Boogie Nights - Siskel & Ebert

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  • @random666777
    @random666777 Před 9 lety +479

    This movie stood the test of time. It's a classic.

    • @martyjackson4166
      @martyjackson4166 Před 5 lety +2

      I completely agree that is has and will stand the test of time... I'm not completely sure it's old enough to be a classic yet though

    • @diezeldiamond1041
      @diezeldiamond1041 Před 4 lety +1

      AGREED

    • @neworleansguy10
      @neworleansguy10 Před 4 lety +2

      You bet your a$$ it has. It all but swept the 20/20 awards in 2017. The 20/20s are essentially meant to fete those films which, in retrospect, were the best of its year. So. 20 years after BN was released, the members of the 20/20 Awards named it Best Film of 1997. PTA won Best Director, and Julianne Moore and Phillip Seymour Hoffman won for Supporting Actress and Actor in their respective categories.

    • @neworleansguy10
      @neworleansguy10 Před 4 lety +2

      Marty Jackson Oh; it’s a classic.

    • @SoftDrinksOfChoice
      @SoftDrinksOfChoice Před 4 lety +2

      Marty Jackson 20 years? Def old enough

  • @davidostlouis
    @davidostlouis Před 9 lety +454

    Definitely one of my favorite films of all time. The whole sequence when Dirk and his crew go to sell drugs to the kingpin has got to be one of the most uncomfortable moments in movie history. As a viewer you're on the edge of your seat feeling claustrophobic the entire time.

    • @RazzleDazz72
      @RazzleDazz72 Před 9 lety +3

      Yes!

    • @allidock11
      @allidock11 Před 9 lety +22

      And that moment during "Jessie' s Girl" where Wahlberg drifts off and smiles to himself...that's when I really saw the redemptive aspect of the whole film. The five minutes between that smile and Jack's forgiveness almost feels like a gift to the viewer. Truly great film.

    • @tommyt1971
      @tommyt1971 Před 4 lety +8

      Yup, it had me squirming in my seat the first time I saw it. I kept wanting to scream at the screen “GET THE FUCK OUT OF THAT HOUSE!!”

    • @rustykuntz94
      @rustykuntz94 Před 4 lety +3

      St.Louis77 David Amazing sequence there in that third act. The guy high on crack and what he would do or say next. The music which was phenomenal there.

    • @stever7157
      @stever7157 Před 4 lety +4

      When Sister Christian starts playing as the gate closes, you just know that their lives are going to change. What a great scene!

  • @Slikrik1212
    @Slikrik1212 Před 9 lety +350

    Ebert was right on the money with his assessment.

    • @mikeg2491
      @mikeg2491 Před 2 lety +13

      Ebert always seemed to know what he was talking about while Siskel had a bit of snobbery about his tastes.

    • @cennon
      @cennon Před 2 lety +2

      It was entertaining. No deep message. It wasn't meant to have one.

    • @jbsamakis
      @jbsamakis Před 2 lety +1

      @@cennon Ebert and Siskel? Or Boogie Nights?

    • @frankbonini9128
      @frankbonini9128 Před rokem

      Ebert Has a Bit of Experience With the Industry ... Having Worked with Russ Meyer Back in the Day, & Co-Written "Beyond the Valley of the Dolls"

    • @jameswilliams-zr8co
      @jameswilliams-zr8co Před rokem +5

      siskel was always so clueless, boogie nights is a master piece

  • @skeeterradar
    @skeeterradar Před 6 lety +271

    Boogie Night was undoubtedly a great movie, but watching this clip I cant help but be reminded of how much we lost with the passing of Siskel and Ebert: always informing, thought -provoking and , entertaining. Theres no critic today who even comes close.

    • @nagafsemaj9727
      @nagafsemaj9727 Před 6 lety +4

      I completely agree.

    • @Jacob-ir6zi
      @Jacob-ir6zi Před 5 lety +8

      Chris Stuckmann

    • @camorinbatchelder6514
      @camorinbatchelder6514 Před 5 lety

      Curiously, Boogie Nights wasn’t in Ebert’s Great Movies list.

    • @Jacob-ir6zi
      @Jacob-ir6zi Před 3 lety

      ​@Julian Borges And you must be brimming with intelligence

    • @KK-pm7ud
      @KK-pm7ud Před 3 lety +1

      It's the platform and the ability to be honest about what they believe. A lot harder today.

  • @circularsky
    @circularsky Před 10 lety +187

    This movie does have a point. It is a movie about family. A "family of freaks" who sustain and rely on each other through the soaring highs and crushing lows of the porn industry. This meaning is solidified in the absolutely magnificent and emotionally cathartic "God Only Knows" musical sequence, followed by the steadicam long-take through Jack Horner's house.

    • @stephenloflin9984
      @stephenloflin9984 Před 5 lety +5

      I always found the sad circus music very moving.

    • @kevinlee149
      @kevinlee149 Před 4 lety +1

      @Elliot Markwardt That's what makes this a great movie to watch if you're feeling bad about your own life. A few hours of this and your attitude changes to "well, at least I'm not like..."

    • @andrewburgemeister6684
      @andrewburgemeister6684 Před 3 lety +3

      Elliot Markwardt this analysis of the ending is the most common one I see and could actually agree with.
      Yeah, everything’s better now than the shit they all went through, but have they really learnt anything? Have they grown in anyway? Will they continue to grow or will they just regress?
      Another line I notice in the ending as well which pretty much sums up the characters is when Jack asks Rollergirl to “clean” her room: “Move all the dirt to one side, so one part looks clean and the other looks dirty.” Pretty much all the characters have pushed the drugs, egotism and narcissism to the side as a bandaid fix, but actually haven’t gone to the root symptoms to get rid of them for good.

    • @richardwagon6433
      @richardwagon6433 Před 2 lety +2

      And the characters are repeatedly shown to be just plain stupid with a childish ignorance about them. Note when Dirk says to an interviewer, "What can you expect when you’re on top? You know? It’s like Napoleon. When he was the king, you know, people were just constantly trying to conquer him, you know, in the Roman Empire. So, it’s history repeating itself all over again." Not to mention his stupid karate moves he does and when he screams at Jack, "I know fucking karate!" when he most certainly does not.

    • @JM-ll2vv
      @JM-ll2vv Před 2 lety +2

      Very true. It's about family, and that's what's so powerful about it.

  • @doubledown1138
    @doubledown1138 Před 8 lety +411

    One of the very best films of the 90s

    • @NigelDoes
      @NigelDoes Před 8 lety +38

      Of all time in my humble opinion.

    • @steveeddy9686
      @steveeddy9686 Před 5 lety +7

      Ever

    • @johnrife7134
      @johnrife7134 Před 4 lety +4

      Ever

    • @richp.738
      @richp.738 Před 4 lety +5

      Top ten without a doubt. Very possibly top five.

    • @blastofo
      @blastofo Před 4 lety +4

      I even got a TK421 mod on my stereo because of this movie.

  • @Provemewrongwithfacts
    @Provemewrongwithfacts Před 9 lety +585

    I thought Boogie Nights was the best picture that year, and it wasn't even nominated.

    • @chuexsy672
      @chuexsy672 Před 9 lety +42

      theriokid Boogie Nights and Goodfellas are my favorite films from the 90's.

    • @one2gaming
      @one2gaming Před 8 lety +21

      isaiah nguyen Pulp Fiction and The Truman Show are mine.

    • @rumshutt3r
      @rumshutt3r Před 8 lety +4

      +one2gaming pulp fiction was 1994.

    • @one2gaming
      @one2gaming Před 8 lety +3

      Sam Adolph ?

    • @rumshutt3r
      @rumshutt3r Před 8 lety

      one2gaming whoopsie. Didn't see the earlier comment.

  • @NMeyer0
    @NMeyer0 Před 10 lety +341

    Are you people on drugs? The drug deal scene is one of the best scenes ever! Wahlberg's acting during it is amazing. One of my favourite movies

    • @emmaduncan2991
      @emmaduncan2991 Před 10 lety +5

      I heard that Donnie got the part by telling the director, who was leaning toward Leo DiCaprio, for the part, went with Wahlberg after he told him that he "has a good 21/2 inches on Leo"

    • @ferox965
      @ferox965 Před 6 lety +7

      That drug deal scene is heavily based on the Wonderland murders with Eddie Nash and John Holmes. The awesome movie Wonderland goes into that.

    • @linkbiff1054
      @linkbiff1054 Před 6 lety +9

      Nat Mey It is one of the 5 best scenes ever put to celluloid.

    • @brettd530
      @brettd530 Před 5 lety +3

      Yep. Great scene.

    • @jameswilliams-of3mv
      @jameswilliams-of3mv Před 5 lety +6

      ..and the donut shop scene is so masterful too

  • @6xry
    @6xry Před 9 lety +406

    It seems like Siskel didn't have much of an argument as to what he didn't like the film, and don't really think he got the point. Ebert was right on this one.

    • @cliffslatterly2893
      @cliffslatterly2893 Před 9 lety +39

      Siskel gave it a positive review too, you know. Just not AS positive as Ebert.

    • @mynameisrandy
      @mynameisrandy Před 6 lety +27

      Siskel was pretty conservative, I think. He was able to praise a movie like Goodfellas, despite its moral bleakness because that movie does not regard its characters with love and affection. Boogie Nights is about characters who live in a world of sex and drugs, and it does treat them with love and affection. I don't think Siskel could fully get behind that.
      Ebert is on point.

    • @porflepopnecker4376
      @porflepopnecker4376 Před 6 lety +7

      Siskel was WAY sharper and smarter than Ebert.

    • @randallbrooks5787
      @randallbrooks5787 Před 6 lety +7

      Thank YOU! I hated Roger Ebert, and this right here is a great example why! He was such an obnoxious asshole who thought his opinion was the only one that mattered, and would badger anyone who disagreed with him.
      And, hell, I don't agree with Gene here, lol. I love this movie!
      But at least Gene was intelligent, polite and well spoken in his reviews!
      #RIPGeneSiskel!

    • @christianhafer9819
      @christianhafer9819 Před 5 lety +1

      @@cliffslatterly2893 Agreed. Great movie. Glad they both enjoyed it.

  • @jrock2720
    @jrock2720 Před 9 lety +118

    god i miss this show.

    • @johnnymfan5065
      @johnnymfan5065 Před 4 lety

      The both died so long ago

    • @susieusmaximus5330
      @susieusmaximus5330 Před 4 lety +5

      @@johnnymfan5065 Roger Ebert died in 2013. 7 years may seem like a vast amount of time to you, but not to everyone.

    • @Comictalent
      @Comictalent Před 3 lety

      The only professionals on TV today who actually remind me a little of Siskel & Ebert oddly enough are Wilbon and Kornheiser on PTI. They take their jobs seriously, know what they are talking about, will sometimes have opinions others disagree with, and are always intelligent and entertaining.

    • @pillettadoinswartsh4974
      @pillettadoinswartsh4974 Před 2 lety

      It's fun to watch them on Letterman:
      czcams.com/video/qfFG6YdayX4/video.html

  • @justtoolit6051
    @justtoolit6051 Před 7 lety +35

    I love Boogie Nights so much. Ebert is right here.

  • @lipby
    @lipby Před 10 lety +527

    Ebert is right

    • @YouCantHoldOnTooLong
      @YouCantHoldOnTooLong Před 10 lety +31

      You bet your ass Ebert was right! Anybody that would disagree with a movie that was extremely very well made like Boogie Nights is crazy. Siskel just did not understand the uniqueness of this film but Roger Ebert was brilliant enough to consider this one of the best movies of 1997.
      My thumb is up for you!
      ~Dutch

    • @_a.tay_
      @_a.tay_ Před 10 lety +15

      They both make valid points, but, yes, I think Ebert is right.

    • @wblake1
      @wblake1 Před 10 lety +12

      I'm also on Ebert's side, but Siskel correctly noted that the character's fates seemed a bit arbitrary. Case in point: the doughnut shop shootout.

    • @Raiderfn31
      @Raiderfn31 Před 10 lety +17

      miljenko1 That's the whole fucking point. Life is very random. Sometimes LUCK can save you. Believe that.

    • @wblake1
      @wblake1 Před 9 lety +2

      still, it kind of hints at lazy screenwriting.

  • @BULL.173
    @BULL.173 Před 3 lety +81

    I actually saw Boogie Nights in the movie theater. The drug deal scene with Alfred Molina was startlingly intense. The firecrackers were so loud that everyone in the audience flinched when they went off. That scene, for me, was the realization i was watching a downright brilliant movie.

    • @ct6852
      @ct6852 Před rokem +9

      It is. The firecrackers are a nice touch.

    • @hofx666
      @hofx666 Před rokem +3

      He killed that scene. When the boys walk in and his reaction when he yells “hello friends” for some reason always stuck with me.

    • @Whatchamawhozit
      @Whatchamawhozit Před rokem +6

      Same here dude, I'll never forget sitting there in the theater in 1997, and jumping every time a firecracker went off, there was so much tension on that scene... I haven't seen tension like since Halloween 1978

    • @BULL.173
      @BULL.173 Před rokem +2

      ​@@Whatchamawhozit Oh it was unbearable! lol. I also remember being absolutely fascinated that one of the scene's most jarring moments is dead silence. When one of Rahad's "Super Cool" mix tapes suddenly stops and another starts turning over. With all that geeked up tension mixed with the firecrackers, the deafening music, Rahad's coked up rage about anyone choosing what songs he listens to and then....SILENCE. It just sucks the air out of your lungs, It felt like a race car plowing into an immovable object . I remember the audience give out this awesome collective gasp. The whole thing was just too damn cool. And in case you were wondering, I am indeed jealous you got to see Halloween during its initial theatrical run. One of the top horror thrillers of all time. But I wouldn't exist for another few years lol. Hell I had to sneak into Boogie Nights because I was waaay too young. I bought a ticket to another movie and just kind of slipped in. I think it was that terrible Mr. Magoo movie that starred Leslie Nielsen.

    • @jacksonjacob7791
      @jacksonjacob7791 Před rokem +2

      I'm lucky to have seen this in the theater as a young teenager. One of my all time movies.

  • @NelsonMontana1234
    @NelsonMontana1234 Před 9 lety +448

    Siskel really missed that one. That film was a brilliant and compelling observation on peoples need to feel relevant. Using the 70's and an industry that requires no skill is the perfect metaphor for vacuousness and self delusion.

    • @jameswilliams-of3mv
      @jameswilliams-of3mv Před 9 lety +41

      Siskel was always clueless.. he didn't like Predator, The Crow, Dark City, ALIENS, casino, and this master piece Boogie Nights..

    • @RazzleDazz72
      @RazzleDazz72 Před 9 lety +5

      You summed that up perfectly.

    • @mijreed
      @mijreed Před 9 lety +11

      james williams He didn't like Pulp Fiction either.

    • @annakendrickfan7520
      @annakendrickfan7520 Před 9 lety +12

      Mike Reed You're Wrong Mike,Gene Siskel DID Enjoy "Pulp Fiction".

    • @NostalgiNorden
      @NostalgiNorden Před 9 lety +4

      Mike Reed he even made a special episode about "Pulp Fiction". Its on the Pulp Fiction blue ray ;)

  • @Tehgoat
    @Tehgoat Před 7 lety +35

    These guys go at it harder than a CZcams comments section
    Boogie Nights is one of the most underrated movies of the last 30 years

    • @valgehiir
      @valgehiir Před 6 lety +5

      I think Ebert beccomes angry at Siskle, because for a film critic fail to recognize how brilliant the Boogie Nights is .. is inexcusable, and Ebert is infuriated.

    • @cl759
      @cl759 Před 3 lety +1

      Lol

  • @toucansam3
    @toucansam3 Před 7 lety +99

    One of the best films ever to not get nominated for Best Picture.

    • @nilsandersson4654
      @nilsandersson4654 Před 5 lety +17

      Along with Magnolia. PTA is having the Stanley Kubrick syndrome, his movies are too good for the Oscars.

    • @steveeddy9686
      @steveeddy9686 Před 5 lety +3

      Exactly. It was the best one that year for sure. It's now a classic.

    • @martyjackson4166
      @martyjackson4166 Před 5 lety +4

      The Academy is a hack, it's always been that way

    • @65g4
      @65g4 Před 2 lety +1

      @@nilsandersson4654 your right he is like the modern day Kubrick his films dont get the appreciation they deserve.

    • @jameswilliams-zr8co
      @jameswilliams-zr8co Před rokem +3

      ..its best movie of 1997..than L.A. confidential.. NOT titanic

  • @mattd4616
    @mattd4616 Před 3 lety +14

    This movie still holds up even today, an absolute classic.

  • @johntucker9782
    @johntucker9782 Před 4 lety +107

    When Dirk goes into the studio to record "You Got the Touch" is the funniest scene in the movie. So much cringe.

    • @gabrielidusogie9189
      @gabrielidusogie9189 Před 4 lety +2

      Also layered as Wahlberg at the time was an accomplished musician. Very funny

    • @robertmcelwaine7024
      @robertmcelwaine7024 Před 4 lety +1

      Funny thing about that song is it originally featured in Transformers the Movie back in the late eighties. I recognized it straight away as I watched it so many times as a kid.

    • @waynej2608
      @waynej2608 Před 4 lety +7

      John C. Reilly's dancing. Lmfao!

    • @lucasm3879
      @lucasm3879 Před 4 lety +6

      @@gabrielidusogie9189
      I hope that's sarcasm! Accomplished musician?? Marky Mark and the Funky Bunch?? 😂

    • @notyou8716
      @notyou8716 Před 3 lety +2

      Nina Hartleys cameo 😍

  • @Onmysheet
    @Onmysheet Před 8 lety +218

    I love how Ebert just shuts him down. lol

    • @ziweiyuan
      @ziweiyuan Před 8 lety +9

      +Onmysheet He does nothing of the sort...he just talks over Siskel. Of course Ebert, Mr. Russ Meyer, loved the movie. Head to head Siskel regularly out-argued Ebert.

    • @johnerikmcgrory289
      @johnerikmcgrory289 Před 8 lety +6

      +ziweiyuan "out-argued" ha! Whatever that is... Siskel was a hack who was too film school prof than an actual reviewer

    • @porflepopnecker4376
      @porflepopnecker4376 Před 6 lety +1

      Ebert couldn't shut down his mama.

    • @dogcow666
      @dogcow666 Před 5 lety +1

      Gene Z''L was a bit of. Hack

    • @SuiGenerisAbbie
      @SuiGenerisAbbie Před 5 lety +3

      Ebert was able to shut ANYONE down!

  • @creativeworld3927
    @creativeworld3927 Před 10 lety +59

    The movie's "point" (as pointless as "looking" for a point actually IS in this GREAT film) is that these people live a life that will burn out. The characters (and real life porn industry folk) probably know this deep down. THE ENTIRE 70s decade was a vacuum of drugs, despair & burnt out post hippie culture (a period that Gene Siskel romanticizes with his Travolta 3 piece disco suit that he bought at auction). Hell, Eagles wrote an entire album (Hotel California) about this very subject! But what this film does is take several recognizable characters whom are all running away from their actual lives and give them their 15 minutes of sex disguised as entertainment glory & then slow painful real life fall back to earth (maybe actually a quick painful fall back to earth). PT Anderson does an incredible job of intersecting these stories into a path of precipitous decline. John Lennon said in his last interview the day before he died "hey, wasn't the 70s a drag? Let's make the 80s good". This movie was the evocation of THAT idea.

    • @milascave2
      @milascave2 Před 9 lety +9

      I was there, and yes, there was a lot, of shallowness, a lot of "I wish this was still the sixties," and so forth..That's part of what Punk rock arose to destroy. Regardless, the mid to late seventies, post Viet Nam pre AIDS, was in many ways an American high point. No war, an economy and set of institutions that took care of people. Old discriminatory laws had fallen away. Cheep education, very few homeless, and yes, a combination of acess to birth control and no incurable STDs that made sex pretty easy to obtain. And porn, for the first and last time, that actually had a plot.

    • @RazzleDazz72
      @RazzleDazz72 Před 9 lety +2

      Ethan Davidson You just blew my mind.

    • @andrewburgemeister6684
      @andrewburgemeister6684 Před 3 lety +3

      Yeah, even though the film is about “family” and how people looking for fame can soon find it fleeting, the background setting of the 70’s porn industry in the “Golden Age” is actually a huge driver behind the characters.
      After obscenity laws related to censorship were watered down in the early 70’s, porn suddenly had an upsurge that propelled explicit X-rated titles to compete against “mainstream” movies. Porn stars regularly appeared on talk shows and were treated as celebrities in an era that’s hard to imagine today.
      By the 80’s however, video cassettes, hard drugs and the arrival of HIV/AIDS began to diminish the industry and it’s stars back to the shady underground, even taking a few lives of the burnt-out stars.
      I like how Boogie Nights touched on that era and the history behind it in progressing the rise and fall story, and it’s crazy that people would literally go out to the cinemas to watch a skin flick alongside mainstream non-pornographic films playing, now you can do it at home in the shady dark corners of the internet.

  • @califinn
    @califinn Před 8 lety +14

    I miss watching these two debate. They had a huge influence on me and getting into film. Really miss them both.

  • @gijoey5912
    @gijoey5912 Před 10 lety +13

    I think this is one of the best movies of the 90's. The amount of great actors and performances in this is just crazy.

  • @blinkzone1
    @blinkzone1 Před 9 lety +77

    Boogie Nights is a great film. One of PTA's best.

    • @theoisgod7201
      @theoisgod7201 Před 6 lety +7

      Isn’t every PTA film one of his best

    • @seanwalsh72
      @seanwalsh72 Před 6 lety +4

      It's a toss up between Boogie Nights and There will be Blood.

    • @C1216MC
      @C1216MC Před 5 lety

      @@seanwalsh72
      There will be blood>Phantom thread>Boogie nights

    • @johnnyboycassidy749
      @johnnyboycassidy749 Před 5 lety

      Hard Eight. Nuff said.

    • @estebanmejia3473
      @estebanmejia3473 Před 5 lety +1

      THE MASTER, are u nuts?

  • @MegaMoose1989
    @MegaMoose1989 Před 8 lety +106

    Wow, the makeup could not hide how sick Siskel was here.
    I thought one of Phillip Seymour Hoffmans greatest performances was in this film.

    • @weaselwords99
      @weaselwords99 Před 8 lety +17

      I absolutely agree with your Philip Seymour Hoffman comment--I adored his character in this movie.

    • @MegaMoose1989
      @MegaMoose1989 Před 8 lety +10

      It was ¨Hey the looks like the same guy from twister, Nah can´t be...wow it is! Man he can act!¨

    • @flexiblestrategist9922
      @flexiblestrategist9922 Před 6 lety +2

      He was good in this but you should watch him in "Before the Devil Knows You're Dead". That was a great performance.

    • @linkbiff1054
      @linkbiff1054 Před 6 lety +5

      MegaMoose1989 Siskel was actually fine right here. Watch the videos from 1998 then you’ll see a truly ill Gene. It was heartbreaking

    • @GinjaNinja77
      @GinjaNinja77 Před 4 lety +1

      @@flexiblestrategist9922 Came here to say this. Such a great but underrated and unknown flick. Everybody is great in it, especially PSH

  • @CypressDahlia
    @CypressDahlia Před 8 lety +141

    A pointless movie isn't necessarily a bad one. Siskel is judging the movie as if it were styled after an epic with a resolution that brings both closure and redemption, but most peoples' lives aren't epic. And this is just a movie about peoples' lives. I know a movie made about me would not have a conclusive 'point'.

    • @ferox965
      @ferox965 Před 6 lety +9

      bang on. Boogie Nights is simply an observation of a slice in time and the people who lived in it.

    • @FrancoisDressler
      @FrancoisDressler Před 5 lety +7

      The need for family is a theme in all of PTA's films.

    • @ParentsNightIn
      @ParentsNightIn Před 3 lety +6

      Most stories don’t really have a point, they’re about the journey, not the destination. Siskel seemed to really lack understanding about that facet of storytelling.

    • @DeflatingAtheism
      @DeflatingAtheism Před 3 lety +5

      The movie ends with an explicit reference to Raging Bull, so Siskel might ask himself what the "point" of Raging Bull is as well. The ravages of time is an evergreen theme for movies and literature. At the end of Boogie Nights, we see most of the characters building their lives outside of the porn industry, except Dirk. Dirk is the protagonist, he gets the "happy ending", but we know, beyond the bounds of the movie, his ending will be anything but.

    • @andrewburgemeister6684
      @andrewburgemeister6684 Před 3 lety +2

      @@DeflatingAtheism yes, the Raging Bull homage is so good and it wasn’t even intentional apparently!
      Both ending to ‘Bull’ and ‘Nights’ see the protagonists washed up and well past their prime, but trying to grasp something to cling onto their former glory and reflect on the journey. Neither Jake LaMotta or Dirk Diggler actually become better people at the end, they’re merely the exact same as they were at the start of the movie.

  • @donaldkoelper5807
    @donaldkoelper5807 Před 10 lety +52

    The cast of "Boogie nights" was astonishing, and they deliver one of the best ensemble performances in the past two decades. Curiously, my favorite performance was delivered by veteran adult film actress Nina Hartley, as a self-absorbed sexual libertine whose hapless husband (William H. Macy) was always walking in on her having sex with some other guy. But what's initially premised as a running gag in the film goes tragically awry in a most startling and unexpected way, in a brilliant twist that shows off director Paul T. Anderson at his very best.

    • @martyjackson4166
      @martyjackson4166 Před 5 lety +1

      Holy shit, that is William H Macy... I never even realized, I just always thought of the character and not the actor. That's amazing, what great acting as always from Mr. Macy

    • @TheDreamtheaterlover
      @TheDreamtheaterlover Před 4 lety +2

      And the judge was Veronica Hart

    • @andrewburgemeister6684
      @andrewburgemeister6684 Před 3 lety +4

      That scene shocked me as well when it happened, but it’s a good halfway point in the movie where the arousing excitement of the first half “climaxes” before descending into the uncomfortable second half of the movie.

    • @outofsight0
      @outofsight0 Před 2 lety +3

      The cast is incredible, I don’t think I have seen a movie with such a talented cast- julianne moore, william macy, philip seymour, don cheadle etc… and Burt Reynolds and walhberg what a performance.

    • @MontagTheMagician
      @MontagTheMagician Před rokem

      incredibly stupid plot twist.

  • @Necrotog82
    @Necrotog82 Před 8 lety +30

    Boogie Nights is one of my favorite movies of all time, i just watched it yesterday and its still amazing.

    • @valgehiir
      @valgehiir Před 6 lety +1

      I saw it in theater in 97, but watching it 10 years later left much bigger impression, and now, 20 years later this in my top 10 of all time, right there with Fargo, Goodfellas, Royal Tenenbaums, The Tenant, Spoorloos and so on

    • @johnnymfan5065
      @johnnymfan5065 Před 4 lety +1

      @@valgehiir Amazing how different peoples opinions can be. I dislike all of your faves, but really despise The Tenant. What a totally useless piece of shit. Like many films of the 70s, it was about nothing. I asked myself,"But what am I watching here?" and the answer was nothing, true of so many films of that decade.

    • @johnnymfan5065
      @johnnymfan5065 Před 4 lety +1

      @Elliot Markwardt Really you would love The Passenger by Michaelangelo Antonioni with Jack Nicholson, come to think of it also that POS Last Tango. You know I realized Andy Warhol was very influential on 1970s cinema.You should try his 4 hour Chelsea Girls from 1966. It is on youtube.

    • @johnnymfan5065
      @johnnymfan5065 Před 4 lety

      @Elliot Markwardt Ok peace my brother. Stay safe

  • @wa798
    @wa798 Před 7 lety +22

    The meaning of the movie is about people in search of a family...who & where they find it in! I can't believe these 2 couldn't see that.

    • @valgehiir
      @valgehiir Před 6 lety +4

      Exactly, this film is about desperation, it is a human drama, and dark comedy, something that is very difficult to get on film convincingly. If Siskel didn't see that, he had no business being movie critic. Very few films compete with Boogie Nights, from 90s Happiness is similarly brilliant, but not many more

    • @samsmith4216
      @samsmith4216 Před 4 lety

      We'll put....right.on the money

    • @DeflatingAtheism
      @DeflatingAtheism Před 3 lety +1

      Ebert was getting at that, with his descriptions of Julianne Moore's and Burt Reynold's characters, if Siskel would have just LET HIM TALK.

  • @ericross441
    @ericross441 Před 7 lety +15

    One of the best movies I've ever seen. In my personal top ten.

  • @BookClubDisaster
    @BookClubDisaster Před rokem +8

    What Gene is criticizing is exactly why it's so memorable. I think he wanted a conventional rise and fall story arc. It doesn't quite give it to us. This is why PTA is such an original if often confounding filmmaker. The Master is another great example. Going in, you think it's a takedown of Scientology. Well it is--sort of. But rather than a story in which Juaquin Phoenix's character gets brainwashed and loses his identity, the opposite happens. He TRIES to let himself get brainwashed but in the end he just can't and kind of ends up adrift more or less how he was when he started. Dirk Diggler is the same way--he's sort of changed by his experiences, but not really. We expect Boogie Nights to be a morality play but while it hardly endorses life in the porn industry, PTA refuses to take the obvious route. He seems to say this world has been both good and bad for these characters and there's no simple affirmation or denunciation to be had. Given that Dirk wasn't the brightest bulb and his mom was psychotic, was his life really going to be much better if he never became a porn star? Debatable. PTA is the master of ambivalence and ambivalence can be frustrating but it's also perhaps more honest to real life.

  • @Mp25DIII
    @Mp25DIII Před 10 lety +67

    Sorry, but this is why Roger Ebert is far more recognized as a great movie critic than Gene Siskel. The firecracker scene is one of the all-time great moments in cinema

    • @stephenloflin9984
      @stephenloflin9984 Před 5 lety +4

      That's Cosmo.....he's Chinese, lol.

    • @bigstunna2049
      @bigstunna2049 Před 4 lety

      Literally every movie that has a drug scene now always is inspired from that scene

    • @slipserslipman1841
      @slipserslipman1841 Před 4 lety +2

      Ebert still has some whack opinions though. He loves this film but finds Blue Velvet morally abhorrent.

    • @waynej2608
      @waynej2608 Před 4 lety +1

      @@slipserslipman1841 My thoughts, exactly.

    • @HugoSoup57
      @HugoSoup57 Před 3 lety +1

      Slipser Slipman Ebert also gave a thumbs down to Die Hard and A Clockwork Orange, but a thumbs up to Space Jam and Home Alone 3. Needless to say, he wasn’t perfect.

  • @robertrecchia2642
    @robertrecchia2642 Před 10 lety +13

    Ebert was dead on right! Siskel couldn't handle the meaninglessness of this outstanding movie!

  • @jftube3333
    @jftube3333 Před 6 lety +14

    This was a tremendous movie. Every time I watched Siskel & Ebert, Siskel was often the more critical one when it came to good movies. What's to complain about this movie? Great cast with great individual stories. Great screenplay, great music in the film. The scene Ebert is talking about with the kid throwing firecrackers, is one of the best, on the edge of your seat, 10 minutes in movie making. Excellent movie.

  • @titusbramble7403
    @titusbramble7403 Před 4 lety +27

    Haha “rap singer turned Calvin Klein model, Mark Wahlberg”

    • @fromthehaven94
      @fromthehaven94 Před 3 lety

      *cue Eminem's "one big Funky Bunch" line on TRL*

  • @hippiecheezburger5457
    @hippiecheezburger5457 Před 2 lety +5

    Boogie Nights is one of my favorite movies ever, the ensemble cast of characters, the screenplay, camera work, soundtrack, it’s got everything a Tarantino movie would have but PTA has his own unique style. I think it’s a major achievement in film making.

  • @allanfifield8256
    @allanfifield8256 Před rokem +4

    A movie that has aged really well. One of my favorites.

  • @alexblondangel8760
    @alexblondangel8760 Před 7 lety +5

    I remember watching this fantastic film in a half empty theater thinking how fantastic the acting was and how alive the movie was..Everyone was going Titanic crazy and this got overlooked..One of my favorite movies for sure

  • @ct6852
    @ct6852 Před rokem +7

    Boogie Nights is probably in my top ten. Paul Thomas Anderson is amazing.

    • @andrewburgemeister6684
      @andrewburgemeister6684 Před rokem +1

      Ooh yeah, I can definitely see that! Probably in my personal top 10 and it’s in at least the top 50 for a lot of film connoisseurs!

  • @mikeg.9788
    @mikeg.9788 Před 2 lety +7

    Nobody mentioned those unbelieveable one-shots this movie has, starting with the very first scene. Absolutely amazing.

  • @nateman79
    @nateman79 Před 10 lety +20

    the point of the film is that there is no point. best movie of the 90's!

  • @icegiant1000
    @icegiant1000 Před 4 lety +4

    Boogie Nights was indeed a great movie. I also agree with Ebert that the firecracker scene was spectacular... it succeeded so well at conveying the sense of high stress, combined with tunnel vision and feeling numb... really great movie.

  • @Waltersop
    @Waltersop Před 7 lety +9

    One of my favorite duo, im tired of people only praising ebert

  • @johntechwriter
    @johntechwriter Před 2 lety +6

    This movie shows us the human side of the porn world of 40 years ago, long before it became a giant internet industry. The story of this little production family, headed by Burt Reynolds, is told with great integrity by the director and cast. You become invested in the characters and care about what happens to them. And finally, if you are a younger viewer, it will give you some good examples of what party life in the ‘70s was like.

  • @xendava9360
    @xendava9360 Před 3 lety +15

    This is a film that draws you in subtlety. But once you are in, you are in. You find yourself hooked and you don't even know it. I felt like I was at the partys at Jack's house. I felt almost like the characters in this film were people I knew. They were real. It was really amazing how the film grabbed you and brought you in. If you haven't seen it. I would recommend it because you will trip on its impact on you

    • @ct6852
      @ct6852 Před rokem +2

      They were also all kind of nice people. In reality I doubt they would've been that charming...but who knows.

  • @DividedLine
    @DividedLine Před 9 lety +35

    Ebert always had better taste than Siskel. Watch the Taxi driver review they did in the 1970s. Ebert of course recognized what a great movie it was while Siskel whined about the violence.

    • @valgehiir
      @valgehiir Před 6 lety +4

      and here Siskle used the term 'pornographic' twice in his description, as if describing a porn film. Siskel always was dumb.

    • @waynej2608
      @waynej2608 Před 4 lety +4

      But Ebert missed the boat on Blue Velvet, while Siskel got it.

    • @mysteriousmrocd8384
      @mysteriousmrocd8384 Před 3 lety +3

      There are many times when Ebert missed the point too

  • @neworleansguy10
    @neworleansguy10 Před 4 lety +13

    Man did Siskel ever miss the boat on this one. BN is my favorite movie of all-time. It’s an absolutely perfect film in my opinion, and it heralded the ascension of the best new director of the last 20 plus years. In a role written specifically with her in mind, it also helped to solidify my favorite actress, Julianne Moore, as one of the most talented actresses ever to grace the silver screen. It gets 5 of 5 stars from me. Ebert ended up naming it as the 3rd best film of 1997.

  • @mattwalker5129
    @mattwalker5129 Před 8 lety +9

    I love when these two guys would disagree. I miss them.

  • @xSic187x
    @xSic187x Před 12 lety +2

    I love these guys. These were the two dudes I would look forward to on Sunday early afternoon for movie reviews and just to know about movies. Great guys.

  • @andyjones7514
    @andyjones7514 Před 3 lety +12

    I've been seeing movies for almost 55 years and this is in my top 5. The soundtrack related to the scenes was perfect. A breakout movie for so many actors to many to name here. I can personally relate to the 70's and drugs. Like Ebert said they were a bunch of losers and when everyone broke up they went downhill fast but in the end they all came together cause all they had was each other and with that they had hope for the future. Finally Burt Reynolds best performance by far.

    • @starfishsystems
      @starfishsystems Před 2 lety +1

      I think that's right. It may be that Siskel and Ebert were just a little too far outside that world to get how well the film captured it. They understood the breakdown and disillusionment in the plot, but seem to have missed the redemption which gave it meaning.

    • @ct6852
      @ct6852 Před rokem +1

      One of the best soundtracks ever.

  • @joejohn.
    @joejohn. Před 8 lety +21

    "The mob destroys them." I definitely agree with Ebert's review, but did I miss something in my numerous viewings of this film? The mob?

    • @patgreenhough167
      @patgreenhough167 Před 8 lety +21

      Think he's reffering to Alfred Molina's character, and their drug use/dealing.

    • @Lupinthe3rd.
      @Lupinthe3rd. Před 8 lety +19

      +Joe John when The Col goes away after the whole underage thing burt renyolds needs to turn to a new source of finance since his backer is now gone the new backer is implied to be with the mafia based on the subtle dialouge and he forces jack horner to move to video

    • @quinnrollen
      @quinnrollen Před 6 lety +6

      Joe John It's amazing how they kept the mob ties very subtle. That's why you didn't catch it at first. That's great film writing.

    • @MegaMoose1989
      @MegaMoose1989 Před 6 lety +3

      Pat Greenhough actually that was similar to what happened to cause the wonderland murderers that John Homes was involved in. John Holmes is the real life inspiration for the Dirk Digler character. John Holmes conspired with a group of guys who lived on wonderland to rob an underworld figure of LA(the Molina character was based off). After the robbery, the underground figure realizes John Holmes was involved and forces John to give yup hogs accomplices and has John help with their executions.

    • @47114
      @47114 Před 3 lety

      @@SpikeMichaels floyd gondoli

  • @Contakum
    @Contakum Před 11 lety +2

    It's been at LEAST 5 years since I've seen Boogie Nights - I think I've "only" saw it three times, I want to see it again. Great movie.

  • @chrisbridges655
    @chrisbridges655 Před 6 lety +3

    Several performers who were in the industry during that time (the Golden Era) have said the movie does a great job of showing the very high highs and the ultra lows of the business. One said it was like working in an industry that was bi polar. At times you felt on top of the world and at others you were below rock bottom.

  • @theholymackerel072
    @theholymackerel072 Před 2 lety +4

    Boogie Nights is a masterpiece. Everything about it feels utterly real.

  • @reneedennis2011
    @reneedennis2011 Před 4 lety +3

    I really like this movie, and Burt Reynolds definitely deserved the Oscar nomination he got for his performance.

  • @stevieavail5773
    @stevieavail5773 Před 9 měsíci +2

    What blows my mind is Paul Thomas Anderson was 25 years old when he made this.

  • @Whtxombi
    @Whtxombi Před 9 lety +2

    I loved how they portrayed the characters in Boogie Nights. They were actually nice and friendly people. In fact, when one was discovered to be a pedophile, they turned their backs on him. Great movie and great characters.

    • @andrewburgemeister6684
      @andrewburgemeister6684 Před 2 lety

      Ehh, well Dirk did turn into a narcissistic crackhead in the 80’s and caused problems for Jack, who in himself wasn’t that great of a person looking on it.
      I would say Amber despite her flaws and addiction (which started Dirk’s downhill spiral) was genuine but just had a lot of personal issues, Reed also seems pretty decent and rational throughout the film as well (except for the drugs obviously). And Scotty seemed like a nice guy but just awkward and heartbroken after Dirk rejected his advances.

  • @CaminoAir
    @CaminoAir Před 10 lety +6

    I've got to say this yet again. Both men were ideally suited to TV. Both had great conversational style of presentation. Both genuinely cared about good film making. So, it's a shame that they didn't think more highly of each other at the time they were making the show. I understand that you have to have ego to do this kind of TV criticism and there's always going to be some resentment in a partnership, but why these two guys didn't realise just how good the other was and how more successful they were as a team on the show.....its' regretable and I hope that both re-evaluated eventually.

  • @SNESdrunk
    @SNESdrunk Před 4 lety +14

    Thank you for uploading this. It helps to sum up what makes this show so valuable

  • @Ken_Scaletta
    @Ken_Scaletta Před 2 lety +7

    Burt Reynolds' performance is kind of amazing because on paper his character should come off as sleazy and exploitative, but he never does.

    • @jkta97
      @jkta97 Před 5 měsíci

      The best actors never play what the script has already written for them. Jack’s lines already had sleaze written into them, so Reynolds made the right choice and chose to add warmth and charm to the character instead.

  • @drivingintothedesertuntilt3202

    the circus/funeral music at the start and its return at the end, hits hards and really sums up the rapid high and lows of the adult movie world

  • @mickeyperez342
    @mickeyperez342 Před 10 lety +3

    I really miss these guys. Too bad this clip cuts off. nevertheless thank you for uploading this! Long live Siskel & Ebert

  • @lotiondungeon4205
    @lotiondungeon4205 Před 10 lety +7

    haha woah, Siskel's left eye at 2:03, starts turning into a gaping black void.

    • @DinoMireles78
      @DinoMireles78 Před 10 lety

      LoL.. I was just noticing that!! thought it was me

    • @EuchridEucrow1
      @EuchridEucrow1 Před 10 lety

      This was the year before he had surgery for a brain tumor.

  • @ryaneverett8375
    @ryaneverett8375 Před 3 lety

    Miss watching this with my dad in the 90s. Great show.

  • @mikefitzgerald41
    @mikefitzgerald41 Před 2 lety +2

    Siskel also didn’t like Silence of the Lambs ( he said there was no chemistry between Hopkins and Foster) or Casino, but thought Saturday Night Fever was one of the greatest movies ever made.

  • @willhamilton297
    @willhamilton297 Před 4 lety +3

    I’ve literally had these exact conversations where I’ve been like “X movie is good but X scene wasn’t that great, you know?” And they’re like “BUT WHAT ABOUT Y!! Y WAS FANTASTIC!!” And I’m like “Yes, yes, definitely, but I was talking about x and-“
    “WHAT ABOUT C, IT WAS SO GOOD!!! AND D, THAT TOO!!!”
    “Yes it was great, but-“
    “AND E!”
    But I agree with Ebert, it’s a great movie. And after all of the misery and sadness the ending really brought it back, and while predictable it was a good way to end it I felt.

  • @meangreen8873
    @meangreen8873 Před 7 lety +11

    Favorite film of all time, Back to the Future close behind.

  • @TTM9691
    @TTM9691 Před 2 lety +1

    I love it, they both are giving it a thumbs up and yet STILL manage to argue about it. Roger is like an attack dog!

  • @susanplank1976
    @susanplank1976 Před 5 měsíci

    I agree with Roger- the "pointlessness"/quiet desperation is the point. I remember being touched in the end, that after all that the characters go through, they get up and go on and are like an unconventional family. That snapshot impression of the film stayed with me. Plus vivid, memorable characters, great music, artful filmmaking!

  • @meowco69
    @meowco69 Před 9 lety +5

    Rog nailed it. I'm surprised Gene didn't appreciate this film for what it was.

  • @Pirate7X
    @Pirate7X Před 10 lety +3

    Props to them both, they always gave excellent revealing perspective.
    The film needed no heroes, romance, or cute bowtie wrap-up making a simple judgment about the characters or 'moral'. It told a realistic story of folks living in a phony world they believed would last forever and it didn't so they outcomes happened, reminds of big Tower style record stores against the internet.
    I agree with Gene. Rise In Power to both.

  • @r0mney
    @r0mney Před 9 lety +36

    ebert was the better of the two

  • @mattcastellanos2178
    @mattcastellanos2178 Před rokem +2

    Great film, and the fire cracker scene was outstanding. Thomas jane’s best role, perhaps mark wahlberg’s as well. One of Tarantino’s favorites.

  • @devnconnors6634
    @devnconnors6634 Před 8 lety +16

    Someone remix this video and dub Phillip Seymour Hoffman crying over Gene's words

  • @nickprado7952
    @nickprado7952 Před 9 lety +9

    Tell him Roger!!

  • @williamhicks7736
    @williamhicks7736 Před 4 lety +2

    Boogie Nights is a great film... Never seen a film that has so many interesting characters... The ensemble is incredible! PT Anderson! What can you say!?!

  • @jeremyfalkner9223
    @jeremyfalkner9223 Před 5 lety +1

    You gotta love Ebert, you could tell he was eager to say exactly what we were all thinking. R.I.P

  • @durtyragoux
    @durtyragoux Před 10 lety +12

    a brilliant film, and one of the great period pieces of the era. the greatest part was the ending and its true to life treatment, where people are victims of their own actions, and in turn are left to pick up the pieces and learn from their mistakes- some sooner than others, just as in real life.

  • @paulzenco6182
    @paulzenco6182 Před 9 lety +134

    Siskel was sometimes so totally WRONG it´s embarrasing.

    • @marioiacolucci
      @marioiacolucci Před 7 lety +7

      he thinks he knows everything he was always like that!

    • @smokeylonesome4328
      @smokeylonesome4328 Před 6 lety +19

      Ebert is also incredibly wrong sometimes.

    • @deedonnerramone4757
      @deedonnerramone4757 Před 6 lety +2

      I think Gene was sick at this stage. I don't know, he looks very thin.

    • @martyjackson4166
      @martyjackson4166 Před 5 lety +3

      They both have such different opinions and so many people agree with both of them on different films, that's what made their show so great

    • @langdonalger9219
      @langdonalger9219 Před 5 lety +3

      Star Fucker sure, but not with this one.

  • @kennethzinke9168
    @kennethzinke9168 Před 2 lety +1

    I wish that Gene Siskel is alive in 2022 reviewing American Beauty, Mystery, Alaska, High Fidelity, Corky Romano, The Last Castle, Out Cold, One Hour Photo, Signs,, Sorority Boys, Bringing Down The House, Calendar Girls, Shanghai Knights, The Alamo, I Heart Huckabees, King Arthur, The Ladykillers, The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, Annapolis, Deja Vu, Stay Alive, The Prestige, The Invisible, Burn After Reading, Miracle at St. Anna, Surrogates, Let Me In, The Help, Take Me Home Tonight, Jobs, Movie 43, La La Land, Nocturnal Animals, Down a Dark Hall, Gloria Bell, Tully, Greta, Hellboy, Her Smell, The Mustang, Promising Young Woman and Last Night in Soho and got sick with COVID-19 after reviewing Boogie Nights in 1997.

  • @natalieps2387
    @natalieps2387 Před 3 lety +1

    I really loved this movie. As mentioned they are like this big family of misfits. The best scene is them at the drug dealers house . It's just crazy with the dealer blaring his favorite music & u feel the nervousness of Wahlberg & john Reilly esp when the dealer has that little guy there blowing off little fire crackers which makes the two guys jump bc they know the bodyguard is about to bust them any minute as he is checking out the fake coke. Such a great scene. Anytime I even think of boogie nights the sister christian or Jesse's girl blaring. Burt deserved the oscar that year.
    The casting is pretty great. Wahlberg ( in his breakout movie performance) Reilly, Reynolds, alfredo Molina, julianne moore , heather Graham, thomas Jane phillip Seymour hoffman & William Macy. That's an epic ensemble cast. Finally that sequence of seeing all the characters at their worst is pretty haunting & stayed with me after the movie ended.

  • @CJStew06
    @CJStew06 Před 3 lety +7

    I actually agree with Siskel.
    The characters, attention to detail, dialogue, dramatic tension are all incredibly vivid and well-realized. The ending is just what thew it off for me.
    "Arbitrary" is what Siskel says and I tend to agree. I hear the theme and overall point being meaninglessness and I appreciate that and understand that's likely what PTA intended - I just think we explored these characters so deeply and got to know them really well, the ending sort of drifts off instead of sewing up much resolution. It makes sense to end the way it does, showing each character graduate out of that time period and move on with life. But it feels more like the end of a documentary than an intimate story, imo.

  • @technodroog
    @technodroog Před 7 lety +6

    Roger is completely right, of course

  • @roderickbryce6697
    @roderickbryce6697 Před rokem

    We really really need badly this type of duo doing this type of real review. Please bring it back !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • @cliffslatterly2893
    @cliffslatterly2893 Před 10 lety +2

    I love Siskel and Ebert. They are the two critics everyone listened to.

  • @tuta123seb
    @tuta123seb Před 7 lety +6

    my god i love this film

  • @gideonwaxfarb
    @gideonwaxfarb Před 9 lety +5

    It's interesting that people try to argue that there really is a point to the movie, but most can't seem to agree on what the point actually is. Siskel thought it was pointless. I guess in a way, everyone is probably right; it's possible that a film can be however you interpret it. I personally don't think being a porn star is a pointless existence any more so than being a film star is. Porn has a definite purpose for existing, and it provides a valuable service for those who consume it. I say valuable because of the amount of money people spend on it. Or, at least they used to until the Internet came along.
    As for Eddie/Dirk, he was born with a gift and chose to use it in the best way he could, and I think that's admirable. It's just too bad he was a certifiable idiot.

    • @milascave2
      @milascave2 Před 9 lety

      Gideon Waxfarb Dirk Diggler was based closely on 70s porn star John Holmes. But while Diggler was just dim, Holmes was a genuine Sociopath. So, is a porn stars life meaningless? I don't think so either. People do different things to pay the rent. Is a Zinga executives life meaningless? Well, if meaning is derived only from work, I would say yes.

  • @gallery7596
    @gallery7596 Před měsícem +1

    Oh, Gene. Not every movie has to have a big, important message, and even something we already knew can still be worth re-stating.

  • @maximumoccupancy
    @maximumoccupancy Před 4 lety +2

    Every time Ebert opened his mouth, Siskel would concede a point that proved him wrong.

  • @kaejae24
    @kaejae24 Před 8 lety +5

    Director Anderson , the heir to Robert Altman

    • @rickbrenner6079
      @rickbrenner6079 Před 4 lety

      As much as I know PTA is a fan of Robert Altman and that he does do some "Altman-esque" stuff with his screenplay and his camera, I'd have to think he would perceive "the heir to Robert Altman" moniker as a kind of a back-handed compliment because he may feel as if that moniker pigeon-holes him into being a specific kind of filmmaker who not only has one "filmmaking style", but also it implies that that "style" isn't even of his own original creation, and he, instead, merely "RE-invented" someone else's original filmmaking style.

  • @melissa2688
    @melissa2688 Před rokem +4

    From the first time I've seen this film, it's been one of my favorites. Everyone is so good in it especially Burt Reynolds, William H. Macy, and Don Cheadle.

  • @stevekeetertheloathlydaddy6636

    I love these guys, because they could disagree in a heated manner, but were always respectful of each other. It's kind of funny to think that the politicians of today could learn a lot from watching these two gentlemen handle their disagreements. Oh, and by the way, great movie!

  • @irkedd
    @irkedd Před 4 lety +1

    siskel was a cold-blooded dude. the director made you care about what happened and what you saw happen to the people in the story. the highest highs vs the lowest lows for a lot of misguided people, it was very human.

  • @advancedraymondology2914
    @advancedraymondology2914 Před 4 lety +21

    Still my all-time favorite movie. I haven't seen it in a few years, but for a while I was legit obsessed with it. Must've watched it twenty-five times, at least.
    The "point" is they're broken people who band together and form a makeshift family. It's sweet, sad, funny. Hands down still PTA's best movie.

    • @andrewburgemeister6684
      @andrewburgemeister6684 Před 3 lety +1

      I was absolutely obsessed with it as well after being blown away how good it was, really must watch it again sometime soon.

  • @misterpowers5234
    @misterpowers5234 Před 10 lety +11

    Siskel looked pissed at Roger at some points!

    • @JustinFriesen
      @JustinFriesen Před 10 lety +14

      That was the point of the show, them arguing. ;)

  • @astrodad656
    @astrodad656 Před 4 lety

    Used to watch every review these guys did. Ebert was the man! Miss him still.

  • @abe_froman8360
    @abe_froman8360 Před 3 lety

    This is one of my all time favorites from the 90s.

  • @ryebread7224
    @ryebread7224 Před 8 lety +5

    I consistently agree more with Ebert... I feel he was always more positive and truly under stood film better than Siskel.

  • @TheLastMeehican
    @TheLastMeehican Před 8 lety +4

    I loved Boogie Night's flashy yet reserved style, fantastic cast, and great cinematography. It is one of my favorite PTA films and films in general. That being said, I felt the film could have cut out several scenes and plotlines.

    • @kentonkruger8333
      @kentonkruger8333 Před 5 lety +1

      I thought a lot about that idea after having seen a lot of scenes they did cut floating around the internet, but have actually come to the opinion that cutting more would have hurt rather than helped the movie. Could they have made a much tighter, shorter film and would it have been good? Absolutely. But I think the way this film does a lot of wandering around, switching between stories that are dark and light, important and trivial, central and peripheral, is part of the true magic of the world building that makes this movie so wonderful. They managed to stay in a narrow zone on each of these fronts that tipping any of them much either way would throw the rest off balance and ultimately hurt the movie.
      Again, all a matter of opinion and I fully understand and respect yours.

    • @andrewburgemeister6684
      @andrewburgemeister6684 Před rokem +1

      @@kentonkruger8333 one thing that was oddly never really referenced in the film was the HIV pandemic that would have been taking hold during the 80’s part of the film. It was significant given in the context of Boogie Nights and it’s Story it cost the life of the John Holmes the real life inspiration for Dirk Diggler, and PTA said Dirk probably would have died by the late 1980’s.
      Probably just a nitpick because the rest of the film is perfect!

  • @Wolverines4ever-sl1js
    @Wolverines4ever-sl1js Před 2 lety +1

    Omg I love this movie so many people went on to be very big in Hollywood and love the whole 70's scene with great soundtrack.

  • @HorrorFreak68
    @HorrorFreak68 Před 16 dny +1

    The ending was spectacular!!!