{"id":9455,"date":"2010-10-19T22:00:56","date_gmt":"2010-10-19T21:00:56","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.filmdetail.com\/?p=9455"},"modified":"2010-10-19T23:37:13","modified_gmt":"2010-10-19T22:37:13","slug":"lff-2010-tabloid-errol-morris","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.filmdetail.com\/2010\/10\/19\/lff-2010-tabloid-errol-morris\/","title":{"rendered":"LFF 2010: Tabloid"},"content":{"rendered":"
A former beauty queen, a Mormon<\/a> missionary, British tabloid newspapers and cloned dogs all provide Errol Morris<\/a> with some riotous material for his latest documentary, which ranks alongside his finest work.<\/p>\n After two serious documentaries about figures involved in US military conflicts – The Fog of War<\/a> (2003) and Standard Operating Procedure<\/a> (2008) \u2013 Morris has returned to the quirkier territory of earlier work like Gates of Heaven<\/a> (1978) and Vernon, Florida<\/a> (1981).<\/p>\n In the late 1970s when a former Miss Wyoming named Joyce McKinney<\/a>, caused a tabloid scandal in England by allegedly kidnapping a Mormon missionary in Surrey and \u2018enslaving\u2019 him in an episode which was soon dubbed the \u2018Mormon sex in chains case<\/a>\u2019.<\/p>\n The resulting media feeding frenzy increased when she was arrested and imprisoned only to later escape to the US, where she surfaced many years later in a very different story.<\/p>\n<\/a><\/p>\n
<\/a>Morris explores this bizarre tale through extended interviews with McKinney herself; Peter Tory, a journalist for the Daily Express<\/a> close to the story; Kent Gavin, a photographer for the rival Daily Mirror<\/a> who had a different take on McKinney; Troy Williams, a Mormon activist who provides religious context; and a Korean scientist who clones dogs.<\/p>\n