Pretty Woman/Blind Fury/A Shock to the System/The Fourth War/Lambada
- Episode aired Mar 24, 1990
- TV-PG
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaDuring the Pretty Woman (1990) review, Roger mentions the "Richard Gere jokes" aren't funny anymore. He was likely referring to the debunked urban legend that Gere put gerbils up his anus.
- Quotes
Gene Siskel - Host: [reviewing "Lambada"] This movie becomes an instant guilty pleasure for me, a film I'm almost embarrassed to admit held my attention. I'm ALMOST embarrassed, but not really, 'cause I'm prepared to defend it now against Roger's sure attack.
Roger Ebert - Host: You SHOULD be embarrassed, Gene, because first of all, this is NOT a good dance musical. It has very very few dance sequences in it, they're badly lit, badly photographed, badly choreographed.
Gene Siskel - Host: Right.
Roger Ebert - Host: And you're quite right: The camera is SO high...
Gene Siskel - Host: Right.
Roger Ebert - Host: ...On most of these people, that you cannot go to this movie and find out from it how the lambada is danced. I don't have a CLUE how to do the lambada from having seeing this movie. Then, we get to the story, which involves teaching poor kids how to find the cosine and use a protractor in order to line up their pool shots. This is like, I don't know if I wanna call this movie "Clean Dancing", instead of "Dirty Dancing", or it's like a remake of "Stand and Deliver". Who in the WORLD wants to go to a lambada movie that ends with a trigonometry bee? I mean, this movie, agh...
Gene Siskel - Host: Roger...
Roger Ebert - Host: ...The audience that I sat there and saw it with...
Gene Siskel - Host: Don't bring up...
Roger Ebert - Host: ...They were STUNNED. The last twenty, fifteen minutes...
Gene Siskel - Host: Wait a second...
Roger Ebert - Host: ...Of this movie consists of mathematical questions!
Gene Siskel - Host: I know. Wait a second...
Roger Ebert - Host: What does it have to do with ANYTHING?
Gene Siskel - Host: They were stunned. I was stunned. And I thought, you know, this picture... is obviously combining two wildly different things- first of all, I didn't even believe that they were in high school. When it says "high school" at the end- wait a second, I'm gonna cr- I'm criticizing it now. When they said "high school" at the end, I thought it was, I was shocked, I thought it was college!
Roger Ebert - Host: Well every high school student in this movie is played by an actor...
Gene Siskel - Host: Twenty-six.
Roger Ebert - Host: ...That looks like he's in his twenties, yes.
Gene Siskel - Host: Absolutely, and I liked that about it.
Roger Ebert - Host: WHY did you like that about it?
Gene Siskel - Host: Wait a second- I'm gonna tell you exactly why.
Roger Ebert - Host: I'm sure you will.
Gene Siskel - Host: Something that I said: The musical form... gets me.
Roger Ebert - Host: Where's the music? That's the, that's the key flaw in your argument.
Gene Siskel - Host: There's enough.
Roger Ebert - Host: "The musical form overcomes everything", there isn't enough music. And there isn't enough dancing.
Gene Siskel - Host: Can I ask you something? Were you bored by the picture, or were you captivated by the picture?
Roger Ebert - Host: I was stunned by the picture. I was stunned that anybody would make this picture. I was stunned by the fact that...
Gene Siskel - Host: There are parts of it that are so bad, and there are parts of it that are strong, and I do think you know a little bit how to do the dance: You just get close and work out.
Roger Ebert - Host: Gene, I knew that when I was seventeen years old. And this movie...
Gene Siskel - Host: Reminds you.
Roger Ebert - Host: ...Doesn't know as much as I knew when I was seventeen years old.
[to camera]
Roger Ebert - Host: Now let's recap the movies-
[back to Gene]
Roger Ebert - Host: About dancing OR about trigonometry.