Moderator: Nicole Marie
analog wrote:The little (or not so little) goofs in movies demonstrate the director's attention to detail....
Even the nearly flawless "Dr Strangelove" has just one I'm aware of..... even though Kubrick was reputed to be a perfectionist.....
toward the end, after Slim Pickens' B52 has been damaged by the Russian missile and is treetopping in the Arctic watch carefully - the model they used for the shot is a B52 but the shadow on the ground is not a B52 with its ten jet engines and the trademark rakish tail but a B17 (four radial engines and classic rounded tail.....)
doesn't hurt the story a bit....
a.

Quite an eye for detail...

Haggis@wk wrote: When I was in Holland I was struck by the common practice of not closing drapes or shutters at night.
BigJon wrote:Haggis@wk wrote: When I was in Holland I was struck by the common practice of not closing drapes or shutters at night.
Do you know the history of why they do this? It's cool.
jamiebk wrote:If you open the curtains on the windows, you signal to people that you are a hardworking housewife and you have kept your house sparklingly clean. So the curtains are open because you are not afraid of close inspection. On the other hand, if you keep the curtains closed, then you signal to people that you are lazy and your house is probably not clean.
Schmeelkie wrote:When you retire, you can take over the house cleaning - sure your wife wouldn't complain.

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