Film critics Siskel and Ebert couldn't stand each other. That's what made their show great (2024)

Table of Contents
Opinion: Why do I hoard more books than I could possibly read? An investigation Remembrance: Roger Ebert, film’s hero to the end After the Death of Gene Siskel, a Requiem for Film Criticism More to Read With ‘Palm Royale,’ Bruce and Laura Dern are (finally) father and daughter on screen ‘Palm Royale’ is a brilliant, star-studded and stylish comedy led by Kristen Wiig A critic has some thoughts on our judgy culture. Feel free to disagree More to Read With ‘Palm Royale,’ Bruce and Laura Dern are (finally) father and daughter on screen ‘Palm Royale’ is a brilliant, star-studded and stylish comedy led by Kristen Wiig A critic has some thoughts on our judgy culture. Feel free to disagree More to Read With ‘Palm Royale,’ Bruce and Laura Dern are (finally) father and daughter on screen ‘Palm Royale’ is a brilliant, star-studded and stylish comedy led by Kristen Wiig A critic has some thoughts on our judgy culture. Feel free to disagree Review: Made by a solo Coen brother, ‘Drive-Away Dolls’ is trashy fun and exceedingly disposable ‘Barbenheimer’ gave us a fun summer ... until you stop to think what they’re really about Review: Abstract expressionism, espionage and Cold War history converge in John Ross Bowie’s ‘Brushstroke’ Review: A bored office worker comes to romantic life in ‘Sometimes I Think About Dying’ Christopher Nolan’s Peloton instructor pledges an ‘insult-free’ ride after ripping ‘Tenet’ in a workout Why director Garth Davis felt a connection with the wife in his futuristic ‘Foe’ FAQs

On the Shelf

Opposable Thumbs: How Siskel & Ebert Changed Movies Forever

By Matt Singer
Putnam: 352 pages, $29

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We called one of them “Fatty” and the other one “Skinny,” and surely we weren’t the only ones. When it came to our moviegoing habits, their word was the beginning and the end.

My mother, my sister and I watched “Sneak Previews” religiously when I was a child, transfixed by the sensation of seeing two people speak intelligently about movies on television. Our dependence led to some awkward moments, like when the three of us went to a matinee showing of “Blow Out,” the 1982 Brian De Palma thriller that begins with the dubbing of a p*rno movie. I was only 11, but both Roger Ebert and Gene Siskel had given the film enthusiastic “Yes” votes (they hadn’t yet adopted the whole thumbs thing). And so, “Blow Out,” with its ample nudity, violence and scariness, it was.

Such incidents might lead to sizable therapy bills. They might also help create a future critic.

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Opinion

Opinion: Why do I hoard more books than I could possibly read? An investigation

After a few years of joining the Kindle cult, I am back to my old bibliophile ways. I do this not just out of compulsion, but aspiration.

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Matt Singer, author of the new joint biography “Opposable Thumbs,” had his own formative experiences with Siskel and Ebert, who, as the book’s subtitle puts it, “changed movies forever.” As a middle school kid in suburban New Jersey, he would tell his parents he was going to sleep on a Sunday night, turn out the lights, and patiently wait until midnight, when the show, now simply called “Siskel & Ebert, ” would air in his market. By then the hosts had moved from PBS to the more lucrative pastures of syndication. Singer, another future critic, was hooked.

“Loving the show was just a fact of life for me,” he says over Zoom from his Brooklyn home. “I felt like it was this thing that I was obsessed with that nobody else cared about. It seemed very mine.”

Of course, Siskel, who died of brain cancer in 1999, and Ebert, who died in 2013 after his own harrowing cancer battle, which ultimately left him unable to speak, were hardly an obscure passion. Millions tuned in every week to see where their hugely powerful thumbs would point, and — just as important — to see them argue with each other in often shockingly personal tones. Frequent guests on late-night talk shows, where they always appeared as a package deal, they became celebrities to rival the stars about whom they opined.

Film critics Siskel and Ebert couldn't stand each other. That's what made their show great (2)

Matt Singer’s new book, “Opposable Thumbs,” chronicles the contentious and irreplaceable film-critic duo Siskel and Ebert.

(Clayton Rathiel)

But to a young person starting to develop a passion for movies, they were indeed a revelation: populist intellectuals, engaging and accessible, highly visible proof that one could actually get paid to write about movies. This in itself qualified as something strange and wonderful.

“Opposable Thumbs,” a lively accounting of the men and the various versions of their show, makes the author’s admiration for his subjects clear. But the book isn’t just a fan’s note. Incorporating thorough reporting and research, including hundreds of hours watching clips on YouTube, Singer gets at what made their partnership unique and far ahead of its time.

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Untelegenic movie critics for rival newspapers — Ebert with the Chicago Sun-Times, Siskel with the Chicago Tribune — they were thrown together in 1975 for what was then a radical new format on Chicago’s PBS affiliate, WTTW. The show’s awkward initial title: “Opening Soon … at a Theater Near You.” As Singer writes, “They didn’t know how to work on television, and they didn’t know how to work with each other.” They weren’t sure how to write for their new medium or how to use a teleprompter. The production lights glared off of Ebert’s humongous eyeglasses. It’s safe to say there was a learning curve.

Something else was abundantly clear from the start: These guys didn‘t like each other. This was decades before sports networks like ESPN began packaging screaming, combative hosts to manufacture hot takes for the sake of hot takes. Siskel and Ebert were highly competitive — especially Siskel, who couldn’t stand the fact that Ebert had become the first movie critic to win a Pulitzer Prize, also in 1975.

Film critics Siskel and Ebert couldn't stand each other. That's what made their show great (3)

(G. P. Putnam’s Sons)

According to a Tribune editor quoted in the book, when Siskel would scoop his rival in print, he’d exult: “Take that, Tubby, I got him again.” Onscreen their rivalry gave the show an irresistible frisson, which I recall as a scary thrill for a childhood viewer: Are these guys about to throw down on TV? As late as 1987, when Ebert made Siskel apoplectic by giving a thumbs up to “Benji the Hunted” but not “Full Metal Jacket,” a sense of animosity lingered in the air.

“The tension was definitely real, and it absolutely made the show better,” Singer says. “There was drama and excitement. You didn’t know what they were going to say, and they genuinely didn’t know what each other was going to say. You’re watching their genuine reactions to each other, and sometimes they are horrified that they’re being blindsided.”

But when they closed ranks, they could be a mighty force, especially when they advocated for films that might otherwise get lost in the Hollywood shuffle. Among the small movies they pushed toward big audiences were Errol Morris’ “Gates of Heaven“ (1978), Louis Malle’s “My Dinner With Andre” (1981), and Steve James’ “Hoop Dreams” (1994). When they championed such films, they banged the drum for them over and over, through multiple episodes and features. “They gave me a career,” Morris says in the book. “Quite simply, I loved them.”

Movies

After the Death of Gene Siskel, a Requiem for Film Criticism

For me, film criticism has been on life support for many years.

March 1, 1999

Ebert and Siskel grew closer over the years, though that original competitive fire kept burning. And after Siskel died, as Singer points out, that chemistry proved unrepeatable. Ebert’s Sun-Times colleague Richard Roeper joined him for a spell, but they were friends, and you could tell. The beefs just weren’t as tasty. Once Ebert’s ailments forced him to step down, various iterations of the show appeared, some hosted by great critics, including A.O. Scott, Michael Phillips and Christy Lemire. But nothing could recapture that old black magic.

Singer has especially nice things to say about Phillips, of the Chicago Tribune (and formerly the L.A. Times), and Scott, of the New York Times, who co-hosted the show from 2009 to 2010. “They were extremely nice and thoughtful and good on camera,” he says. “But they didn’t have that tension, and it’s hard to fake that. If you like somebody, it’s tough to really go after them in that way that made the show so much fun to watch.”

Through all the replacements and imitations, it became clear that Siskel and Ebert were sui generis. Today you can go online and find umpteen pairs talking about movies, maybe even arguing about them. Most lack the seriousness of purpose, knowledge base and oil-and-water relationship of the original model.

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Siskel and Ebert bustled into the world at a time when movie critics mattered more, before the culture fragmented into a million voices and “influencers,” and they ruled that world with iron thumbs. In this sense Singer’s book is a time capsule of a bygone era every bit as irreplicable as the partnership at its core.

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Film critics Siskel and Ebert couldn't stand each other. That's what made their show great (2024)

FAQs

Film critics Siskel and Ebert couldn't stand each other. That's what made their show great? ›

Film critics Siskel and Ebert couldn't stand each other. That's what made their show great. Gene Siskel, left, and Roger Ebert, photographed in Los Angeles in 1986, had a contentious relationship that made their TV shows about movie criticism major hits, as chronicled in Matt Singer's new book, “Opposable Thumbs.”

What happened to Siskel and Ebert show? ›

The two remained a powerhouse pairing until Siskel died of brain cancer in 1999. He was just 53-years-old at the time. Ebert continued the show with guests hosts, and eventually fellow Sun-Times critic Richard Roeper. He continued to write movie reviews until his death of complications with cancer in 2013 at age 70.

What made Roger Ebert so good? ›

Ebert was known for his intimate, Midwestern writing style and critical views informed by values of populism and humanism. Writing in a prose style intended to be entertaining and direct, he made sophisticated cinematic and analytical ideas more accessible to non-specialist audiences.

Who is the best film critics in the world? ›

These 10 great film critics remain most referred to at all times, as they remind the audience of what great cinema is and always will be.
  • 3 Mark Kermode.
  • 4 Pauline Kael. ...
  • 5 Kenneth Turan. ...
  • 6 Andrew Sarris. ...
  • 7 François Roland Truffaut. ...
  • 8 Leonard Maltin. ...
  • 9 Stanley Kauffmann. ...
  • 10 Vincent Canby. New York Times. ...
Mar 22, 2023

Did Siskel and Ebert like Star Wars? ›

When Star Wars: Return of the Jedi hit theaters in 1983, it was a hit beloved by fans and even critics Gene Siskel and Roger Ebert — but it was also attacked for lacking cinematic integrity, much the same way Marvel films have been targeted as of late.

Why were Siskel and Ebert so popular? ›

Known for their sharp and biting wit, intense professional rivalry, heated arguments, and their binary "Thumbs Up or Thumbs Down" summations, the duo became a sensation in American popular culture. Siskel and Ebert remained partners until Siskel's death from a brain tumor in 1999.

Did Siskel and Ebert get along? ›

They never became besties. [They] socialized together very infrequently. They might go out on a double date — like them and their spouses after Roger and Chaz got married.

Which film is considered by most to be the greatest film ever made? ›

Citizen Kane is a 1941 American drama film directed by, produced by, and starring Orson Welles. Welles and Herman J. Mankiewicz wrote the screenplay. The picture was Welles's first feature film. Citizen Kane is frequently cited as the greatest film ever made.

How much money did Roger Ebert make? ›

Ebert's personal net worth was U.S. $9 million.

Was Roger Ebert an optimist? ›

Roger Ebert: 'I'm an optimistic person'

What happened to Roger Ebert's jaw? ›

He was teased for years about his weight, but the jokes stopped abruptly when Ebert lost portions of his jaw and the ability to speak, eat and drink after cancer surgeries in 2006.

Who is the smartest film critic in the world? ›

Cole Smithey - The Smartest Film Critic in the World.

Who is considered the greatest filmmaker of all time? ›

Top 25 Greatest Directors of All Time (The Ultimate List)
  1. Steven Spielberg. Producer. Writer. ...
  2. Martin Scorsese. Producer. Director. ...
  3. Alfred Hitchco*ck. Director. Producer. ...
  4. Stanley Kubrick. Director. Writer. ...
  5. Francis Ford Coppola. Producer. Director. ...
  6. Woody Allen. Writer. Director. ...
  7. Billy Wilder. Writer. Director. ...
  8. John Huston. Actor. Director.

Can Roger Ebert talk? ›

When film critic Roger Ebert lost his lower jaw to cancer, he lost the ability to eat and speak. But he did not lose his voice.

What did Spielberg think of Star Wars? ›

According to Spielberg, he thought Star Wars was going to be a "big hit", which doesn't seem too far off from reality.

How many stars did Roger Ebert use? ›

By conservative estimate, Ebert reviewed at least 10,000 movies during a career that spanned from 1967 to 2013. Most of these films were graded on a scale of four stars to one-half star, but I Spit On Your Grave was awarded zero.

How long were Siskel and Ebert together? ›

Matt Singer on the Bygone Era Before Movie Clips. Today, everyone—myself included—just calls it Siskel & Ebert. That's become the default name everyone uses when talking about the influential movie review show that aired on public television and in syndication from 1975 to 1999.

What was the last movie Roger Ebert watched? ›

Terrence Malick's To the Wonder was Ebert's last review and showcased the director's iconic style and departure from his previous period pieces. Ebert defended Malick's filmmaking choices and believed that not every film needed to explain everything, highlighting the film's ambitious portrayal of spiritual longing.

How old was Siskel when he died? ›

Siskel died at a hospital in Evanston, Illinois, on February 20, 1999, nine months after his diagnosis and surgery; he was 53 years old.

Is this film more interesting than a documentary of the same actors having lunch? ›

Even now, the Gene Siskel test holds weight: Is this film more interesting than a documentary of the same actors having lunch? Siskel and Ebert also succeeded because they treated film criticism on TV as its own form.

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