Siskel & Ebert Saving Private Ryan (1998) Review

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  • Опубліковано 3 гру 2024
  • Siskel And Ebert both love the 1998 oscar winning film "Saving Private Ryan" Directed by Steven Speilberg

КОМЕНТАРІ • 1,1 тис.

  • @mirandac8712
    @mirandac8712 8 років тому +326

    So touching - Siskel visibly fighting the cancer, Ebert's love for his friend equally visible.

    • @markdodson5866
      @markdodson5866 6 років тому +3

      miranda c exactly what I was thinking.

    • @samslick9000
      @samslick9000 5 років тому +10

      Gene was dead in less than a year after this review

    • @gregpelfrey9506
      @gregpelfrey9506 5 років тому +19

      You are so right. Being a fan of these two guys and watching this show every week as a kid, this clip is actually hard for me to watch because there is no doubt that Siskel is really struggling here.

    • @prezidenttrump5171
      @prezidenttrump5171 4 роки тому +1

      You're just gay.

    • @grungefreak10
      @grungefreak10 3 роки тому +17

      It really is saddening. Gene Siskel passed away in early 1999. Roger Ebert passed away 14 years later. They got to do what they loved until the very end and they will always be remembered fondly.

  • @squamish4244
    @squamish4244 12 років тому +71

    Saving Private Ryan came out at the right time, when many of the veterans of World War Two were still alive. It instilled in us the horror of what they went through and was like a final salute to them. And Band of Brothers.

    • @dnasty312
      @dnasty312 2 роки тому +3

      My great-grandpa, a WWII veteran, sadly passed in 1996. I often wonder what he would have thought of this film

    • @marklewen9384
      @marklewen9384 3 місяці тому

      Sasha & kumani..

    • @squamish4244
      @squamish4244 3 місяці тому

      @@dnasty312 My grandfather didn't know why we wanted to watch it. For him, it wasn't a movie, it was real-life brutality.

  • @helmerrudrogen1
    @helmerrudrogen1 10 років тому +312

    I miss these guys, Siskel and Ebert.

    • @HEAD3455
      @HEAD3455 10 років тому

      the lord acts in mysterious ways!!!

    • @AlwaysHalloween000
      @AlwaysHalloween000 9 років тому +3

      that cliche is sooooooooo lame

    • @rabidtrumpazee5204
      @rabidtrumpazee5204 7 років тому +3

      say what? why? film critics are douches

    • @bryansarracino8623
      @bryansarracino8623 7 років тому +5

      MrBrenman21 I miss that show too. They had a great dynamic together

    • @Falton911
      @Falton911 7 років тому

      Rabid Trumpazee anybody with any sort of profession is a douche

  • @hellogoodbye4061
    @hellogoodbye4061 3 роки тому +20

    Siskel and Ebert, to their credit, never sold out to Hollywood...always reviewed from their heart and expertise.

    • @tedcity5861
      @tedcity5861 3 роки тому +5

      Yes. Todays reviewers have no credibility with their PC / Feminist agendas .

    • @GeorgeZimmermen
      @GeorgeZimmermen 3 роки тому +1

      @@tedcity5861 fucking liberals!

    • @steveleeart
      @steveleeart 5 місяців тому

      @@GeorgeZimmermenfucking conservatives

    • @mclink99
      @mclink99 4 місяці тому

      ​@@GeorgeZimmermenI know, right?

  • @Xayjohns
    @Xayjohns 8 років тому +256

    I watched this one week ago, in its entirety for the first time. This is one of the greatest movies that I've ever seen.

    • @27519
      @27519 8 років тому +8

      Long time coming, have you seen Schindeler's List? If not, that one is gonna fuck you up.

    • @Xayjohns
      @Xayjohns 8 років тому +3

      Justin Schreiner Yeah, I saw it in high school. Depressing, but excellent.

    • @timpatjoe
      @timpatjoe 8 років тому +2

      +XRJ92. You should have a look at the wind that shakes the barley and Hunger

    • @suzycreamcheesez4371
      @suzycreamcheesez4371 8 років тому +3

      absolutely true

    • @ahappyguy7324
      @ahappyguy7324 8 років тому +4

      Band of Brothers is also an amazing tv mini series

  • @reagalbeagle1
    @reagalbeagle1 3 роки тому +46

    I remember watching this in the theater and how much anxiety I got right before the last battle scene. The theater was shaking and the sound of the tanks moving slowly through the streets was so eerie. That was by far the most intense moment I ever experienced watching a movie.

    • @Mario_N64
      @Mario_N64 3 роки тому +4

      That "camera shake" effect was so unsettling. Later I read they actually screwed up the camera intentionally to get it.

  • @ShadyNJ
    @ShadyNJ 11 років тому +868

    The fact this lost to Shakespeare in Love tells you the Oscars don't mean shit.

    • @darkl3ad3r
      @darkl3ad3r 11 років тому +7

      Oh shit ShadyNJ, you're on Liveleak too right? Coincidence man. And agree with what you said. Oscars are a joke.

    • @ShadyNJ
      @ShadyNJ 11 років тому +6

      *****
      Haha! Yeah man. Sometimes we need a break from all the murder and mayhem... talk about some high quality entertainment on YT. :) It's a small world bro, good running to you.

    • @emmaduncan2991
      @emmaduncan2991 11 років тому +17

      up until Schindler's List the Oscars were never a fan of Spielberg

    • @darkl3ad3r
      @darkl3ad3r 11 років тому +1

      I hear that man. Seriously small world indeed. I don't even know what made me want to look through all these Siskel and Ebert clips, or what made me look at the comments on this particular one, but yeah coincidence to the extreme lol

    • @TheLCinema
      @TheLCinema 10 років тому +4

      Because Saving Private Ryan is a dreadful film and SIL is at least decently made. Same goes for Schindler's List. Spielberg is a hack. And Lincoln... Jesus that was bad. The very fact that the man has even one oscar and is thought of along side true masters like Kurosawa, Kubrick, Scorsese, Polanski and Leone does in fact show how much of a joke The Oscars are.

  • @ronniebishop2496
    @ronniebishop2496 6 років тому +78

    When that military car is driving out to that farm to tell that mother one of her sons has been killed in action and she sees the car coming and just sets down on the floor of the porch knowing what's happened and overwhelmed. It caught the horrible feeling of losing a child without saying a word. It brought tears to this Cowboys eyes.

    • @thed.z.a.4658
      @thed.z.a.4658 3 роки тому +4

      No matter how many times I watch it........I am brought to tears

    • @ge2623
      @ge2623 3 роки тому

      Me too

    • @charleybarley939
      @charleybarley939 3 роки тому +2

      @@ge2623 There was the similar case of the Sullivan's in WWII. So the plot is plausible.

    • @ge2623
      @ge2623 3 роки тому +2

      @@charleybarley939 I believe there was a case in The Civil War that Lincoln had to address also.

    • @tomsampson8084
      @tomsampson8084 3 роки тому +5

      @@charleybarley939 The Sullivan's all served on the same ship. After that the military made a point of keeping brothers in different units.

  • @AnimuLLLL
    @AnimuLLLL 11 років тому +280

    This film is a masterpiece. The fact that it didn't win Best Picture is outrageous.

    • @jasonraczkowski6001
      @jasonraczkowski6001 3 роки тому +7

      It did win for best director

    • @markburnsworth3591
      @markburnsworth3591 3 роки тому +9

      I agree whole heartedly

    • @adambrydges1040
      @adambrydges1040 3 роки тому +24

      apparently it was supposed to win Best Picture but Harvey Weinstein campaigned behind the scenes and was able to convince the academy to vote for Shakespeare in Love

    • @markbraverman9622
      @markbraverman9622 3 роки тому +11

      I agree. The biggest rip off in Oscar history

    • @markshaw7253
      @markshaw7253 2 роки тому

      absolutely!

  • @1suaveguy
    @1suaveguy 11 років тому +23

    this is the greatest movie ever made, watching siskel and ebert talk about it the last 2 minutes made me choke up a little, RIP to them both :(

  • @marcusharjo8081
    @marcusharjo8081 3 роки тому +22

    I remember this episode and had to see this movie. I saw SPR at the local movie theater and before the movie started, audience were all just laughing and talking. Then the movie starts and when it was over, I'd never seen a crowd of people walking out of the theater so quiet and, like me, wiping tears from our eyes. Spielberg is a genius.

    • @sandranorman5469
      @sandranorman5469 3 роки тому +2

      When it was run in my hometown they had counselors sitting in the lobby aide WWII and Korea and Vietnam to refer the men to places that they could get help. BTW my father was in the first wave of D-Day and he only lived to be 39.

  • @bigoldinosaur
    @bigoldinosaur 11 років тому +37

    One of the greatest movies ever.

  • @cjwright79
    @cjwright79 10 років тому +61

    Gene Siskel didn't have long to go after this was recorded. 6 months.

  • @Thunderbolt8296
    @Thunderbolt8296 11 років тому +91

    This film doesn't just have an excellent beginning. The whole movie is a masterpiece.

    • @denroy3
      @denroy3 3 роки тому +4

      No it's not...it's a bunch of of message horsecrap after the initial beginning. Good special effects.

    • @Thunderbolt8296
      @Thunderbolt8296 3 роки тому +6

      @@denroy3 I disagree. And I really don’t know what you mean by “message horsecrap”

    • @vr2k8
      @vr2k8 3 роки тому

      Movie is a great movie for it's time.

    • @stevereynolds5684
      @stevereynolds5684 3 роки тому +3

      I don’t know about message horsecrap, but it is the most stereotypical cliched war movie ever made. You name the cliche and it’s in here, coward gets guy who just wants to go home killed then kills guy who killed him because shame is courageous. Plus many more.
      First 45 minutes are excellent though.

    • @Thunderbolt8296
      @Thunderbolt8296 3 роки тому +1

      @@stevereynolds5684 Agree to disagree, I guess

  • @ferox965
    @ferox965 7 років тому +20

    The opening sequence is one of the scariest things I've ever seen in a movie...and I'm a huge horror addict.

  • @danielhurley2894
    @danielhurley2894 3 роки тому +21

    When this movie ended as I watched it at the Brooklyn Center Minnesota multiplex, I clearly remember saying to myself: "How is it possible for someone to make a movie this good"? I still feel that way.

    • @JaxonSmithers
      @JaxonSmithers 2 роки тому

      Mn kid myself, south metro. I know that theatre though.

    • @robdykes3659
      @robdykes3659 Рік тому

      Not like the woke shit of today

  • @davidevans3175
    @davidevans3175 10 років тому +146

    My Dad was in WW2, he refused to see the movie because he heard it was so realistic. He landed one town north of Normandy 6 months after the invasion, marched all the way through Europe to Leipzig in the winter of '44. He has told me many times it was constant confusion and chaos just like the first 25 minutes of the film.

    • @natskivna
      @natskivna 8 років тому +15

      +David Evans My father also served in WWII as a Glider trooper 194th Glider Infantry Regiment of the 17th Airborne Div. His unit began action in the Battle of the Bulge late December 1944 then on to the Rhineland Campaign, the Operation Varsity Glider drop and finally mop up and policing activity till he was released to go home in July 1945. He was lucky to go home early since he didn't have enough points but because his unit was supposed to take part in the invasion of Japan was allowed to go home on leave. The Atom Bombs probably saved his life. What I know of his combat experience is nothing. Never spoke of it to myself, my brother, or sister nor even my mother from 1945 till his death in 1999. But he did apparently speak of it one time at a family gathering where he had 2 much to drink and spoke of watching friends of his being torn apart and killed in front of his eyes. I thank Mr. Hanks and Mr. Spielberg for their dedication in showing the public what that war was really like. May we never have one like it ever again.

    • @davidevans3175
      @davidevans3175 8 років тому +4

      natskivna Thanks for this. My dad was just south when the Battle of the bulge occurred. He too was assigned to the Japanese theater after Hitler, was about to leave London for Japan when news of the bomb changed those plans and he come home on the Queen Mary with 1800 other troops.

    • @natskivna
      @natskivna 8 років тому +2

      I was able to take a tour of the Queen Mary in April 2013. She is a museum now in Long Beach, CA. If you ever get the chance, I highly recommend taking that tour especially since your dad was on her. They have tours focusing on her days as a troop carrier during WWII.

    • @davidevans3175
      @davidevans3175 8 років тому +4

      +natskivna Thanks, that's a great idea. I live about 1/2 hour north of that. I haven't been because I generally shy away from touristy stuff. They turn it into a haunted ship every Halloween. But you're right, I should find out from my dad where he bunked and go check it out (he's 91).

    • @BlackpeopleSuck-pi8zf
      @BlackpeopleSuck-pi8zf 7 років тому +1

      how many German babies did your dad kill or was ordered to kill? did he even tell you?

  • @1995a1995z
    @1995a1995z 9 років тому +78

    saving private ryan was one hell of a movie

  • @3000dora
    @3000dora 8 років тому +298

    Why this movie lost to "Shakespeare In Love" at the Oscars is unthinkable, and a travesty.

    • @Ajourneyofknowing
      @Ajourneyofknowing 7 років тому +9

      Yes but the 90s Oscar best picture winners is a debated topic in the film community
      People say that Ghost and Goodfellas were robbed by Dances with Wolves in 1990
      People also say that The Shawshank Redemption and Pulp Fiction were robbed by Forrest Gump in 1994
      People argue about weather Babe and Apollo 13 should've won instead of Braveheart in 1995
      And the mixed opinions and views on American Beauty for 1999

    • @RomTankin
      @RomTankin 7 років тому +27

      I hear all those arguments, but no way should Shakepeare In Love have won.

    • @jediknight73
      @jediknight73 6 років тому +3

      Absolutely agree

    • @sha11235
      @sha11235 6 років тому +3

      Two reasons why: 1. This was released in July, while Shakespeare was released in December. The Shakespeare film was fresher in the voters' asshole minds. 2. Most of these asshole uncle fuckers didn't go to college and feel that Shakespeare is classy to vote for. Same reason why they picked English Patient over Fargo, or Dances With Wolves over Goodfellas. At least in these later years, they have gotten a little better with choices.

    • @CelestialWoodway
      @CelestialWoodway 6 років тому +4

      The Oscars have a history of getting shit wrong.

  • @mousehead2000
    @mousehead2000 11 років тому +200

    the best movie Vin Diesel has ever appeared in.

    • @bigbabysld
      @bigbabysld 3 роки тому +6

      But if you wanna see Diesel's best performance check out BOILER ROOM

    • @Tommy1977777
      @Tommy1977777 3 роки тому +2

      his best role by far.

    • @mamalannightshyaman
      @mamalannightshyaman 3 роки тому +4

      @@bigbabysld I hate that movie because I was recruited as a stock broker and hated every fucking person I met. Bunch of arrogant coke heads.

    • @mikeaylward4521
      @mikeaylward4521 3 роки тому +4

      Riddick movies are Diesel's best

    • @XerxezsX
      @XerxezsX 3 роки тому

      He should have won the oscar for a random cheap actor category 😂😂😂

  • @winkzmusic1
    @winkzmusic1 3 роки тому +23

    “One of the big movies we’ll be reviewing this week on Siskel and Ebert... along with the parent trap” 😂😂😂🤣

  • @Stogie2112
    @Stogie2112 3 роки тому +4

    I lived in Normandy for four months. Spring 1998. Came home in June, and a couple of months later, this film was released. Talk about chills up and down my spine! I saw it four times in the theater.

  • @robertm7889
    @robertm7889 6 років тому +9

    Beautiful work by the two best movie critics who ever lived.

  • @andrewjacksonbr
    @andrewjacksonbr 6 років тому +19

    I miss these two. 👍🏼👍🏼

  • @markburnsworth3591
    @markburnsworth3591 3 роки тому +4

    As a veteran, and the grandson of a veteran that was on that beach, this movie affects me emotionally unlike any other film ive ever seen. At the grave site, when he asks "am i a good man?" oh man....the reading of the Lincoln letter, the mother on the porch, the german that was captured, and then met again....

  • @SamIAm-kz4hg
    @SamIAm-kz4hg Рік тому +4

    Best movie I've ever seen. I saw it with my friends at the theatre. Afterwards we all just sort of wandered away, lost in our own thoughts. The theatre was eerily silent on the way out.
    I've not had the guts to see it again since then.

    • @free2roam674
      @free2roam674 15 днів тому

      Agreed, saw it once, and that was enough. I still watch some scenes on UA-cam, but will never watch the whole movie again. It was very traumatic, it succeeded in its mission to show the horrors of war.

  • @sburns2421
    @sburns2421 3 роки тому +24

    Think about Hanks in the 1990's. Philadelphia, Forrest Gump, Apollo 13, Toy Story, Saving Private Ryan, The Green Mile, Castaway. Amazing run of movies from him. 100 years from now though people will still watch SPR. History will remember this as Hank's decade.

    • @virajkanbur4371
      @virajkanbur4371 2 роки тому

      True, the 1990s was ruled by Hanks.
      Tom Cruise was right up there too.
      A close 2nd place

    • @anunusualironiccircumstanc2108
      @anunusualironiccircumstanc2108 2 роки тому

      @@virajkanbur4371 nah, what about Gary Oldman? State of Grace, JFK, Dracula, Romeo is bleeding (criminally underrated film) True Romance ( A small role but probably the best performance in the film) Leon, Fifth Element, Murder in the first, Air Force one.
      I’m not knocking at Cruise though, he starred in some very good movies throughout the 1990’s. I just think Oldman had a more variety of roles, many of which should have won best actor.
      It just shows how many amazing films were made in that decade. Possibly second behind the 1980’s?

    • @nizloc4118
      @nizloc4118 Рік тому

      Very well put

    • @quatore-5886
      @quatore-5886 7 місяців тому

      I think frozen buddies versus pastoral

  • @montemccarty6512
    @montemccarty6512 3 роки тому +17

    I remember having to pee an hour into movie...needless to say i waited til movie is over. Afterwards, we all made a bee line to the bathroom. I was next to a gentleman old enough to be in the war with a veterans hat on. As i was walking away..he turned to me and said..that was the most realistic war movie I've ever seen...as tears were rolling down his cheeks. As powerful as the movie itself.

    • @michaelb1761
      @michaelb1761 3 роки тому +1

      I don't think there was a dry eye in the theater at the end of that movie.

    • @sandranorman5469
      @sandranorman5469 3 роки тому

      My father was in the first wave of D-Day. So was my husbands. So very proud.

    • @lanceheaps581
      @lanceheaps581 3 роки тому

      I remember having to make that same decision many years later watching Dunkirk in theaters. I was hoping that movie would be as good as Saving Private Ryan a movie I had seen many years before with my Korean War vet grandfather in the theatre. I was watching Dunkirk having become myself a combat veteran since watching Saving Private Ryan as a teen. Long story short Dunkirk was a poor movie nowhere near as good as Saving Private Ryan and I went and took a piss.

  • @MidniteSon
    @MidniteSon 10 років тому +39

    It's an incredible film and a great work of art. It is or IS Speilberg's greatest accomplishment.

    • @lesternapoleongreen7543
      @lesternapoleongreen7543 10 років тому +2

      Schindlers List and Munich are actually a bit better. Although that's only my opinion )

    • @MidniteSon
      @MidniteSon 10 років тому +1

      gregg mikulla I have to sort of disagree with you there. Yes there are fine movies, but Schindler's list is the kind of movie you only want to see once, and Munich doesn't really have the wide reaching appeal as a World War II film. I've seen SPR so many times and you really get a perspective the soldiers went through that I haven't seen in any war film with the same emotional connection.

    • @davidferrara1105
      @davidferrara1105 10 років тому +2

      gregg mikulla Munich is good

    • @gordonsteadman9889
      @gordonsteadman9889 10 років тому +1

      keithrig Watch the mini-series "Band Of Bothers". Saving Private Ryan pales in comparison.

    • @TheDude90100
      @TheDude90100 10 років тому +1

      many people seem to forget "empire of the sun"

  • @josephthebobcat5085
    @josephthebobcat5085 2 роки тому +1

    Such brilliant analysis. Really miss these guys. Nice to see these episodes that I missed

  • @davidleary7393
    @davidleary7393 8 років тому +31

    I saw this when it came out and when the end credits rolled I sat in my seat unable to move. No other movie,not even Schindler's List, had that effect on me.

    • @theyellowlightsaber3193
      @theyellowlightsaber3193 3 роки тому

      You and me both, I was just 18 when I saw this in the theatre, before the film Id been into war as a topic and watched alot of war films, after this screening I never wanted to think about war again, speilberg effectively gave me ptsd, thats the job this film does.

    • @davefullmer8669
      @davefullmer8669 3 роки тому +1

      @@theyellowlightsaber3193
      I took my 16 year old son with me to see it in the theater. Afterward, sitting in the car, I just sat there and bawled for 5 minutes, I had been so emotionally drained. I'm sure my son thought "Holy Cow dad!"

    • @amlafrance1918
      @amlafrance1918 3 роки тому

      This is the only movie I can remember balling at. Very moving

    • @theyellowlightsaber3193
      @theyellowlightsaber3193 3 роки тому

      @@davefullmer8669 I was too traumatised to cry, I was suffering from phantom shellshock but yes there were plenty of moments you could cry at in this film. Tom Hanks crying by himself in a corner is cryworthy, you dont usually see tom as an actor breaking down like that in his films but the fact Miller privately blames himself for getting Wade killed is pretty sad

    • @edschober917
      @edschober917 3 роки тому

      Same here, David, only I was sobbing uncontrollably and was frozen in my seat until the crew came in to clean the theater. Cried all the way home, and now, in 2021, I still can’t watch the movie because of the emotional impact it still has on me. I’m 76 years old, and grew up loving war and cowboy movies and saw almost all of them. Since Ryan, not so much. This movie is a masterpiece in every sense of the word, and when it didn’t win the Oscar for Best Picture, I decided the Oscars were bullshit, and have never watched another one since.

  • @outlawwales959
    @outlawwales959 3 роки тому +25

    So do we not get the review of "The Parent Trap"? Come on, I need to know if it's any good!

  • @MrBEATTITUDE
    @MrBEATTITUDE 11 років тому +19

    The first 25 minutes alone should have won best picture. Most Intense realistic war scene I've ever seen.

  • @harrystuart4724
    @harrystuart4724 8 років тому +5

    It is also very interesting, and enlightening to view the Allied Cemeteries in Normandie. To this day they are kept every bit as beautifully as is our own Arlington National Cemetery. To this day, French survivors of the German occupation and their liberation speak with great love, respect and appreciation for the sacrifice of the fighting men of the Allied Forces.

  • @micahnewman
    @micahnewman 7 років тому +6

    "I am so impressed that we are talking about ideas." Good for you, Gene.

  • @jerseymike7946
    @jerseymike7946 2 роки тому +2

    Tom Hanks is the modern Jimmy Stewart.
    Abe Lincoln's mom was Nancy Hanks, her brother is Tom's direct ancestor. He is Lincoln's 3rd cousin, 4 times removed.
    Maybe he should avoid doing a play at Ford's Theater.
    By the way, there is a fine museum in the basement of the theater, they have many Lincoln items. Also the derringer
    the vermin Booth murdered him with. The vast majority of tourists visiting DC have no idea the museum is there,
    which is a shame as visiting Ford's is a moving experience.

  • @nativewizard
    @nativewizard 4 роки тому +6

    roger didn't want to get into another argument about full metal jacket so he brushed it off as quick as he could

  • @PatrickOCnMD
    @PatrickOCnMD 3 роки тому +1

    Really miss both these guys. And their great reviews.

  • @breal8484
    @breal8484 4 роки тому +3

    Glad siskel got to see some good classics before he passed.

  • @tinderbox218
    @tinderbox218 3 роки тому +1

    They were so good. I forgot they were together until that late. Miss them both, a notable part of the American culture during my youth.

  • @hlywdplayer
    @hlywdplayer 11 років тому +3

    I applaud Steven Spielberg for this film, more importantly , to all the american men who were a part of WW2, the ones who survived and to the ones who's fate was not as fortunate , I salute you , and give my deepest thank you's and gratitude for your courage and patriotism .

    • @jerseymike7946
      @jerseymike7946 2 роки тому +1

      They don't fight for democracy or the USA or any of that, go to your VFW and ask anyone.
      You fight for your buddies in your squad and to eventually get home after the job is done, period.
      Anybody standing up and saying "I'm here to support freedom, apple pie, and baseball" would be shunned and deemed
      a dope who might get you killed in combat by being too gung ho instead of soberly considering the tactical situation.

  • @alexius23
    @alexius23 3 роки тому +2

    The historical consultant was Stephen Ambrose. Spielberg showed Ambrose the rough cut of Omaha Beach. After it was over Ambrose left & said he would return. Spielberg was filled with self doubt. Ambrose returned & told him it was the best he had ever seen.
    My best friend’s Dad fought & was nearly killed in Normandy. She was thinking to take him to see Private Ryan. Then she read of Internet stories of WW2 veterans being overwhelmed by the battle scenes. She decided not to take him. Today, she wonders if she made the correct choice or not... He passed several years later...
    She & I have visited Pointe du Hoc, Utah & Omaha Beach. It was very emotional for us....We also visited the American Cemetery too....

  • @danhenderson9382
    @danhenderson9382 10 років тому +14

    I noticed that Siskel had hair extensions. I wonder if he was already undergoing treatment for his brain tumor. The movie was released in late Summer 1998 and Siskel died the following February.

    • @gc3k
      @gc3k 10 років тому +8

      you can hear him struggling to finish the segment

  • @hlywdplayer
    @hlywdplayer 11 років тому +7

    Though "Saving Private Ryan" was a brilliant film , it completely drained me , I could not watch it a second time, I remember sitting in the theatre & noticed during the grueling first 28 minutes , a family entered with toddlers, suffice to say , they did not stay, what were those parents thinking ?, this was not Disney. So many Images of that first part still cross my mind, one in particular was the young soldier walking around listless searching for his arm that had just been blown off....

  • @toddgrogg2810
    @toddgrogg2810 3 роки тому +20

    Shakespeare, got the oscar, but Ryan, got all the love.

  • @jpkillibrew1638
    @jpkillibrew1638 Рік тому

    I loved listening to these two men talk about movies, may they both rest in Paradise

  • @charleswayne7442
    @charleswayne7442 7 років тому +4

    Even after 20 years, this is the definitive WW2 movie. It is like Schindler's List. Epic, moving and horrific, and so well made and acted in. Superiour film making that sadly, doesn't come that often from demented Hollywood these days.

  • @rahlohmcdonogh280
    @rahlohmcdonogh280 6 років тому

    RIP guys,Me and brother were with you since Sneak Previews on PBS.The first movie we remember was North Dallas Forty.I really hope you're in a good place,THANX so!

  • @Gromit801
    @Gromit801 3 роки тому +4

    The mission wasn’t to save a mother’s feelings. It was policy after the five Sullivan brothers were killed when the USS Juneau was sunk in the southwest Pacific. That family effectively died then and there. No becoming husbands, fathers, no descendants. So the “Surviving Son” policy was put into effect.

    • @ge2623
      @ge2623 3 роки тому

      I caught that too.

  • @davidquinn5429
    @davidquinn5429 3 роки тому +2

    agreed. in 2021 who remembers Shakespeare in Love? Everyone remembers Saving Private Ryan

  • @hanscombe72
    @hanscombe72 10 років тому +3

    SPR 16 years later is such a special film.

  • @Grandizer8989
    @Grandizer8989 2 роки тому +1

    When I saw SPR, two older gentlemen were behind me. When Hanks hit the beach, one of them said to the other, ‘That’s not how John Waine did it’. Fast forward 20+ years, I’m on a Zoom call with Dale Dye and was able to tell him that story.

  • @JohnDoe-qu7gm
    @JohnDoe-qu7gm 3 роки тому +5

    The greatest war movie ever. And that’s saying something. Most accurate, heart wrenching portrayal of war. I mean if I ever see the actor who played Oppum I think I’ll smash his face.

    • @timlevis3630
      @timlevis3630 3 роки тому

      Why?

    • @JohnDoe-qu7gm
      @JohnDoe-qu7gm 3 роки тому

      @@timlevis3630 wasn’t literal. Basically he was a coward and let his fellow servicemen die while he sat there crying like a liberal.

    • @timlevis3630
      @timlevis3630 3 роки тому

      @@JohnDoe-qu7gm If he was a conservative , he could have cried bone spurs, and avoided the war.

    • @JohnDoe-qu7gm
      @JohnDoe-qu7gm 3 роки тому

      @@timlevis3630 lol. That’s pretty good.

  • @cwinowich
    @cwinowich Рік тому +1

    What is ebert talking about at 5:10?? It sounds like hes talking about full metal jacket lol

  • @rasalghul9331
    @rasalghul9331 4 роки тому +8

    SO sad to think Siskel would die a few months later.

  • @thomassullivan4742
    @thomassullivan4742 3 роки тому

    Growing up in NW Indiana and Chicago. These were always the guys....Miss them both!!!

  • @MontyQueues
    @MontyQueues 9 років тому +6

    a movie that shows the true chaos of war
    war is hell

  • @patrickorourke41
    @patrickorourke41 11 років тому +2

    Amen! I have to say this is one of the greatest war films alongside Platoon and Patton.

  • @magicbus63
    @magicbus63 4 роки тому +7

    My 15 favorite movies from the 1990's
    15. Dances With Wolves
    14. The Green Mile
    13. Fargo
    12. Total Recall
    11. Back To The Future Part III
    10. In The Line Of Fire
    9. Titanic
    8. The Lion King
    7. Unforgiven
    6. Jurassic Park
    5. Heat
    4. Goodfellas
    3. Schindler's List
    2. Terminator 2 Judgement Day
    1. Saving Private Ryan

    • @bigzach7778
      @bigzach7778 2 роки тому

      Replace hop dreams with last of the mohicans

    • @jamescarr4662
      @jamescarr4662 2 роки тому

      open range was 2003

    • @Hollywood42081
      @Hollywood42081 2 роки тому

      Crazy u don't have Heat in this list

  • @anthonyweston630
    @anthonyweston630 2 роки тому +2

    What about the parent trap review? That’s what we are all waiting for

  • @uchibenkei
    @uchibenkei 2 роки тому +7

    If you didn't get to see this on the big screen, you missed out. Very powerful film. There have been a couple good war movies since, but nothing compares to this.

    • @Mr.Goodkat
      @Mr.Goodkat 2 роки тому

      Watch Come And See from 1985 (the whole way through).

    • @axgreenious9400
      @axgreenious9400 Рік тому

      Full Metal Jacket is the ultimate war movie; nothing comes close.

  • @Harv72b
    @Harv72b 12 років тому +2

    Saving Private Ryan wasn't an anti-war film, at least not in the way that most people imagine such a thing. It was a film which told the honest truth about war, from the soldier's perspective, and drove home so many of the brutal realities of combat which are glossed over in other movies. The greatest beauty of the film is that it leaves the interpretation of the moral ambiguities of war up to the audience...much like the elder Pvt. Ryan is left to wonder if he truly did "earn it".

  • @funnyguy7574
    @funnyguy7574 10 років тому +9

    flawless film. amazing

  • @tomf429
    @tomf429 3 роки тому +2

    My father drove a truck off a landing craft on D-Day and got stuck in the surf. He said he was more scared of the sergeant yelling at him then the Germans. Obviously, he was not in the first wave. He drove a truck pulling a trailer with a bulldozer on it. He said the hardest part was driving hours across Europe at night following the red light on the truck ahead of him (no headlights allowed) and having to urinate on the floor because they never stopped.

  • @kmvoss
    @kmvoss 11 років тому +4

    I remember watching it live as a 13 year old boy and being utterly shocked and pissed off. It forever tainted my view of those awards.

    • @bra-balllegend3940
      @bra-balllegend3940 3 роки тому +1

      My moment was when freakin' Annie Hall beat Star Wars for Best Pic in 1978. That decision sure didn't age well! La-dee-fuckin'-da, I guess.

    • @KahlessTheUnforgettable
      @KahlessTheUnforgettable Рік тому

      Christ brother; I know this comment is a decade old but I’m praying you recovered. No 13 year old should have to go through that 😂

  • @cjwright79
    @cjwright79 10 років тому +1

    One of the best reviews I've ever seen them do, along with the 1997 re-issue of The Empire Strikes Back.

    • @ExodusPessoa
      @ExodusPessoa 9 років тому +2

      +Chris Wright You're right he described the movie brilliantly R.I.P Siskel and Ebert.

  • @gimme2utah1
    @gimme2utah1 10 років тому +3

    Hands down, my favorite Memorial Day movie.

  • @KeithCooper-Albuquerque
    @KeithCooper-Albuquerque 3 роки тому +1

    It's great when these two both get it right. This is one of the best war movies IMHO.

  • @07foxmulder
    @07foxmulder 10 років тому +65

    The Thin Red Line was great, but it wasn't anywhere near the greatness of Saving Private Ryan. Sorry, film snobs.

    • @MontyQueues
      @MontyQueues 9 років тому +9

      i had a problem with that movie i couldnt get past the first half cause it's weird and boring as fuck

    • @ScreaminModelKits
      @ScreaminModelKits 9 років тому +1

      +07foxmulder Platoon is the most realistic war movie

    • @07foxmulder
      @07foxmulder 9 років тому +5

      360SRH 2 Platoon was garbage, just like the rest of Stone's films. He's nothing but a hack constantly trying to create controversy.

    • @ScreaminModelKits
      @ScreaminModelKits 9 років тому +7

      07foxmulder
      A hack? U mean a combat veteran.. He understands war, not a pretentious flag waver like Spielberg.

    • @07foxmulder
      @07foxmulder 9 років тому

      360SRH 2 Sure, Spielberg is guilty of being a bit of a flag-waver, but he's far from pretentious. Stone, on the other hand, is the pretentious one. Whether it's Platoon, JFK or Natural Born Killers, he does nothing but attempt to make the audience gasp.
      I don't care if he's a vet, Platoon was a bad movie. It was almost laughable at how hard he was trying to be controversial.

  • @gregshock
    @gregshock 3 роки тому +1

    SPR is the only movie I ever went to see at the theater multiple times in a row. Every single time I watched that opening battle scene, I had to cry for those guys, because those things actually happened to real people in that battle.

    • @faithplus1588
      @faithplus1588 3 роки тому +1

      Same here. i went to see it 4 times. Amazing movie

    • @KahlessTheUnforgettable
      @KahlessTheUnforgettable Рік тому

      I feel the same way about “Virgin Vaginas IV.” I saw it at least 6 times. Every single time I watched that opening M-F-M scene, I had to “spill a little fluid” myself; because those things actually were happening to that woman in this movie. The power of cinema.

  • @NA86737
    @NA86737 10 років тому +86

    The issue with Private Ryan is that the opening is so brilliant that everything after it pales in comparison.

    • @tiffsaver
      @tiffsaver 9 років тому

      +GregB1986
      Comparing a modern war flick with old, pre- CGI flick is not really judging them on a level playing field, is it?

    • @NA86737
      @NA86737 9 років тому +5

      +tiffsaver I did neither. I mean that the film itself was never able to get passed its opening and it's what keeps it from being a great film all the way through. It's a very good film instead of being a great film.

    • @tiffsaver
      @tiffsaver 9 років тому

      +GregB1986
      Ok. But I think it's important for a lot of reviewers here to realize that CGI and digital technology in film and sound gave SPR a leg up from it's many predesessors.

    • @NA86737
      @NA86737 9 років тому +1

      CGI means nothing for quality of the films narrative.

    • @tiffsaver
      @tiffsaver 9 років тому

      +GregB1986
      Who said anything about "narrative"?? I was relating strictly to the opening battle sequence at Dunkirk. Not the dialogue.

  • @andrewzenn1719
    @andrewzenn1719 3 роки тому +2

    One of my top 5.

  • @Avalyn_Wu
    @Avalyn_Wu 11 років тому +3

    Rest in Peace Roger Ebert

  • @thegr8n84ever6
    @thegr8n84ever6 8 років тому +1

    Just imagine a Dad bringing a ten year old boy and his sisters at 8 and 9 to see this in a theater. That was my old man and my sisters still talk about the sound and images of the Normandy scene. They had their hands over their ears and their heads in between their knees.

  • @Fermifire
    @Fermifire 4 роки тому +3

    Siskel & Ebert were classy af

  • @raymoles
    @raymoles 7 років тому +1

    The first 30 min. and the last 30 min. are absolutely realistic and breathtaking.

  • @slaythegodz
    @slaythegodz 11 років тому +11

    I love Shakespeare in Love, but no way should it have won best picture over Saving Private Ryan.

  • @tomsampson8084
    @tomsampson8084 2 роки тому +1

    I saw this film when it first came out. It is brilliant. Like Schindler's List it is a movie I just can't get myself to watch again. Everyone should see both of these films at least once.

  • @Independentfellow
    @Independentfellow 10 років тому +3

    I think this movie can be for younger viewers. I always think realistic consequences to violence (blood, wounds, agony, etc) in movied is better than the sanitized action of a pg-13 flick, such as mission impossible.

  • @derth4
    @derth4 13 років тому +2

    this film is neither pro nor anti-war. It just shows the reality of it and lets you decide whether or not the cost is worth it. In my opinion WW2 was worth the cost to destroy tyrannts. Everyone who died was a hero and it is sad to try and break down this movie as anything else.

  • @powderfinger6597
    @powderfinger6597 9 років тому +10

    SPR was great, but, hands down (for me) best war drama is HBO's "Band of Brothers" and "Pacific." Both based on real people and their experiences in WW2 and both done with Spielberg & Hanks as producers.

    • @ChaostheClown
      @ChaostheClown 9 років тому +2

      +Powderfinger Well of course those were great, but they had so many more hours to tell their story with!
      Different format. I love those miniseries' too, but it doesn't take anything away from this movie.

    • @billbuster3115
      @billbuster3115 8 років тому +1

      +Powderfinger Grant it, band of brothers and the pacific were miniseries instead of a movie and thus had more time to tell more stories.

    • @SuperToombs
      @SuperToombs 8 років тому +1

      +Powderfinger band of brothers was great, personally i think spr is over rated...long..boring give or take a few scenes

    • @SuperToombs
      @SuperToombs 8 років тому

      +Powderfinger don't get me wrong spr is a good movie that tackles a lot of issues, but there are other war movies i like better.

    • @powderfinger6597
      @powderfinger6597 8 років тому

      +SuperToombs yes, SPR is boring in some areas. What other war movies would you suggest?

  • @allenanderson4911
    @allenanderson4911 3 роки тому +1

    That scene where they're storming the beach!

  • @thekingofcool2105
    @thekingofcool2105 6 років тому +5

    The more I kill...
    The further away from home I feel...

  • @luckyday465768
    @luckyday465768 11 років тому +1

    There is also no romanticism here as well. This is an Anti-war movie, this movie makes us have more sympathy for the men who experienced the harshness of war, and this movie also showed that war is something you do not want. Therefore yes it is an Anti-War movie.

  • @ImJustSayin81
    @ImJustSayin81 13 років тому +3

    omg "Along with the parent trap"

  • @kunalandshorya
    @kunalandshorya 3 роки тому +1

    This movie was movie of the decade & yet doesn't win best picture at the Oscars?

  • @2HRTS1LOVE
    @2HRTS1LOVE 10 років тому +24

    Not a fan of SPR, but it led to Spielberg and Hanks producing Band of Brothers for HBO, and I watch that entire series at least once a year. Love, love, love. If you've never watched it, do it soon, you're welcome.

    • @SparksDrinker
      @SparksDrinker 10 років тому

      well most people watched this review because they love the movie. but you dont like the movie, so we probably wont love band for brothers. thank you

    • @EarendilUndomiel
      @EarendilUndomiel 10 років тому +6

      ***** What the hell kind of reasoning is that? Band of Brothers is _amazing_.

    • @SparksDrinker
      @SparksDrinker 10 років тому

      EarendilUndomiel why should i believe you? you don't like saving private ryan, but you want me to check out another war movie/series? no way, i bet it sucks. hey i don't like the movie goodfellas, but you should check out this other show about the mafia.

    • @EarendilUndomiel
      @EarendilUndomiel 10 років тому +2

      ***** When did I ever say that I didn't like Saving Private Ryan? And I don't care if you don't like GoodFellas, it's still my favorite movie of all time.

    • @SparksDrinker
      @SparksDrinker 10 років тому

      EarendilUndomiel sry its the dude you are sticking up for, but my logic is valid.

  • @Ranillon
    @Ranillon 13 років тому +1

    @HenryConway007 Wayne is no hero for failing to go to war, but he had entirely legal, unforced justifications for not going off to the fighting. For one thing he was 34 at the time and too old for the draft. He also had a family deferment. Meanwhile, his studio was highly resistent to him going off to the army and putting pressure on him not to do so. So, he had a no legal requirement to go to war and a lot of reasons not to. Sure, he's no hero, but he certainly was not a "draft dodger."

  • @michaelterry6143
    @michaelterry6143 11 років тому +4

    Saving Private Ryan was a milestone in film making. There were war films made before Saving Private Ryan and war films made after Saving Private Ryan. When this film was released it automatically made all previously made WWII pictures look dated.

  • @HenryConway007
    @HenryConway007 13 років тому

    @Ranillon The point is, though, that Wayne never even tried to enlist. Jimmy Stewart tried at least three times before the Army even accepted him. Orson Welles also tried to enlist, but he wasn’t as lucky as Stewart- the Army thought that even then he was overweight. Wayne essentially did nada.

  • @DavidL14
    @DavidL14 8 років тому +33

    Tom Hanks should have won the Oscar for this role

    • @dnasty312
      @dnasty312 7 років тому +1

      Nominated

    • @sha11235
      @sha11235 6 років тому

      He had 2 already.

    • @mr.balloffur
      @mr.balloffur 6 років тому +2

      sha11235 That has nothing to to do with it. Edward Norton should've won.

  • @Oof-DahReviews-bf4hv
    @Oof-DahReviews-bf4hv 4 місяці тому

    Spot on review of the movie. So glad the filmmakers did that opening scene. Sets the tone for the entire narrative of the film after that.

  • @doublestrokeroll
    @doublestrokeroll 10 років тому +3

    Thin Red Line IS a much better movie......but Saving is still pretty amazing.

    • @HEAD3455
      @HEAD3455 10 років тому

      if that's the movie with sean penn not great but fair

    • @ivanbelinsky7596
      @ivanbelinsky7596 9 років тому +4

      Lay off the drugs, son

    • @doublestrokeroll
      @doublestrokeroll 8 років тому

      I suppose if you're a simplistic person who can only handle straight forward "right/wrong" plot lines then yeah...for you saving private ryan would be the "better" movie.
      For people who like a movie to challenge them a little bit...Thin Red Line is much better.
      No drugs needed.

    • @ivanbelinsky7596
      @ivanbelinsky7596 8 років тому

      doublestrokeroll I was kidding, man

  • @irradiatedbadger
    @irradiatedbadger 11 років тому +2

    this was one of their best reviews

  • @ace-x6m
    @ace-x6m 10 років тому +10

    i own saving private ryan and the thin red line on DVD. i couldn't watch half of the thin red line without turning it off. saving private ryan is the true winner. It captures war at the highest level a movie can.

  • @07foxmulder
    @07foxmulder 13 років тому

    @mikeyanagita1 i have a hard time understanding what you don't like about this movie. the characters are very interesting and far from being stock. what cliches are you talking about? may i ask what WW2 movie you would consider great?

  • @sinclairjg
    @sinclairjg 9 років тому +5

    I miss Gene Siskal!

  • @TooLooze
    @TooLooze 6 років тому

    SPR, although not of my generation (I was drafted in 1969), is a movie so good and so moving that I remain unable to watch it again. Even so, I am still haunted by almost every scene still vivid in memory.

  • @1suaveguy
    @1suaveguy 11 років тому +7

    BEYOND outrageous...is anybody even talking about shakespeare in love?

  • @adamb.8112
    @adamb.8112 3 роки тому +1

    “Did you fire your weapon in basic training?” Interesting foreshadowing, because that characters main conflict is whether or not he can bring himself to do that.