Telling people there's a surprise at the end of a movie will often ruin the surprise. Someone told me there was a twist at the end of Shutter Island and I figured it out easily. I wouldn't have seen it coming otherwise.
1999 was a fantastic year for movies. The Sixth Sense and The Thomas Crown Affair are great examples why. You also have The Green Mile, The Cider House Rules, American Beauty, The Matrix, Fight Club, Toy Story 2, The Insider, etc. You also have classics like The Mummy, Galaxy Quest and Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me
Saw this episode a week after I returned from a vacation in France... Weird since I was excited at the time to watch The Sixth Sense, and cannot even get over The Blair Witch Project either after watching it
This has to be the guest reviewer Roger Ebert said on Tom Snider’s Late Late Show that didn’t know movies or how to talk about movies and lied on his resume about his experience. He wouldn’t name him on the episode but look it up and watch Ebert on Late Late Show & you’ll see this is probably the guest reviewer he was talking about.
Ok so I'm trying to piece together what you've said. I can't find this episode or soundbite you're referring to. Siskel died in Feb 1999. Snyder's final show was in Mar 1999 and that week he had Ebert on after the Oscars and he made no mention of a guest reviewer who lied. There's nothing out there about Wesley Morris being a fraud. The only guest co-host to ever face any controversy was Harry Knowles.
The funny thing is, seeing that morris is not pretty popular from bpt the new york times and the ringer podcasts, plus the fact that he's the only man WITH 2 PULITZER PRIZES IN CRITICISM, leaves me kimda stumped at how often I feel that he's just plain bad. That doesn't mean i disagree with his criticism, I just think he's insufferable.
@@danorthsidemang3834 Well it's a little known fact that Eddie Murphy was in Life. The same year he did that Steve Martin film. Also he was also in The Out of Towners.
Bowfinger and The Sixth Sense are in my best mainstream studio-produced and released films of 1999...
Telling people there's a surprise at the end of a movie will often ruin the surprise. Someone told me there was a twist at the end of Shutter Island and I figured it out easily. I wouldn't have seen it coming otherwise.
Agreed. I knew what it would be with 'Sixth Sense' once I got the opening.
You could hardly avoid it. The ending of this movie was a cultural phenomenon, you had to legitimately try hard to avoid hearing about it
Renee Russo and Pierce Brosnan have some of the best on screen chemistry in cinematic history and that's a damn fact!
1999 was a fantastic year for movies. The Sixth Sense and The Thomas Crown Affair are great examples why. You also have The Green Mile, The Cider House Rules, American Beauty, The Matrix, Fight Club, Toy Story 2, The Insider, etc. You also have classics like The Mummy, Galaxy Quest and Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me
...& Three Kings
Stir of Echoes and Blair Witch
I loved the Sixth Sense, Mystery Men, and Bowfinger I think in their own right are classics
Saw this episode a week after I returned from a vacation in France... Weird since I was excited at the time to watch The Sixth Sense, and cannot even get over The Blair Witch Project either after watching it
The fact that this and the Blair witch Project were in the theaters together is just absolutely amazing!
Dick and Mystery Men are great movies that I never hear much about.
1999 was actually a great year for movies. Kinda fitting being the last year of the century when the medium started.
when i see that scene with the bowling ball i always think of the music video for All Star.
This has to be the guest reviewer Roger Ebert said on Tom Snider’s Late Late Show that didn’t know movies or how to talk about movies and lied on his resume about his experience. He wouldn’t name him on the episode but look it up and watch Ebert on Late Late Show & you’ll see this is probably the guest reviewer he was talking about.
Ok so I'm trying to piece together what you've said. I can't find this episode or soundbite you're referring to.
Siskel died in Feb 1999. Snyder's final show was in Mar 1999 and that week he had Ebert on after the Oscars and he made no mention of a guest reviewer who lied.
There's nothing out there about Wesley Morris being a fraud. The only guest co-host to ever face any controversy was Harry Knowles.
I don't think he was referring to Morris. The guys a racist but he was invited to guest host several times, probably wasn't who ebert was referring to
I thought the one was someone they didn't even use the segment. It was a sports writer of some sort, not this guy.
The funny thing is, seeing that morris is not pretty popular from bpt the new york times and the ringer podcasts, plus the fact that he's the only man WITH 2 PULITZER PRIZES IN CRITICISM, leaves me kimda stumped at how often I feel that he's just plain bad. That doesn't mean i disagree with his criticism, I just think he's insufferable.
My dad really loved The 6th Sense.
That explains a lot
@@danorthsidemang3834 Well it's a little known fact that Eddie Murphy was in Life. The same year he did that Steve Martin film. Also he was also in The Out of Towners.
When did Tommy Davidson do movie reviews? 🤨
Dude had zero interest in The Sixth Sense but couldnt shut up about Mystery Men. Wow
The 6th Sense 👍🌟🌟🌟🌟
Bowfinger 👍🌟🌟🌟
Dick 👍🌟🌟🌟
Mystery Men 👎🌟
Mystery Men!
lol.. you can't really review The Sixth Sense and do it any justice without giving away the ending.
they basically spoiled the movie by telling people that there was a twist at the end. they always did that!! lol
This guy actually said he liked mystery men publicly. Yikes…