Well, I've had such fun working on the podcast with fellow film writer J. Robert Parks that we've decided to ...
An audio program for your computer or iPod featuring reviews, discussions, interviews, and festival reports.
In this episode of the Errata Movie Podcast we talk about a great American film, Charles Burnett's debut feature Killer of Sheep (1977).
davis writes: I've attempted to prove my independent personhood in a court of law, but each time ...
Maya writes: Nor has he ever portrayed Mr. Panh on television. Robert Davis is a real life ...
HarryTuttle writes: re: clip of Stan's wife The two gangsters who want to recruit Stan say "The ...
Brian writes: I like it. But what will happen to Errata and the prize for the Metropolis ...
elina patricia di leo aufranc writes: I´m an italian french descendant, and i want to know if this surname "Denis" has ...
HarryTuttle writes: OK, my bad. The second one is slightly angled too (you can see the "vertical" ...
HarryTuttle writes: Yeah I was thinking of Hen in the wind too. I noticed that we don't ...
HarryTuttle writes: Charles Burnett interviewed by Elvis Mitchell on The Treatment (KCRW podcast, April 9, 2008, 30' ...
HarryTuttle writes: No, you're right. A low sight-line puts the heads of everyone above the horizon, so ...
J Robert writes: One note: I don't think Ozu looks up at people (low angle camera). He lowers ...
HarryTuttle writes: I finally get to see this rare film. Great podcast as usual. Listening to the ...
Maya writes: And then I can just rely on Darren and his iPhone to fulfill this function ...
Darren writes: "You mean like an iPhone app that would help you build and manage your film ...
Maya writes: And the blogroll keeps rollin' rollin' rollin' rollin' rollin' rollin' ...
Michael writes: Rob, the grid definitely feels manageable. I particularly like the pro/con layout, as well as ...
Thoughts and conversation about intruders.
A cinephile strolls through the Tate Modern's Edward Hopper exhibit.
A conversation about composing.
2007, 2006, 2003, and All-Time (circa 2004)
An archive of regret, from the editors.
Errata is a web journal written by Robert Davis who has neither spent a night in a ghost town nor pulled a turnip from the earth. He doesn't even know if turnips grow in the ground. Perhaps on trees, like candy corn. Therefore, Errata is a non-commercial project.
Observation #1: It may be appropriate, when leaving a movie theater, to say "mysterious."
Observation #2: It may be appropriate, when leaving a movie theater, to say "mysterious" at the top of your lungs. Bring your eyebrows together before you say it. Effective!
Observation #3: Same for books. Even at libraries.
There is a prize for people who correctly guess the thing about Metropolis, Nevada.
Except where the text specifically states otherwise, Errata's vagaries are indicated vaguely and its authors are indistinct in the traditional way of the Internet, except where the authors lay claim to their work. In some cases Robert Davis lays claim to work that is not his own but has been abandoned like so many ghost towns. Except where held presently, fistfuls of dirt are suspended via dispersal, or dispersed via suspension (in the air), and thus their dissolution is their transcendence, or their transcendence is their dissolution. And yet our eyes tear, and our vision is impaired, demonstrating for the umpteenth time that one entity's gain is another's fit of sneezes. Except where indicated, storms shall outlive the clay upon which they rain, unless storms are improperly delimited by their clouds, which dissolve, rather than by their inevitable return. Thus the clay loses, unless the clay is said to own the storm, to use it to make itself heavy, to make itself cling to white garments, refuse dispersal, cake upon the facades of abandoned buildings, and sit like Man [sic] upon the earth where it is pelted by a storm that it owns. In which case the clay still loses, if you ask us.
Some of the above is legally binding and should be considered a mental contract between Errata and those upon whom it acts. The bit about the prize should be considered an overstatement insofar as prizes differ from dirt and prize dispersal differs from dirt dispersal. Please recall that ownership is a weight and, therefore, hope that you do not win the prize.
One day Errata or its representatives will call upon you for a favor. It is expected that you will hop-to without delay.
You may contact Robert Davis by email unless it's about the rock that was thrown in anger. The rock is more properly called a clod. Why do you continue to raise the topic?
Hey, my review of The Love Guru made Defamer. Or, rather, my tomato rating did. The review itself is quite mixed.