Awake in the Dark: The Best of Roger Ebert (87 page)

BOOK: Awake in the Dark: The Best of Roger Ebert
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*The Coen Brothers later explained that the story was completely fictional, and that the use of the opening line about it being based on a true story was a "stylistic device."

*Corliss might be surprised to discover, however, that he is not always right when he assumes that his magazine reviews are longer than the S&E treatment of a film. On Blaze, the Time count is 324, S&E 755. On Blue Steel, it was Time 267 words, S&E 864. On The 'Burbs, Time nudges us 603 to 471, and on House Party, 567 to 536, although, as Corliss points out, in addition to the words we also show clips from the films.

*The MPAA's refusal in March to grant an R to The Cook, the Thief, His Wife, and Her Lover is the latest example of the way a film can suffer in distribution. Many chains have contracts with their landlords prohibiting them from playing X-rated or unrated films.

*The most detailed film criticism I've seen on American TV was the Richard Schickel PBS series where he led great directors through discussions of their themes and styles, and then showed what they were talking about.

*Corliss on Cruise: "The souped-up Chevy Lumina circles the track at North Carolina's Charlotte Motor Speedway. At the wheel is Tom Cruise, daredevil superstar. The hazel eyes that laser out of his handsome face focus on the thrill of speed and risk. Nor is this challenge confined to a roadway's hard curve; it applies as well to his career in the movies, even if it means taking dangerous curves toward roles that might confound his fans. This day, after a dozen laps, Cruise sees a dime, stops on it and emerges from the Lumina to say hello to a visitor. He extends a hand and flashes the million-dollar smile-or, to judge from the worldwide take of his past four movies, the $1.035 billion smile. He points to the car and asks, `Want to go around?' America wants to go around with Tom Terrific-that's how he looks, that's how he makes moviegoers feel."

Table of Contents

Foreword, by David Bordwell

Introduction

Prologue: Death of a Dream Palace ................... xxix

Review of La Dolce Vita ...................... xxxiv

Introduction ........................................ i

Warren Beatty

James Stewart

Robert Mitchum

Mitch and Jimmy: Some Thoughts

Lee Marvin

Ingmar Bergman

Martin Scorsese and Paul Schrader

Robert Altman

Werner Herzog

Meryl Streep

Woody Allen

Spike Lee

Tom Hanks

Errol Morris

Steven Spielberg

Introduction ....................................... 103

1967: Bonnie and Clyde

1968: The Battle of Algiers ............................. io8

1969: Z ...........................................11o

1970: Five Easy Pieces

1971: The Last Picture Show

1972: The Godfather

1973: Cries and Whispers

1974: Scenes from a Marriage

1975: Nashville

1976: Small Change

1977:3 Women

1978: An Unmarried Woman

1979: Apocalypse Now

1980: The Black Stallion

1981: My Dinner with Andre

1982: Sophie's Choice

1983: The Right Stuff

1984: Amadeus ......................................151

1985: The Color Purple

1986: Platoon

1987: House of Games ................................160

1988: Mississippi Burning

1989: Do the Right Thing

199o: GoodFellas

1991:JFK

1992: Malcolm X

1993: Schindler's List

1994: Hoop Dreams

1995: Leaving Las Vegas

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