Roger Ebert

Roger Ebert

Favorite films

  • Casablanca
  • Notorious
  • Gates of Heaven
  • 2001: A Space Odyssey

Recent activity

All
  • The Adventures of Bullwhip Griffin

    ★★★

  • The Endless Summer

    ★★★

  • Easy Come, Easy Go

  • The Naked Prey

    ★★

Recent reviews

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The Adventures of Bullwhip Griffin
★★★ Watched

Bullwhip Griffin

"Bullwhip Griffin" is a pleasant, low-key adventure comedy, good summer entertainment for youngsters and perhaps not too unlikely for their parents. If it isn't quite up to Walt Disney's best comedies ("The Absent-Minded Professor," for example), it is good Disney all the same, and many of the Disney trademarks are in evidence.The hero from the kid's point of view, I suspect, is Jack Flagg (Bryan Russell), an impossibly noble 12-year-old with blue eyes, scrubbed cheeks and the mature…

The Endless Summer
★★★ Watched

The Endless Summer

The peculiar charm of "The Endless Summer" is something I haven't got quite worked out in my mind yet. This is all the more strange because here, at last, is a completely uncomplicated film, fresh and natural, designed only to please. It does. Why?Part of the answer may be in the unconventional approach of the filmmaker, Bruce Brown. He packed a 16-mm camera and assorted telephoto lenses into a suitcase and set off around the world one…

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Mulholland Drive
★★★★ Liked Watched

Mulholland Drive

David Lynch has been working toward "Mulholland Drive" all of his career, and now that he's arrived there I forgive him "Wild at Heart" and even "Lost Highway." At last his experiment doesn't shatter the test tubes. The movie is a surrealist dreamscape in the form of a Hollywood film noir, and the less sense it makes, the more we can't stop watching it.It tells the story of . . . well, there's no way to finish that…

2001: A Space Odyssey
★★★★ Liked Watched

2001: A Space Odyssey

The genius is not in how much Stanley Kubrick does in "2001: A Space Odyssey," but in how little. This is the work of an artist so sublimely confident that he doesn't include a single shot simply to keep our attention. He reduces each scene to its essence, and leaves it on screen long enough for us to contemplate it, to inhabit it in our imaginations. Alone among science-fiction movies, “2001" is not concerned with thrilling…