Thursday, April 4, 2013
RIP Roger Ebert
Not two days after posting a "leave of presence" from his website, Roger Ebert passed away earlier today. I could write at length about the effect Ebert's reviews have had on me, but suffice to say I wouldn't be posting infrequent movie reviews here if I had never come across the man and his work. For a film nerd who grew up in a nowhere town where even driving to the closest Blockbuster was a near-Herculean effort, Ebert's reviews (and At The Movies) were something of a godsend. It was through Ebert I learned names like Bergman and Fellini and Godard, and it was also were I learned the most valuable bit of information when analyzing film: "It's not what the film is about, but how it's about it."
Ebert never stopped writing, even as his health deteriorated over the years and he found himself without the ability to speak; he was more productive in the last year alone than he had ever been. Even announcing his pseudo-retirement in the article linked above, Ebert laid out plans for revitalizing his website and starting a new venture (which I hope still happens). In memoriam, here's some of his pieces that I'll always remember:
Roger Ebert's Last Words, cont.
Apocalypse Now
Le Samourai
Tokyo Story
Pulp Fiction
Dark City
The Tuxedo
Thanks for everything, Mr. Ebert.
UPDATE: Now I find out that we lost Carmine Infantino today as well. Jess Franco, Ebert and Infantino all in the same week... What the hell, world...
Labels:
in memoriam,
roger ebert
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