This. Ebert is actually far more sympathetic to genre films than most "serious" critics. He is rare among such critics as he, generally, judges films in terms of their intentions, rather than against some arbitrary measure of "cinema as art". On the other hand, he understands film as a broad form of art and is not tied to a specific genre, allowing him to place his reviews in far broader (and more meaningful) critical context than a "genre" reviewer.Sorry, I think it's a fine review. Ebert is always Ebert, God bless 'im, and I'm more impressed by his two-and-a-half stars than by most of the tabloid and Internet chatterers at Rotten Tomatoes.
Though he gets some details wrong, he's more right than anyone involved in making this film as far as the science is concerned and as far as any distinction between imaginative science fiction and space opera goes. It's possible to like this movie - which he clear does - without attributing to it virtues that it seems to lack.
Gene Siskel did, indeed, like Star Trek. Roger Ebert has not been a relevant film critic since Gene passed away. The last time I caught him, M. Night Shyamalan was his guest co-host.Between Ebert and the late Gene Siskel, was Ebert the one more generally critical of Star Trek? I thought Siskel was the one who had a softer spot for it. Could have them mixed up. Could be entirely wrong. Damn clouded memories.
^that quote was in jest
EDIT. Aarghhh you guys are too goddamned fast!
Nope.Siskel really liked Trek, if I remember.
He was good friends with the late Michael Piller, but he wasn't a fan.
I distinctly remember his review on TV of INS (which he liked) where he said:
I've sick of Ebert for a long time. He's a typical elitist when it comes to film, however it doesn't mean that this particular review doesn't have merit.I wouldn't know what a Klingon was if one came up and bit me. I don't even know if Klingons have teeth.
But based on the overwhelmingly positive response it's received, I'd say that he's probably dead wrong on this.
Nope.Siskel really liked Trek, if I remember.
He was good friends with the late Michael Piller, but he wasn't a fan.
I distinctly remember his review on TV of INS (which he liked) where he said:
I've sick of Ebert for a long time. He's a typical elitist when it comes to film, however it doesn't mean that this particular review doesn't have merit.I wouldn't know what a Klingon was if one came up and bit me. I don't even know if Klingons have teeth.
But based on the overwhelmingly positive response it's received, I'd say that he's probably dead wrong on this.
I'd hardly call Ebert an elitist. This is the guy, after all, who gave the third X-Men film 3 stars because it had no thought, and called out the Brown Bunny simply for trying too hard to be artsy. But yeah, I'd rather get a well-thought negative review (and even then, it's slightly negative) than a gushing brown-nosing positive review like his successors in "At the Movies" constantly throw at the audience. I'm still going to see the movie and I expect to disagree with Ebert's criticism.
Also, Siskel said INS was the finest Trek movie he ever saw. Trekkie or not, he liked the Trek. He also gave Generations a bit more approval than Ebert did, in another split vote.
Thumbs down is not positive.
Ebert's criticisms are understandable, and I appreciate that. And I think this is still a positive review, right? He said it was FUN.
Thumbs down is not positive.
Was that a thumbs down?
Are you seriously tying Ebert's "relevance" your personal viewings of his TV show which he no longer appears on because his thyroid cancer? Where's your Pulitzer?Gene Siskel did, indeed, like Star Trek. Roger Ebert has not been a relevant film critic since Gene passed away. The last time I caught him, M. Night Shyamalan was his guest co-host.![]()
Thumbs down is not positive.
Was that a thumbs down?
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