Gene Siskel (born January 26, 1946, Chicago, Illinois, U.S.—died February 20, 1999, Evanston, Illinois) was an American journalist and film critic for the Chicago Tribune who became one of the most-influential movie reviewers in the United States when he teamed up with fellow film critic Roger Ebert from the rival Chicago Sun-Times on a weekly television program. Their signature “thumbs up” or “thumbs down” judgments guided millions of moviegoers and often had the power to determine the critical and financial fate of a film.
(Read Roger Ebert’s 1978 Britannica essay on feature films.)
Siskel graduated from Yale University in 1967 with a degree in philosophy and was planning to become a lawyer. Following work on a political campaign, however, he joined the U.S. Army Reserve and wrote press releases. His interest in journalism ignited, he took a job at the Chicago Tribune in January 1969, and by the following September he had become the newspaper’s movie critic.
In 1974 Siskel began delivering reviews and features on the local television news broadcasts of Chicago’s CBS affiliate. The teaming of Siskel and Ebert began in 1975 with Opening Soon at a Theater Near You on a local public television station in Chicago. Their feisty, spirited, and sometimes argumentative encounters attracted viewers, and the program—by then titled Sneak Previews—was syndicated on PBS in 1978. In 1982 the show moved to commercial syndication and became known as At the Movies, and in 1986 the title became Siskel & Ebert at the Movies. It was later shortened to just Siskel & Ebert, a reflection of the two men’s success and influence. Siskel continued reviewing for the Chicago Tribune, and his column “Siskel’s Flicks Picks” was nationally syndicated. He also appeared on the TV program CBS This Morning.
In 2000, following Siskel’s death, the Film Center of the Art Institute of Chicago was renamed the Gene Siskel Film Center.