Quotes
A Perfect World/We're Back! A Dinosaur's Story/Mrs. Doubtfire/The Nutcracker/A Dangerous Woman
Siskel & Ebert
- Gene Siskel - Host: [reviewing "We're Back! A Dinosaur's Story"] Did the voice of Walter Cronkite just really ring hollow to you?
- Roger Ebert - Host: Well...
- Gene Siskel - Host: It's not HIS fault, it's, they shouldn't have been casting it...
- Roger Ebert - Host: Yeah, well, of course, you have Julia Child, too. You have a lot of peop- Jay Leno.
- Gene Siskel - Host: But HIS voice is probably the most distinctive voice. He comes on, and it's such arch dialogue...
- Roger Ebert - Host: Well, now that's an odd criticism, Gene, because the fact is...
- Gene Siskel - Host: Yeah?
- Roger Ebert - Host: ...For the kids who see this movie, they won't know that Walter Cronkite was on the news. So the voice will be new to them. Think about it- you're getting older, old man.
- Gene Siskel - Host: Um...
- Roger Ebert - Host: Getting older.
- Gene Siskel - Host: We ALL are, I think. Even those little kids are getting older.
- Roger Ebert - Host: Especially you.
- Roger Ebert - Host: "Mrs. Doubtfire" is funny at times, but not THAT funny, and I guess it's supposed to be sort of moving, too, that a father would go through such an effort for his children. But somehow, I never saw father there, I only saw Robin Williams, in a role that was tailor-made to exploit his talent for impersonation without ever really using his talent as an actor.
- Gene Siskel - Host: Well, I enjoyed this film a lot, Roger. And I think that the problem may be for some people, they're gonna compare this against "Tootsie".
- Roger Ebert - Host: Oh yeah.
- Gene Siskel - Host: And "Tootsie" is a classic, great American film. This is NOT in that league, but I think there are some sequences that are. And I'm particularly talking about a scene that you didn't get the chance to show, and that is a scene where Robin Williams has to run, in the restaurant, this is a long chunk of the film...
- Roger Ebert - Host: Yeah, and it didn't work.
- Gene Siskel - Host: Oh my God...
- Roger Ebert - Host: It didn't, it never...
- Gene Siskel - Host: It's classic farce.
- Roger Ebert - Host: It never took off.
- Gene Siskel - Host: And he has to play Mrs. Doubfire in one part of the restaurant with his wife and kids.
- Roger Ebert - Host: Yes.
- Gene Siskel - Host: Then he has to play the wr- the struggling actor trying to get a job on his TV station with his boss, and the running before- I tell ya, there was genuine tension developing.
- Roger Ebert - Host: But Gene, that scene was set up as a kind of screwball, classic scene.
- Gene Siskel - Host: And I think it is.
- Roger Ebert - Host: It never paid off.
- Gene Siskel - Host: Oh, I think that is wonderful.
- Roger Ebert - Host: They just couldn't get it to work.
- Gene Siskel - Host: I thought that was wonderful. And I think that there are tender moments in the film, too. There are some, the- the little sequence you saw of the, that you said at the employment office, that's kinda silly.
- Roger Ebert - Host: Yes, it is.
- Gene Siskel - Host: But that's... a minute out of a really enjoyable film.