UI alumnus, film critic Ebert cuts ties with TV show
July 21, 2008
CHICAGO – Roger Ebert is leaving the balcony – but hinting that he’s not finished with television.
The famed film critic and University of Illinois alumnus announced Monday that he is cutting ties with the nationally syndicated program he and the late critic Gene Siskel made famous, a day after Richard Roeper said he was quitting the show.
In an e-mail to The Associated Press, Ebert said Disney-ABC Domestic Television, which owns “At the Movies With Ebert and Roeper,” has decided to take the program in a new direction.
“I will no longer be associated with it,” Ebert said.
He didn’t immediately elaborate, but it was clear the Pulitzer Prize-winning Chicago Sun-Times critic wanted the show to remain as it was when he and Siskel, a fellow Chicago newspaper film critic, first hit the airwaves on PBS in 1975.
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“Gene and I felt the formula was simplicity itself: Two film critics, sitting across the aisle from each other in a movie balcony, debating the new films of the week,” Ebert wrote. “We developed an entirely new concept for TV.”
Ebert is a copyright holder on the signature “thumbs up-thumbs down” judgment that he and Siskel made part of each film review. Last year, as he was negotiating a new contract with Disney-ABC Domestic Television, Ebert said he had “exercised his right to withhold use of the “thumbs” until he had a new contract.
“The trademark still belongs to me and Marlene Iglitzen, Gene’s widow, and the ‘thumbs’ will return,” he wrote Monday. “We are discussing possibilities, and plan to continue the show’s tradition.”
“Disney cannot use the ‘thumbs,'” he said.
Ebert didn’t elaborate on future possibilities. Nor did he say what – if any – role Roeper, whose work he praised, will have.
But Roeper, in his own announcement that he was leaving the program, hinted that perhaps his partnership with Ebert may not be over.
Roeper, a Sun-Times columnist who signed on in 2000 after Siskel’s 1999 death, said he planned to “proceed elsewhere with my ninth year as the co-host of a movie review show that honors the standards established by Gene Siskel and Roger Ebert more than 30 years ago.” He added that he would soon disclose details about such a program.
Roeper didn’t immediately return a call for comment Monday.
His statement said he was leaving after failing to agree on a contract extension with Disney-ABC Domestic Television, and that his last appearance will air the weekend of Aug. 16-17.
A Disney spokeswoman didn’t immediately return calls for comment on the latest developments as well as whether the show would continue either in its current form or a new one.
Ebert said he is in the dark about any plans for the show, saying Disney hasn’t discussed any with him.
“All I know for sure is, the show is not being taken in its current direction,” he said in a second e-mail.
Ebert’s announcement brings to a close a chapter in one of the longest running shows in television history. In 1975, Siskel and Ebert, two competing Chicago newspaper film reviewers, launched a program on Chicago’s public broadcasting’s WTTW. The two jumped to commercial television through the Tribune Co.’s TV syndication wing in 1982, switching to Disney in 1986.
The pair became stars in their own right, and their “two thumbs” reviews became one of the most recognizable assessments in the history of film criticism – with movies trumpeting a “Two Thumbs Up” as part of their own advertising.
After Siskel died of a brain tumor in 1999, Roeper was selected from among a large group of contenders to be his permanent replacement on the show.
In recent years, Ebert has been battling cancer. He has undergone a series of operations, with doctors removing a cancerous growth from his salivary gland and part of his right jaw.
He has been unable to appear on the show since doctors performed surgery in July 2006 that left him unable to speak. But he continues to churn out reviews, and has published a number of books.
Ebert said Monday that he has remained active with the show “behind the scenes,” and praised the work of Roeper and the guest co-hosts, such as Chicago Tribune critic Michael Phillips and New York Times critic A.O. Scott, in his absence.