Aw, shucks. I will miss him. He's not the same in print.
I do think he's a good read, though. He's sometimes so wrong-headed I want to smack him, but I appreciate him for being really good for the kind of critic he is. He looks terrible though! I hope that's just his recovery showing.
He looks terrible though! I hope that's just his recovery showing.
That's his new jaw - he pretty much had to have the lower half of his face rebuilt from scratch, and the surgeons didn't quite get the chin right.
Nevermind. I went back and read the article...which helps so much with comprehension!
As I first looked at the photo of Ebert and his wife, I thought to myself, "She looks like an angel." Then, in the article, he calls her 'my angelic wife.' Funny sometimes, how you can judge a book by its cover.
Bless them both.
That's his new jaw - he pretty much had to have the lower half of his face rebuilt from scratch, and the surgeons didn't quite get the chin right.
Oh, I've been avoiding the gory details. Yeah, that pretty much makes sense. Yikes!
The weird part is, apparently while they were revising his face they gave him lasik. Because I haven't seen him once with his glasses on since the whole cancer saga began, and
that
is the part that makes me unable to recognize him.
(Maybe they revised his ears so he can't wear glasses any more?)
Maybe he wears them on the show to read the teleprompter. I wouldn't imagine someone his age getting Lasik, since it can't fix presbyopia.
aww
I am not familiar with Akira Kurosawa's work.
is leading today's imdb poll with 40% of the vote
Maybe he wears them on the show to read the teleprompter.
I'd noticed it too, in earlier pics I've seen of his new face -- my thought was "maybe he actually prefers contacts, but wore the glasses on TV because it was always such a part of his look".
After everything he's been through, I could see him saying, screw the image, from here on out comfort is the key.
I rented "Dreams", a collection of Kurasawa's short films, and was absolutely enchanted by several of them (the one in the post-apocalypse future left me cold, but I think it was supposed to). I'm still haunted by the story of the peach (cherry?) trees and the story of the boy who looked in the woods and saw something he was forbidden to, and the heartbreaking consequences.
And then I watched Roshomon, and while it may have been revolutionary for film-making, as a film to watch and enjoy I was disappointed, and it's been done better since. Especially since I didn't find the four viewpoints to vary that much, if at all, really, which made it ineffective to me as a device.