At the Movies (TV Series 1982–1986) Poster

(1982–1986)

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9/10
Love-Hate Movie Critics Relationship!
ShelbyTMItchell12 April 2013
Warning: Spoilers
With the earthly departure of Roger Ebert, the original movie critics. As both he and the late Gene Siskel made a so-called love-hate relationship of their movies turning out to being very helpful for the movie industry.

Gene kind of played the straight man to Roger's nerdy antics. As both really seem to love to playing the love-hate relationship. But one thing for certain was that both love movies and really helped out the movie industry. Not actually hurt it.

Richard Roper who replaced Gene after he died, was great. But can never hold a candle to Gene. Now the balcony has been closed forever. RIP Gene and now Roger! Both of you will be missed!
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9/10
Fs
stickskac20 April 2022
Warning: Spoilers
Motels. Google is going on and I have to go back and get the phone with my family Feud and Maddie and her friends and Maddie B are going on Halloween and Maddie B and C and B and C.
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10/10
This was siskel and ebert at their peak before they went mainstream
justin-fencsak2 July 2020
Back in the 80s, Siskel and Ebert were the most popular movie critic duo on television and many fans liked their thumbs up and thumbs down trademark similar to how Rotten Tomatoes does their ratings as well as Metacritic and of course IMDB!!! The duo first made their debut on public tv on Chicago station WTTW and then in the 80s moved to syndication with Tribune before expanding with a 90s show under Disney ownership years before they died. A cartoon called The Critic was a hit with fans and lampooned Siskel and Ebert.
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Siskel & Ebert during the Tribune years
donmccullen-117 December 2002
With Gene Siskel and Roger Ebert becoming house hold names their popularity forced the duo to move from public TV and commercial TV. Tribune who Ebert worked for was ready willing and able to bring not only Ebert but his TV partner Siskel as well, along with their weekly discussions about current movies playing. The show was titled "At the Movies" which was taken from their closing while they were working for WTTW-TV, their local PBS outlet who got them started.

"At The Movies" was the show that introduced the viewers to their "Thumbs Up/Down" trademark, but it not become popular during the years at Tribune but rather when Siskel & Ebert made to move to Disney which they eventually did. They took the Thumbs but could not take the "At the Movies" phase in tow.

Tribune replaced them with Rex Reed and Bill Harris. The later would be replaced by female movie critic named Dixie Whatley. At the Movies however ran out of gas quickly than Sneak Previews did. The programming was really more of a stepping stone for Gene Siskel and Roger Ebert and their rise to fame.

You have to give the show credit for putting Siskel and Ebert in the original opening of the program, in which both wait in line with other people to go to a show. Best part is when one has a briefcase with refreshments inside. The other goes for notes from a vending machine. Then both quietly go up to the balcony (It's closed), and then take their usual places in begin their show.
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7/10
This could be the most interesting buddy-show ever !
elshikh45 September 2009
Out of the most prominent duos that the American TV showed in 1982 like Sam and Diane of (Cheers), Laura Holt and Remington Steele of (Remington Steele), or Cagney & Lacey of (Cagney & Lacey), still Siskel & Ebert are one of the most interesting, informative and droll duos ever been in a show, not in 1982 only, but at all. Thanks for the miracle of internet that made me watch countless episodes of their show.

Gene Siskel, who began working for the Chicago Tribune in 1969, teamed up with Roger Ebert, the film reviewer of the Chicago Sun-Times, in 1975 to host a show which eventually became "Sneak Previews". In 1982, their new show, "At the Movies", was produced. Then after 4 years, its commercial version "Siskel & Ebert & the Movies" was made with just more lights in and around the show. Their duo, and not the show, ended with Siskel's death in 1999.

I felt that Siskel was the more charismatic and the less emotional. Ebert with his corpulent presence, baby face, big glasses, and the way he straightens his sitting before saying anything important--was more innate and close to a movies nerd who, at one moment, would suppress his anger with fading low tone.

When asked, on Johnny Carson's The Tonight Show, what he thought was the biggest difference between himself and Ebert, Siskel unhesitatingly replied: "I'm a better reviewer than he is." But a few moments later, he said that anyone who read a Roger Ebert review would read "an extremely well-written review". Thumps Down for that Gene. You should never have said it. This is no sagacity. And even if he was speaking what he thought the truth, then he should have left the viewers to say it, not him.

Some said that Siskel and Ebert's "dislike" for each other was well known in the industry. You can see clearly that it was a love/hate relationship. But I felt that Siskel was the bully one. And you can observe how he was starting it. From slightly provocative notices like: "Yes, I agree with you, but you forgot that..", instead of: "Yes, and I think also that..". To explicitly ugly ways to ruin Ebert's attempts to say something funny. And you'd never see Ebert using the same style with Siskel.

There are some of the 1980s outtakes, present on YouTube, that touch off that where Siskel even curses Ebert, and begins - what seems as usual joking - a non-stop, running gags about Ebert's love of food. True that Ebert fought fire with fire perfectly, but that was mean to begin in the first place. They both refused to be guest star in movies or TV shows, unless the animated TV series "The Critic". I guess they accepted it just for one scene where they fight by bare hands in airplane to smash its door and continue fighting on the wing, not for the main plot about them being separated, then can't stand a partner else the other.

I liked the show's opening credits and format. For one reason, their setting in the empty theater somehow represented that they own the cinema, or that they're the viewers whom stay for more time, than the regular viewer, to discuss, debate, and evaluate. It's easy to notice the show's effect when you find the duo's famous remarks and expressions in numerous other reviews we read.

Richard Roeper, or Ebert's Chicago Sun-Times colleague, was a fine successor after Siskel's death. He's a bit childish, but that's a nice characteristic of all things (In fact, neither Ebert nor Siskel looked that young even in their thirties!). You can't decide was it a relationship where Roeper was the funny lead, and Ebert was the wise mentor? Or that Ebert was the old lead, and Roeper was his sidekick?! I think it was kind of a father/son relationship where both got the same intelligence. After Ebert left for his health problem, I kind of couldn't care less with what the show presents.

Sometimes it wasn't satisfying enough to review a movie in 3 minutes (half of them are for telling the story), but that's the show's specialty and time anyway. And I hated the matter of "I couldn't agree more"!!; there wasn't any drama there, and instead of disagreeing with one of them and agreeing with the other, you find yourself disagreeing with both of them there! (Pulp Fiction, Titanic; I was mad not to see someone with me on these!).

These 2 buddies didn't have the attraction or the stardom of the leads of "Cheers", "Remington Steele", "Cagney & Lacey", only their arguments, being more cultural, and believe it or not, more persistent too.
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1/10
An Honest Review
generationofswine11 March 2019
This represents a dawn of realization in my childhood. It honestly marks the first time in my life I sat back and thought "I don't care what you think."

And I still feel that way about critics, especially now that the critics are attacking fans along with production companies.

But, hey, I review almost everything that I see here on IMDB, and I can guarantee you that I don't do it because I want to influence what YOU think, I do it because it's fun.

The bottom line is that this is a series of mostly horrible reviews on films that still managed to achieve their goal, to entertain.

So, nevermind what the critics think, like what you want. Hate what you want.
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