How do you encompass your feelings about someone who meant
so much to you? I don’t know if it’s possible, but I’ve got to try. Roger Ebert
was the only film critic I ever really loved. I’ve got a bunch that I respect,
still more that I enjoy reading/listening to, but Roger was the only one that I
loved. To read his work was to drink deeply at the well with someone who knew a
lot about what he was talking about and had the grace to want to share it with
you in a way that you could understand.
I knew that I loved movies from a young age, and was fairly
excited to learn that I could turn that love into a Bachelor’s Degree. I took a
strange path to that degree, caused in some ways by my own timidity coupled
with some stubbornness and a desire to avoid a heavy workload. There is some
debate about exactly what the word “heavy” means in this context. Anyhow, I
found a way to graduate while avoiding the classes that would force me to watch
a ton of movies every week, having seen fellow students struggle to keep up and
not wanting to be pushed into watching films that I didn’t want to.
I’d been a fan of “Siskel and Ebert” and later “Ebert and
Roeper,” and had read Roger’s work for years, but something changed around the
time I graduated from college. In reading more of his work, I wanted to start
watching the movies that he was talking about. He didn’t just talk about movies
from the last year or two and he didn’t just talk about American films. He
talked about all kinds of films from all over the world and, if he loved the
movie he was talking about, he passed that enthusiasm along. He was looking at
films in a larger context than anyone else I was familiar with at the time. It
wasn’t important what language was used, how much money was made, or how famous
the filmmakers were. It only mattered if the film was good or not, and if that
film had something of value to say about the human experience.
So, armed with Roger’s Great Movies list, a Netflix
account, and an open mind, I started making my way through the films that he thought were
important. It’s safe to say that I might not have encountered Kieslowski,
Antonioni, Godard, Herzog, Bunuel, Truffaut, the Dardennes, or Ozu if not for
Roger. It’s possible that I might have found them through some other avenue,
but I wouldn’t have experienced them in the same way.
Roger had become my teacher. Many is the time I’ve watched a film from his list, found myself either bewildered or unconvinced, and turned to his writing to provide illumination. I will not say that my mind has been changed each time, but I almost always felt that I understood the film better after reading what he had to say.
I think his real gift as a critic came from the way that he
thought about characters. In his mind, they were supposed to be real people,
and that formed a large part of the foundation for his appreciation or aversion
to a particular film. He would find ways to contextualize a character’s actions
in such a way as to make you realize not only what was happening but also the
magnitude of something that might have slipped right past you.
He fought against cancer for eleven years. He was a lucky
man to have been able to hold it off for so long. If he was great before that,
he became something different altogether after the surgeries that robbed him of
his ability to speak. Left with no other recourse, he wrote and wrote and
wrote, and it wasn’t only about the movies anymore. His blog was a thing of
beauty, a mind in full flight, unfettered by limitation and filled to the brim.
The first time I ever got to go to a Steak N Shake (years ago around 1 AM
somewhere in Kentucky), I only had any idea of its existence because of the many
times that Roger had gone into depth of his love for the place.
I never met him, but had the chance to speak with him once a
few years ago through the web. He’d written a blog entry about Bergman (I
think), I commented, and Roger responded. I’d read his blog since the
beginning, but this was the first time that he’d ever responded to one of my
comments. It meant a lot. Roger read and vetted every single comment on his
blog, but only responded to a few. That one of mine got a response is something
that I’ll always treasure.
As a film critic, I don’t think that you can do any better
than Roger. More than that though, I think that he was a thoroughly decent
person, and my heart goes out to his wife and family tonight.
Death is never easy, but part of what makes this so strange was the tone of last blog post, "A Leave of Presence." Even as talked about the recurrence of cancer in his body, he seemed to be so full of life and, more than anything, hope for the future. I had no idea that he was so close to the end. Maybe he didn't either.
Death is never easy, but part of what makes this so strange was the tone of last blog post, "A Leave of Presence." Even as talked about the recurrence of cancer in his body, he seemed to be so full of life and, more than anything, hope for the future. I had no idea that he was so close to the end. Maybe he didn't either.
I know that he didn’t fear death, and I think that that must
have been a great comfort. There is a certain kind of tranquility that comes
from a man who knows that he has done enough in life to be satisfied. There are
many things about Roger’s work that I admire and hope to be able to emulate in
my own way, but I think that’s the quality of his that I most admire, along with his fundamental decency as a human being. I hope that, when I face the end, I can look
back as he did, know that I have done what I wanted to do, and be thankful for
all that I have been given.
Roger taught me a lot. I am grateful for that. I miss him now, and I will miss him always.
-----
"‘Kindness’
covers all of my political beliefs. No need to spell them out. I believe that
if, at the end of it all, according to our abilities, we have done something to
make others a little happier, and something to make ourselves a little happier,
that is about the best we can do. To make others less happy is a crime. To make
ourselves unhappy is where all crime starts. We must try to contribute joy to
the world. That is true no matter what our problems, our health, our
circumstances. We must try. I didn't always know this, and am happy I lived
long enough to find it out."
From Go Gentle Into That Good Night, posted on 5/2/2009.
From Go Gentle Into That Good Night, posted on 5/2/2009.
2 comments:
I definitely feel the loss of Roger Ebert as if he'd been in my family or close circle of friends. Enjoyed your tribute post.
Thanks, Julia. I think that a lot of people feel that way. As a friend said, Roger was like a good friend that you'd just never met.
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