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Life Itself 2014 123movies

Life Itself 2014 123movies

The only thing Roger loved more than moviesJul. 04, 2014121 Min.
Your rating: 0
5 1 vote

Synopsis

Watch: Life Itself 2014 123movies, Full Movie Online – ‘Life Itself’ recounts the surprising and entertaining life of world-renowned film critic and social commentator Roger Ebert – a story that’s by turns personal, wistful, funny, painful, and transcendent. The film explores the impact and legacy of Roger Ebert’s life: from his Pulitzer Prize-winning film criticism and his nearly quarter-century run with Gene Siskel on their review show, to becoming one of the country’s most influential cultural voices, and finally to Roger’s inspiring battles with cancer and the resulting physical disability – how he literally and symbolically put a new face on the disease and continued to be a cultural force despite it..
Plot: The surprising and entertaining life of renowned film critic and social commentator Roger Ebert (1942-2013): his early days as a freewheeling bachelor and Pulitzer Prize winner, his famously contentious partnership with Gene Siskel, his life-altering marriage, and his brave and transcendent battle with cancer.
Smart Tags: #film_critic #death #journalist #reformed_alcoholic #cancer_patient #writer #interracial_marriage #film_criticism #movie_review #screenwriter #physical_rehabilitation #blog #interview #chicago_illinois #husband_wife_relationship #interracial_relationship #hospital #archive_footage #independent_film #filmmaker #writing


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Ratings:

7.8/10 Votes: 15,796
98% | RottenTomatoes
87/100 | MetaCritic
N/A Votes: 300 Popularity: 9.106 | TMDB

Reviews:

Please excuse my oversimplifications
(Full, more complete review on Influx Magazine.)

“When did you first want to become a film critic?” is the question I get asked the most, second only to the obligatory “what is your favorite movie?” I always respond to the first question with the same story; I was a four-year-old boy, “reading” the “Tempo” section of the “Chicago Tribune,” and by reading, I mean looking at the pictures of the movies in there, cutting them out, and pasting them to a scrapbook I would make. When I finally developed the ability to read, I would “read” some of Roger Ebert’s reviews in the “Chicago Sun-Times,” and by read, I mean study and honestly look at his writing structure, often rereading sentences of his over and over that struck me as comedic or ones that hit home harder than I was ever used to being hit. To say Ebert was an influence on me and my writing is still a monumental oversimplification.

Even more of an oversimplification than what I’m about to say concerning Steve James’ long-awaited documentary “Life Itself,” based on the life and memoir of film critic Roger Ebert. I laughed, cried, talked back to the screen, voiced my own opinions, and indulged in some of the most gratifying and entertaining two hours of my life watching his documentary unfold. Frequently I wasn’t subtle in showing my emotions, pervasively tearing up when I saw the way his loving wife Chaz Ebert would help and assist Roger in any way, shape, or form he needed, and sometimes just laughing or cheering at the hilarious and often vulgar banter him and his colleague Gene Siskel would exchange on the set of their show “Sneak Previews.” While all this was happening, the whole time wishing, hoping, and grieving to be half the film critic he was, leaving a tenth of the impact he did on a culture and an industry.

The film chronicles the humble beginnings to the meteoric rise to fame Roger Ebert endured, coming from your average family in Illinois to becoming known and recognized at the University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign for his persistent editing and managing of the school’s newspaper, “The Daily Illini.” Eventually, Ebert became the youngest film critic to ever hold the professional position for the “Chicago Sun-Times,” the liberal, blue collar, working class paper that directly competed with the wealthier and more conservative “Chicago Tribune” right across the street. Ebert worked to breed life and an identity in the field where, before his time, film reviews were written by whomever happened to go to the movies that weekend under the name “Mae Tinee” – look at that name very closely.

It wasn’t long before Ebert became known in the newspaper circle, winning the Pulitzer Prize early in his career, developing a TV show with the “Chicago Tribune’s” film critic Gene Siskel, in one of Television’s most charismatic and checkered relationships in the medium’s history, to his personal bouts with alcoholism, to becoming one with the industry’s actors, directors, writers, and so forth. Numerous colleagues of Ebert speak out on his impact on an unrecognized industry, like film critic A.O. Scott of “The New York Times,” who labels Siskel and Ebert’s Television show as a work of “transgressiveness” for the medium, being that these two men were who they were, verbally fighting about each others opinions on film, not complimenting and making classy remarks like “I see your point” at the completion of each others sentences. They fought over opinions like you and your relatives do with political opinions and exchanges over the dinner table.

Ebert also made the casual man appreciate film for its aesthetics, its beauty, and its capabilities, commenting on the film medium as “a machine that generates empathy,” in a speech more beautiful than anything I could be given a year to cook up. He gave quieter independent films an outlet on his show with Siskel, so that you and I would know them more than just “some arty movie playing downtown.”

James is all encompassing with “Life Itself,” tirelessly trying to capture everything that occurred in Ebert’s life, and not only miraculously succeeding, but doing succeeding overwhelmingly, to the extent one would assume impossible in just two hours that were destined to race past, as they did. James develops on Ebert’s long checkered bouts with cancer, multiple different surgeries, to even showing the last few months of his life, which were largely spent in hospitals with a tireless Chaz right by his side. A cruel but necessary juxtaposition of events comes when we see home video footage of Ebert walking with his step-grandson in Europe for lengthy periods of time contrasted with an ailing but determined Ebert struggling to walk on a treadmill at a rehabilitation facility, wheezing and becoming short of breath from just a few steps.

“Life Itself” is destined to be the most emotional, moving documentary I see all year, if not the most emotional, moving film I see all year. Its detailing of a life so grand, a person so complex, and a man so original and captured in the spirit of himself in a delightfully open way makes for a film that I struggle to summarize in a way that gives it proper credit. In that case, I close my review of my current favorite documentary of 2014 in a softly poetic way, rather than a didactic or smarmy way, republishing an ode to Roger Ebert I wrote on part of my eighth grade class in 2009.

Ode to Roger Ebert

Film Critic, Columnist, like a brother. Reviews movies like none other. Bias towards him, and the ones that came. But other reviews can never be the same. One star. Two stars. Three stars. Four. Others make reviewing seem like a chore. I like Ebert for evermore.

Directed by: Steve James.

Review By: StevePulaski
More about the death than the life itself
The documentary reasons that Ebert’s enthusiasm for wanting the painful and explicit procedures he daily endures following the loss of his lower jaw comes from long-time colleague Gene Siskel’s withholding of his own brain cancer from Roger. To be sure the procedures make this a challenging documentary to watch and arguably take away from the life the movie intends to document. While we do get some of the biography presented in Ebert’s book segmented as he did by chapters devoted to those closest to him, much of the detail is missing. This choice makes for a major distraction from Ebert’s contribution. However, unlike the book, the movie tells us some of Siskel’s background and kindles some interest in learning more about him. When will that bio debut? In short, the fascinating “Zelig”-like life of Ebert shines through despite the narrative choices.
Review By: estreet-eva

Other Information:

Original Title Life Itself
Release Date 2014-07-04
Release Year 2014

Original Language en
Runtime 2 hr 1 min (121 min)
Budget 0
Revenue 0
Status Released
Rated R
Genre Documentary, Biography
Director Steve James
Writer N/A
Actors Roger Ebert, Chaz Ebert, Gene Siskel
Country United States
Awards 25 wins & 33 nominations
Production Company N/A
Website N/A


Technical Information:

Sound Mix N/A
Aspect Ratio 1.78 : 1
Camera N/A
Laboratory Nolo Digital Film
Film Length N/A
Negative Format N/A
Cinematographic Process N/A
Printed Film Format N/A

Life Itself 2014 123movies
Life Itself 2014 123movies
Life Itself 2014 123movies
Life Itself 2014 123movies
Original title Life Itself
TMDb Rating 7.57 300 votes

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