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Other Books by Roger Ebert

An Illini Century: One Hundred Years of Campus Life

A Kiss Is Still a Kiss

Two Weeks in the Midday Sun: A Cannes Notebook

Behind the Phantom’s Mask

Roger Ebert’s Little Movie Glossary

Roger Ebert’s Movie Home Companion (annually 1986–1993)

Roger Ebert’s Video Companion (annually 1994–1998)

Roger Ebert’s Movie Yearbook (annually 1999–2007, 2009–2012)

Questions for the Movie Answer Man

Roger Ebert’s Book of Film: From Tolstoy to Tarantino, the Finest Writing from a Century of Film

Ebert’s Bigger Little Movie Glossary

I Hated, Hated, Hated This Movie

The Great Movies

The Great Movies II

Your Movie Sucks

Roger Ebert’s Four-Star Reviews 1967–2007

Awake in the Dark: The Best of Roger Ebert

Scorsese by Ebert

Life Itself: A Memoir

A Horrible Experience of Unbearable Length

With Daniel Curley

The Perfect London Walk

With Gene Siskel

The Future of the Movies: Interviews with Martin Scorsese, Steven Spielberg, and George Lucas

DVD Commentary Tracks

Beyond the Valley of the Dolls

Citizen Kane

Dark City

Casablanca

Crumb

Floating Weeds

Other Ebert’s Essentials

33 Movies to Restore Your Faith in Humanity

25 Great French Films

27 Movies from the Dark Side

25 Movies to Mend a Broken Heart copyright © 2012 by Roger Ebert. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission except in the case of reprints in the context of reviews.

Andrews McMeel Publishing, LLC

an Andrews McMeel Universal company

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www.andrewsmcmeel.com

ISBN: 978-1-4494-2224-0

All the reviews in this book originally appeared in the Chicago Sun-Times.

Attention: Schools and Businesses

Andrews McMeel books are available at quantity discounts with bulk purchase for educational, business, or sales promotional use. For information, please e-mail the Andrews McMeel Publishing Special Sales Department: specialsales@amuniversal.com

Contents

Introduction

Key to Symbols

About Last Night . . .

All the Real Girls

Annie Hall

Autumn Tale

Beauty and the Beast

Before Sunrise

Before Sunset

Cousin, Cousine

500 Days of Summer

Flirting

Innocence

Lars and the Real Girl

Like Water for Chocolate

Minnie and the Moskowitz

Moonstruck

An Officer and a Gentleman

Once

Out of Africa

Possession

Pride and Prejudice

Say Anything

Scent of Green Papaya

Shakespeare in Love

Some Like It Hot

The Truth About Cats and Dogs

Introduction

To begin with full disclosure, I am not at all sure a movie can mend a broken heart. It may be able to distract you, or cheer you up a little, or put a positive spin on things, and if it does any of those things, you can count yourself fortunate. But mending a broken heart? Only time can do that—sometimes.

That said, here are twenty-five films that made me feel very good while I was watching them. Certainly one of the most beneficial was Norman Jewison’s Moonstruck, a reminder that Cher at one time was a superb actress, although she has chosen different directions.

It is a film about love. Not content with one romance, it involves five or six, depending on how you count, and conceding that some characters are involved in more than one. It exists in a Brooklyn that has never existed—a Brooklyn where the full moon makes the night like day and drives people crazy with amore, when the moon-a hits their eyes like a big-a pizza pie.

And it permits its characters such joyous exuberance. I have long been an admirer of Nicolas Cage. He is dismissed by many movie fans as an overactor, an undisciplined show-off who bolts over the top with the slightest excuse. But certain films require that almost manic quality, and not many actors have the nerve to go for it. Maybe they’re worried about looking goofy.

When Cage as Ronny Cammareri sweeps Loretta Castorini (Cher) off her feet in Moonstruck, he almost, in his exuberance, throws her over his shoulder.

“Where are you taking me?” she cries.

“To the bed!” he says.

Not “to bed,” but “to the bed!” There is the slightest touch of formality in that phrasing, and it is enough to cause Loretta to let her head fall back in surrender. Such sublime abandon, by Cage and Cher, is part of the magic of Norman Jewison’s romantic comedy, but it also depends on truth spoken in plain words.

The movie observes many long-embedded conventions of the romantic comedy. In this case, they all have a reason for being used—even in the triumphant scene around the kitchen table where everything that must happen, does happen. One of the gifts of a film is to use clichés and deserve them.

There is also great consolation to be found in Richard Linklater’s films Before Sunrise and Before Sunset. The first presents an accidental encounter that leads to a long night of conversation and revelation. In its own way, it is self-contained. But Jesse and Celine, the characters played by Ethan Hawke and Julie Delpy, create such an absorbing relationship during their long night in Vienna that when they meet again nine years later in Paris, we are grateful that the conversation can continue.

The second film isn’t a “sequel” in any conventional sense. The first film was complete. But something happened between them, and now in Paris they begin to talk again, in a rush. It’s not so simple now. Before, they were young, with their lives ahead. Now they’re over thirty, and have made commitments, and this strange relationship stands outside of their lives, almost as an alternate time line. Would that heal your heart? To find that another path in life might find you happiness? Probably not. But isn’t it nice to think so?

ROGER EBERT

Key to Symbols

A great film

G, PG, PG-13, R, NC-17

: Ratings of the Motion Picture Association of America

G

Indicates that the movie is suitable for general audiences

PG

Suitable for general audiences but parental guidance is suggested

PG-13

Recommended for viewers 13 years or above; may contain material inappropriate for younger children

R

Recommended for viewers 17 or older

NC-17

Intended for adults only

141 m.

Running time

2011

Year of theatrical release

About Last Night . . .

R, 116 m., 1986

Rob Lowe (Danny), Demi Moore (Debbie), James Belushi (Bernie), Elizabeth Perkins (Joan), George DiCenzo (Mr. Favio), Michael Alldredge (Mother Malone), Robin Thomas (Steve), Joe Greco (Gus). Directed by Edward Zwick and produced by Jason Brett and Stuart Oken. Screenplay by Tim Kazurinsky and Denise DeClue, based on the play Sexual Perversity in Chicago by David Mamet.