Ebert Movie List
I've seen a couple of books, film critic Roger Ebert – and wondered about the differences.?
One is the right of the great films, while another is subtitled THE BEST OF Roger Ebert (I forget the main title of the latter). Anyway, the first (which contains a greater volume of material), movies lists alphabetically by the title, the latter end of the year of release (which has been reviewing movies from around 1967). It's the last book, then a list of films, each of which (in his opinion) was the best movie of that particular year? I realized that there was very clever cross between the two – despite the fact that the first book there is room for more than forty films. Is that the former is simply the idea of (say) the "100 best films, regardless of when they were released – which means it could have been a few years, when not even necessarily the best films were good enough to be listed as the big movies?
The most likely answer is that over time his views changed. It is also possible that your explanation is accurate. If you look at the dates of publication of individual books you can find a political or socio-economic trend for movie choices, in addition, if you want to get intellectual about it.
John David Ebert Movie Review on Videodrome
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Roger Ebert's pocket video guide: A handy list of Roger Ebert's star ratings for every movie to appear in his video companion
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Roger Ebert's Movie Yearbook 2005
$3.98 The Movie Yearbook also contains the year's interviews and essays-perceptive profiles of actors such as Kevin Costner and Russell Crowe-and the biweekly "Questions for the Movie Answer Man," which never fails to unearth fascinating tidbits about filming particulars, per-screening revenues, and similar details, all based on reader-generated queries.To cap it off, the book highlights Ebert's film festival coverage from Cannes and includes a list of all movies previously appearing in a Video Companion or Movie Yearbook with Ebert's star ratings. The result is truly the bible for moviegoing readers everywhere. They know that Ebert is the source for all things cinema. |
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Roger Ebert's Movie Yearbook 2004 (Roger Ebert's Movie Yearbook)
$3.48 America's Number one movie fan is back with his annual edition of movies. Roger Ebert is the only movie critic to win the Pulitzer Prize for distinguished criticism and was recently awarded a special award from the American Society of Cinematographers. "Roger Ebert has earned the respect and affection of our members because of his integrity and passion for the art form," say Owen Roizman, head of the ASC awards committee. "His reviews are intelligent and insightful. He focuses on films that merit attention rather than just the highest profile studio movies with the biggest stars." Movie buffs everywhere anticipate Roger Ebert's annual yearbook because of the overwhelming cornucopia of movie material it contains. Roger Ebert's annual yearbook 2004 includes every review Ebert wrote from January 2001 to mid-June 2003. It also includes his essays, interviews, film festival reports, and In Memoriams, along with a list and star ratings of all movies previously appearing in a Video Companion or Movie Yearbook. Since 1967, Ebert has been a movie critic for the Chicago Sun-Times. The best-selling author and American institution received an honorary doctorate from the University of Colorado, regularly lectures at the University of Chicago, and was name to the Chicago Journalism Hall of Fame. |
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Roger Ebert's Movie Yearbook 2009
$23.99 Roger Ebert's Movie Yearbook 2009 |
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Ebert's Bigger Little Movie Glossary
$7.11 Ebert's Bigger Little Movie Glossary |
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Roger Ebert's Movie Yearbook 1999 (Serial)
$3.98 In a brand-new concept, Roger Ebert's Movie Yearbook contains all the reviews published by Ebert in the last two and a half years, including foreign films, documentaries, indies, and highly negative reviews which were often eliminated from the Companion for space reasons but make entertaining reading as well as aiding in the selection process. The Yearbook also contains all interviews and essays for the year, his Questions for the Movie Answer Man, and film festival coverage. The book also retains in the back a list of all movies previously appearing in Video Companions with Roger's star ratings. |
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Roger Ebert's Video Companion 1996/Roger Ebert's Pocket Video Guide (Roger Ebert's Movie Yearbook)
$3.98 Roger Ebert's Video Companion 1996/Roger Ebert's Pocket Video Guide (Roger Ebert's Movie Yearbook) by Roger Ebert Published in 1995 by Andrews Mcmeel Pub |
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Roger Ebert's Movie Yearbook 2007
$12.61 Buy and sell [Roger Ebert's Movie Yearbook 2007] at great prices. |
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Roger Ebert's Video Companion 1998 (Roger Ebert's Movie Yearbook)
$3.98 Roger Ebert's Video Companion 1998 (Roger Ebert's Movie Yearbook) by Roger Ebert 13th Published in 1997 by Andrews Mcmeel Pub |
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Roger Ebert's Movie Yearbook
$20.52 Roger Ebert's Movie Yearbook 2010 is the ultimate source for movies, movie reviews, and much more. For nearly 25 years, Roger Ebert's annual collection has been recognized as the preeminent source for full-length critical movie reviews, and his 2010 yearbook does not disappoint.pThe yearbook includes every review Ebert has written from January 2007 to July 2009. It also includes interviews, essays, tributes, and all-new questions and answers from his Questions for the Movie Answer Man columns. Fans get a bonus feature, too, with new entries to Ebert's Little Movie Glossary.pThis is the must-have go-to guide for movie fanatics.Now fully updated, this annual yearbook includes every review Ebert had written from January 2007 to July 2009. It also includes interviews, essays, tributes, and all-new questions and answers from his Questions for the Movie Answer Man columns. |
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Roger Ebert's Movie Yearbook
$11.63 Nobody has been more important in telling Americans why we should love film than Roger Ebert. --Michael Shamberg, Editor and PublisherpPulitzer Prize-winning film critic Roger Ebert presents more than 650 full-length critical movie reviews, along with interviews, essays, tributes, film festival reports, and Q and As from Questions for the Movie Answer Man,pRoger Ebert's Movie Yearbook 2009 collects more than two years' worth of his engaging film critiques. From Bee Movie to Darfur Now to No Country for Old Men, and from Juno to Persepolis to La Vie en Rose, Roger Ebert's Movie Yearbook 2009 includes every review Ebert has written from January 2006 to June 2008.pAlso included in the Yearbook, which boasts 65 percent new content, are:p* Interviews with newsmakers, such as Juno director Jason Reitman and Jerry Seinfeld, a touching tribute to Deborah Kerr, and an emotional letter of appreciation to Werner Herzog.p* Essays on film issues, and tributes to actors and directors who died during the year.p* Daily film festival reports from Cannes, Toronto, Sundance, and Telluride.p* All-new questions and answers from his Questions for the Movie Answer Man columns.Pulitzer Prize-winning film critic Ebert presents more than 650 full-length critical movie reviews, along with interviews, essays, tributes, film festival reports, and Q and As from Questions for the Movie Answer Man. |
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Roger Ebert's Movie Yearbook 2006 (Roger Ebert's Movie Yearbook)
$4.48 This has been a big year for Roger Ebert. In January 2005 he received TelevisionWeek's Lifetime Achievement Award, and this summer he will be honored with a star on Hollywood's Walk of Fame. It seems only fitting that his Movie Yearbook is annually regarded as the best place to turn to learn about and choose a movie. The 2006 volume contains all Ebert reviews written from January 2003 through June 2005. That includes blockbusters such as Million Dollar Baby and The Aviator along with surprise hits like Sideways, and such moving films as Hotel Rwanda and Vera Drake. (Oh, yes, and Brown Bunny as well.) Roger Ebert's Movie Yearbook 2006 also includes all Ebert interviews and essays for the year, the biweekly Questions for the Movie Answer Man, and Ebert's well-respected film festival coverage. |
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Roger Ebert's Movie Yearbook 2009
$18.25 Pulitzer Prize-winning film critic Ebert presents more than 650 full-length critical movie reviews, along with interviews, essays, tributes, film festival reports, and Q and As from Questions for the Movie Answer Man. |
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Roger Ebert's Movie Yearbook 2010
$17.99 Now fully updated, this annual yearbook includes every review Ebert had written from January 2007 to July 2009. It also includes interviews, essays, tributes, and all-new questions and answers from his Questions for the Movie Answer Man columns. |
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Scorsese by Ebert
$16 Roger Ebert wrote the first film review that director Martin Scorsese ever received—for 1967’s I Call First—when both men were just embarking on their careers. Ebert had never been touched by a movie in quite the same way before, and this experience created a lasting bond that made him one of Scorsese’s most appreciative and perceptive commentators. Scorsese by Ebert offers the first record of America’s most respected film critic’s engagement with the works of America’s greatest living director. The book chronicles every single feature film in Scorsese’s considerable oeuvre, from his aforementioned debut to his 2008 release, the Rolling Stones documentary, Shine a Light.Here Ebert puts Scorsese’s career in illuminating perspective, exploring the different phases of his development and the abiding themes (many of which reflect Scorsese’s Catholicism) that give his work such complexity and depth. All of Ebert’s incisive reviews of Scorsese’s individual films are here, of course, but there is much more. In the course of eleven interviews done over almost forty years, the book includes Scorsese’s own insights on both his accomplishments and disappointments. One of these interviews, the single longest ever conducted with Scorsese, appears here for the first time. Ebert has also written and included six new reconsiderations of the director’s less commented upon films, as well as a substantial introduction that provides a framework for understanding both Scorsese and his profound impact on American cinema. As Scorsese himself notes in his foreword to this volume, history is the only critic that counts, but the dialogue from which its judgments arise begins with the kind of emotionally alert, historically informed, and intellectually honest writing that Ebert has collected here in this, the ideal pairing of filmmaker and critic. |
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Scorsese by Ebert
$16 Roger Ebert wrote the first film review that director Martin Scorsese ever received—for 1967’s I Call First—when both men were just embarking on their careers. Ebert had never been touched by a movie in quite the same way before, and this experience created a lasting bond that made him one of Scorsese’s most appreciative and perceptive commentators. Scorsese by Ebert offers the first record of America’s most respected film critic’s engagement with the works of America’s greatest living director. The book chronicles every single feature film in Scorsese’s considerable oeuvre, from his aforementioned debut to his 2008 release, the Rolling Stones documentary, Shine a Light.Here Ebert puts Scorsese’s career in illuminating perspective, exploring the different phases of his development and the abiding themes (many of which reflect Scorsese’s Catholicism) that give his work such complexity and depth. All of Ebert’s incisive reviews of Scorsese’s individual films are here, of course, but there is much more. In the course of eleven interviews done over almost forty years, the book includes Scorsese’s own insights on both his accomplishments and disappointments. One of these interviews, the single longest ever conducted with Scorsese, appears here for the first time. Ebert has also written and included six new reconsiderations of the director’s less commented upon films, as well as a substantial introduction that provides a framework for understanding both Scorsese and his profound impact on American cinema. As Scorsese himself notes in his foreword to this volume, history is the only critic that counts, but the dialogue from which its judgments arise begins with the kind of emotionally alert, historically informed, and intellectually honest writing that Ebert has collected here in this, the ideal pairing of filmmaker and critic. |
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Cinebooks Movie List
$13 Cinebooks Movie List |
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The Second Signet Movie List
$2.75 The Second Signet Movie List |
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Roger Ebert's Book of Film
$1.36 Thumbs up for this lavish and entertaining anthology of writing on film, assembled by one of America's best-loved movie critics. For this delicious, instructive, and vastly enjoyable anthology, Roger Ebert has selected and introduced an international treasury of more than 100 films that touch on every aspect of filmmaking and filmgoing. |
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Ebert's Bigger Little Movie Glossary
$8.66 The popular film critic offers a compilation of witty and wise observations about the film lexicon, including Fruit Cart, a chase scene through an ethnic or foreign locale, or The Non-Answering Pet, referring to a dead pet in a horror movie. 40,000 first printing. |
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Roger Ebert's Movie Yearbook 2007
$18.71 This book is in New - Excellent condition |
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Roger Ebert's Movie Yearbook 2001
$12.95 No Synopsis Available |
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Roger Ebert's Movie Yearbook 2010
$20.57 No Synopsis Available |
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Roger Ebert's Movie Yearbook 2003
$14.48 No Synopsis Available |
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Ebert's 'Bigger' Little Movie Glossary
$8.36 No Synopsis Available |
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Roger Ebert's Movie Yearbook 2007
$19.07 No Synopsis Available |
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Roger ebert's movie yearbook 2009
$22.92 No Synopsis Available |
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Roger Ebert's Movie Yearbook 2010
$22.92 No Synopsis Available |
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Roger Ebert's Movie Yearbook 2001
$13.22 No Synopsis Available |
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Roger Ebert's Movie Yearbook 2007
$19.46 No Synopsis Available |
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Roger ebert's movie yearbook 2009
$23.39 No Synopsis Available |
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Roger Ebert's Movie Yearbook 2003
$14.78 No Synopsis Available |
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Roger Ebert's Movie Yearbook 2010
$23.39 No Synopsis Available |
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Ebert's 'Bigger' Little Movie Glossary
$8.54 No Synopsis Available |
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Roger Ebert's Movie Yearbook 2010
$20.99 No Synopsis Available |
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The A-List
$12.38 "Best of" lists in film are as ubiquitous as shopping lists, and usually arrive to the shouts of those decrying certain omissions, and the others bellowing about one or another pick`s inclusion. The National Society of Film Critics weighs in with their own canon-fetish, a list of the 100 films necessary to have seen to appreciate the art of the cinema. Each title is accompanied by a short essay by one of the many critics in the Society. Included are THE BATTLESHIP POTEMKIN, introduced by Roger Ebert; NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD, introduced by Kevin Thomas; Bruce Lee`s ENTER THE DRAGON, introduced by Michael Sragow; and JAILHOUSE ROCK, with an introduction by Carrie Rickey. |
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Roger Ebert's Four-Star Reviews 1967-2007
$19.48 Spanning the length of Roger Ebert's career as the leading American movie critic, this book contains all of his four-star reviews written during that time. A great guide for movie watching. |
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The A-List
$11.71 In 100 memorable essays, the National Society of Film Critics lists the 100 essential films of all time (a list which may surprise some movie fans). 16 photos. |
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Friedrich Ebert
$18.35 Friedrich Ebert |
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Scorsese By Ebert
$10.43 Scorsese By Ebert |
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List, The
$13.46 Popular comic Wayne Brady stars as a skilled young advertising executive who knows exactly what he wants in a woman, and isn't willing to let his disillusion with the dating scene prevent him from finding true love. Upon assembling a list of attributes that would define his ideal woman, the ambitious adman sets out to see if she truly exists. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide |
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The List -
$14.99 In this thriller, Judge Richard Miller (Ryan O'Neal) is put in a highly precarious position when he is assigned to preside over the trial of Gabrielle Mitchell (Madchen Amick), a high-priced call girl with an exclusive clientele. Gabrielle, who has arranged her own arrest in order to blackmail her better-known customers, presents Miller a list of her regular clients -- as well as an incriminating videotape. Miller is put in the difficult position of either making the information public and destroying the careers of trusted colleagues, or risking his own prosecution by keeping it a secret. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide |
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The List -
$8.99 In this thriller, Judge Richard Miller (Ryan O'Neal) is put in a highly precarious position when he is assigned to preside over the trial of Gabrielle Mitchell (Madchen Amick), a high-priced call girl with an exclusive clientele. Gabrielle, who has arranged her own arrest in order to blackmail her better-known customers, presents Miller a list of her regular clients -- as well as an incriminating videotape. Miller is put in the difficult position of either making the information public and destroying the careers of trusted colleagues, or risking his own prosecution by keeping it a secret. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide |
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List
$12.71 A Charlotte lawyer unearths a closely guarded family secret when his father dies and leaves him interest in an obscure entity known as The Covenant List of South Carolina, Ltd. in director Gary Wheeler's adaptation of the novel by author Robert Whitlow. Convinced that the fall of the Confederacy is at hand after the Battle of Gettysburg, a group of South Carolina plantation owners gather at the Rice Planter's Inn in Georgetown, South Carolina and hatch a plan to smuggle their fortunes into Europe. Their cover for the operation: a secret society dubbed The Covenant List of South Carolina, Ltd. But a weathered prophet opposes the group's nefarious plan, and issues a dire warning to his friends and neighbors that one day the descendents of the group will one day face judgment at the mighty hand of God. Decades later, the interests of the families have been passed down through the generations. The profit margin has exploded, and with each passing year the secret grows more sinister. When Charlotte lawyer Renny Jacobson learns that his father has recently passed away, he returns to Charleston to pay his final respects and attend the reading of the family will. Much to Renny's surprise, his father bequeathed a large portion of his estate to charity. Shortly after discovering that his sole inheritance is an interest in the mysterious Covenant List of South Carolina, Ltd., Renny is contacted by The List and approached by a beautiful woman named Jo Johnston. In the following days Renny will become swept up by a whirlwind of deception and greed that will lead him from the picturesque coasts of South Carolina to the closely guarded Swiss bank vaults which house a vast fortune in cursed blood money. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide |
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Roger Ebert's Four-Star Reviews 1967-2007
$8.64 Spanning the length of Eberts illustrious career as Americas leading movie critic, this book contains every one of his four-star reviews written from 1967 to 2007.Spanning the length of Roger Ebert's career as the leading American movie critic, this book contains all of his four-star reviews written during that time. A great guide for movie watching. |
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The A-List
$9.99 Starlet Amelie Adams's new movie is being shot on location-at Beverly Hills High. But the drama on-screen is nothing compared to what's happening off-screen. Lights, camera, deception! |
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The A-List
$9.99 Starlet Amelie Adams's new movie is being shot on location-at Beverly Hills High. But the drama on-screen is nothing compared to what's happening off-screen. Lights, camera, deception! |
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The A-List
$9.99 Starlet Amelie Adams's new movie is being shot on location-at Beverly Hills High. But the drama on-screen is nothing compared to what's happening off-screen. Lights, camera, deception! |
|
The A-List
$9.99 Starlet Amelie Adams's new movie is being shot on location-at Beverly Hills High. But the drama on-screen is nothing compared to what's happening off-screen. Lights, camera, deception! |
|
The A-List
$9.99 Starlet Amelie Adams's new movie is being shot on location-at Beverly Hills High. But the drama on-screen is nothing compared to what's happening off-screen. Lights, camera, deception! |
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Roger Ebert`s Movie Yearbook 2010 (Paperback)
$19.59 Description not available. |