Corliss wrote for many magazines—
National Review from 1966 to 1970,
New Times, ''
Maclean's and SoHo Weekly News in 1980. At Film Comment'', Corliss helped draw attention to the screenwriter in the creation of movies. Corliss challenged
Andrew Sarris's idea of the Director as author or auteur of this work. Corliss was one of Sarris' students at
New York University (NYU); the two remained friends until Sarris' death. Corliss brought
Jonathan Rosenbaum to
Film Comment as a Paris correspondent. Despite working for
National Review, a conservative magazine, Corliss was a self-described "liberal". In 1980, Corliss joined
Time. Although he started as an associate editor, he was promoted to senior writer by 1985. Corliss wrote for time.com as well as the print magazine including a retired column about nostalgic pop culture called
That Old Feeling. He wrote occasional articles for
Time. He was an occasional guest on
Charlie Rose's talk show commenting on new releases, mostly during the 1990s with
Janet Maslin and
David Denby. His last appearance on the show was in December 2005 to talk about the year in film. Corliss also appeared on
A&E Biography to talk about the life and work of
Jackie Chan, and appeared in Richard Schickel's documentary about
Warner Brothers. Corliss attended the
Cannes Film Festival along with
Roger Ebert and
Todd McCarthy for the longest period of any US journalist. He also attended festivals in Toronto and Venice. Corliss used to work on the board of the
New York Film Festival, but resigned in 1987 after longtime head
Richard Roud was fired due to his challenging of editorial direction of the festival.
Lolita, Corliss's third book, was a study of
Vladimir Nabokov's
book and
Stanley Kubrick's
film. Later Corliss has written an introductory essay for
Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon: A Portrait of the Ang Lee Film. Corliss also admired the
Pixar movies, including listing
Finding Nemo as one of his and fellow
Time critic
Richard Schickel's 100 all-time greatest movies. With recent Pixar releases
Cars and
Ratatouille Corliss had access into the studio's inner workings. Pixar director
Brad Bird has said of critics in general that he has "got nothing against critics." He also that he had "done very well with them, over the years." In addition to writing for
Time, Corliss had a lengthy association with
Film Comment magazine, serving as its editor from 1970 to 1990. Corliss covered movies for the magazine and for time.com simultaneously. Corliss along with
Martin Scorsese first came up with the idea for the issue on "guilty pleasures". Corliss along with
Richard Schickel made a 100 Greatest movies list. Corliss alone created lists of the 25 greatest villains, the 25 best horror films, and the 25 most important films on race. In addition Corliss was on the 2001 jury for
AFI's 100 Greatest movies list. In a 1993
Time magazine movie review of
The Crying Game, Corliss subtly gave away the
spoiler of the film, by spelling it out with the first letters of each paragraph of his review. In the 2012
Sight & Sound poll, Corliss cast votes for
Chungking Express,
Citizen Kane,
Historie(s) du Cinema,
The Lady Eve,
Mouchette,
Pyaasa,
The Searchers,
The Seventh Seal and
WALL-E. ==Conflict and criticism==