Siskel & Ebert - Best of 1994

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  • Опубликовано: 17 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 457

  • @flaccidusminimus2170
    @flaccidusminimus2170  3 года назад +526

    The main reason I love sharing these videos, apart from their historical significance, is to hopefully encourage a RUclips audience to seek out great films they may not have heard of and possibly share Gene and Roger's infectious passion. Films and film criticism are two sides of the same coin, and these guys have enhanced my appreciation of movies (as well as my love for talking about them) immensely.

    • @kalinda619
      @kalinda619 3 года назад +13

      As a gen-Z denizen, thanks !

    • @Jamal3.87
      @Jamal3.87 3 года назад +12

      They were the best weren’t they?

    • @timothygrant7266
      @timothygrant7266 3 года назад +12

      I watched them every weekend throughout the 80s and 90s

    • @joshd3192
      @joshd3192 3 года назад +2

      The very good old days.

    • @paulnistor3547
      @paulnistor3547 3 года назад

      Thanks a lot, Flaccidus! All the best!

  • @Grandizer8989
    @Grandizer8989 2 года назад +87

    These guys will never be replaced, just like Alex Trebeck will never be really replaced.

  • @jcollins1305
    @jcollins1305 Год назад +22

    I saw both Ed Wood and Pulp Fiction in the theatre in NYC, in 1994. For anyone too young to remember, Pulp Fiction was an EVENT. I don’t know how else to describe it, but the atmosphere was electric in that theatre.

    • @MikeTheFinger
      @MikeTheFinger 5 месяцев назад +1

      The shot scene to Mia Wallaces chest. Wow what an experience in that theater in that scene. Unble

    • @brianmeen2158
      @brianmeen2158 2 месяца назад +1

      I gotta be honest, I’m not a big fan of Pulp Fiction. It’s far from terrible but I just never enjoyed it nearly as much as most. I prefer Jackie Brown

    • @browland1
      @browland1 Месяц назад +1

      I was 14 at the time and snuck into the theater to see Pulp Fiction. One of the greatest movie-going experiences of my youth.

  • @commanderkeen3787
    @commanderkeen3787 3 года назад +130

    Quiz Show is a superb film, sadly it seems to never get mentioned anywhere these days. Truly a fascinating story with a sharp script

    • @Harkness78
      @Harkness78 2 года назад +8

      One crazy part about that movie is that every single character is interesting. The contestants, the producers, the FBI detective, the families of the contestants, it's crazy! Amazing performances all around.

    • @fromthehaven94
      @fromthehaven94 2 года назад +4

      That year's Oscar was Forrest Gump vs Pulp Fiction, Shawshank Redemption became a hit on video- then straight to the top of the imdb user rankings, and Four Weddings and a Funeral got a remade TV show on streaming. But yeah, Quiz Show, even with the relevant issues, has gotten lost.

    • @royfr8136
      @royfr8136 2 года назад +4

      A very underrated film for sure.

    • @prmaninla
      @prmaninla 2 года назад +1

      One of my favorite scenes is the lunch scene at the Athenaeum. The conversation between the elder Van Doren and Goodwin is as good as it gets.

    • @dreamquesttv
      @dreamquesttv 2 года назад

      @@Harkness78 Martin Scorsese (in one of his few acting roles) is great in this as the show's sponsor.

  • @sebastianknowlton8238
    @sebastianknowlton8238 3 года назад +48

    1994 is one of the greatest years in film history, and a magical era where something that was at least good, if not great, came out seemingly every week. I also really miss watching Siskel and Ebert on Sunday evenings. Their sign-off was the unofficial end of my weekend.

    • @flaccidusminimus2170
      @flaccidusminimus2170  3 года назад +5

      Something that is "at least good" comes out every week, no matter which year you're in, if you look hard enough!

    • @SebKnowlton
      @SebKnowlton 3 года назад +7

      @@flaccidusminimus2170 I’m not as confident anymore. Cinema isn’t what it once was.

    • @mikelaw5965
      @mikelaw5965 Год назад

      Amen

    • @jjmanzano9
      @jjmanzano9 Год назад +5

      1994 is the greatest year in film

    • @reginaldforthright805
      @reginaldforthright805 Год назад +4

      The greatest years of film history were 1930-2008. Thanks obama

  • @BobCat623923
    @BobCat623923 3 года назад +42

    This show used to be on Saturday afternoons I remember....and then sometimes I'd catch it on late at night. Always enjoyed it. Sad that both Siskel and Ebert have passed. Siskel died far to young. And to watch Ebert lose his voice and then suffer his illness over the last few years of his life was terrible...both RIP.

    • @ArthurCSchaperMR
      @ArthurCSchaperMR 2 года назад +1

      I remember when they were on Sunday afternoons.

    • @rhyancoleman6462
      @rhyancoleman6462 2 года назад

      And both from cancer

    • @007Julie
      @007Julie Год назад +1

      In Chicago they used to be on Saturdays at 10:30pm.

    • @BobCat623923
      @BobCat623923 Год назад +1

      @elmo007millie Yeah...in Pittsburgh it was Saturday
      afternoons but then I remember catching it on late night at times too. Seems like it moved around a lot through the years on when it was broadcast.

    • @BobCat623923
      @BobCat623923 Год назад

      @arthurschaper2433 I sort of remember that too...Sunday aftrrnoons....it was always on on the weekend though, it switched around a lot though when it was broadcast here in Pittsburgh.

  • @indyj16
    @indyj16 3 года назад +32

    I love all these S&E clips. Really takes me back. These guys were stars in their own right for what they did for the film industry and the fans.

  • @ice9557
    @ice9557 Год назад +54

    In October of 1994 .... Pulp Fiction, Jurassic Park, The Lion King, Forrest Gump, and The Shawshank Redemption were all in the theatre’s at the same time. Imagine that!!!

    • @flaccidusminimus2170
      @flaccidusminimus2170  Год назад +9

      I doubt Jurassic Park was still in theatres by this time. It was released in June *1993*, and I'm pretty sure it was out on video by Fall 1994.

    • @JoeKnows44
      @JoeKnows44 Год назад

      @@flaccidusminimus2170 , believe it or not, it was still there.
      From an article written by Matt Patches in 2020:
      "Steven Spielberg’s Jurassic Park arrived in 1993 to an opening-weekend gross of $47 million - massive, for the time. The blockbuster’s theatrical run lasted for over a year and a half, finally wrapping up in October 1994 with a worldwide total of $912 million (or $1.6 billion in 2020 dollars)."

    • @threeminuteshate
      @threeminuteshate 9 месяцев назад

      @@flaccidusminimus2170released on Oct 4, 1994 to be exact

    • @zetetick395
      @zetetick395 7 месяцев назад +2

      @@flaccidusminimus2170 It would have come back, they did this with huge successes back in the day, that's how I got to see Jaws and Star Wars in the cinema in the very early '80s, for example (and JP was HUGE at the period this show was made)

    • @flaccidusminimus2170
      @flaccidusminimus2170  7 месяцев назад +1

      @@zetetick395 You could have caught it at second-run repertory houses in 1994 before the home video release in the Fall, if you lived in a big city. But its wide release was done by the end of 1993.

  • @ayubnor0
    @ayubnor0 3 года назад +71

    I love how Hoop Dreams topped both of Siskel and Ebert's lists.

    • @ianrobinson4200
      @ianrobinson4200 2 года назад +9

      I thought that seemed strange...until I saw it. And now it's my #1 of 1994 as well

    • @deckofcards87
      @deckofcards87 Год назад +6

      @@ianrobinson4200 Same here. I likely wouldn't of discovered that gem had it not been for S&E! Same goes for the "Three Colors: Red"

    • @martinbrown2268
      @martinbrown2268 Год назад +13

      They both are Chicago guys and it’s a Chicago documentary. Hoop Dreams is a captivating film with possibly a bit of home court advantage with S&E.

    • @WalkerOne
      @WalkerOne Год назад +5

      I agree, but it got snubbed at the awards.

    • @rba7712
      @rba7712 Год назад +5

      Absolutely 100% correct even though I love Shawshank and Pulp Fiction. Hoop Dreams is a diamond among diamonds. What a year in film.

  • @Kruppt808
    @Kruppt808 3 месяца назад +2

    These are the only two people on Earth 🌎 history that i ever cared about opinions on movies. Not friends or family, any other critics, Rotten Tomatoes nothing.
    Only these two.
    Obviously i don't agree with everything but that is besides the point. They love movies and are so intelligent about talking about them, we are extremely lucky a few people on RUclips still show alot of their content.
    Thank you to all of you.

  • @killbot_factory
    @killbot_factory 2 года назад +42

    Ebert gets most of the love but let's hear it for Siskel who put two true masterpieces on his list that Roger left off: Shawshank Redemption and Red Rock West

    • @skinnypuppy95
      @skinnypuppy95 Год назад +1

      Nice they had 2 John Dahl movies on their lists. I still think about those movies almost daily.

  • @xdmaster7888
    @xdmaster7888 3 года назад +38

    Ed Wood is a superb film from beginning to end, I loved it when I first saw it in Gainesville in 1994 (while visiting my brother for the Gators' homecoming football weekend, which they won 42-18 over LSU) and I love it today. I'm so glad that it's historical verdict has been hugely positive, even though it was not a success at the box office.

    • @LumpyAdams
      @LumpyAdams 3 года назад +5

      It's Burtons best and I don't think it's even close.

    • @branagain
      @branagain 3 года назад +1

      Great movie. That and Big Fish are Burton’s best.

    • @CornbreadOracle
      @CornbreadOracle 3 года назад

      I thought it was a hoot.

    • @Harkness78
      @Harkness78 2 года назад

      It's made it back on video, many times over I am sure.

    • @ice9557
      @ice9557 Год назад +1

      Chomp Chomp

  • @ikd3240
    @ikd3240 3 года назад +36

    So glad Ed Wood made the list. I love that movie, I consider it to be Tim Burton's best film.

    • @keithdoherty3178
      @keithdoherty3178 2 года назад +3

      It is

    • @consman22
      @consman22 2 года назад

      Sweeney Todd is my favourite burton film

    • @lon9047
      @lon9047 Год назад

      Ed Wood and Pee Wees Big Adventure. If you watch it, “ Tell ‘‘em Large Marge sent ya”.!!!!

    • @reginaldforthright805
      @reginaldforthright805 Год назад

      Edward scissorhands is his best. The clearest expression of his unique sensibilities.

    • @alphabetaxenonzzzcat
      @alphabetaxenonzzzcat Год назад +1

      It's an underrated film. It's sad that it wasn't a big success.

  • @Spudcore
    @Spudcore 4 месяца назад +4

    I was surprised to see Natural Born Killers and The Last Seduction on Ebert's list. Two great, but underappreciated films that could only have been made in the 90s.

  • @sleong
    @sleong 3 года назад +21

    amazing. These videos take you back in time and remember how people felt AT THAT TIME. Now people in July 2021 people revere Shawshank, Pulp Fiction, and Forrest Gump, but back then, they were just considered good films relative to their era(not all-time great)

    • @kevinfinnerty8414
      @kevinfinnerty8414 2 года назад +1

      It’s the same in almost all walks of life. Everything was better back then.

    • @martinbrown2268
      @martinbrown2268 Год назад

      I think “Woke-ness” has got a lot of people shitting on Forrest Gump these days. Even though Hanks didn’t go full retard.

    • @Dahdoi
      @Dahdoi Год назад +1

      You’re right except for Pulp Fiction. I remember it clearly, and that movie was an instant fundamental part of film history.

  • @mangore623
    @mangore623 5 месяцев назад +3

    The last time I physically went to a theatre to watch a movie was in 2011. This vignette from the past reminds me why, as modern cinema is dead. Instead of anticipating new releases, I chose to review all the films from the past that I hadn’t seen, looking for gold. There’s far better films to watch made in the past than anything released in the last twenty years.

    • @antekkk
      @antekkk Месяц назад

      this is so dense...you just dont know where to look. Im from Poland, so maybe here its normal for theaters to show amazing indie films. but "There’s far better films to watch made in the past than anything released in the last twenty years." is an idiotic statement.

  • @60smusicrules
    @60smusicrules 2 года назад +23

    If you haven’t seen Fresh, it is absolutely amazing. Giancarlo Esposito and Samuel L. Jackson are excellent in their roles, along with everyone in the cast. A real treat.

    • @jpinnacle
      @jpinnacle Год назад +2

      Can't disagree with you-- a superb film. One of the greatest performances from a child actor (Sean Nelson) that I can remember.

    • @bnvccxncv9974
      @bnvccxncv9974 22 дня назад

      People know and like him now for other stuff, but Giancarlo Esposito should have gotten a Best Supporting Oscar nomination 30 years ago for playing Esteban in "Fresh". Convincingly menacing and yet highly charismatic and even likeable at the same time.

  • @FloraWest
    @FloraWest Год назад +3

    What a great year for films this was--a lot of excellent pictures here.

  • @keithclifton392
    @keithclifton392 3 года назад +16

    Thanks so much for posting these classic shows! I never missed an episode back in the day, recording many of them on my old VCR. I saw Siskel and his wife at an event in Chicago months before his death and wish I could have told him how much he and Roger influenced my love for film.

  • @jamesmorgan3212
    @jamesmorgan3212 2 года назад +5

    I turned 13 in 1992. All through the 90’s I rented movies and went the movies every week. I remember during that time S@E came on Sundays at 11:30 after the news . I used to set my vcr in case I fell asleep . I was a big fan of S@E. I wanted to be a film critic back then 😎. I still loves movies and collect them .

  • @adamw116
    @adamw116 Год назад +5

    1994, one great movie after another and this was only one year in the 90s!

  • @sonicgrub
    @sonicgrub 3 года назад +11

    Amazing films. All of them. Especially Quiz Show and Kieslowski's trilogy.

    • @waynej2608
      @waynej2608 Год назад +1

      Absolutely. The Three Colors films were just mind boggling. Magnificent films!

  • @marychocolatefairy
    @marychocolatefairy Год назад +9

    1993-96 was such an awesome time for movies, with many films that were beloved by both audiences and critics- something that doesn't happen often now!
    Re Hoop Dreams, I remember there was a whole controversy over it not getting an Oscar nomination for best documentary and it turned out there was corruption within that group of voters, which helped lead to reforms later. One of the nominees that year (and the eventual winner) was the former head of the documentary nominating committee (she had stood down so she could be eligible for her film to be nominated). Also there was a preference in the group for shorter films, and Hoop Dreams had been too long for them. The irony of Hoop Dreams getting its one nomination for best editing was noted at the time, lol.

    • @KRhetor
      @KRhetor Год назад +1

      It was a lot like the early Seventies, a very exciting time for movie lovers.

  • @julieporter7805
    @julieporter7805 Год назад +3

    11:17-I understand completely. I am a Book Reviewer because I love books so much and want to explore them and share them with others. No matter whether I end up liking or not liking the finished project, just being there seeing the title page and feeling that zest coming from the author and how they created this universe is enough to get me excited.
    Just the process of going through the pages, learning who the characters are, what are the struggles, where are they going, and how it all adds together and putting my thoughts about this journey on my blog are the things that I love most about being a Reviewer and this creative wonderful literary world that I chose to explore.

  • @lasagne23
    @lasagne23 3 года назад +8

    Thank you for everything u do, I love seeing these snapshots of movie history

  • @jimgeary
    @jimgeary 3 месяца назад +2

    I just rewatched Hoop Dreams after last seeing it in the theatres in 94. Takes an amazing movie to beat pulp fiction, but that’s an amazing movie. PS Pulp Fiction is my favorite movie.

  • @teddydurgin3689
    @teddydurgin3689 3 месяца назад +1

    You could do a second Top 10 list of just the movies these two legendary reviewers collectively left off: 1) Speed; 2) The Lion King; 3) True Lies; 4) The Paper; 5) Dumb and Dumber; 6) The Madness of King George; 7) ; 8) Clerks; 9) Clear and Present Danger; and 10) Four Weddings and a Funeral.

  • @TheRustyLM
    @TheRustyLM Год назад +4

    Fantastic year for cinema!

  • @dodgedforgottenn
    @dodgedforgottenn Год назад

    A snapshot in time. So cool to see and to revisit some great films that have largely been forgotten

  • @cameronbobsmith
    @cameronbobsmith 3 года назад +7

    there is a reasonable argument to be made that 1994 is one of the very best years for cinema ever. It is in my top 3, at any rate

    • @flaccidusminimus2170
      @flaccidusminimus2170  3 года назад +4

      I think it receives an undue amount of attention because 3 of the most *popular* films of all time were released. But if you weigh everything that came out from January to December, it was at best an average year in my opinion and a major letdown after the abundance of riches released in 1993. The turds of 1994 were hot and heavy.

    • @erakfishfishfish
      @erakfishfishfish 3 года назад

      @@flaccidusminimus2170 that’s the real question, isn’t it: would you rather have a plate full of silver, or few good chunks of gold? (No wrong answer)

    • @UxCANxDOxIT
      @UxCANxDOxIT 3 года назад +3

      1995 is actually a much better year for movies, people always mention 94 and then only talk about Shawshank, Pulp Fiction, and Gump.

    • @langdonalger9219
      @langdonalger9219 3 года назад +1

      @@UxCANxDOxIT I didn’t find 1995 to be that special. There weren’t a lot of great movies released that year. Which ones stand out most to you?

    • @UxCANxDOxIT
      @UxCANxDOxIT 3 года назад

      @@langdonalger9219 HEAT, Se7en, Casino, The Usual Suspects, Apollo 13, Die Hard with a Vengeance, Crimson Tide, 12 Monkeys, Braveheart, Toy Story, Tommy Boy.. to name a few.

  • @clejosh
    @clejosh Год назад +16

    Poor Christian Bale is so relatively unknown at this point that they don't even grace him with a mention in the "Little Women" review...

    • @donaldhavrejr8283
      @donaldhavrejr8283 8 месяцев назад +1

      And look at him now

    • @StreetHierarchy
      @StreetHierarchy 6 месяцев назад +2

      I was about to say the same thing. Funny. We loved Christian Bale back then, too! We loved Empire of the Sun and I'm still a big Newsies fan. My dad enjoyed Swing Kids; not sure when that came out.

    • @VinMar-m6w
      @VinMar-m6w 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@StreetHierarchy Most of America did not know who Christian Bale was until _Batman Begins_ (2005). At 13, he had starred in Steven Spielberg's _Empire of the Sun_ (1987), but that film was a disappointment and did nothing for his career.
      A few years later, they tried to make him happen again with leads in Disney's _Newsies_ (1992), and _Swing Kids_ (1993), but both movies flopped badly at the box-office.
      Thus, throughout the '90s and early 2000s, he did mainly indies -- or had supporting roles in bigger films -- but he was never quite a star.
      _The Dark Knight_ trilogy (2005, 2008, 2012) is what made him a household name, and _The Fighter_ (2010) earned him his first Oscar nomination and win.

    • @dionhodge9880
      @dionhodge9880 3 месяца назад

      ​@@VinMar-m6w How about American Psycho?

  • @terrygracy8345
    @terrygracy8345 2 года назад +4

    Loved the fact that they have Natural Born Killers on their list. I remember the first time coming out of that movie being super charged with adrenaline. It was nuts

  • @bostons2826
    @bostons2826 2 года назад +8

    Fresh is such an underrated movie

  • @ezequielgomez7083
    @ezequielgomez7083 5 месяцев назад +2

    My Best and Favorite Flim of the year
    1.Mircale on 34th Street
    2. Forrest Gump
    3. The Lion King
    4. Pulp Fiction

  • @piccolomaster
    @piccolomaster 2 года назад +10

    1994 was a great year for film. My favourite film is The Shawshank Redemption and a very close second is Hoop Dreams.

  • @ahwhite2022
    @ahwhite2022 Год назад +4

    He apparently had to mute the dialog on Pulp Fiction, but a good deal of us could repeat it all from memory anyway.

    • @waynej2608
      @waynej2608 Год назад

      I know a lot of it. I think in that scene Travolta was discussing the differences of Europe vs USA.
      'What do they call a whopper'?
      'I dunno. I didn't go to Burger King'.
      😂

  • @GooberNumber9
    @GooberNumber9 2 года назад +6

    Red Rock West is an overlooked gem

  • @gspendlove
    @gspendlove 3 года назад +10

    These two guys had the best jobs in the world. Imagine getting paid to watch movies, and then getting paid to sit and talk about them with a friend of yours. And you become a celebrity in your own right because people actually care what you think, and your opinion is so influential that advertisers quote it on the posters and TV spots for their movies. How do you get a better career than that? It would be like living inside the most fantastic dream you ever dreamed.

    • @Nathan-gd7xq
      @Nathan-gd7xq 3 года назад +2

      Although I've heard Mark Kermode say (and probably other critics too) that critics don't get paid to watch good films, they get paid to sit through all the bad ones.

    • @jp3813
      @jp3813 2 года назад +1

      There's a reason why you commented that under a "Best of" video rather than a "Worst of" episode. There are a ton of movies out there that people wish to unsee.

    • @gspendlove
      @gspendlove 2 года назад +2

      @@jp3813 That's true. What was it Richard Roeper said? "The best thing about being a movie critic is that you get to see every movie ever made. The worst thing is that you _have_ to see every movie ever made."

    • @joeski734
      @joeski734 Год назад +1

      They were superb film critics. They were so intelligent and passionate and charismatic that they got a nationally syndicated TV show. To be able to do the job they do so well, you have to be supremely talented. There wasn't anything like them before and there hasn't been since.

  • @Uni85h
    @Uni85h Год назад +6

    1994 was a big year in film for me. Pulp Fiction and Clerks made a movie lover out of me.

  • @branagain
    @branagain 6 месяцев назад +1

    My list for the Best films of 1994:
    1. Pulp Fiction
    2. To Live
    3. Ed Wood
    4. Forrest Gump
    5. The Adventures of Priscilla
    6. True Lies
    7. Speed
    8. Legends of the Fall
    9. Quiz Show
    10. Leon: The Professional

    • @Dw-rb5yl
      @Dw-rb5yl 4 месяца назад +1

      Great taste my friend! Leon the professional is an amazing film. Can't believe pulp fiction didn't win film of the year.

  • @robertriquelmy7193
    @robertriquelmy7193 3 года назад +1

    Thank you.

  • @SladeBling
    @SladeBling Год назад +4

    1994 might be the greatest year in movies There certainly was a huge dropoff by the end of the 90's. 72-95 I say are the greatest movie years ever.

  • @scottlombardi4603
    @scottlombardi4603 Год назад +3

    Gene at 9:40 has an insightful remark about funerals. I recently attended my Uncles’ Catholic funeral service and I said the same thing to my wife afterwards. They spoke about my uncle for maybe 10 minutes then praised god for the next hour.

  • @kessel12
    @kessel12 Год назад +3

    1994 was just an incredible year in film. Here are some films not mentioned in their lists: The Lion King, True Lies, The Crow, The Professional. Even Natural Born Killers. Liked it or hated it, you had an opinion.

    • @flaccidusminimus2170
      @flaccidusminimus2170  Год назад

      Natural Born Killers was on Roger's list, one of the first movies discussed in this episode!

    • @kessel12
      @kessel12 Год назад

      @@flaccidusminimus2170 Whoops overlooked it. I remember his positive review of the film.

  • @platoplombo15
    @platoplombo15 Год назад +43

    Any one of these films is leagues better than anything produced in the last 5 years. It really was a golden age.

    • @I_can_do_20_push-ups
      @I_can_do_20_push-ups Год назад +5

      Watch TÁR

    • @WalkerOne
      @WalkerOne Год назад

      Agree

    • @imandan1966
      @imandan1966 Год назад +12

      Such a small minded comment, there were many terrific films in 2022

    • @platoplombo15
      @platoplombo15 Год назад +1

      @@imandan1966 Name one

    • @imandan1966
      @imandan1966 Год назад +10

      @@platoplombo15 Everything Everywhere all at Once and the Banshees of Inishirin. Thats 2. Open your mind ya old man

  • @jessecoffey4737
    @jessecoffey4737 3 года назад +4

    Gene viewed "The Flintstones" as being more significant than "Forrest Gump" in 1994, a statement he owed solely to the marketing impetus of the former (which had a domestic gross of over $100 million and a successful McDonald's promotion but otherwise was a film Gene and Roger didn't care for at all). Runners-up on Gene's list were "Speed", "Red", "Legends of the Fall", "What Happened Was . . . ", "The Blue Kite" and "Ladybird, Ladybird". (SOURCE: Chicago Tribune, December 25, 1994)

  • @newwavepop
    @newwavepop Год назад

    i had never even heard of Shawshank Redemption and one night when it was new on cable i was flicking through channels looking for something to watch, something i had not already seen. and i came to whatever channel it was and it had the playing next message up and i clicked to red the description and i was like "Ugh a prison movie. no thanks" and i kept looking through the channels, i just could not find anything and finally reluctantly i was like "ok guess i will watch the damn prison movie" i then sat there and was absolutely absorbed into this film and its world.
    30ish years ago i would have told you than Shawshank was my favorite film of this bunch, but over the decades Forrest Gump has really earned a special place for me. i find myself rewatching it often, you have to forget about all those unnecessary gimmick scenes where they place him into historical footage those are the weak points of the film. i dont think Forrest Gump is about Forrest, it is about the damaged people in his life that come and go, when they are really down and need someone they always return to their loyal stable friend and over time his positive presence helps them get their own lives together and find happiness. the arc of Dan always fills me with hope.
    there are several other really popular films on the list but i personally never liked any of them that much. i think Hoop Dreams was these two guys favorite film EVER, for years ad years they never stopped mentioning it. i never could sit through it, of course i grew up poor as hell and poverty didnt interest me the same way it did them. i also was the tallest kid in school my whole life and was endlessly harassed to play basketball which i had less than zero interest in. so maybe i just have a chip on my shoulder about basketball.

  • @suarezguy
    @suarezguy 3 года назад +5

    I've disagreed with them sometimes but I'm really surprised they liked Natural Born Killers a lot.

  • @sleuthentertainment5872
    @sleuthentertainment5872 5 месяцев назад +1

    Can't believe the jewel Ed Wood is not on the list of Roger Ebert...

  • @uyeda
    @uyeda 3 года назад +12

    Too bad Siskel wasn't around to see The Green Mile. Directed by the same man who did The Shawshank Redemption.

    • @michaelorick2065
      @michaelorick2065 3 года назад

      Both of them movies suck thumbs down way down 👎

    • @BishopWalters12
      @BishopWalters12 Год назад

      @@michaelorick2065 LOL, go watch the MCU.

  • @joeski734
    @joeski734 Год назад

    One the the best years for movies in a long time.

  • @space_boogieq.6797
    @space_boogieq.6797 3 года назад +5

    I liked Forrest Gump and pulp fiction. I'm born in 92 so i wasn't there to see most of these films but i will look some up.

    • @timothygrant7266
      @timothygrant7266 3 года назад +2

      Ed Wood is very entertaining and very strange. I have it on Blu-Ray. Little Women is a really good film,, and I liked Hoop Dreams too.

    • @reneedennis2011
      @reneedennis2011 3 года назад

      @@timothygrant7266 All of them of good film.

  • @distinguishedflyer
    @distinguishedflyer 3 года назад +7

    Ed Wood's my #1 for this year, although it has some strong competition; 1994 is often called one of the best-ever years for movies (and it is), but 1992 & 1993 deserve comparison with it and are often overlooked.

    • @zxbc1
      @zxbc1 3 года назад +2

      I agree, 1994 was one of the best years for movies, at least 5-6 films this year could be top of the list in any other year too.

  • @Jamal3.87
    @Jamal3.87 3 года назад +3

    My best of 1994 list
    10. Clerks (Kevin Smith)
    9. To Live (Zhang Yimou)
    8. Forrest Gump (Robert Zemeckis)
    7. The Last Seduction (John Dahl)
    6. The Lion King (Roger Allers, Rob Minkoff)
    5. Quiz Show (Robert Redford)
    4. Ed Wood (Tim Burton)
    3. The Shawshank Redemption (Frank Darabont)
    2. Pulp Fiction (Quentin Tarantino)
    1. Hoop Dreams (Steve James)
    Runners-up
    15. Mrs. Parker and the Vicious Circle (Alan Rudolph)
    14. Little Women (Gillian Armstrong)
    13. Bullets Over Broadway (Woody Allen)
    12. In the Land of the Deaf (Nicolas Philibert)
    11. Speed (Jan de Bont)
    Clearly I’m aligning more with Siskel’s list but I’m glad Ebert included The Last Seduction. The Linda Florentino character Bridget is an absolute original. It’s mordantly hilarious how devious and intelligent she is. She should have gotten that Oscar nomination that year.

    • @kevinlakeman5043
      @kevinlakeman5043 3 года назад +1

      Clerks is utterly mediocre. just like its writer/director. C'mon man, Pulp Fiction, Shawshank, Forrest, Hoop Dreams, the Kieslowski movies, are all much better than that slacker fodder.

    • @waynej2608
      @waynej2608 Год назад

      Florentino definitely got screwed! She should've not only been nominated, but won!

  • @wallhagens2001
    @wallhagens2001 Год назад +3

    Watch the best of 1997 too. Man, I didn’t realize what we had! I miss the movies. And I’m a Marvel fan. I just want more of other things too!

  • @fromthehaven94
    @fromthehaven94 2 года назад +3

    If Rotten Tomatoes existed back in 1994, most of these movies would have nearly identical audience and critics scores.

  • @derricklou4075
    @derricklou4075 11 месяцев назад +1

    The balcony has not been the same. RIP

  • @5andup
    @5andup 3 года назад +7

    Ten best films of 1994
    1. Pulp Fiction
    2. Trois colours: rouge, Krzysztof Kieślowski
    3. Du li shi dai (A Confucian Confusion), Edward Yang
    4. To Live, Yimou Zhang
    5. Ashes of Time, Wong Kar-wai
    6. Before The Rain, Milcho Manchevski
    7. Quiz Show
    8. Exotica, Atom Egoyan
    9. Through the Olive Trees, Abbas Kiarostami
    10. Hoop Dreams, Steve James

    • @leka6000
      @leka6000 3 года назад +1

      I agree with you with Exotica. That was a great film.

    • @iluvmylovebirdandmybudgiet7729
      @iluvmylovebirdandmybudgiet7729 2 года назад +1

      I probably have seen "Pulp Fiction" a hundred times...and I saw in Japan when it came out and had no idea what to expect...loved it......

    • @robertriteman3227
      @robertriteman3227 Год назад

      You are someone with great taste in films. The amazing thing is that Yimou Zhang and Wong Kar- Wai have made even greater films . I actually would be tempted to rate Before the Rain above them. About the only one on your list that I would not consider for my Top 10 of 1994 is Exotica which is kind of sad because I am not only Canadian but met Atom several times and admire every single actor in it . I do understand why it received so much praise but for some reason it just would not make my Top 10 . But I do think The Sweet Hereafter is a masterpiece in any year and also really liked Ararat .

  • @jakethesnakeofficial
    @jakethesnakeofficial 3 года назад +6

    My top 10 from 1994:
    1. Pulp Fiction
    2. The Shawshank Redemption
    3. Hoop Dreams
    4. Clerks
    5. Ed Wood
    6. Forrest Gump
    7. Red Rock West
    8. Quiz Show
    9. The Madness of King George
    10. Speed

    • @timothygrant7266
      @timothygrant7266 3 года назад +1

      Speed is just great, and I really enjoyed Dianne Wiest:s performance in Bullets.

    • @keithclifton392
      @keithclifton392 3 года назад

      @@timothygrant7266 I bet Clerks was in the top 20 for at least one of them. A great movie.

    • @erakfishfishfish
      @erakfishfishfish 3 года назад +1

      @@keithclifton392 probably not Ebert. He liked it (3 stars), but there were more films that he rated higher.

    • @BishopWalters12
      @BishopWalters12 Год назад

      Hoop Dreams is overrated.

  • @baymaxc1647
    @baymaxc1647 3 года назад +9

    Is it just me or I’m I wrong thinking Hollywood has really lost so very much since the 1990s ?

    • @flaccidusminimus2170
      @flaccidusminimus2170  3 года назад +4

      The days of major studio executives caring about the quality or longevity of their products are pretty well past.

    • @consman22
      @consman22 2 года назад +4

      The 70’s was golden era for Hollywood films

    • @waynej2608
      @waynej2608 Год назад

      ​@@consman22It's always been the '40s, '70s and '90s for me.

    • @joshuabarnett8626
      @joshuabarnett8626 Год назад

      ​@@waynej2608Those were all tremendous decades for movies, but the 50s also get some love from me. Those were the years that Billy Wilder, my favorite director, released Sunset Boulevard, Ace in the Hole, and Stalag 17.

    • @EddieHenderson92
      @EddieHenderson92 11 месяцев назад

      the 90s was the last great decade for Hollywood movies.

  • @fasteddie9867
    @fasteddie9867 Год назад +2

    "The madness of King George" should have been in either's top 10.

  • @historybuff1986
    @historybuff1986 2 года назад +3

    1. Pulp Fiction
    2. Speed
    3. Red
    4. The Shawshank Redemption
    5.Ed Wood
    6. Clerks
    7. True Lies
    8. Wes Craven's New Nightmare
    9. Quiz Show
    10. The Lion King
    I really need to watch Hoop Dreams

    • @dougjohnson182
      @dougjohnson182 2 года назад +2

      It's by far the best out of those and those are some awesome movies

  • @PATRIOT1690
    @PATRIOT1690 Год назад +1

    You only have to look at what Quiz Show was up against in the Oscars that year.

  • @itslachy4582
    @itslachy4582 Год назад +1

    My goodness 1994 was a fantastic year for movies, I was born this year. Maybe theres a correlation haha

  • @ethanedwards7557
    @ethanedwards7557 Год назад +2

    Best film that didn’t make either list, Speed.

  • @jamesklatt
    @jamesklatt Год назад +1

    It was so stupid that the academy didn’t even put hoop dreams in the best documentary category.

    • @VinMar-m6w
      @VinMar-m6w 5 месяцев назад

      The film's producers aimed for Best Picture instead and failed. Their fault. It would have easily won for Best Documentary, but the acclaim it received from critics, especially Siskel & Ebert, made them too proud to submit in the "lesser" category.

  • @breakercassidy6946
    @breakercassidy6946 Год назад +1

    The last great decade for film.

  • @spudwas
    @spudwas Год назад +3

    I'm was baffled by "Hoop Dreams" back then ...and just as baffled today. P.S. I'm surprised that "Speed" did not make any of their top ten's.

    • @scottmccurdy6493
      @scottmccurdy6493 8 месяцев назад +2

      Speed is one of the best action films ever made. I don't care if it's "just" Die Hard on a bus. It works! My god, does it work!

    • @sdot5389
      @sdot5389 8 месяцев назад

      Are you baffled why it didn’t get recognition by the Oscars? It’s one of the greatest sports documentaries of all time.

  • @footballpredictions-g2y
    @footballpredictions-g2y 2 года назад +2

    It's interesting that Three Colors: Red is even higher than Pulp Fiction on Ebert's list but it's nowhere to be seen on his best of the decade list.

    • @flaccidusminimus2170
      @flaccidusminimus2170  2 года назад

      Actually, it is! The Three Colors trilogy was collectively #5 on his final Best of the Decade list.
      He also included the trilogy on *this* list, not just Red.

    • @footballpredictions-g2y
      @footballpredictions-g2y 2 года назад

      @@flaccidusminimus2170 you're right, I should have checked it before writing this comment, but it was still behind Pulp Fiction on that list.
      He did the same thing with Raging Bull, it was his #1 movie of the decade, but it wasn't actually his #1 movie of the year it came out.

  • @rockingbeat
    @rockingbeat 8 месяцев назад

    I recently watched their Howard the Duck review, they really changed their mind about Tim Robbins

  • @robertgoulet7886
    @robertgoulet7886 2 года назад +2

    A great year for film.

  • @davissae
    @davissae 2 месяца назад

    Hoop Dreams was spectacular

  • @TheDas9582
    @TheDas9582 2 месяца назад

    This was the best year for films

  • @jjstraka1982
    @jjstraka1982 Год назад +1

    '94 was straight fire

  • @mansam15
    @mansam15 Год назад

    Its so funny to see how the legacy of the movies grow with time

  • @coryfunk2307
    @coryfunk2307 7 месяцев назад

    Pulp fiction is my favorite film of all time

  • @heilzorak64
    @heilzorak64 3 года назад +3

    My list:
    1. Ashes of Time (Wong Kar Wai)
    2. Natural Born Killers
    3. Picture of Light (Peter Mettler)
    4. Clean, Shaven (Lodge Kerrigan)
    5. Mod Fuck Explosion (Jon Moritsugu)
    6 Prêt-a-Porter/Ready to Wear (Robert Altman)
    7. Little Buddha (Bernardo Bertolucci)
    8. Mrs. Parker & The Vicious Circle (Alan Rudolph)
    9. The Hudsucker Proxy (Joel Coen)
    10. Ed Wood
    Honorable Mentions:
    Black Ice (Stan Brakhage), Chungking Express (Wong Kar Wai), Crooklyn (Spike Lee), Dumb & Dumber (Farrelly brothers), Death Wish 5 (Alan A. Goldstein), The Glass Shield (Charles Burnett), Hong Kong 97 (Albert Pyun), I Can't Sleep (Claire Denis) Imperfect Journey (Haile Gerima), The Moon (Takashi Itô), New Nightmare (Wes Craven), No Escape (Martin Campbell), Scanner Cop (Pierre David), Serial Mom (John Waters), The Shadow (Russell Mulcahy), Through the Olive Trees (Abbas Kiarostami), Timecop (Peter Hyams), To Live (Zhang Yimou), Vanya on 42nd Street

    • @iluvmylovebirdandmybudgiet7729
      @iluvmylovebirdandmybudgiet7729 2 года назад

      I didn`t like Natural Born Killers at all...and I know they did...watching annoying and unlikeable caricatures for 2 years didn`t cut it....

    • @seanodeli7031
      @seanodeli7031 2 года назад

      NBK is so awful Tarantino had his name removed they had to comprise w a story by credit
      It’s a cluster of a movie does not deserve to be on any best of list

    • @robertriteman3227
      @robertriteman3227 Год назад +1

      I can see that you have good taste and know films so therefore I will not condescend to point out Chungking Express was from 1984 because it is likely on your list because of its later release via Tarintino ( and yet look how i managed to still try to make myself seem clever .. even though I am pretty sure you already knew that LOL) . So many great films that year and I do remember ( with chills) watching Clean Shaven . Back then after having been in Laws of Gravity , Clean Shaven and Pulp Fiction , i thought Peter Greene was going to a "star". I thought of him as the American version of Tim Roth or Ray Winstone. The reason that your numbers 6-9 would not be considered by me is partly because I prefered films like To Live, Blue Kite, Through The Olive Trees but because Altman, Rudolph, Joel Coen and BB all made other films that were so much better than those ( in my subjective view) so despite their being good I came away disappointed.

  • @mrtempleton5302
    @mrtempleton5302 Год назад +2

    I feel bad I've never heard of Hoop Dreams, I gotta watch that!

    • @ead630
      @ead630 9 месяцев назад

      Did you end up seeing it?

  • @jeffcarlin5866
    @jeffcarlin5866 Год назад +2

    Hoop Dreams is fine -- but I would never want to see it again.

    • @BishopWalters12
      @BishopWalters12 Год назад

      Exactly, that's why nobody talks about it anymore, it was forgettable and shouldn't be top 10.

    • @ead630
      @ead630 9 месяцев назад

      Really? I've seen it maybe five times in the last six years. I think it's endlessly rewatchable. It's like visiting the past and a whole other life.

  • @pikapo16
    @pikapo16 3 года назад +4

    1. Hoop Dreams
    2. Three Colors: Blue, White, Red
    3. Pulp Fiction
    4. Forrest Gump
    5. The Shawshank Redemption
    6. The Lion King
    7. Leon the Professional
    8. It Could Happen to You
    9. The Nightmare Before Christmas
    10. Interview With a Vampire

    • @timothygrant7266
      @timothygrant7266 3 года назад +3

      Nightmare looks great on Blu-Ray. Amazing and entertaining.

    • @pikapo16
      @pikapo16 3 года назад +1

      @@timothygrant7266 I have it on blu ray. Definitely agree!

    • @Swoll826
      @Swoll826 3 года назад

      Mandela effect - interview with THE vampire

    • @Nathan-gd7xq
      @Nathan-gd7xq 3 года назад

      @@Swoll826 you sound fun

    • @leka6000
      @leka6000 3 года назад +1

      Interview with a Vampire, Tom Cruise, Brad Pitt, Christian Slater and Antonio Bandares all thrown together before the idea of The Expendables came about. It was a well made movie. Thank you for mentioning it.

  • @MONKMONEY-hu1gw
    @MONKMONEY-hu1gw Год назад

    Miss these guys

  • @jamesgilbey8672
    @jamesgilbey8672 Год назад +2

    Quiz Show great movie!

  • @mosinc7388
    @mosinc7388 Год назад

    What a year.

  • @davec484
    @davec484 Месяц назад +1

    4 good ones in my opinion:
    The Hudsucker Proxy
    Bullets Over Broadway
    Nobody's Fool
    Don Juan DeMarco

  • @SCharlesDennicon
    @SCharlesDennicon Год назад

    Those credits, though. :D

  • @offspringfan1288
    @offspringfan1288 3 года назад +2

    Best of 1994
    Pulp Fiction
    Natural Born Killers
    Forrest Gump
    Shawshank Redemption
    True Lies
    Speed
    Léon: The Professional
    Ed Wood
    The Mask

  • @suarezguy
    @suarezguy Год назад

    Loved Quiz Show and Pulp Fiction but corruption behind the scenes of 1950s TV game show/quiz show was probably just a bit too non-commercial for most viewers.

  • @pokeysdad17
    @pokeysdad17 2 года назад +6

    i thought gump was very uneven. they could have left out the part where he was running around the country. the scenes with lt. dan were the best parts of the movie.

  • @alcabane3125
    @alcabane3125 2 года назад +1

    did they review terminal velocity?

  • @TheNameisPlissken1981
    @TheNameisPlissken1981 3 года назад +4

    I love that Gene picked Rock Rock West. It is such a great murder mystery thriller written & directed by John Dahl. He did another great film with Val Kilmer & Michael Madsen called Kill Me Again which is almost as good.
    Roger's choice, The Last Seduction, was also made by Dahl, only it's not quite as good in my opinion.

    • @ricardocantoral7672
      @ricardocantoral7672 3 года назад +1

      Red Rock West deserves a place among the classic Noir films of yesteryear.

    • @LilannB
      @LilannB 2 года назад

      Once upon a time I owned Kill Me Again, The Last Seduction and Red Rock West all on VHS. Kill Me Again is probably my favorite of those three. Though I enjoyed all three films.

    • @alphabetaxenonzzzcat
      @alphabetaxenonzzzcat Год назад

      It's just a shame that John Dahl isn't directing films any more(he is just doing TV).

  • @AntLeonardi01
    @AntLeonardi01 3 месяца назад

    Hoops dreams above pulp fiction is funny. I’ve never end heard of it

    • @flaccidusminimus2170
      @flaccidusminimus2170  3 месяца назад

      Every living movie fan has not heard of countless great titles. Don't conflate popularity and quality!

  • @salvitoripopadillo4539
    @salvitoripopadillo4539 11 месяцев назад

    Isn't that "Kevin Pollak" as the cab driver??? In "End of Days" with Arnold Schwarzenneger and many other films???

  • @Dwight2744
    @Dwight2744 3 месяца назад +1

    Where the hell's Dumb & Dumber?

    • @flaccidusminimus2170
      @flaccidusminimus2170  3 месяца назад

      @@Dwight2744 Nowhere near any critic's top 10 list that year, get real!

  • @AndyBluebear-fi9om
    @AndyBluebear-fi9om 3 месяца назад

    How come all of the lists aren't included? is that your edit or was that how they presented the show originally?

    • @flaccidusminimus2170
      @flaccidusminimus2170  3 месяца назад

      @AndyBluebear-fi9om As Ebert says at the top, they run down the full slates at the end. The show is for discussing selected titles, they only had 22 minutes plus ads.

  • @adamfloyd7457
    @adamfloyd7457 3 месяца назад

    how are they so good at talking

  • @BishopWalters12
    @BishopWalters12 Год назад +1

    Hoop Dreams wasn't all that.

  • @aretnap3653
    @aretnap3653 2 года назад

    I Wonder if The SNL Orchestra Recorded The Intro Music for Siskel&Ebert?...

  • @BradLee-z1v
    @BradLee-z1v 4 месяца назад

    Hoop Dreams above Pulpmotherf**king Fiction? That's redic. I guess it's because I've seen this realm of documentary countless times. And it's difficult for me to even compare a documentary to a movie. I enjoy documentaries very much, but it's a completely different category. I watched Hoop Dreams once it came to VHS and had also seen it in the last 20 years. It's entertaining enough, but certainly not enough to jump it to the best picture of 1994, which was a Pulp Fiction year, which I probably put in the top 5 among the 50 best films of the year over the last 50 years, so hoop Dreams is a bold #1.

  • @cablehogue599
    @cablehogue599 2 года назад +2

    Wait, was hoop Dreams not even nominated for the oscars?

    • @flaccidusminimus2170
      @flaccidusminimus2170  2 года назад +4

      Nominated for Best Film Editing only.
      The outcry over the Best Documentary snub led to an internal investigation by the Academy into the screening practices of the documentary branch. They discovered that the branch voters provided a show of hands in a vote to turn the movie off after 15 minutes. They didn't even watch it.

    • @terrygracy8345
      @terrygracy8345 2 года назад +2

      Not even nominated for best documentary. LOL.

    • @fromthehaven94
      @fromthehaven94 Год назад +2

      @@flaccidusminimus2170 That's disappointing.

    • @BradLee-z1v
      @BradLee-z1v 4 месяца назад

      to be honest it shouldn't have been. It certainly deserved the win in the documentary category, but outside of that it's apples and oranges to rank it along side movies. I like documentaries and it's good/decent as a documentary (I'd probably rank it in the top 50 of documentary's, which documentaries have grown and improved exponentially since Hoop Dreams). I watched it at the time when it got to the video store knowing that Siskel and Ebert praised it like crazy and I watched it... it was decent, but it's so weird for it to be considered so good that it's movie of the year.

  • @TonyMichaels166
    @TonyMichaels166 Год назад

    The thumbnail looks like a MAD Magazine caricature of Gene Siskel.