I know, I just quoted Ebert last week. But he's just so eminently quotable (and not coincidentally, he's one of TOC's Cultural Heroes). From his Sun-Times blog:
Let me give another example of credulity. The following paragraph appeared this week in a New York Post review by Adam Buckman of the season premiere of "Heroes."This show, which was once so thrilling and fun, has become full of itself, its characters spouting crazy nonsense. Here's one I wish someone would translate for me: "There's a divinity that shapes our ends--rough hew them how we will," spouts the enigmatic industrialist Linderman played by Malcolm McDowell, who should win an Emmy for keeping a straight face while reciting these lines.Perhaps McDowell kept a straight face because he knew he was quoting one of the most famous speeches in Hamlet. I don't expect everyone to have read Hamlet, but I would hope a New York critic might have run across it once or twice.
*Head...desk*
Posted by: Megan | September 24, 2008 at 09:00 PM
C'mon, Rog, we're talking about a guy who works for the Daily Rupert. I know you and everyone else at the S-T beat Murdoch in the end, but no one but neocon drones works at the Post these days.
Posted by: Mark Jeffries | September 25, 2008 at 11:07 AM
Hilarious.
Posted by: Malachy Walsh | September 29, 2008 at 04:33 PM