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Life Itself (2014)
10/10
Thumbs Way Up
5 July 2014
As someone who literally grew up at the movies--my mother took me to anything and everything from my infancy right through my early childhood, until I was old enough to go by myself--my love for and fascination with film is deeply entrenched in my way of thinking, my way of writing, my way of viewing life. And Roger Ebert (with Gene Siskel) was a vital discovery, someone whose opinions were always worth hearing (or reading); someone whose love for film and his way of thinking about it seemed to legitimize my lifelong instinct to appraise and quantify the value of what I was being shown on the big screen. It was all right to question things, or to accept the questionable.

I was staying at my favorite hotel in London some years ago (the mid 80s, as I recall) with a writer friend from Oslo (another lover of film and theater). She and I were having a late-night post-theater meal in the lounge when Roger came bustling through on the way to his room. I nearly levitated from my seat at the sight of him, and after he'd passed from view, I tried, a bit deliriously, to explain to my friend who this man was, and his importance to the world of film. She was awe-struck when I spoke of the format of the show, of two men agreeing or disagreeing over forthcoming films. There was nothing like it anywhere outside of the U.S.

As I watched this documentary, I kept remembering that evening at Brown's Hotel way back then, thinking that Roger would have given this film a wholehearted thumbs up. It is wonderfully coherent, and offers insights into the man, into his extraordinary talents and his tremendous enthusiasm, not just for film but for life and the people he loved. It's not hard to understand how difficult it was for his remarkable wife Chaz to let him go.

Like all good films, it left me sated but sad, missing those years of the wonderful weekly excitement of sitting down with my daughter (now also a lifelong film buff) to watch Sneak Previews and, subsequently, At The Movies. This is a film *not* to be missed. It succeeds on every level.
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Iris (I) (2001)
9/10
Beautifully done
1 April 2002
This is by no means the cheeriest movie ever made, but it's an honest and powerfully affecting portrait of writer Murdoch's disappearance beneath the weight of Alzheimer's. Judi Dench, as always, brings everything to the role--a naked, wrenching performance. The entire cast is splendid; the script tight and unsentimental, the editing crisp and clean. There is great subtlety and humor, too. This is an eminently worthwhile and important film.
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9/10
Refreshing
1 April 2002
This film is a delight: funny and touching and wise. The situations are well-conceived, the cast is very good indeed (even the usually over-the-top Felshuh turns in a fine performance here); there isn't a cliche in sight and the characters are all original and very human. Definitely worth seeing.
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