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1970s/80s Siskel & Ebert Episodes
I just noticed a wealth of old "Sneak Previews" PBS episodes with Siskel and Ebert have been recently uploaded on youtube. They are all in really good shape and look like they could have been sourced from the original broadcast masters. The reviews range from the late seventies until the early 80s.
https://www.youtube.com/user/greggag...=dd&shelf_id=1 ...keep pressing "Load More" and prepare to lose a few hours of time. |
Re: 1970s/80s Siskel & Ebert Episodes
Holy moly! What a treasure trove of material. I've been watching all the Siskel and Ebert videos I could find on YouTube for 10 years now, and this is about 90% stuff I've never seen before. There is so little from this era. God bless whoever put these up, and thanks so much for alerting us.
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Re: 1970s/80s Siskel & Ebert Episodes
There used to be a website that had an archive (that has since been taken down) that had hundreds of episodes dating back to the days when Gene Siskel had a moustache that would make Sam Elliot blush.
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Re: 1970s/80s Siskel & Ebert Episodes
This is awesome though.
On the same topic, something like Siskel & Ebert would never work today with how cynical the world is. Especially with all the talking head cable news shows that are so awful. It just wouldn't work. |
Re: 1970s/80s Siskel & Ebert Episodes
People having educated, informed opinions about movies? We can’t have that! |
Re: 1970s/80s Siskel & Ebert Episodes
Originally Posted by Hazel Motes
(Post 13572098)
This is awesome though.
On the same topic, something like Siskel & Ebert would never work today with how cynical the world is. Especially with all the talking head cable news shows that are so awful. It just wouldn't work. |
Re: 1970s/80s Siskel & Ebert Episodes
Originally Posted by Hazel Motes
(Post 13572097)
There used to be a website that had an archive (that has since been taken down) that had hundreds of episodes dating back to the days when Gene Siskel had a moustache that would make Sam Elliot blush.
This is the first time I've seen most of these reviews since they originally aired on PBS. It's a great collection as it contains a lot of films that Roger Ebert never provided written newspaper reviews for so his opinions were essentially lost until now. It's also a reminder that I still have a lot of titles I still need to add to my collection.:) |
Re: 1970s/80s Siskel & Ebert Episodes
The days of the famous movie critic are over unless you go the YouTube celebrity route. Before the Internet existed, it was hard finding informed opinions on films beyond the occasional newspaper review. Now you can literally call up hundreds of reviews in a variety of formats (both written and video) within seconds. I doubt Siskel and Ebert would stand out today from the thousands of others reviewing movies.
All that being said, I religiously watched their show. |
Re: 1970s/80s Siskel & Ebert Episodes
Originally Posted by Hazel Motes
(Post 13572098)
This is awesome though.
On the same topic, something like Siskel & Ebert would never work today with how cynical the world is. Especially with all the talking head cable news shows that are so awful. It just wouldn't work. It was fun at first to hear people talk about movies like me and my friends do, but the novelty wore off.
Originally Posted by majorjoe23
(Post 13572205)
in a world where everything is either a zero or a 10, I feel a thumbs up/down review system would fit in now better than ever. |
Re: 1970s/80s Siskel & Ebert Episodes
Fantastic! I love, love love this!
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Re: 1970s/80s Siskel & Ebert Episodes
Originally Posted by orangerunner
(Post 13572054)
I just noticed a wealth of old "Sneak Previews" PBS episodes with Siskel and Ebert have been recently uploaded on youtube. They are all in really good shape and look like they could have been sourced from the original broadcast masters. The reviews range from the late seventies until the early 80s.
https://www.youtube.com/user/greggag...=dd&shelf_id=1 ...keep pressing "Load More" and prepare to lose a few hours of time. Frankly, it's a real shame that so much stuff like this gets dropped down the memory hole. Almost any "dated" material like this, or old magazines, tend to be mostly lost and gone forever. I fucking loved it when archive.org was hosting all of the old OMNI magazines (managed to download all of them before they got yanked), and they currently have a full collection of Twilight Zone magazines up. |
Re: 1970s/80s Siskel & Ebert Episodes
I liked the episode where they gave thumbs down to Amadeus Meets Salieri, split on Chicago Jones and the Temple of Doom, the finger to Dirty Larry, and serious high-fives to Attack of the Street Pimps.
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Re: 1970s/80s Siskel & Ebert Episodes
I remember watching in on KRON channel 4 when it would usually air on Sat or Sun evenings.
Talking Movies on the BBC News America is probably the closest thing to a true movie show on TV though they don't give reviews. |
Re: 1970s/80s Siskel & Ebert Episodes
I wonder if they thought Taxi Driver would have such a long lasting appeal.
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Re: 1970s/80s Siskel & Ebert Episodes
Originally Posted by Mabuse
(Post 13572183)
People having educated, informed opinions about movies? We can’t have that! |
Re: 1970s/80s Siskel & Ebert Episodes
Originally Posted by Hazel Motes
(Post 13572636)
I just think there's a surplus right now of people having arguments on tv. I loved Siskel and Ebert, but they could be pretty petty sometimes. The culture has shifted in a way that makes a show like that a much less appealing concept in 2019. Also Roger Ebert and Gene Siskel really captured lightning in a bottle with their chemistry and talent. I think it would be hard to get right. Just ask Richard Roeper.
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Re: 1970s/80s Siskel & Ebert Episodes
Originally Posted by brayzie
(Post 13572446)
True. I loved watching Siskel and Ebert as a kid but wasn’t their thumbs up/thumbs down review style a dumbing down of film criticism? |
Re: 1970s/80s Siskel & Ebert Episodes
Originally Posted by Shannon Nutt
(Post 13572725)
Only if that's all you cared about. If you listened to them or read their columns, they'd take you to school on why a film did or didn't work.
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Re: 1970s/80s Siskel & Ebert Episodes
Didn't they refuse to allow "two thumbs down" in newspaper ads after David Lynch's Lost Highway used it in their promotions?
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Re: 1970s/80s Siskel & Ebert Episodes
Originally Posted by Shannon Nutt
(Post 13572725)
Only if that's all you cared about. If you listened to them or read their columns, they'd take you to school on why a film did or didn't work.
Real lightning in a bottle stuff. Though, watching their reviews of horror films, they tend to overuse the word "gruesome." |
Re: 1970s/80s Siskel & Ebert Episodes
I always thought horror was one of their big blind spots. Siskel was never much of a horror movie fan and Ebert had eccentric tastes in horror. They had grown up during a time when horror meant something different and never really adapted to how they were made after the 70s.
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Re: 1970s/80s Siskel & Ebert Episodes
I never understood why people hated them since they assumed they gave every movie that was popular with the masses a thumbs down and praise for the indies and arthouse cinema though they had appreciation for love for the blockbusters too.
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Re: 1970s/80s Siskel & Ebert Episodes
Yeah, I remember when they gushed over Kingpin like it was Citizen Kane.
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Re: 1970s/80s Siskel & Ebert Episodes
I remember these early years when Siskel & Ebert were shown on PBS and voted "Yes" or "No" instead of "Thumbs Up or "Thumbs Down". When did they make that switch?
And "Dog of the Week" was one of my favorite parts of the show back then. I never understood why they later got rid of that segment. |
Re: 1970s/80s Siskel & Ebert Episodes
They loved Halloween but despised all the Friday the 13th movies. I don't really see them as misogynistic.
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