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Roger Ebert’s 4-Star Memoir

Posted on October 29, 2011 at 8:00 am

Roger Ebert, not just the greatest movie critic of all time but one of the most influential thinkers and brilliant writers on any subject over the past four decades, has written his story in Life Itself: A Memoir.  When he lost his ability to eat and speak following treatment for cancer, he says he “began to replace what I lost with what I remembered” and devoted the same piercing intelligence, fearless analysis, open-heartedness, and vitally engaging prose style to his own life.  This is the man who wrote an entire book called I Hated, Hated, Hated This Movie, but who is even more passionate in writing about what he loves, loves, loves in books like Scorsese by Ebert and his collection of 4-Star reviews.  His shot-by-shot commentary on “Citizen Kane” is one of the most thrilling experiences I have ever had watching a film as he helped me understand more richly and compellingly a movie I thought I already knew and appreciated.

In Life Itself, Ebert evocatively describes growing up as the only child in a college town, his passion for reading, his college days, becoming a journalist when the era of the two-fisted, fedora-wearing, “get me rewrite” days were not yet over and writers like Tom Wolfe, Hunter S. Thompson, and Woodward and Bernstein were making journalism the world’s most exciting place to be.  He writes about his interviews with the biggest stars and the most outrageous characters.  And he brings the same unflinching honesty tempered with compassion to his own story, his struggles with alcohol, and, finally, just like in the movies, a beautiful love story when he meets his adored Chaz.

This is a fascinating book, one of the best books about movies and one of the best memoirs I have ever read.  I have one copy to give away.  Send me an email at moviemom@moviemom.com with Ebert in the subject line and don’t forget your address.  I’ll pick a random winner on November 6.

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Jim Emerson Deconstructs ‘The Dark Knight’ Action Sequence

Posted on September 14, 2011 at 8:00 am

Jim Emerson of Indiewire takes viewers through the truck chase scene in “The Dark Knight” and explains how an action sequence works (and does not work). This is a superb lesson on visual story-telling, highly recommended.

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Critics Understanding Media and Pop Culture

Free Issue of Roger Ebert’s Newsletter — This Week Only

Posted on August 20, 2011 at 10:13 pm

Roger Ebert’s wonderful newsletter is a steal at $10 a year.  This week only, it’s even more of a steal with a FREE issue that includes a glimpse of his upcoming autobiography and trailers for some of the coolest upcoming films.

Don’t forget to follow him on Twitter at @ebertchicago.

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Best Actor in the Worst Movie and More From Rotten Tomatoes — From Slate

Posted on June 6, 2011 at 3:29 pm

Slate has taken data from Rotten Tomatoes to compute the career trajectories of actors and directors.  The results are unexpected — would anyone guess that the actor with the best reviews is….Daniel Autueil?  And the worst actress…Jennifer Love Hewitt?  I’m a fan of both.

To be fair, on Rotten Tomatoes actors do not get individual scores, though that’s a fun idea.  How would you like to read a review that gave individual report cards to each of the people in or behind the film?  Autueil is a brilliant French actor who is equally adept at drama and comedy.  If he has made bad films, they have not made it to the United States.  Jennifer Love Hewitt is a fine actress who has appeared in some lousy (but financially successful) movies.  But the statistics are fascinating nevertheless, and Slate has included its own interactive chart, so you can put in the name of any actor or director to see how his or her career has risen and fallen over the years and even compare them to each other.  Try John Travolta, Jim Carrey, and Brad Pitt.

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Critics Understanding Media and Pop Culture
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