Shelby Daily Globe

Entertainm­ent 10 greatest movies of all time according to Roger Ebert

- By FEDERICO FURZAN

(movieweb.com) There’s a very good chance that if you’re looking to become a film critic or writer, you were somehow influenced by Roger Ebert, the Chicago Sun-times writing prodigy who spoke about films like no one else did. Forget scholars and the ‘film Twitter’ of high-class vocabulary but void of compelling arguments; Ebert was able to compile in a few paragraphs how you actually felt about movies, without forgetting he was actually acting as a journalist. He mixed subjectivi­ty and objectivit­y in a risky environmen­t, but almost always came out first. His behemoths of books are still part of some film buffs’ households.

He’s a part of popular culture whether you like him or not, and even more importantl­y, whether you agreed with him or not. He took film criticism to the mainstream with TV shows, books, and the inevitable rise of the Internet. Some of us who enjoyed the pinnacle of his career miss him dearly to this day.

He truly was the most important mainstream film critic, but not necessaril­y the best. It’s still a matter of personal taste, just like the movies he loved. It’s all subjective, but you can tell a lot about someone by understand­ing their favorite films. Ebert was very vocal about the list of what he considered to be the greatest films of all time. We can’t imagine how hard it was to do just 10, when for many, putting together just the best of 2022 is a jarring process. But Roger accomplish­ed it, with some tinkering here and there every couple of years. This was part of his introducti­on in the article:

“If I have a criterion for choosing the greatest films, it’s an emotional one. These are films that moved me deeply in one way or another. The cinema is the greatest art form ever conceived for generating emotions in its audience. That’s what it does best. (If you argue instead for dance or music, drama or painting, I will reply that the cinema incorporat­es all of these arts).”

These are Roger’s choices for the 10 greatest films of all time in no particular order, as, like children, Ebert didn’t want to rank his favorites.

We figured it was impossible for him not to include the romance drama with a hint of war. He was very expressive when talking about Casablanca as being perfect in its narrative structure, and how it forms its arcs through now timeless tragedy and heartbreak. There’s a reason why it’s such an important classic, and Roger saw it clearly. From endlessly quotable dialogue to utterly romantic cinematogr­aphy and acting, every second just feels perfect in this film, which has become a kind of mascot for classic cinema itself.

Call him literal or convention­al, but Roger included what so many others have considered the best film ever made on his list — Citizen Kane. The Orson Welles drama changed film history through its beautiful rendering of power, corruption and family secrets being heavy enough to model you for your entire existence.

Its visual language is impressive, and even almost 100 years after it was released, there are still mysteries that can’t be solved. The famed Sight and Sound Poll had Citizen Kane as the greatest film of all time for six decades before it was dethroned.

This 1978 documentar­y by Errol Morris is one of Roger’s picks that aren’t widely known, but that doesn’t mean you shouldn’t run and pick up Criterion’s version, released in 2015. It’s a story about the business of pet burial and the people behind it, and how they deal with their own matters of existentia­lism. But it’s about so much more, and Roger saw it for what it was. Shot in “Morris” style with no narration, only interviews and beautiful cinematogr­aphy, Gates of Heaven is a simultaneo­usly sad, happy, and weird film experience you won’t forget.

The Fellini pick for Roger’s list has been questioned sometimes. People actually ask why 8½ wasn’t his pick, when it’s on everyone’s lists. La Dolce Vita, with a beautiful characteri­zation of emptiness in the streets of Rome, feels like a more emotional journey that ends up in the strangest way possible. Roger wasn’t the bohemian, intellectu­al critic; he liked weird stuff, but he valued emotional resonance, as he stated in his piece, and this seemed to be the Fellini film with the most emotional impact on him.

Notorious was Roger’s favorite Hitchcock film. And once again, he drifts away from convention­al, and usual picks in other lists (Vertigo and Rear Window would have been the obvious). This love story, set in times of war, is still beautiful and emotional. Ingrid Bergman shows up again in this list and confirms her status as a screen legend.

Scorsese’s films are ripe for bestof lists, and again Roger doesn’t go for the same films people always pick (Taxi Driver, Goodfellas, Mean Streets, etc.). Raging Bull is a sports drama that tells the tale of real life boxer Jake Lamotta and how his life of excesses ended up breaking him and his relationsh­ip with family and friends.

Scorsese almost always depicts downfalls, but few feel this poetic. Roger always found a way to bring up this one when writing, and we’re sure it’s one of the reasons why people actually still see it to this day.

The Carol Reeddirect­ed, Orson Welles-starring thriller is considered by many to be the ultimate film noir everyone should see. Roger heavily agreed with this. The Third Man, with exceptiona­l cinematogr­aphy and use of angles and light, is considered to be one of the greatest British films ever made.

Roger loved documentar­ies, and it’s perhaps the reason why another one shows up in the list when it isn’t exactly widely known. This is part of the Up series of films that depicted the lives of British people from the time when they were seven years old, up until they get older. This is perhaps the lesser known film in the list, but it doesn’t mean you shouldn’t stop trying to see it

Sure, 28 Up is only one of the films, but imagine going on a 1018-minutes cinematic adventure? The film series is truly one of a kind, following the individual­s as they grow up over the past six decades, with the next film, 70 Up, likely to come out around 2026.

A film from Japan from the masterfull­y quiet Yasujiro Ozu, Floating Weeds is a compelling drama about family dynamics gone haywire when an artist comes home and must reconnect with his son who thinks he’s his uncle. Roger was outspoken about his love for this 1959 film, and he was even included in a commentary track for the Criterion DVD. Floating Weeds is a patient masterpiec­e that exemplifie­d Ozu’s still camerawork, long takes, and Buddhist stillness.

The sci-fi Kubrick masterpiec­e couldn’t be out of Roger’s considerat­ion. 2001: A Space Odyssey was perhaps one of the few titles that was never removed from his favorites. It’s a no-brainer that Roger picked it as the appropriat­e film for expressing his love of both science and big, abstract ideas, and it’s one of those films that, to this day, remains visually flawless. Perhaps the most defining film of its decade, the ‘60s masterpiec­e arguably introduced experiment­al film to mainstream audiences, and transition­ed sci-fi into the modern era.

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