Short Cuts (1993) - Roger Ebert Review
HTML-код
- Опубликовано: 3 апр 2024
- www.rogerebert.com/reviews/sh...
Comment below with your thoughts, subscribe to stay updated on our cinematic journey, and give us two THUMBS UP if you enjoy the analysis of these films
🔍 Curious about specific reviews? Dive into OUR Vault! Request the films you'd love to see your favorite movies. Your engagement fuels our passion for sharing these film reviews!
🎥 Subscribe now for a front-row seat to the captivating world of film criticism. Join us on this cinematic adventure, where every review is an ode to the art of storytelling. 🌈🍿 #FilmCritics #RogerEbert #MovieReview #CinematicDebate
0:44
I thought he was going to say he would have to urinate.
😂🤣😂🤣😂🤣
I'm glad that Roger didn't live to see what Hollywood has become.
He lived through the best times and was a master at the craft of dissecting film.
So true. There was a time when you would see 10 great films a year, now it's perhaps 5 every decade, if that. Roger and Gene became lead critics during arguably, for some, the landmark era of movies, the 60s and 70s.
@@deckofcards87 Walking from one theater and into the next was a way of life on the weekends.
A few arcade games on the way of course.
Movie going has always been this way. Every watched a lot of terrible movies. That being said, Ebert would have loved a lot of independent movies that have come out the last 5 years
@@jesusrivera521 Which titles in the last 5 years?
@@Been.Here.Since.2007 Eight Grade, Never Rarley Sometimes Always, Leave No Trace, Mass, Red Rocket, CODA, Belfast, The Mitchels vs the Machines, etc
Another film that feels similar to this is Magnolia (1999).
I always said Magnolia is the spiritual remake of Short Cuts
These films are similar because they have mosaic narratives. Each character follows their own trajectory and eventually they meet in some way until the third act. Or the stories connect through a theme. Other similar films: Babel, Crash, Amores Perros.