Evil_the_Nub wrote:Prime Riblet wrote:SEXFIGHTER wrote:We hating critics in general here or just critics of ROTF? You can't watch something and not form an opinion..unless you're dead...or braindead.
It is ok for an critic to form an opinion, but it is not ok when a critic tries to cram his opinions down peoples' throats as if they are fact. I am speaking mostly about Roger Ebert. That bastard hasn't had anyone willing to stand up to him since Gene Siskel died.
True, they were a great team because they kept each other in check. Now Ebert's ego is so out of control he calls people who disagree with him unevolved.
While all of that is true, Ebert is a critic. His job is to critique things. Sexfighter's right, you can't view anything without forming an opinion of it, and critics of films or music or literature or whatever, we've decided that their opinions are valued enough that people listen to them. And everyone does, even if someone's saying that Ebert's a jerk, obviously they've listened to enough of Ebert's ideas to form that opinion.
Admittedly, my memory is fuzzy as to what he said about ROTF. I remember reading a thing in the Sun Times I think it was where he pretty much shared my thoughts on the movie, about it being loud and dizzying and confusing, not that fans of it are morons or whatever. But I do recall there being an uproar over his opinion and at the time I figured it was that we were mad at critics in general. But over time, it has become clearer and clearer that what people are mad at are critics of ROTF and/or Michael Bay. Ok, was Ebert out of line, definately. I can't say that calling someone who likes ROTF an imbecile is polite or justifiable (and, find my post where I say that, if you're going to contest that, please) but after all, he's a critic, and it's his job (for whatever reason) to critique. Why is he 'better suited' to do so than others, I don't know. But by forming an opinion we automatically critique what falls outside of the favorable in our opinions, so we're all critics really.