Great Movies collects one hundred of these essays, each one of them a gem of critical appreciation and an amalgam of love, analysis, and history that will send readers back to that film with a fresh set of eyes and renewed enthusiasm–or perhaps to an avid first-time viewing.

Ebert’s selections range widely across genres, periods, and nationalities, and from the highest achievements in film art to justly beloved and wildly successful popular entertainments. Roger Ebert manages in these essays to combine a truly populist appreciation for our most important form of popular art with a scholar’s erudition and depth of knowledge and a sure aesthetic sense. Wonderfully enhanced by stills selected by Mary Corliss, the film curator at the Museum of Modern Art, The Great Movies is a treasure trove for film lovers of all persuasions, an unrivaled guide for viewers, and a book to return to again and again.

The Great Movies includes: All About Eve • Bonnie and Clyde • Casablanca • Citizen Kane • The Godfather • Jaws • La Dolce Vita • Metropolis • On the Waterfront • Psycho • The Seventh Seal • Sweet Smell of Success • Taxi Driver • The Third Man • The Wizard of Oz • and eighty-five more films.

544 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 2002

About the author

Roger Ebert

89 books387 followers
Roger Joseph Ebert was a Pulitzer Prize-winning American film critic and screenwriter.

He was known for his weekly review column (appearing in the Chicago Sun-Times since 1967, and later online) and for the television program Siskel & Ebert at the Movies, which he co-hosted for 23 years with Gene Siskel. After Siskel's death in 1999, he auditioned several potential replacements, ultimately choosing Richard Roeper to fill the open chair. The program was retitled Ebert & Roeper and the Movies in 2000.

Ebert's movie reviews were syndicated to more than 200 newspapers in the United States and abroad. He wrote more than 15 books, including his annual movie yearbook. In 1975, Ebert became the first film critic to win a Pulitzer Prize for Criticism. His television programs have also been widely syndicated, and have been nominated for Emmy awards. In February 1995, a section of Chicago's Erie Street near the CBS Studios was given the honorary name Siskel & Ebert Way. Ebert was awarded a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in June 2005, the first professional film critic to receive one. Roger Ebert was named as the most influential pundit in America by Forbes Magazine, beating the likes of Bill Maher, Lou Dobbs, and Bill O'Reilly.[2] He has honorary degrees from the University of Colorado, the American Film Institute, and the School of the Art Institute of Chicago.

From 1994 until his death in 2013, he wrote a Great Movies series of individual reviews of what he deemed to be the most important films of all time. He also hosted the annual Roger Ebert's Overlooked Film Festival in Champaign, Illinois from 1999 until his death.

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Profile Image for Julie Davis.
Author 5 books305 followers
October 7, 2013
I miss Roger Ebert. Even when I disagreed with his online personal journal entries, which happened fairly frequently, I still loved reading him.

Most importantly, of course, I miss reading his movie reviews every Friday. They were the anchor against which I measured all other critical opinions of a film. Again, I might disagree with him because his range and experience and desires when watching a film were often different from mine. Again, it didn't matter. I loved his way with words, the way he made you understand that his point of view was very valid even if you did disagree, and the way he was unafraid to champion movies others despised. He began this with early support of 2001: A Space Odyssey and later won my heart with his embrace of Abraham Lincoln Vampire Hunter. This is something few movie critics achieve.

The Great Movies collects a series of Ebert's of critical appreciations of movies which deserved a deeper look than a simple review. It ranges across time and genres to choose the best of the best, movies which make you want to grab your friends and force them to watch.

This is one of those books not to read from beginning to end but to flip open and see what catches your eye. Or to pick and choose from the table of contents, either the films you love or the films you never heard of. No matter your method, you will come away both missing Roger Ebert and grateful that his "voice" is still with us in print.

This book makes me appreciate the movies I love even more, makes me realize some movies that I never want to watch, and ... yet ... also makes me appreciate that both sorts can be connected in a way that makes my own viewing richer. This just happened in reading Ebert's comparison between the noir masterpiece Sunset Boulevard (much loved by me) and the Japanese existentialist film The Woman in the Dune (in which simply reading the description was enough, thank you very much).

There are some reviews which I won't read now because those movies, such as Jean Renoir's The Grand Illusion, are on my list to watch. Ebert can't fully discuss these as "great movies" without giving spoilers, so I will deny myself the pleasure of knowing his reasons for recommendation. It is enough to know that I can come back to his discussion when I am ready.

Above all it makes me want to watch some of these great movies again ... or for the first time. Surely that was Ebert's goal and he hits the target with sureness and grace. If you love movies, if you love intelligent and insightful writing, and, above all, if you miss Roger Ebert, then you owe it to yourself to read this collection.
Profile Image for Kerri.
1,045 reviews473 followers
March 17, 2024

The Big Sleep (1946)
Sometimes I read entire chunks of this in one sitting, other days I only read one review, or skipped it altogether. I don't have a copy of the second volume yet, so I wanted this one to last a while! In the end it took just under a month.

The Apartment (1960)
I love the way Roger Ebert wrote. I don't always agree with his opinion on a film. Some he likes something much more than I did, some much less. Others I haven't seen at all, but that didn't matter as his writing filled me in on all that was important. You can feel his passion for movies and all that goes into making them. I appreciate when he mentions that some scenes might feel clichéd today, but this particular film was the first example of something much repeated, now overly familiar.

Bride of Frankenstein (1935)
If I watch an older film, I often check his website to see if he reviewed it. I always learn something if he did. Nowadays I read the newer reviews by the writers employed by the site. I like them, but there have been many times when I have wished I could have known what Ebert would have thought of a particular film, and what fascinating trivia he would have included in his review.

Red River (1948)
I finished this book with a long list of movies I want to see and was reminded of how much I enjoyed others - especially Casablanca and The Big Sleep, which I must watch again. I realised while reading this that I have never watched a silent film and intend to correct that soon. Happily, many are readily available for free. It's a whole era of film that I've never bothered to visit, but his passion for films such as City Lights and Broken Blossoms appealed greatly.

City Lights (1931)
He also mentioned some Japanese films that I had heard of, but have never gotten around to, such as Seven Samurai and Woman in the Dunes, which I will make a point to finally actually watch!

Seven Samurai (1954)
There are more recent (in an overall sense) films like Pulp Fiction, Raging Bull, E.T. and Schindler's List, and many classics such as All About Eve, The Maltese Falcon, Vertigo and Some Like It Hot. I like some more than others of course, but the choices are very good, and his reviews informative and fun. I had a great time with this and am happy that there are three more in the series!

The General (1926)
Profile Image for Paul Bryant.
2,321 reviews11.2k followers
Shelved as 'reviews-of-books-i-didnt-read'
February 27, 2023
Companion piece to Kirk's review of the half year January to June 2021.
His review is here

https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

FILMS JANUARY TO JUNE 2021

NEW OR NEWISH : THE VERY GOOD, ALMOST GREAT


Two films of the book:

News Of The World
This was the film of one of those modern westerns I like so much. Downside was that it starred the often tiresome Tom Hanks. But no problem, he was very good. And the movie was nearly as good as the book.

A Simple Plan
From 1998 so not very new. The book takes an idea which has been used a lot of times before and does it right, and all the film has to do is follow the book page for page, and it does.

Pariah
Promising Young Woman
Judas and the Black Messiah


NEW OR NEWISH : THE REST

I Care A Lot
This is about an obscure aspect of the American legal system (guardianship or conservatorship) which if true is mind-boggling. I was thinking that surely this movie exaggerates a lot, but then the whole Britney Spears thing came up in the news, so maybe it’s true. The movie has some flaws but it’s almost a must-see.

Shiva Baby
After The Storm
Nobody
Lone Star
The Father
The White Tiger
A Quiet Place Part 2
Pieces Of A Woman
Nomadland
The Nightingale
Once Upon A Time In Hollywood


FOREIGN : THE GREAT

a must-see trilogy by Abbas Kiarostami:

Where Is The Friend’s House
And Life Goes On
Through The Olive Trees

These are interlinked in a unique way. The first one is a charming story of a kid who is trying to return a forgotten homework book to his friend who lives in the next village. That movie was made in 1987. Three years later there was a disastrous earthquake and Kiarostami became very concerned about the survival of the children in his movie so he went looking for them. Turned out they were okay. So the second film is about his fraught with difficulty road trip to try to find these kids. The third film is about two of the actors who played one scene in the second film, and why they were such trouble.

Two more great movies about kids :

The White Balloon
Also by Kiarostami – I really discovered him this year!

L’enfance Nue
This is like a non-cute version of The 400 Blows. Probably my movie of the year so far.

These are all highly recommended:

Farewell My Concubine
Germany Year Zero
Mephisto
Central Station
The Baker’s Wife
Winter Sleep
Before The Rain
The Handmaiden
A Special Day
Il Posto


THE NOT GREAT

Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives
Why this boring supernatural slo-mo silliness transfixed the critics is way beyond me.

Le Samourai
Another critical all time top movie I thought was an empty exercise in gangster chic

SOME GREAT CLASSIC HOLLYWOOD

Baby Face
Ball Of Fire
Brute Force
Stage Door
Night And The City
Employees Entrance
A Night To Remember
Panic In The Streets


SOME STRANGE STUFF FROM HERE AND THERE

My Dinner With Andre
Could this be the most boring movie ever? Well, no, but it’s surely in the top five. A real time two hour restaurant conversation between two very tiresome artsyfartsy guys in New York. Kill me now.

Sweet Movie
This should be seen to be believed but half an hour will be enough…. From the imdb plot summary : She moves to an anarchic community of sodomy and later she becomes an actress working in a erotic chocolate advertisement. Meanwhile, the revolutionary, pedophile, and mad killer Anna Planeta makes candy in her boat while sailing through the canals of a city that seems to be Amsterdam.

The Boy Friend
Gummo
Ken Park
Bronson
Buffalo 66


ONE BEAUTIFUL DOCUMENTARY

Kedi
This is all about the thousands of street cats of Istanbul. They are so cute and charming and the lovely people of Istanbul take collective care of them.

Profile Image for Kevin.
595 reviews182 followers
October 20, 2021
“I demand that a film express either the joy of making cinema or the agony of making cinema. I am not at all interested in anything in between.” ~Roger Ebert, The 400 Blows

“It does not hook its effects on specific plot points, nor does it ask us to identify with Dave Bowman or any other character. It says to us: We became men when we learned to think. Our minds have given us the tools to understand where we live and who we are. Now it is time to move on to the next step, to know that we live not on a planet, but among the stars, and that we are not flesh, but intelligence.” ~Roger Ebert, 2001: A Space Odyssey

Known as a humanist and a populist, Roger Ebert critiqued films from 1967 to 2013. That’s 46 years of bearing witness to the best (and worst) of world cinema. These reviews are some of his best.
Profile Image for N.N. Heaven.
Author 6 books2,014 followers
January 29, 2018
I've been a huge fan of Roger Ebert ever since I was a little girl. I would watch his show every weekend to see what movies were good and what movies to skip. Yes, Virginia, there wasn't an internet or social media then. Anyway, this book is filled with Ebert's view on 100 great movies ever made. A must read and own for any film buff! Highly recommend!

My Rating: 5++ stars
312 reviews9 followers
August 14, 2013
The word that sprang to mind as I finished this book is anodyne. This is a competent and thoroughly unexceptional survey of 'great movies.' Ebert's opinions range from main stream to routine / within the normal range of deviation / acceptably eccentric. Not one of the reviews in the book made me stop of think 'wow, what a fascinating new way to look at that movie.' Nor did any of them illuminate to me why I liked, or failed to be moved by, or disliked a movie. I came out of the book knowing no more about movies nor about my own responses to movies than I did going in.

On a more technical level there are times when Ebert is simply wrong about the facts surrounding a movie. For example he writes of the first Star Wars film "Two Lucas inspirations started the story with a tease: He set the action not in the future, but "long ago," and jumped into the middle of it with "Chapter 4: A New Hope." These seemingly innocent touches were actually rather powerful. They gave the saga the aura of an ancient tale and an ongoing one." Of course this is incorrect. When the film was first released it was simply titled "Star Wars." I am of an age to have seen it when it was initially released and remember that first opening crawl. I also remember the gasp of confusion in the theater when the sequel's open title crawl began "Episode V: The Empire Strikes Back." (This was back in the days when it was the norm to see a film without having been completely spoiled as to its details in advance.)

This 'mistake' is important because of the material with which it is surrounded. Ebert is writing about what it felt like to watch the first Star Wars film at the time it was initially released and yet it is clear that he is confounding the feelings of later viewings with those of his initial experience. In other words, he is not recalling the actual experience of first watching the film he is overwriting those memories with later opinions and encounters.

This undermines many of his discussions about other movies since he often begins by writing about how he felt when he first saw them and contrasting those feelings with the way in which he experienced the same movies in later years. This reader wonders if this projection and overwriting of later experiences and feelings onto vague initial memories is a frequent occurrence.

Finally it should be pointed out that this is not a survey of 'great movies.' Ebert himself writes "The movies in this book have three thoughts or more. They not 'the' 100 greatest films of all time, because all lists of great movies are a foolish attempt to codify works which must stand alone. But it's fair to say: If you want to make a tour of the landmarks of the first century of cinema, start here." However this is a thoroughly mainstream, middle of the road introduction to 'great' films which guides the reader along in such a way that there is an illusion of a range of cultures and genres and yet the writing does so in such a way that there is not a single film included that doesn't fall within the standard 'canon.' For example, where are the great films of 'Black Cinema?' Ebert may not have seen those as a boy or as a young man but those films were seen by succeeding generations of African-American actors, writers and directors and thus by influencing some of the greatest artists of the cinema continue, if only at a remove, to have an impact on all American cinema today. Where are the films that came out of China and India? Where are the films made by indigenous North and South Americans? Where are the films made by actors and directors from Mexico, Argentina and Brazil?

This is a thoroughly middle of the road, Eurocentric, safe, unadventurous and timid exploration of the 'great films.'

And that is why it is filed in my mind under the word anodyne.

Profile Image for Jim Dooley.
865 reviews48 followers
March 23, 2017
Roger Ebert introduces this collection of his reviews by pointing out these are what he considers to be GREAT movies … not the GREATEST movies. He found a GREATEST list to be virtually meaningless as it is difficult to argue merits beyond GREAT. I would be on pretty safe ground if I told you that I’m providing a list of my Favorite Films, but Greatest Films is an entirely different situation and will immediately be headed to disagreement. So, these are films that he believes stand out as major artistic achievements and/or are especially thought-provoking.

He includes the films that almost everyone considers to be wonderful, such as:

· 2001: A SPACE ODYSSEY
· CASABLANCA
· CITIZEN KANE
· THE WIZARD OF OZ

There were also those films that I haven’t seen, but that I’ve added to my viewing list, such as:

· THE DECALOGUE
· FLOATING WEEDS
· L’AVVENTURA
· MR. HULOT’S HOLIDAY

Of course, there were those that I haven’t seen and have absolutely no intention of ever seeing, such as:

· HOOP DREAMS (Not much of a sports film fan)
· LE SAMOURAI
· PICKPOCKET
· WRITTEN ON THE WIND (If I never see another movie directed by Douglas Sirk, it will be too soon)

And there were those that caused me to scratch my head at their inclusion, such as:

· LAST YEAR AT MARIENBAD (I made it through to the end … barely.)
· UN CHIEN ANDALOU (Challenging, yes. Unusual, yes. Great … well, it has no story line and the shots aren’t connected to one another … so, no.)

I was actually surprised that I had seen most of the films, and that I agreed with his choices most of the time. Even when I disagreed, his reasoning provided a great deal of insight. Most of all, it generated a strong interest in me to go and view many of these either again or for the first time. In some cases, I’ll want to see a few that I didn’t like initially, but his argument caused me to wonder if my opinion will change. (So, TAXI DRIVER, here I come.)

I found this side note interesting. Roger Ebert had been working as a film critic for only 6-months when BONNIE AND CLYDE was released. The film was roundly panned by most critics at the time … to the point that the studio considered pulling it from release. He said that when he saw it, he realized he had seen his first masterpiece since working for a newspaper and he sang the film’s praises. Of course, public acceptance and … later … revisits by many of those same critics supported his belief. (I think it is a GREAT film, too.)

At the end of the book was a listing for THE GREAT MOVIES II, so maybe the films I thought should have been included and weren’t will finally make an appearance.

This one gets a “Thumbs Up. Way Up.”
Profile Image for Suyog Sonar.
15 reviews14 followers
October 20, 2020
I have been reading reviews of Roger Ebert's since a quite time now. I literally read hundreds of his reviews in recent time. When I cant interpret the movie myself I turn to Roger Ebert. He has watched and reviewed more than 25 thousand movies in his career spanning over many decades. So surely we can trust his judgement about movies.


He did not review based on some dry technical bore, although that also important, and he did incorporate them as well, but he reviewed movies to understand the purpose of the movie. The essence and heart of the movie.

The technicalities and methods used by filmmakers are only mediums to make movies, not the sole purpose. The very purpose of movies is to manifest the human psychological experiences through meaningful stories. And thats important. If a movie is able to constructively convey what it wants to, it serves its purpose, the methods therefore become secondary. The methods might improve how the story is told and received by viewers but it isnt the story, afterall.


This book is collection of his reviews of movies he considered great. It contains many famous works as well some unheard ones. All of them special and unique in their presention. And vast in their scope.

Many of them are in my to watch list. I have see quite a few of them and hoping to see more.
Profile Image for Kirk.
137 reviews26 followers
Read
July 8, 2021
[continuing pandemic edition] I guess I'll keep doing these semi-annual State of Cinema lists as long as Paul wants to continue... First survey entirely from the UK, movies seen from January thru June.
An update, movies seen in a cinema, 2020: Nine.
Movies seen in a cinema, 2021 (so far): One.

Yes the 15 month drought ended. My last cinema experience was seeing The Hunt in Berkeley, CA in March 2020. I've now seen A Quiet Place part 2 in June 2021 in Cambridge, UK. It was great!

Otherwise, the usual viewing of many movies at home, accentuated by lockdowns. Quite a few rewatches, so I'll cover those first. Bold = a five star film or nearly so.

Movies Seen Not for the First Time

The Untouchables
Should have let this alone, I had remembered it as great, however: every character is a cliche; DeNiro phones in his performance; I had forgotten how wooden the young Kevin Costner was.
In the Mood for Love
The Professionals
In a Lonely Place
This is great for Bogart stepping away from his persona completely. He played alot of charismatic good guys and charismatic villains. Here he just plays a neurotic asshole, and nails it.
The Thing
John Carpenter's 1982 masterpiece absolutely holds up, if anything it's even better than I remembered.
Spartacus
Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan
Candyman
The Stunt Man
The Man Who Would Be King
A Nightmare on Elm Street
Well the terrifying concept holds up, but scene by scene this is no longer scary, and the so-'80s tinny synth/keyboard music score is atrocious.


New-ish Films

Bad Education
Comedy (mostly) about a real life scandal in a NY school district. Highly recommended.

Saint Maud
Effective horror in the vein of Repulsion.

The Columnist
Dutch comedy/MeToo revenge flick.

Dear Comrades!
Brilliant Russian film about a 1962 massacre of protesting workers that I (and apparently most of the world) had never heard about. Pretty much a masterpiece.

Quo Vadis, Aida?
Finally a film about the Srebrenica massacre. Faultless but hard to watch. Strange how it was chilling seeing an actor playing Ratko Mladic, when I've no doubt seen 50 actors playing Hitler...

Promising Young Woman
Will be contender for my film of the year. Close to perfect, and the most zeitgeisty movie since Get Out.

His House
British horror about Sudanese immigrants in a haunted house. Makes a good double bill with the Persian horror Under the Shadow.

A Quiet Place part 2
Being my first big screen flick in over a year no doubt helped, but I loved this as much as the first.

Misbehavior
Miss Juneteenth
Stowaway


British Indies

Alex Wheatle and Education
The last two of Steve McQueen's five Small Axe films; all are worth seeing.

Perfect 10; Daphne; Rocks; Jellyfish
Watched quite a few of these, usually centered on working class British women or teens (also Make Up; Dirty God; Lynn + Lucy in 2020). Perfect 10 and Rocks have a good balance of hardship with interesting characters and situations. Daphne is kind of fascinating for its aggressively unlikeable lead character. Jellyfish and Lynn + Lucy tip over into misery porn.


Documentaries

Collective
Romanian film about uncovering a hospital scandal.

Assassins
Bizarre but true story of North Korea orchestrating an assassination by duping two Malaysian women who thought they were doing a reality show prank. Yes this really happened.

Poly Styrene - I am a Cliche
Doc about the life of a major punk figure I previously knew next to nothing about. Really good.

Athlete A
About the Larry Nassar U.S. Gymnastics abuse scandal.

Tina
The devastating and incredible story of Tina Turner's life. Don't say the uber-famous never suffer; she persevered and triumphed eventually, but oh man did she suffer.

Corman's World
About Roger Corman who produced approximately 17 million low budget films. The strange thing is he comes off as the most buttoned down, soft spoken gent ever, like a museum docent. Jack Nicholson and David Carradine get genuinely emotional talking about him. Worth seeing for the generous film clips. There's low budget, and then there's It Conquered the World.


Other Horror Films

Unbreakable
M. Night Shyamalan combines noir with the most somber superhero origin story ever. If you don't think too hard about it, it works.

Glass
Shyamalan ended up making a sort of trilogy (Split is the second one) involving three characters. Again he takes profoundly silly ideas and gives them a deft, earnest execution. I have to admit each one works pretty well when you're watching it.

Ringu
The original Japanese flick with the scary VHS girl. The truth is the American (quite faithful) remake, The Ring, is better and scarier.

One Cut of the Dead
Very meta Japanese zombie flick. Completely deranged and bananas, and skillfully done. Recommended.

The Woman in Black (1989)
I saw this after reading an article about it, a British TV movie said to be genuinely scary. It is. (I haven't seen the more recent film version.)

The Perfection and M.F.A.
I sought out a couple other rape-revenge flicks after seeing Promising Young Woman. The Perfection is demented and absurdly entertaining. M.F.A. plays it straight and is thematically similar to Promising Young Woman if a bit less ambitious. Both are worth seeing if the subgenre itself doesn't put you off.

And Soon the Darkness
A Bay of Blood
30 Days of Night


Other Foreign Films

Monos
Nearly surreal Columbian film about teenagers with guns and a hostage in the middle of nowhere. Kind of Lord of the Flies + Deliverance on acid. Recommended.

Bacurau
Equally bizarre as Monos, a middle of nowhere village in Brazil is attacked by mercenaries led by Udo Kier (never a good sign). It's like half a Nicholas Roeg film + half a Walter Hill film, on acid. Also recommended.

Atlantics
Senegalese film part mood piece, part romance, part ghost story. Gorgeously filmed, worth seeking out.

Osaka Elegy
Excellent early Mizoguchi film (1936), '40s Hollywood melodramas had nothing on him.

Cairo Station
Egyptian melodrama.

Woman at War
Offbeat Icelandic environmental comedy, loopy and quite entertaining.


In a Category of Their Own

Culloden and The War Game
Peter Watkins made both of these for British television in the 1960s, as sort of imagined documentaries. Culloden is about a battle in Scotland in 1746, filmed as though a TV crew were on the scene documenting it in real time. The War Game is about a nuclear attack on Britain. Both are mind-blowingly brilliant, and impossible to describe what it's like to watch them. Absolute highest recommendation.

My Childhood and My Ain Folk and My Way Home
Trilogy of autobiographical Scottish misery. Apparently well regarded but didn't work for me at all.


Everything Else I Watched

Set It Off
Impact
Ministry of Fear
Ice Cold in Alex
Loss of Innocence
The Fits (really good American indie)
Spider-Man: Into the Spider-verse
American Honey (indie in the vein of The Florida Project, which I liked better)
Bill & Ted's Excellent Adventure
Bill & Ted's Bogus Journey (no I'd never seen either; aggressively and amiably stupid, but entertaining)
A Night to Remember (I never saw Titanic but now I've seen a movie about The Titanic; rather good in its British understated way)
Profile Image for Lukasz Pruski.
921 reviews126 followers
January 2, 2021
"We live in a box of space and time. Movies are windows in its walls. They allow us to enter other minds - not simply in the sense of identifying with characters, although that is an important part of it, but by seeing the world as another person sees it."

Roger Ebert was to me the best film critic ever. No one else could write about movies with such passion, wisdom, and literary talent. Yes, there was Pauline Kael, and I read two big collections of her reviews. Yet for me, she was too opinionated in a mean way, and I sensed too much of a cold brain and not enough heart in her reviews.

I have already reviewed The Great Movies III and The Great Movies II, so now it's time for the original. The Great Movies was published in 2002 and, like its two sequels, it contains 100 reviews of 20th century movies that Mr. Ebert found the most important. In attempting the review, I will use the same approach as I did for the sequels. Instead of reviewing all reviews, which I am totally not qualified for, I will quote a few beautiful sentences - some stunning metaphors - from the reviews of five movies, which I personally consider the greatest in this set, and add some thoughts of mine.

Coppola's Apocalypse Now: Quite likely the best movie I have seen in my life. It shook me to the core. I was sick all night and most of the next day after seeing the film 41 years ago. Mr. Ebert writes a similar thing:
"Apocalypse Now is one of the central events of my life as a filmgoer."
He continues:
"[it] is more clearly than ever one of the key films of the century."
He offers an attempt at an explanation:
"The whole movie is a journey toward Willard's understanding of how Kurtz, one of the army's best soldiers, penetrated the reality of war to such a depth that he could not look any longer without madness and despair."
Without any doubt, the film has the best intro sequence of all movies in history, with Martin Sheen, and The Doors playing The End. I disagree, though, with Mr. Ebert about Marlon Brando. To me, everybody loved Marlon Brando's part because he was Marlon Brando. It is Martin Sheen and his out-of-this-world phenomenal performance that makes Apocalypse not just a masterpiece but likely the best movie ever made.

Antonioni's Blowup: Mr. Ebert writes:
"Freed from hype and fashion, it emerges as a great film, if not the one we thought we were seeing at the time."
I felt the same when I watched the movie twice about 20 years ago, after I had seen it the first time in 1966, when I was a teenager, and when I was fascinated with sex, The Yardbirds' music, sex, London in the Sixties, the mystery of the possible murder, and did I mention sex? Now I see that what Mr. Ebert writes is accurate:
"Whether there was a murder isn't the point. The film is about a character mired in ennui and distaste, who is roused by his photographs into something approaching passion."
Kieslowski's The Decalogue, which is difficult to fit here as it is a series of 10 one-hour films, each loosely based on a Commandment: Isn't Mr. Ebert's metaphor stunning:
"[...] you see that the Commandments work not like science, but like art; they are the instructions for how to paint a worthy portrait with our lives."
And even more importantly:
"These are not characters involved in the simpleminded struggles of Hollywood plots. They are adults, for the most part outside organized religion, faced with situations in their own lives that require them to make moral choices."
Resnais's Last Year in Marienbad: Hypnotic, hermetic, hallucinatory.
"[...] the three characters would move forever through their dance of desire and denial [...]
To me, watching this movie is closest to listening to classical music and admiring the timeless beauty of structure. Mr. Ebert writes:
"Yes, it involves a story that remains a mystery, even to the characters themselves. But one would not want to know the answer to this mystery. Storybooks with happy endings are for children. Adults know that stories keep on unfolding, repeating, turning back on themselves, on and on until that end which no story can evade."
Cassavetes's A Woman Under the Influence: As Mr. Ebert writes, the film shows "an uncertain balance between hope and fear." He also writes:
"There is no safe resolution at the end of any of Cassavetes's films. You have the feeling that the tumult of life goes on uninterrupted, that each film is a curtain raised on a play already in progress. The characters seek to give love, receive it, express it, comprehend it."
A great, great movie, the only one out of the five that I mention here, along Apocalypse, that would certainly be among the top five movies I have ever seen. I am not sure how much of my love for this movie is due to the director and how much to the screenplay that shows that there is no border between being a normally functioning person and a mentally sick one. And how much to Ms. Rowlands's phenomenal performance.

The review is way, way too long so I will just list the three "honorable mentions." Taxi Driver, The "Up" Documentaries, and Belle de Jour. When reading this great set of reviews enjoy all the wondrous metaphors!

Four-and-a-quarter stars.
Profile Image for Les.
2,911 reviews1 follower
January 28, 2018
I have a friend who explains she judges Chinese restaurants by cold sesame noodles. If they make good cold sesame noodles they can make anything. I judge movie review books by The Godfather. So the first review I read in this book was the Godfather and it was brilliant

In the introduction Ebert says these are 100 of 140+ reviews he wrote over a period of time. These are not a top 100 list, just 100 films he really appreciated.

I am going to straight up admit I didn't read all 100 essays. I am not a film student and I never was, I did take one film class and I worked in a pretty awesome video store back in the day but I am not and have never been a big fan of foreign films. So I will admit I willingly skipped over some of these movies; regardless of his praise I am never going to watch them. Never, ever,ever.

But the ones I did read were great; even the ones for movies I hadn't seen.

And I love this quote. "It is a truism that Hollywood trailers advertise not the movie that has been made, but the movie that the studio wishes had been made."
Profile Image for Kerry.
152 reviews76 followers
May 18, 2022
Anybody who enjoys critical reviews of movies and books would likely enjoy Ebert's, The Great Movies. Roger Ebert, who passed away in 2013, had a timeless writing style that stemmed from his absolute love of movies. He appreciated every aspect of movie production. This is captured in his review of It's a Wonderful Life and Star Wars

Sickle and Ebert anticipated half the internet with their show Sneak Previews on WTTW in Chicago. They sold the idea that audiences would watch two people debating whether a movie was 'thumbs-up' good or 'thumbs-down' bad. They later became syndicated and a PBS mainstay. Should be a standard source for those looking to improve their skill at movie/literary criticism.

There is no need to buy these books, he wrote four Great Movies books, because you can now find reviews at https://www.rogerebert.com. I like the hardcopy just for quick reference. I picked it up as a library remainder. I enjoy writing reviews and often find his work inspiring.
Profile Image for Lara.
84 reviews
August 28, 2014
Reading anything by the late Roger Ebert is to experience a mini master class in film criticism. Through his prose, his adoration of film shines through every word, whether he likes a film or not. Cinema - GOOD cinema - is the alter before which he worshiped, and which he analyzed like no other critic living today.

That said, Ebert wrote three books with the same title: "The Great Movies" (the first merely goes by that title but the second and third are II and III, respectively, on their covers). Reading just one Roger Ebert review/analyzation is satisfying enough. But when 100 films, ranging from Werner Herzog's "Aguirre, the Wrath of God" to "The Godfather", "A Hard Day's Night", Japanese films such as Akira Kurosawa's haunting "Ikiru" (which I watched immediately after reading Ebert's chapter on it) to the great silent films like "M" and "Metropolis" and some masterworks of directors Bergman, Goddard and Renoir are all put together in chapter after chapter ... well, if you are a film lover of just about any ilk, you are not going to want to put this book down.

The reader just learns and learns. Even reading about the films in this book that I haven't seen, I lapped up the words like a kitten before a bowl of cream, perhaps even more eagerly than I would have now that we no longer have his voice to turn to. Each film is described and discussed thoroughly and, frankly, the best praise I can give "The Great Movies" is that reading only a few pages made me want to shut myself away in a darkened theatre, all alone, having my meal brought to me and surrounded by my cats (they always watch movies with me because at those moments, I'm a captive lap). I want to just watch and watch and gorge myself on all the films Ebert writes of, one right after the other.

I cannot wait to get to Volumes II and III. Actually, I've got II right here on my desk, so I'll just close this review saying while we no longer have the man to enjoy, he wrote a lot of words that still exist and resonate, and his love of film will never die but will transmit itself through "The Great Movies" and all the other volumes of criticism he has left with us to enjoy and savor.
Profile Image for Bryce.
1,316 reviews33 followers
December 9, 2015
Reading Ebert’s collection of essays was like revisiting the highlights from film school. The films are taken from the tried-and-true list of greats, but all of them are actually pretty great. Ebert writes in a way that is accessible to the film layman but also includes enough about the technical and creative processes that give more experienced readers insight.

My favorite essay was on E.T.; Ebert broke from his usual formula there, crafting the review as a letter to his grandchildren after their first viewing of the film. It was witty and sweet, but also made excellent points about the film’s perspective and craftsmanship.
Profile Image for Leonard Pierce.
Author 14 books34 followers
October 19, 2008
Spotty as usual, but when Ebert is really on, he can write truly memorable film criticism. He's no intellectual, but he has a pretty keen visual sensibility, and he really latches on to emotional themes that can escape other reviewers.
Profile Image for Anita.
272 reviews5 followers
February 17, 2019
A really fun read, and super inspiring: I want to re/watch all the films, now.
Profile Image for Robert.
74 reviews
July 27, 2014
It's hard to imagine criticism as being something that everyone isn't good at. I'm being critical right now; your snide Facebook comment from earlier today is criticism. Given how much our thoughts and feelings end up public affairs in the modern world, everyone is a critic, yet few of us do it well. How often do we gush about some movie, restaurant, or book to our friends only to realize later that our words had little to no effect in altering their behavior? Reading a book of criticism which convinced me I had to see one movie is no mean feat: what if a critic convinced you to see 25 movies? Maybe more?

Roger Ebert's passing was a great loss to those of us who enjoy discussing the things we love. His writing style was knowledgeable, convincing, and purely entertaining. The books chosen in this volume were clearly loved by Ebert, watched multiple times without adulterating his experience. While I may not watch all of the movies discussed in this book, I've certainly spent a good deal of time thinking about my own writing style and my own favorite flicks. Though first glance at the list of movies may leave the potential reader fearing for a pretentious trip down Cannes lane, every entry left me at least mildly interested in renting a copy for my own viewing pleasure. Even the movies Ebert himself called out as pretentious.

Truly special are the entries--none of these can be considered movie reviews even though reviews are what we would expect from Ebert--in which Ebert takes liberties with his writing style such as a formatting his discussion of "E.T." into a letter to his grandchildren, with whom he had just watched the film. Like any book that consists of dozens of chapters all on a similar subject, "The Great Movies" is enjoyed best in smaller chunks to avoid a sense of repetition. You could happily read about a movie a day for months or take in three or four at a time, like I did.

All writers learn to write better by reading great authors. If everyone's a critic, everyone should make a point to read this.
Profile Image for Diane.
347 reviews77 followers
February 26, 2017
This is a book of Roger Ebert's reviews about classic films from "2001: A Space Odyssey" to "A Woman Under the Influence." Fascinating, fun, and a pretty quick read. Don't judge it by how long it took me - I kept having to read it in small doses, stealing time here and there in between work, family, gardening, and some pretty demanding pets. I don't always agree with Ebert - I enjoyed the endings to "Red River" and "Psycho" and have never liked "Citizen Kane" - but I share his love of great movies, both the oldies and the more recent ones. His love for the movies comes through, and he really makes you want to watch them. He also makes you look at familiar movies in a different light.

Very recommended.
Profile Image for Hajir Almahdi.
173 reviews145 followers
July 5, 2017
Like rest of human population I enjoy watching films but lately I've developed this passion for film critique, I no longer just enjoy watching a "movie", I try to see everything else I might have missed, re-watch, read articles about it, be critical, specially if its something that I enjoyed. What I loved the most reading this book (even though it took me a lot of time to watch all the films reviewed that I haven't seen before and I did manage to see most of them) is Roger Ebert's passion when talking about the films he love, he's genuine and honest, his understanding and love of Cinema and film is captivating. This collection of reviews servers as a great guide to classic films you might have missed watching and great read to both film and reading lovers alike.
Profile Image for Spiderorchid.
195 reviews12 followers
July 11, 2015
Very entertaining collection of short essays. I haven't read all 100 of them (only the ones about movies I've seen or want to see in the future, perhaps 3/4 of the book) and I don't always share Ebert's opinion but it's well written and fun for movie fans.
Profile Image for Niklas Pivic.
Author 3 books70 followers
April 28, 2013
I must admit, I've only read the reviews of films that I haven't seen in here, which probably amounts to a third of the book in total.

Ebert has really, really seen these films. Most of them, according to himself, several times, and an additional time in order to write this book. A lot of them are classics, and a few of them - e.g. "The Wizard of Oz" - aren't included in a lot of critics' tomes.

He opens the book with an introduction where three paragraphs stood out to me:

The ability of an audience to enter into the narrative arc of a movie is being lost; do today’s audiences have the patience to wait for Harry Lime in The Third Man?


At Boulder and on other campuses, talking with the students, I found that certain names were no longer recognized. Even students majoring in film had never seen one by Buñuel, Bresson, or Ozu. They’d seen one or two titles by Ford and Wilder, knew a half-dozen Hitchcock classics, genuflected at Citizen Kane, knew the Star Wars pictures by heart, and sometimes uttered those words which marked them as irredeemably philistine: “I don’t like black and white.” Sixty of these films are in black and white, and three use b&w and color; you cannot know the history of the movies, or love them, unless you understand why b&w can give more, not less, than color.


Today even the most popular subtitled films are ignored by the national distribution oligarchy, mainstream movies are pitched at the teenage male demographic group, and the lines outside theaters are for Hollywood’s new specialty, B movies with A budgets.


While he may seem grumpy, there are obvious points to be made. Yes, most modern Hollywood flicks are crap, yes, the attention span of anybody today is Twitter and Reddit long (by which I mean that "too long, didn't read" is more of an axiom to some than a joke), but then again - his claims would be nothing if he didn't fess up and review with gusto, intelligence and terrific insight.

And that, my friend, he delivers.

From "The Big Sleep":

Working from Chandler’s original words and adding spins of their own, the writers (William Faulkner, Jules Furthman, and Leigh Brackett) wrote one of the most quotable of screenplays: It’s unusual to find yourself laughing in a movie not because something is funny, but because it’s so wickedly clever. (Marlowe on the “nymphy” kid sister: “She tried to sit in my lap while I was standing up.”) Unlike modern crime movies which are loaded with action, The Big Sleep is heavy with dialogue. The characters talk and talk, just like in the Chandler novels; it’s as if there’s a competition to see who has the most verbal style.


On "Ikiru":

It is not so bad that he must die. What is worse is that he has never lived. “I just can’t die—I don’t know what I’ve been living for all these years,” he says to the stranger in the bar. He never drinks, but now he is drinking: “This expensive saki is a protest against my life up to now.”

[...]

I saw Ikiru first in 1960 or 1961. I went to the movie because it was playing in a campus film series and cost only a quarter. I sat enveloped in the story of Watanabe for two and a half hours, and wrote about it in a class where the essay topic was Plato’s statement “the unexamined life is not worth living.”


On "JFK", which indeed questions how films should be "truthful":

Shortly after the film was released, I ran into Walter Cronkite and received a tongue-lashing, aimed at myself and my colleagues who had praised JFK. There was not, he said, a shred of truth in it. It was a mishmash of fabrications and paranoid fantasies. It did not reflect the most elementary principles of good journalism. We should all be ashamed of ourselves. I have no doubt Cronkite was correct, from his point of view. But I am a film critic and my assignment is different than his. He wants facts. I want moods, tones, fears, imaginings, whims, speculations, nightmares. As a general principle, I believe films are the wrong medium for fact. Fact belongs in print. Films are about emotions. My notion is that JFK is no more or less factual than Stone’s Nixon—or Gandhi, Lawrence of Arabia, Gladiator, Amistad, Out of Africa, My Dog Skip, or any other movie based on “real life.” All we can reasonably ask is that it be skillfully made, and seem to approach some kind of emotional truth.


Reviewing a film that is old could pose several problems, but if it's been remade a million times since, is harder; Ebert pulls this off with "Nosferatu":

To watch F. W. Murnau’s Nosferatu (1922) is to see the vampire movie before it had really seen itself. Here is the story of Dracula before it was buried alive in clichés, jokes, TV skits, cartoons, and more than thirty other films. The film is in awe of its material. It seems to really believe in vampires. Max Schreck, who plays the vampire, avoids most of the theatrical touches that would distract from all the later performances, from Bela Lugosi to Christopher Lee to Frank Langella to Gary Oldman. The vampire should come across not like a flamboyant actor, but like a man suffering from a dread curse. Schreck plays the count more like an animal than like a human being; the art direction by Murnau’s collaborator, Albin Grau, gives him bat ears, clawlike nails, and fangs that are in the middle of his mouth like a rodent’s, instead of on the sides like a Halloween mask.


Check out the insight on "Raging Bull", one of the best films ever made according to myself:

Raging Bull is not a film about boxing, but about a man with paralyzing jealousy and sexual insecurity, for whom being punished in the ring serves as confession, penance, and absolution. It is no accident that the screenplay never concerns itself with fight strategy. For Jake LaMotta, what happens during a fight is controlled not by tactics, but by his fears and drives.

Martin Scorsese’s 1980 film was voted in three polls as the greatest film of the decade, but when he was making it, he seriously wondered if it would ever be released: “We felt like we were making it for ourselves.” Scorsese and Robert De Niro had been reading the autobiography of Jake LaMotta, the middleweight champion whose duels with Sugar Ray Robinson were a legend in the 1940s. They asked Paul Schrader, who wrote Taxi Driver (1976), to do a screenplay. The project languished while Scorsese and De Niro made the ambitious but unfocused musical New York, New York (1977) and then languished some more as Scorsese’s drug use led to a crisis. De Niro visited his friend in the hospital, threw the book on his bed, and said, “I think we should make this.” And the making of Raging Bull, with a screenplay further sculpted by Mardik Martin (Mean Streets [1973]), became therapy and rebirth for the filmmaker.

Raging Bull is the most painful and heart-rending portrait of jealousy in the cinema—an Othello for our times. It’s the best film I’ve seen about the low self-esteem, sexual inadequacy, and fear that lead some men to abuse women. Boxing is the arena, not the subject. LaMotta was famous for never being knocked down in the ring. There are scenes where he stands passively, his hands at his side, allowing himself to be hammered. We sense why he didn’t go down. He hurt too much to allow the pain to stop.


All in all: very insightful, almost a little too much for me, who's not a film critic or someone who's that deep into film. Still, Ebert a perfect juxtaposition to Anthony Lane's brilliant collection of his own reviews, titled "Nobody's Perfect".
Profile Image for Dhiraj Sharma.
202 reviews85 followers
January 24, 2022
Written in trademark style of late Roger Ebert, this is the "lucid but still to the point" prose which won him the Pulitzer prize and arguably made him the most loved movie critic of all times.

This is one book to be cherished by all movie lovers. In addition to the famous ones there are many movies reviewed here that I had not heard of. Needless to say this did prompt me to search for these lesser known movies (atleast to me) on the net.

The feeling which one gets after reading Roger Ebert's reviews is that "Man, this is what exactly I wanted to say but somehow my thoughts got lost when I started transferring them into words"

Example - Roger Ebert also feels that the bicycle chase scene in ET was tad too long (before their bikes start flying). I have the same feeling whenever I watch ET !!!
Profile Image for Ryan Hatch.
300 reviews3 followers
April 27, 2019
8.5/10
It takes amazing talent to make a great movie, in some ways it takes just as much talent to put perfectly into words what makes that movie great. Roger Ebert does that better than almost anyone. So often reading these essays I would get the "that's exactly how I felt" moment. The other thing I love about Roger was that he knew what he liked. Only he could include movies like "Gates of Heaven," a documentary about an absurd pet cemetery, and put it with the likes of "The Godfather" and "Citizen Kane." He was a man who loved movies. I love this book.
116 reviews6 followers
February 4, 2021
I grew up reading Ebert's reviews but this is the first I read of his criticism. The films selected are a mix of the canonical (Casablanca and Star Wars) to the obscure (Woman in the Dunes and Greed) and all his essays are insightful and warm. It has put new films on my "to watch" list and given me a deeper understanding of the films I already love.
208 reviews
December 17, 2019
A great book about great movies. Ebert provides enough of a summary and his opinions to remind you why you loved certain movies, wonder why you didn't love others, and want to see still other movies. I miss Roger Ebert's excitement about movies. I can't think of a critic today who so clearly loves the art form.
Profile Image for Dankwa Brooks.
59 reviews
October 14, 2023
Not only do I like watching great films, but I like reading about them too. As a filmmaker people are always surprised that I haven’t seen some “classics”. Generally, I haven’t seen too many films before I was born (70s) and I really have no interest in several genres like war/military films and westerns. I have to say though that as a filmmaker I will watch ANY film when recommended.

When it comes to movies, no one knows them better than Roger Ebert. Forget the movie side; he is one of the best writer/journalist period! His essays are analytical without being too scrutinizing. They really celebrate what it is like to FEEL what the film is trying to convey and how they made him feel. He also has been watching films from around the world at a young age (25) and brings with him a wealth of knowledge of film technique and career of pretty much any given filmmaker in the last 50 years.

The essays in this book were deductive, insightful and most of all filled with fondness of something Roger Ebert perhaps knows just as well as any great filmmaker – film.

~Post Script~
The movies that I haven’t seen, but want to after reading this book are
2001
The 400 Blows
The Apartment
Body Heat
The Bicycle Thief
The Big Sleep
Bonnie & Clyde
Casablanca
Double Indemnity
La Dolce Vita
Lawrence of Arabia
The Maltese Falcon
Network
The Night of the Hunter
On The Waterfront
Raging Bull
Seven Samurai
Sunset Blvd

With the exception of ‘The 400 Blows’ I have heard of all of these films, but have never seen them. Ebert covers A LOT of films and since there were so many I read only the essays of those films I heard of. I hope to see these films – eventually.

Post Post Script
March 2023

Since I first published this review I have seen many films on my above list, some of them on the BIG SCREEN and yes they are “great movies”.

2001
The 400 Blows
The Bicycle Thief
The Big Sleep
Bonnie & Clyde
Casablanca
Lawrence of Arabia
The Maltese Falcon
Network
The Night of the Hunter
Raging Bull
Seven Samurai


You can read my GOODREADS Reviews of some of his other volumes.

THE GREAT MOVIES II https://www.goodreads.com/review/show... 📚

THE GREAT MOVIES III https://www.goodreads.com/review/show... 📚

THE GREAT MOVIES IV https://www.goodreads.com/review/show... 📚
Profile Image for Jillian.
2,031 reviews102 followers
May 11, 2016
What makes a film great is fairly subjective. It depends on the viewer's tastes and preferences, and someone always finds something wrong with every film. That's just life. There are a handful of films the majority of people would agree are truly great: Citizen Kane, The Godfather, Gone with the Wind, etc. There are also films most people would agree are just universally bad: Grease 2, Catwoman, The Room, etc. Everyone is entitled to their own opinion, but if you really want to listen to someone's opinion on what makes films great and which are, it should be the late Roger Ebert's.

Mr. Ebert knew film. God, he knew film. He knew exactly what made a film good or bad, and he wasn't afraid to state it. More than that, he paid attention to the nuance of a film. Even if it didn't meet expectations, he could see what the filmmaker had attempted to do. I haven't seen every film in this collection of Ebert's Great Movies, but it still fascinated him. I liked reading analysis about film, and Mr. Ebert does it extremely well. The films in the book are varied; there are verified classics and children's films, art films and blockbusters. Mr. Ebert's intelligence and humor wrings through each of the essays. This was a man who unapologetically loved film. He believed it was important, and he makes you believe it too.

“As we leave the theater, we are absolutely convinced that the only thing keeping the world from going crazy is that the problems of three little people do, after all, amount to more than a hill of beans.”

Definitely recommended! I will watch these films and then read the next installments of Ebert's Great Movies. Rest in peace, Mr. Ebert.
Profile Image for Muzzlehatch.
149 reviews9 followers
August 28, 2008
I have very mixed feelings about Roger Ebert, and this book is full of perfect examples of why that is. On the one hand, he communicates an enthusiasm that is hard to ignore, and his writing is always lucid and entertaining; on the other, he is sloppy and sometimes dead wrong in his facts -- somehow ignoring that Ozu's "Floating Weeds" is a remake of an earlier film BY THE SAME DIRECTOR; making a snide comment about the failed "futuristic city" in Albert Brooks' "Defending Your Life" -- actually a vision of the afterlife. Did Ebert even see the film? He could have picked a more accurate example to throw a line about in his otherwise decent discussion of "Metropolis". His choices generally are very conservative, films that anyone with a smidgeon of knowledge of film will know -- though they're all great films, it would have been nice to see him point his way towards directors and films that need the exposure more than "Singin' in the Rain", "Vertigo" and Frank Capra.
Profile Image for Jack.
136 reviews
April 16, 2023
I’m an uncultured swine, so I haven’t seen all these classics (gave me plenty to watch later), and I only read the well-written and introspective reviews for the films I was familiar with. Fascinating that unit production photographs/movie stills have been used to recreate films that have been lost over time. 2001: A Space Odyssey - I never thought of this as a silent film. He’s right about the superior alien beings who crafted the monolith being better left to the imagination. Apocalypse Now - very interesting about Coppola including an ending credit sequence of the camp blowing up just as fodder for the credits on the 35mm print and not as anything adding to the narrative. Bonnie and Clyde - love that he can’t help but include he was the first and only critic to see its genius upon release. Bride of Frankenstein - fun fact that Mel Brooks literally reused the set after finding it for Young Frankenstein. I definitely need to check out Gods and Monsters. Casablanca - really enjoyed the way he talks about the strength of repeated viewings, the general audience perception of heroism, and learning they were essentially making up the movie as they filmed, which kept the actors in the dark about the ending. Chinatown - cool to hear his thoughts on how this role cemented the Nicholson we know. Citizen Kane - great line “it explains what Rosebud is but not what Rosebud means.” Deep focus (everything in foreground and background is visually clear and camera tricks must be performed with lighting to play with perspective and give viewers a clear focal point) concept is interesting. Cloth ceilings to hide the microphones, wow! Invisible wipes are when something onscreen disguises itself as a wipe to clear the scene, such as someone stepping in front of the camera, curtains closing, etc. Do the Right Thing - great entry in this book, nails everything. Dracula - I wasn’t aware Phillip Glass composed a new score to the classic, and I have to check that out. Dr. Strangelove - great observation about the movie being very sparse outside of its actors. Never heard pie fight was the intended ending. ET - written from the perspective of him writing a letter to his grandkids after they watched it for the first time. He speaks about the perspective being through the lens of a child. Fargo - love that he weighs in on the friend from school scene. The Godfather - great observation about certain details not being important (did he tell Kay about Apollina his Italian wife?). A Hard Day’s Night - agreed that it is timeless. Lawrence of Arabia - odd swipe at Pearl Harbor in his review, but I love the description of “tall man in a small room” to describe watching it on home video screens. Network - big recommendation for Sidney Lumet’s book. Nosferatu - vampires should be played like humans with a dreadful curse; silent films are dreamlike. Pinocchio - I completely forgot about the smoking cigarette being the reason they turn into donkeys. Psycho - “the most effective slashing in film history, suggesting situation and artistry are more important than graphic details;” the balls on this dude to suggest a re-edit to make the film “perfect.” Pulp Fiction - Quentin finds a way to make words humorous without asking for a laugh; Fabienne and Butch’s potbelly chat establishes their relationship and her character rather than wasting time telling the audience what we already know about the exposition details of the plot; the chronological elements of the movie are in the dialogue (Vincent and Jules set up everything coming with the foot massage for the stakes of Mia Wallace’s life, the robbery at the diner, etc.); again he takes a shot at Pearl Harbor in this review, he also swipes at The Mummy Returns. Raging Bull - great discussion of the cinematography techniques and black and white choices, it made me want to rewatch the movie to see the boxing scenes the way he explains them. Schindler’s List - I wonder what the proposed version would be with a Goethe who is simply a normal guy following orders rather than serial killer. Seven Samurai - enjoy the closing paragraph about the samurai not being wanted beyond the task of driving out the invaders because armed men bring a risk to the community and that’s the nature of society. Shawshank - love the idea of the camera giving Andy space after his bouts with trauma and violence, as if we are others in the prison. Silence of the Lambs - might be his best entry in the book, brilliant insight on the differences between this movie and the sequel, parallels between Lecter and Starling, visual and audio themes; he references the DVD commentary track frequently. Singing in the Rain - didn’t realize the studio just scraped together a bunch of songs they had lying around. Some Like It Hot - “poured into her dress that offers her breasts like jolly treats for needy boys” and “she wears that clinging, see-through dress, gauze covering the upper slopes of her breasts, the neckline scooping to a censor’s eyebrow north of trouble.” Star Wars - where Kubrick went to imagine what the future tech would look like in 2001, Lucas plunders the past; the force = going with the flow. Taxi Driver - priest’s eye view = overhead shots used in the film; “the end sequence plays like music, not drama.” Wizard of Oz - didn’t know there were so many crazy shifts and accidents behind the scenes during the making; I love the child perspective (over the rainbow = away from home, it’s scary and you’d want friends to show you the way, you’d probably get lost with your pet); the friends symbolize childhood fears (am I real/ugly and silly/brave enough?); appealing to adults because it reminds us of a journey we went on before. Wizard of Oz one might be my favorite of those I read. Lots that I still need to see!
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
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