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Roger Ebert to be honored at ShoWest 2009

rogerebert

We appreciate Roger more and more with each passing year. His writing only stands out more as we wade through the mediocrity – myself included. While you’ll never agree with everything any critic says, Roger has done it as well as any person alive. Kudos to Roger and the award. Let’s hope we have many more years of reviews and commentary.

Veteran film critic Roger Ebert will be honored at ShoWest 2009 with a special award for career achievement in film journalism. Ebert will be feted at a luncheon April 2, the final day of the annual exhibition confab. ShoWest opens March 30 at the Bally’s and Paris hotels in Las Vegas. “With over 40 years devoted to providing moviegoing audiences with reviews and incredible insight into the film world, Roger Ebert has been a standout critic respected by audiences, peers and movie industry insiders alike,” ShoWest co-managing director Mitch Neuhauser said. “If it weren’t for Roger Ebert — who has always had the foresight to champion the cause of relatively unknown and budding filmmakers and talent — the world of motion pictures as we know it today wouldn’t be as rich, diverse and enriching as it is.” – From The Hollywood Reporter


Roger Ebert’s Best Films of 2008

The brilliant film critic Roger Ebert has just announced his Best Films of 2008. Please read his entire list at the link below — we agree with most. Was surprised by Iron Man (which we enjoyed, just surprised). We also scoured YouTube for all the movies mentioned on his list — and complied them below.

In these hard times, you deserve two “best films” lists for the price of one. It is therefore with joy that I list the 20 best films of 2008, in alphabetical order. I am violating the age-old custom that film critics announce the year’s 10 best films, but after years of such lists, I’ve had it. A best films list should be a celebration of wonderful films, not a chopping process. And 2008 was a great year for movies, even if many of them didn’t receive wide distribution. – read more from Roger Ebert

Ballast

The Band’s Visit

Che

Chop Shop

The Dark Knight

Doubt

The Fall

Frost/Nixon

Frozen River

Happy-Go-Lucky

Iron Man

Milk

Rachel Getting Married

The Reader

Revolutionary Road

Shotgun Stories

Slumdog Millionaire

Synecdoche, New York

W.

WALL-E


Stephen King – His 10 Best Movies of 2008

Horror “King” Stephen has released his favorite top 10 movies of 2008 at EW — but here’s his rundown via YouTube:

10. Death Race – “Death Race is filled with laconic violence and blasting muscle cars, but just beneath the surface is a biting satire of reality TV.”

9. Redbelt – “… this is not your father’s Karate Kid.”

8. The Ruins – “It could have been ludicrous. Instead, it’s unrelenting.”

7. Lakeview Terrace – “Jackson’s performance deserves an Academy Award nod, but won’t get one. Too bad.”

6. The Bank Job – “High-tension cerebral thrills.”

5. Funny Games – “It works as a savage parody of the snuff-porn genre even as it transcends it.”

4. Tropic Thunder – “The funniest, most daring comedy of the year.”

3. WALL-E – “I don’t think it deserves a Best Picture Academy Award, but it certainly deserves to be nominated.”

2. Slumdog Millionaire – “It’s been years since the movies have produced such an affecting story about the power of friendship.”

1. The Dark Knight – “The best superhero movie ever. This is to cape-and-tights movies what Godfather II was to the gangster movie: a genre-defining event.”


Roger Ebert VS Ben Stein

Roger Ebert is best known as a movie critic on TV, but he has been writing movie reviews for far longer. I’ve read a great number of his columns and his writing is in general excellent, with an obvious and profound depth of understanding of movies.

Ebert has a fierce intellect backing up his writing, and that is on display very well in his review of the execrable “eXpelled: No Intelligence Allowed”, the creationist “documentary” that is so chock full of lies that the creators’ pants will be on fire for centuries. Ben Stein was the host of this steaming pile of celluloid, and Ebert aims his keyboard directly at him. – from Discovery

Roger Ebert is the nation’s most prominent film critic, but he would have made a first-rate cultural columnist. Over the years he has done excellent occasional op-ed pieces about politics and hot-button social issues that engage his brain. They have always been worth reading. Today on his blog he produces one of his best. In it he wields the rapier of his intellect on the television entertainer Ben Stein’s “Expelled,” a “documentary” film that takes the side of creationism against evolution. Ebert absolutely eviscerates Stein, deftly demonstrating that his arguments are disingenuous and even dishonest. – from Here

I’ve been accused of refusing to review Ben Stein’s documentary “Expelled,” a defense of Creationism, because of my belief in the theory of evolution. Here is my response.

Ben Stein, you hosted a TV show on which you gave away money. Imagine that I have created a special edition of “Who Wants to be a Millionaire” just for you. Ben, you’ve answered all the earlier questions correctly, and now you’re up for the $1 million prize. It involves an explanation for the evolution of life on this planet. You have already exercised your option to throw away two of the wrong answers. Now you are faced with two choices: (A) Darwin’s Theory of Evolution, or (B) Intelligent Design.

Because this is a special edition of the program, you can use a Hotline to telephone every scientist on Earth who has an opinion on this question. You discover that 99.975 of them agree on the answer (A). A million bucks hangs in the balance. The clock is ticking. You could use the money. Which do you choose? You, a firm believer in the Constitution, are not intimidated and exercise your freedom of speech. You choose (B).

- from Roger Ebert