A Brief by Doug Draper
If you love going to movies like I love going to movies, you might also enjoy reading about them by great movie reviewers.

Roger Ebert at right with his best movie-loving buddy Gene Siskel. About the last of the best in the movie review/critic genre.
And few movie reviewers were better over the past 30 or 40 years than Roger Ebert, who died, at age 70, after a long battle with cancer this April 4.
Roger Ebert was a great movie lover and reviewer from Chicago, and he was also a great friend of what has become a Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF for short) that might not have grown, around the world, as successfully as it has without the endorsement of such a high-profile film reviewer as Roger Ebert.
Roger Ebert died this April 4th and with him dies a good deal of what is left of any kind of thoughtful writing about movies. As someone who studied and did my best to practice good journalism back into the 1970s, 80s and for a few more years beyond that before the serpents of capitalism slithered under the tent, he was one of the last individuals left who had the integrity to tell it like it was about film and whatever movie was released at the time.
Now, movie coverage is more often about how many millions of dollars the latest ‘blockbuster’ made at the box office this week. Most broadcast or newspaper corporate chains would not dare to have someone like Ebert do an honest review on a movie that might, by the way, be produced by one of their corporate affiliates, for fear that a poor review might offend their corporate masters.
Roger Ebert was one of the last of the movie reviewers from the good old days when the best of people like him could give you and I the real goods on whether or not a film was worth a couple of hours of our lives’
No one is replacing him and it is a God-damn shame. His last words in a movie column as recently as a few days ago were; ‘See you at the movies.’
Next time I am in a movie theatre, will see you there in soul and spirit Roger. You and your old buddy Gene Siskel, who died about 20 years ago from cancer, were among the best in delivering the honest goods on movies.
And by the way, the loss of columnists like Roger Ebert and Gene Siskel falls in tandem with the loss of other journalists for national and local papers across the United States and Canada. The corporations that rule over most newspapers today could not give a fig if they have a Roger Ebert on staff.
That leaves us with a mission, if we care enough to clime on borad, to generate new voices – free from fear or favour – on independent, online sites like this and others to replace them.
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