The World Beyond BetterMost > The Culture Tent

Roger Ebert says MILK is the best film of the

<< < (2/4) > >>

serious crayons:

--- Quote from: Kd5000 on February 06, 2009, 11:38:23 am ---Well I like Doubt, Frost/Nixon, Curious Case of Benjamin Buttons and had mixed feelings about Revolutionary Road.
R.R. was probably the most depressing movie I've seen in along time. I going to read the book to see if The Wheelers (RR) are more sympathetic in literature  as they seemed  rather selfish and so above it all in the film.  Gran Torino was a lesser Clint Eastwood film.   Just my opinion.  MILK, I know how it ends. Though I'm told it's not a depressing film.

--- End quote ---

Nope, I didn't find Milk particularly depressing.

CCoBB was visually arresting, though for me not particularly dramatically satisfying. A bit too Forrest Gumpy (long, picaresque tale of unusual hero who meets assorted semi-eccentric characters and maintains tragic lifelong romantic/friendship relationship, narrrated by Southern-accented hero). But whoever did the makeup should get an Oscar for sure. And I'm not sure it would have worked with many other actors; much of the drama, for me, comes from waiting for Brad to develop his full Pittiful beauty. What if, say, John C. Reilly had played the role?


belbbmfan:

--- Quote from: Meryl on February 05, 2009, 02:11:44 pm ---I stopped listening to Roger Ebert after his antics in 2006 that helped "Crash" end up in the top spot.  I figure anyone who can't see that Brokeback is miles above that movie doesn't know peanuts.

It would be ironic if Heath wins an Oscar over Phillip Seymour Hoffman in the same year that a gay-themed movie wins Best Picture.  Not likely, but it's weird how things can turn out.

--- End quote ---

What did he say about BBM? I just read his review of the movie and it's very positive.  ???

Meryl:

--- Quote from: belbbmfan on February 06, 2009, 01:01:51 pm ---What did he say about BBM? I just read his review of the movie and it's very positive.  ???
--- End quote ---

It's not that he didn't like BBM, but both he and his partner Roeper got on a "Crash" high not long before the voting ended and started saying how they thought it should be the one to get the Oscar.  I've never forgiven them for that.  Maybe they succumbed to the politics of it all, I don't know.  I still hold that any critic worth his salt had to be nuts to look at both of those pictures and decide that BBM wasn't the superior film.

serious crayons:

--- Quote from: Meryl on February 06, 2009, 03:11:58 pm ---It's not that he didn't like BBM, but both he and his partner Roeper got on a "Crash" high not long before the voting ended and started saying how they thought it should be the one to get the Oscar.  I've never forgiven them for that.  Maybe they succumbed to the politics of it all, I don't know.  I still hold that any critic worth his salt had to be nuts to look at both of those pictures and decide that BBM wasn't the superior film.

--- End quote ---

I generally respect Roger Ebert and don't think he seems the type to be swayed by politics (though some say that his wife being black may have had something to do with it). I just think that in this particular case, he went a little crazy.

Most if not all of the film critics I like go crazy from time to time. In a couple of cases, this even involved Brokeback Mountain. Stephanie Zacharek of Salon -- a good critic and normally fairly reliable -- actually gave it a mediocre review.

I guess I'm not that surprised if I liked Gran Torino and some critic didn't. In the case of BBM, it seems particularly shocking -- how could they fail to appreciate the best movie in the history of cinema? But oh well. If I like the critic otherwise, I just try to forget about it.

Aloysius J. Gleek:


--- Quote from: serious crayons on February 06, 2009, 03:26:11 pm ---I generally respect Roger Ebert and don't think he seems the type to be swayed by politics (though some say that his wife being black may have had something to do with it). I just think that in this particular case, he went a little crazy.

Most if not all of the film critics I like go crazy from time to time. In a couple of cases, this even involved Brokeback Mountain. Stephanie Zacharek of Salon -- a good critic and normally fairly reliable -- actually gave it a mediocre review.

I guess I'm not that surprised if I liked Gran Torino and some critic didn't. In the case of BBM, it seems particularly shocking -- how could they fail to appreciate the best movie in the history of cinema? But oh well. If I like the critic otherwise, I just try to forget about it.

--- End quote ---


Stephanie Zacharek literally gives me hives.  And her Brokeback review caused me to not renew my Salon  subscription.

Navigation

[0] Message Index

[#] Next page

[*] Previous page

Go to full version