Siskel & Ebert: Best Movies of 1980 - American Gigolo, Being There, Best Boy, Kagemusha

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  • čas přidán 12. 06. 2021
  • In this episode, Siskel and Ebert look at the best films of 1980. These films include: American Gigolo, Being There, Best Boy, Coal Miner's Daughter, Kagemusha, Ordinary People, Raging Bull, The Black Stallion, The Blues Brothers, The Empire Strikes Back, The Great Santini, The Stunt Man and The Tree of Wooden Clogs.

Komentáře • 93

  • @sleuthentertainment5872
    @sleuthentertainment5872 Před 3 měsíci +3

    Kagemusha!
    One of the greatest samurai movies of all time

  • @alanFconrad
    @alanFconrad Před 3 měsíci +3

    BEING THERE.....I loved that movie

  • @crystalshaw8744
    @crystalshaw8744 Před 10 měsíci +4

    Coal Miner's Daughter is one of my favorite movies.

  • @TheVagolfer
    @TheVagolfer Před rokem +17

    if you've never seen "Black Stallion", you missing out. Great cinematography, Mickey Rooney's best performance, and a great story, plus a beautiful Terri Garr.

    • @sleong
      @sleong Před 11 měsíci +1

      Black Stallion was awesome, I actually think Raging Bull is overrated.

    • @exodia9817
      @exodia9817 Před 27 dny

      I remember Terri Garr more as Esme Hogget from the Babe movies

  • @walterclark3198
    @walterclark3198 Před rokem +5

    1980 had some many great movies and now you go to the movies and it's a hit or miss. The movies just aren't the same.

  • @bugsycline3798
    @bugsycline3798 Před 9 měsíci +3

    can we all just agree 1980 was one of the best years ever for film releases? Why can't we have quality like this now a days?

    • @patrickshields5251
      @patrickshields5251 Před 8 měsíci +2

      S&E thinks it’s quite the contrary. They think that 1980 was a significant decline from the groundbreaking personal films of the 70s that were making their jobs so delightful. Having assessed their reviews one year at a time myself, I came to the conclusion that they were frustrated with the 80s in general. The New Hollywood movement ended when Heaven’s Gate tanked and bankrupted a major studio. Exploitation films reached saturation point, the indie film movement was in its infancy, and foreign films were nearly obliterated in North America. Directors had lessened their power. Experimentation and personal vision were discouraged. The major studios regained control they had lost in the late 60s. They both found it to be an artistically safe, unchallenging decade. It was a time when high concept, theme park moviemaking had been entrenched after the successes of Jaws and Star Wars and they were frustrated with the trend year after year. Their thumbs up reviews have slightly increased in the 90s with the indie film movement and the increased amount of foreign films. The 80s movie monoculture they covered is now dead.

    • @johnbrennan4449
      @johnbrennan4449 Před 4 měsíci

      1980 was no better or worse than any other year. It produced some great films, some good films, some average films, some mediocre films, some bad films & some terrible films. one can make that claim about every year during the entire history of cinema, beginning with 1931. not sure about any year before 1931.

  • @Jbaxter85
    @Jbaxter85 Před 2 lety +14

    The Blues Brothers the best musical comedy ever & in the 80's. 👍🌟🌟🌟🌟
    Other movies of 1980
    Raging Bull
    Ordinary People
    The Black Stallion
    Airplane
    Private Benjamin
    American Gigolo
    Gloria
    The Great Santini
    Being There
    Coal Miner's Daughter
    The Shining
    Kagemusha

    • @chrisfinch8637
      @chrisfinch8637 Před rokem

      One of my favorite John Belushi movies of all time. However, can Joliet Jake Blues ever take down Bluto? Hell no!

    • @gheller2261
      @gheller2261 Před rokem

      It's funny and makes no sense given what I typically like, but I have never once gotten through Blues Brothers.

    • @alfje5492
      @alfje5492 Před rokem

      @@gheller2261 Give it another try, Blues Brothers might not be a great movie, but it's a lot of fun!

  • @obviously6thbeliever
    @obviously6thbeliever Před rokem +9

    I'm watching this 42 years later and the nostalgia almost brings tears to my eyes. I know each of these movies well. I just think, 'Wow, John Lennon could have seen these films" (for my own reasons, Lennon's death coincided with a lot of changes in my life)

  • @pariahpokemonwesbragg2904

    Sissy Spacek definitely deserved an award for emulating the siskel and ebbert theme in Coal Miners Daughter...the way she immitated all those instruments of their theme....just wow!!! Lol .jk, jk..

    • @gilraybaker826
      @gilraybaker826 Před rokem +1

      Yes, it seemed a little jazzy and uptempo for Butcher's Hollow

  • @debbieburris9453
    @debbieburris9453 Před rokem +6

    All GREAT FILMS!! Classics we look back on today for their filmmaking. Caddyshack is my all-time favorite comedy ❤️

  • @Comictalent
    @Comictalent Před 2 lety +28

    In a 2 month stretch in summer 1980, The Empire Strikes Back, The Shining, Airplane, The Blues Brothers, and Caddyshack were all released. I really hope theatrical releases come back strong - I'll take that over streaming any day.

    • @iluvmylovebirdandmybudgiet7729
      @iluvmylovebirdandmybudgiet7729 Před rokem +2

      I live in Japan and went to the movies 6 times last summer when I went home...shocked the theaters were always almost empty even on 3.00 dollar day.....

    • @robzilla730
      @robzilla730 Před rokem +3

      Summer '89 was pretty damn good, too. Batman, Ghostbusters 2, Lethal Weapon 2, Indiana Jones, The Abyss....

    • @Comictalent
      @Comictalent Před rokem +3

      @@robzilla730 Awesome summer! I remember also seeing Parenthood, Honey I Shrunk the Kids, When Harry Met Sally, Karate Kid III... lots of fun stuff.

    • @theriddler8695
      @theriddler8695 Před rokem +1

      Five classics! Great films!

    • @robzilla730
      @robzilla730 Před rokem +1

      @@Comictalent Star Trek Final Frontier DID suck though! So did Pink Cadillac...

  • @OneThousandHomoDJs
    @OneThousandHomoDJs Před rokem +24

    Blues Brothers is my all-time favorite. I couldn't respect someone who didn't like it.

  • @kkampy4052
    @kkampy4052 Před rokem +2

    The Cab Calloway scene on stage is one of my all time favorite scenes of all movies.

  • @okay5045
    @okay5045 Před rokem +6

    I loved this movie and the Aretha scene had people applauding in the theater.

  • @DS8379
    @DS8379 Před 2 lety +7

    Blues Bros would be my number 1 but there were some amazing films that year. Wonder what my Chicago dudes thought of The Shining?

    • @linkbiff1054
      @linkbiff1054 Před 2 lety +1

      Gene didn’t care for it. Roger loved it, eventually adding it to his Great Movies list

    • @ricardocantoral7672
      @ricardocantoral7672 Před 2 lety +1

      The Shining received mixed reviews from many critics at the time and it actually earned a Razzie nomination. Roughly a decade passed before it was reappraised.

  • @sejembalm
    @sejembalm Před rokem +7

    2:59 The sub-moron copyright holders who complain of copyright violations that are CLEARLY fair use exceptions (criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research being examples). This is a movie review show and they are going to show film clips and even music from the films. The courts should have panels of people who clear genuine copyright complaints to go forward and fine the people who make specious complaints.

    • @gilraybaker826
      @gilraybaker826 Před rokem +4

      Their small-minded nickel and dime refusal to let a smidgen of their songs be used effectively sterilizes new generations hearing the music and discovering it. In these days when 95% of sold music is retro, this is financial seppuku.

  • @Dohsoda
    @Dohsoda Před 3 lety +12

    1980 was a really good year for films! The Blues Brothers, Ordinary People and The Empire Strikes Back are fantastic films. I'll have to check out the others as they look really interesting.

    • @mr.picoboulevard6758
      @mr.picoboulevard6758 Před 2 lety +2

      And the best of them all, Caddyshack.

    • @patrickshields5251
      @patrickshields5251 Před 8 měsíci +2

      These guys didn’t think so. They’ve both considered the 80s to be the worst decade in the history of American cinema. The personal filmmaking in the 70s that was making their jobs so delightful have died out when Heaven’s Gate bombed and bankrupted a major studio. The indie film movement was in its infancy, and foreign films were nearly wiped out in North America. The era of the director was over. Personal filmmaking was discouraged. The major studios regained control they had lost in the late 60s. It was a frustrating decade. It was a time when high concept, crowd pleasing blockbusters were entrenched after Jaws and Star Wars and they were frustrated by the trend year after year. Their thumbs up reviews have slightly increased in the 90s with the rise of the indie film movement as well as the increasing amount of foreign films. The 80s movie monoculture is dead.

  • @TheJuRK
    @TheJuRK Před 10 měsíci +3

    Was Stanley Kubrick's The Shining ever reviewed by Siskel and Ebert on their show?

  • @MzuMzu-nx1em
    @MzuMzu-nx1em Před rokem +3

    Funny and useful to find out about hidden gems

  • @AndrewTubbiolo
    @AndrewTubbiolo Před rokem +3

    When I saw Risky Business I thought that this was the logical other end of "Ordinary People".

  • @gheller2261
    @gheller2261 Před rokem +9

    Gene and Roger would be offended, as am I, by the fact that the word epic has no meaning anymore because it is used to describe just about everything.

  • @freemangriffin4953
    @freemangriffin4953 Před 2 lety +4

    Tess was my best film of 1980. I am one of the rare people who dislikes Raging Bull.

    • @branagain
      @branagain Před rokem +1

      I dislike Raging Bull, too. Sure the acting is good but watching it is truly a miserable experience.

    • @morgan8757
      @morgan8757 Před 11 měsíci

      @@branagain i dislike raging bull also

  • @seranatus
    @seranatus Před 9 měsíci

    It's insane that America was capable of producing that much year over year. Now, lucky to have one great film a decade.

  • @Madstsone
    @Madstsone Před 3 lety +7

    Video becomes surreal at 3:05.

  • @TariqBusy
    @TariqBusy Před 2 lety +6

    Empire Strikes Back is the first movie I ever saw AT the movies. Father took me, and it was one of the few memories I had of him, for a long time. One of only two or three things that I remember from that year now.
    I still can't get into Deniro in Raging Bull, a little too much of a sociopath. Don't think that I have seen it all the way through in one sitting, ever. And Deniro is my all-time fave.
    Finally gotten around to seeing Ordinary People last year. The last "Chicago" '80s movie that I had not ever watched.
    It was a slog, barely got through it. Mary Tyler Moore was (ahem) a little too much of a sociopath.
    OTOH.
    I've saw the Blue Brothers like three years after its release on TV, and 100 times since.
    I am sentimental to the scene with Aretha, as I was able to visit this local diner as a kid, several times before the building was knocked down. I vaguely remember it now, but possibly the first time I had Corned Beef-on-rye was there.
    1980 would be the year that LA officially surpassed Chicago in size, and something about that impending change made the city work harder to get movies there, funny thing.
    Much love and respect to the late Mayor Jane Byrne for starting a train of nearly 5 dozen films being shot in the city over the course of the 80s; with that statistic in mind.

  • @polreamonn
    @polreamonn Před 2 lety +3

    1980 was a cracking year for cinema.

  • @oobrocks
    @oobrocks Před 2 lety +7

    Raging Bull is easily the best: in fact it's voted the best film of the decade

    • @rickbrenner6079
      @rickbrenner6079 Před rokem +2

      Raging Bull was so so good.
      When I first saw it in 1986,
      it floored me. It blew me away.

    • @oobrocks
      @oobrocks Před rokem +1

      Yes it’s amazing

  • @65g4
    @65g4 Před rokem

    Kagemusha is a great movie

  • @consonantsandvowels1
    @consonantsandvowels1 Před rokem +4

    14:59 Blues Brothers

  • @SB_whatevers
    @SB_whatevers Před 2 lety +5

    You should just edit out the parts that are under copyright and that you cannot use.

  • @rnw2739
    @rnw2739 Před 10 měsíci +1

    Roger Ebert there, correctly predicting the Oscar win of the superb Sissy Spacek.

  • @MediaBuster
    @MediaBuster Před 6 měsíci

    How did they miss:
    1. The Elephant man
    2. The Shining
    3. Stir Crazy
    4. Airplane
    5. Dressed to Kill
    6. Melvin and Howard

  • @emanuellawton7942
    @emanuellawton7942 Před rokem +1

    "The Black Stallion" was released on October 17, 1979 and is considered a 1979 film not a 1980 film.

  • @emanuellawton7942
    @emanuellawton7942 Před rokem +2

    "Being There" actually came out in December 1979 and is considered a 1979 film not a 1980 film.

    • @patrickshields5251
      @patrickshields5251 Před 8 měsíci

      They saw the movie in Chicago in 1980. Film distribution in Chicago tended to be iffy back then.

    • @alanFconrad
      @alanFconrad Před 3 měsíci

      awesome film RIP Peter Sellers

    • @emanuellawton7942
      @emanuellawton7942 Před 3 měsíci

      @@patrickshields5251 They saw it too late to make their Best of 1979 list.

    • @patrickshields5251
      @patrickshields5251 Před 3 měsíci

      @@emanuellawton7942 Like I said, film distribution in Chicago was iffy back then.

  • @66Bunn
    @66Bunn Před rokem

    I have to say, I agree with Gene’s list more that Roger’s. Then again, I always found myself agreeing with Gene mor often than Roger

  • @gilraybaker826
    @gilraybaker826 Před rokem

    Wow, i bet people were falling over themselves to go see Tree of Wooden Clogs.

  • @pandaeyes42
    @pandaeyes42 Před 2 lety +1

    DISCO PANTS AND HAIRCUTS!!!

  • @alcabane3125
    @alcabane3125 Před 2 lety +1

    The Distinguished Gentleman is a 1992

  • @wessikes
    @wessikes Před rokem

    5 commercial breaks in 30 minutes are to many.

  • @HC-cb4yp
    @HC-cb4yp Před rokem +2

    You can't look at this list and then tell me today's Hollywood is as vibrant and capable today. The superhero films and the woke BS have killed it.

  • @theriddler8695
    @theriddler8695 Před rokem +4

    The Empire Strikes Back has had of course more staying power than all those films listed.

  • @montysloungetv
    @montysloungetv Před 2 lety +3

    greatest bond song
    hamlisch/sager

    • @TariqBusy
      @TariqBusy Před 2 lety

      Live and let Die is close though.

  • @roycegrubic2620
    @roycegrubic2620 Před 9 měsíci

    um...how about a bigger TV? You're only using about 30% of the CZcams screen.

  • @sylvesterquast9906
    @sylvesterquast9906 Před 2 lety +9

    Raging Bull is really one of most overrated movies ever

    • @TariqBusy
      @TariqBusy Před 2 lety +2

      Seriously. It puts me to sleep. So does Ordinary People.

    • @morgan8757
      @morgan8757 Před rokem +1

      i'm with you

    • @branagain
      @branagain Před rokem

      I soooo agree with you.

    • @chrisfinch8637
      @chrisfinch8637 Před rokem +2

      Maybe, but it did manage to give Robert DeNiro an Oscar, though. I’m just surprised he didn’t earn one for his performance in “Taxi Driver”, in which was indeed a classic, a lot more than Raging Bull.

    • @reneedennis2011
      @reneedennis2011 Před rokem +1

      I haven't seen it.

  • @princenamor1939
    @princenamor1939 Před rokem

    These guys were so pretentious...lol

  • @michaelkitchen4174
    @michaelkitchen4174 Před rokem +1

    blues brothers is the worst movie of the 80s considering what came after it but I do like the musical cut scenes and the un buttered toast part.

  • @arnoldlitke5084
    @arnoldlitke5084 Před rokem +5

    Siskel and Ebert this is what my mother watched every Saturday back in the 1980,s I was 12 years old in 1980 and I loved the movie the shinning. The weird thing is my mom never ever went to a movie in the theater . She waited a year to watch it on cable TV. She would make me run to the movie theater to buy her a large fresh buttered popcorn for her every Saturday so she can watch Siskel and Ebert! When a horror movie came on at 10:00 pm on week nights she would call me when I was already in bed and let me come down stairs to watch it with her, in other words she was a chicken but by me been there at age 12 13 14 15 she was able to make it through the horror movie.😜🪓🪓🪓🤣🤣🤣😂😂😂🗡️🤭🤭🤭👍

    • @reneedennis2011
      @reneedennis2011 Před rokem

      Cool 😎 memories!

    • @donpinkston5263
      @donpinkston5263 Před rokem

      Thanks for sharing those memories of your mom! She sounds like quite a character!

  • @pacificblue3955
    @pacificblue3955 Před rokem +1

    i guess you had to plaster siskel & ebert's face on the screen to skirt around copyright infringements when they would show clips of the movies?

  • @freddyfurrah3789
    @freddyfurrah3789 Před rokem +2

    American gigolo was boring.