At the Movies

1982

Seasons & Episodes

  • 1

EP1 Chill Factor / In Too Deep / Dudley Do-Right / The Astronaut's Wife / All the Little Animals (Joel Siegel) Sep 04, 1999

EP2 Stir of Echoes / The Minus Man / Suger Town / Best Laid Plans / On the Ropes (Joyce Kulhawik) Sep 11, 1999

EP3 American Beauty / Blue Streak / For Love of the Game (David Poland) Sep 18, 1999

EP4 Double Jepordy / Jakob the Liar / Mumford (Lisa Schwarzbaum) Sep 25, 1999

EP5 Three Kings / Drive Me Crazy / Happy Texas / Guinevere / Mystery Alaska (Jeff Greenfield) Oct 02, 1999

EP6 Superstar / Random Hearts / Boys Don't Cry / The Limey / Romance (B. Rudy Rich) Oct 09, 1999

EP7 Fight Club / Straight Story / Julien Donkey-Boy / The Story of Us (Michaela Pereira) Oct 16, 1999

EP8 Three to Tango / Crazy in Alabama / The City / Body Shots / Bringing Out the Dead (David Poland) Oct 23, 1999

EP9 Music of the Heart / House on Haunted Hill / Being John Malkovich (Joyce Kulhawik) Oct 30, 1999

EP10 The Bone Collector / Last Night / Liberty Heights / The Bachelor / American Moive / The Legand of 9000 (Joyce Kulhawik) Nov 06, 1999

EP11 Anywhere But Here / Pokémon: the first movie / Dogma / The Messenger / Felicia's Journey (Michaeira Pereira) Nov 13, 1999

EP12 Sleepy Hollow / 42 Up / The World is Not Enough / Mansfield Park / Rosetta (Michaela Pereira) Nov 20, 1999

EP13 Toy Story 2 / Flawless / End of Days (Joel Siegel) Nov 27, 1999

EP14 The Green Mile / End of the Affair / A Map of the World / Sweet and Lowdown / Mr. Death (Lisa Schwarzbaum) Dec 04, 1999

EP15 Man on the Moon / Deuce Bigalow: Male Gigolo / Cradle Will Rock / Cider House Rules / The War Zone (Joel Siegel) Dec 11, 1999

EP16 Magnolia / Stuart Little / Anna and the King / Bicentennial Man / Topsy - Turvy (Joyce Kulhawik) Dec 18, 1999

EP17 Any Given Sunday / Fantasia 2000 / Galaxy Quest / The Talented Mr. Ripley / The Hurricane (Harry Knowles) Dec 25, 1999

EP20 Girl Interupted / Angela's Ashs / Snow Falling on Ceders Jan 15, 2000

EP21 Simpatico / Titus / Holy Smoke / Down to You Jan 22, 2000

EP25 Wonder Boys / The Whole Nine Yards / Diamonds Feb 19, 2000

EP26 Martin Scorsese's Best Films of the 90's Feb 26, 2000

EP27 Mission to Mars / The Ninth Gate / Ghost Dog Mar 11, 2000

EP28 Erin Brockovich / Onegin / Finial Destination / Deterrence Mar 18, 2000

EP29 Waking the Dead / Here on Earth / Romeo Must Die Mar 25, 2000

EP30 High Fidelity / The Road to El Dorado / Price of Glory Apr 01, 2000

EP31 Rules of Ingagment / Return to Me / Black and White Apr 08, 2000

EP32 Keeping the Faith / 28 Days / Where the Money is / American Psyco Apr 15, 2000

EP33 U 571 / The Virgin Suicides / Love and Basketball Apr 22, 2000

EP35 Gladiator / Commited / I Dreamed of Africa May 06, 2000

EP36 Battlefield Earth / The Big Kahuna / Hamlet / Michael Jordan to the Max May 13, 2000

EP37 Dinosaur / Small Time Crooks / Shanghai Noon May 20, 2000

EP38 Big Mamma's House / Mission Impossible 2 Jun 03, 2000

EP39 Gone in 60 Seconds / Love Labours Lost / Sunshine Jun 10, 2000

EP40 Shaft / Titian A.E. / Boys and Girls / Jesus' Son Jun 17, 2000

EP42 The Adventures of Rocky and Bullwinkle / The Perfect Storm / The Patriot / Trixie Jul 01, 2000

EP45 What Lies Beneath / Loser / In the Crowd / Pokemon: The Movie 2000 Jul 22, 2000

EP46 Nutty 2: The Klumps / The Eyes of Tammy Faye / The Hollow Man / Thomas and the Magic Railroad / Wonderland Jul 29, 2000

EP47 Hollow Man / Space Cowboys / Legand of Bagger Vance / Coyote Ugly Aug 05, 2000

EP48 The Replacements / Autumn in New York / Cecil B. Demented Aug 12, 2000

EP50 The Crew / Bring It On / Love and Sex / The Ballad of Ramblin' Jack Aug 26, 2000

8.5| 0h30m| en
Synopsis

At the Movies is a movie review television program that aired from 1982 to 1990. It was produced by Tribune Entertainment and created by Gene Siskel and Roger Ebert, who had left Sneak Previews the previous year. Siskel and Ebert left in 1986 in a dispute with Tribune Entertainment; they went on to create Siskel & Ebert with Buena Vista Television. They were replaced by film critics Rex Reed and Bill Harris, a gossip correspondent for Entertainment Tonight. Under Reed and Harris, the show expanded beyond movie reviews, adding show business news. Harris left in 1988 and was replaced by former ET host Dixie Whatley.

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Reviews

GarnettTeenage The film was still a fun one that will make you laugh and have you leaving the theater feeling like you just stole something valuable and got away with it.
ChicDragon It's a mild crowd pleaser for people who are exhausted by blockbusters.
DipitySkillful an ambitious but ultimately ineffective debut endeavor.
Joanna Mccarty Amazing worth wacthing. So good. Biased but well made with many good points.
ShelbyTMItchell 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!
elshikh4 Out of the most prominent duos that the American TV showed in 1982 (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've left the viewers to say it, not him.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 at 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 bet 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 ?!).It got its moments. Fun went to extremes at times. Memorably ; "where are your beard and red suit Santa ? You gave them away as gifts ?" that's what Siskel said to Ebert when the last was praising the crappy (Cop and ½). "This movie is starring Jessica Alba's buttocks and Paul Walker's pecs, and if you asked me; Alba's rear end is a much better actor" Roeper about (Into the Blue). Ebert screaming his head off "CAROL ANNE, CAROL ANNE" imitating the way that the lead of (Poltergeist 3) was yelling the heroine's name with for 300 times, then Siskel sorrowful question "why they didn't think for one time to say "Carol" for a change ?!!". "She wasn't good, and I'm talking about her face" Siskel criticizing (Demi Moore) in (The Scarlet Letter) !. And finally Ebert's wicked note : "This is the only movie that none of the 44 reviewers, who were attending the special viewing, went to the bathroom during it !" talking about (Basic Instinct 2) !These buddies didn't have the sexuality 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.
Don McCullen 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.