Chicago Sun-Times

The Sun- Times costs less than a night at the movies, lasts longer

- RICHARD ROEPER MOVIE COLUMNIST rroeper@suntimes.com | @ RichardERo­eper

Let’s go to a movie. Oh, and did I mention you’re buying? Thanks!

Ah, there’s a little film called “Avengers: Infinity War” in theaters today. If you surf over to Fandango and buy four adult tix ( we’re each bringing a Plus One, right?) for a Friday night showing, that’ll be $ 35.96 plus a $ 6 convenienc­e fee, for a total of $ 41.96. These days, many theaters feature adults- only beverages, along with an evergrowin­g array of soft drinks, bottled water and of course snacks, ranging from the traditiona­l, R2D2- sized bucket of popcorn to pretzel bites, nachos, chicken tenders, pizza, mozzarella sticks, Junior Mints, Sour Patch Kids, etc., etc.

If we get a couple of beers and two glasses of wine before the show and then load up on drinks and treats for the movie — and we add on the cost of parking — we’re easily up to a hundred bucks.

I’m sure we’ll have a great time, but consider this:

For less than the cost of that one big evening at the movies, you can have access to the Chicago Sun- Times for an entire year.

All the front- page headlines and stories. All the stellar reportage from some of the finest and hardest- working journalist­s in the country. All the great and comprehens­ive sports coverage. All the veteran columnists who have been sharing their worlds and their worldviews with you for years.

All the entertainm­ent coverage — including hundreds of movie reviews from a guy who’s just as enthusiast­ic about telling you why you should save your money and avoid the duds as he is about urging you to please,

please check out the groundbrea­king “Black Panther” or the unforgetta­ble “Lean on Pete” or the wonderfull­y unsettling “A Quiet Place.”

The front page of the printed edition of the Sun- Times was blank on Monday — a stark and honest and realistic way of us telling you we need your support.

For $ 7.49 a month — that’s less than 25 cents a day — you will get unlimited access to the Sun- Times website and its bounty of original content. You will help a Chicago institutio­n remain vital and vibrant at a time when Real News and well- informed, thought- provoking, respectful­ly voiced and entertaini­ng opinions are absolutely essential. The place to sign up is suntimes. com/ subscribe.

I’ve been a part of the Sun- Times family for more than half my life, but the SunTimes has been a part of my family far longer than that.

When my dad would come home from working for the Illinois Central Railroad, more often than not he’d have a copy of the Sun- Times under his arm. As a kid, I would stretch out on the living room carpet and immediatel­y flip the paper over to its “other” front page — the sports page. Later, when I began to entertain dreams of becoming a writer, I’d eagerly devour the SunTimes ( and yes, the Tribune) from the front page through the news stories through the editorials and features and comics, and then lap up the sports section for dessert.

My first job at the Sun- Times was as an editorial assistant, answering phones and sorting mail and helping out any way I could. ( Or, more accurately, any way I was told I could help.) Eventually I was writing Sunday features, covering breaking news, writing a daily column, interviewi­ng stars ranging from Paul Newman near the end of his magnificen­t run to Meryl Streep in the middle of her incredible career to a 23- year- old named Julia Roberts who had just starred in a movie called “Pretty Woman.”

Later, I had the honor of succeeding my friend, the late and legendary Roger Ebert, as the film critic for the Sun- Times.

I love writing for the Chicago Sun- Times. I also love reading the Chicago Sun- Times, whether I’m flipping through the print edition or, more often, checking out the website. I find it difficult to imagine what it would be like to wake up one day in a city where the Sun- Times wasn’t there for all of us, giving us the latest news, a surprising scoop, provocativ­e commentary and so much more.

With your help, we can make sure that day never comes.

 ?? SUN- TIMES FILE PHOTO ?? Richard Roeper takes a break to read his Sun- Times in 2001.
SUN- TIMES FILE PHOTO Richard Roeper takes a break to read his Sun- Times in 2001.
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