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IMDbPro

Errol Morris

  • Director
  • Producer
  • Writer
IMDbProStarmeterSee rank
Errol Morris in Tabloid (2010)
A documentary about the rise and fall of Theranos, the one-time multibillion-dollar healthcare company founded by Elizabeth Holmes.
Play trailer2:08
The Inventor: Out for Blood in Silicon Valley (2019)
6 Videos
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His documentaries helped spur a rebirth of non-fiction film in the 80s & garnered wide critical success. But until 2003's "The Fog of War," Morris was shunned by the Academy Awards.

Morris' first two films won much acclaim (Gates of Heaven (1978) and Vernon, Florida (1981)). In the second movie, Morris intended to explore "Nub City," the town known for residents trading limbs for insurance settlements, but death threats (and some other equally fascinating locals) morphed Morris' focus into profiling other citizens instead.

After his first two films, Morris found financing for new projects scarce, so he turned to a unusual source of income - working as a New York private detective. Finally, after 6 years, he moved into feature-length, (and more serious projects) with The Thin Blue Line (1988).

Errol Morris cites his detective experience as providing new skills for his investigative filmmaking, most notably in "The Thin Blue Line", which resulted in a wrongfully convicted man being freed from a lifetime sentence in Texas after serving 13 years for a policeman's murder. Morris persuaded the real murderer to help free the innocent man. The real killer was subsequently executed for a unrelated murder.

Morris uses techniques not traditionally seen in documentaries, to make his films more dramatic and diverse, such as the Thin Blue Line's incredibly eerie Philip Glass score, and the haunting reenactments of the policeman's murder. Thin Blue Line's multiple points of view have drawn favorable comparisons to Kurosawa's ground-breaking cinema classic, Rashomon (1950). His own striking, innovative film style is very influential. Like Alfred Hitchcock, Morris knows how to create careful doses of emotional reality, which can have much more impact on a viewer than a literal reality can be on film.

Technical problems forced Morris to insert his voice as an interviewer for the first time, at the end of The Thin Blue Line, and he's experimented with using himself in his documentaries since. Morris incorporated his reaction to his parents' recent deaths in Fast, Cheap & Out of Control (1997).

Morris feels his interviewing of subjects, has been greatly enhanced in his later work, by devising the Interrotron (terror and interview). It's two cameras, one on Morris and one on the interviewee. Each sees the other's images staring directly into the lens, to give the audience the appearance the subject is talking directly to them.

While his work explores a wide range of subjects, Morris has stated his films break down into "Completely Whacked Out" and "Politically Concerned." Many focus on people with strong, unusual obsessions. His cable documentary series First Person, was especially effective presenting with great sympathy, power and humor, compelling individuals such as Temple Grandin, an animal scientist who has autism. Grandin designs animal slaughterhouses to be humane.

Fred Leuchter, the subject of Morris' film, Mr. Death: The Rise and Fall of Fred A. Leuchter, Jr. (1999) was slated to be one of the people profiled in Morris' "Fast, Cheap & Out of Control", but Morris decided putting Leuchter in the same film would overpower the other portraits. Leuchter'd been dubbed "The Florence Nightingale of Death Row" for his career of making prisoner execution methods more humane, was invited by a Holocaust denier who was on trial, to examine the site of the Auschwitz death camp. Way out of his league, Leuchter's faulty, amateurish research led him to claim that Auschwitz could not have been used for executions. "Accidental Nazi" was considered as a title for the film. Morris prefers characters who are puzzling.

The film brought Morris (who's Jewish) much criticism and attention. One of Morris' recurring themes is the powerful contrasts between how his subjects view themselves, and how audiences view them. The witty Morris revels in his own off kilter humor, iconoclasm, and extreme skepticism when he's being interviewed.

Morris had problems when he ventured into directing a Hollywood fiction film as did his contemporaries Michael Moore, Joe Berlinger, and Bruce Sinofsky. The Dark Wind (1991) was held up by the studio for 2 years, then released on video. It was an adaptation of a Tony Hillerman mystery novel, executive produced by Robert Redford. Morris has continued entirely with non-fiction, though many of his subjects are much stranger than fiction anyway.

He has taken on difficult subjects, such as A Brief History of Time (1991), about the paraplegic physicist Stephen Hawking, illustrating Hawking's revolutionary theories, and comparing the paralyzed scientist's own rich interior world periled by ALS, with the complex, dying universe Hawking limns.

Morris' film The Fog of War (2003), examines the architect of the U.S. war in Vietnam, former Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara. Morris' academic training in philosophy and history shows in his documentaries' vast depth. While getting a history degree at University of Wisconsin, Morris explored doing a film on notorious local murderer Ed Gein (Gein was the basis for Psycho (1960)). Morris also studied at Princeton and University of California - Berkeley.

Morris' directing career started while he programmed shows at the California's Pacific Film Archive. A newspaper headline spurred his first film "Gates of Heaven," revealing with bizarre developments in 2 widely contrasting pet cemeteries. The uncut film confounded editors, such as Academy Award nominee David Webb Peoples (Unforgiven (1992)). German film director Werner Herzog bet Morris that the film would never get made. At Berkeley, Herzog settled the bet on stage in an incredible display, as documented by director Les Blank (whose son 'Harrod Blank'_ is also an acclaimed documentary filmmaker) in Werner Herzog Eats His Shoe.

Morris, who received a MacArthur Foundation genius grant, says none of his films have made him money, so he directs commercials, and won an Emmy in 2001. A series of campaign ads he did for John Kerry was little shown. Morris' much-criticized approach was to Interrotron actual Republicans and conservatives who had switched to support Kerry, versus George W. Bush. Morris has an occasional feature in the New York Times ruminating on the power and meaning of photos.

Opening April 2008 is his new feature, Standard Operating Procedure (2008), which explores abuse in the Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq. The film is accompanied by a book of on-set photos of Morris' productions.
BornFebruary 5, 1948
  • More at IMDbPro
    • Contact info
    • Agent info
    • Resume
BornFebruary 5, 1948
IMDbProStarmeterSee rank
  • View contact info at IMDbPro
    • Won 1 Oscar
      • 27 wins & 33 nominations total

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    Known for

    The Fog of War (2003)
    The Fog of War
    8.0
    • Director
    • 2003
    The Thin Blue Line (1988)
    The Thin Blue Line
    7.9
    • Director
    • 1988
    Fast, Cheap & Out of Control (1997)
    Fast, Cheap & Out of Control
    7.1
    • Director
    • 1997
    John le Carré in The Pigeon Tunnel (2023)
    The Pigeon Tunnel
    7.0
    • Director
    • 2023

    Credits

    Edit
    IMDbPro

    Director



    • 40 Chances
      • Director
      • In Production



    • Chaos: The Manson Murders (2025)
      Chaos: The Manson Murders
      5.6
      • Director
      • 2025
    • Separated (2024)
      Separated
      6.6
      • Director
      • 2024
    • Errol Morris in Tune Out the Noise (2023)
      Tune Out the Noise
      7.4
      • Director
      • 2023
    • John le Carré in The Pigeon Tunnel (2023)
      The Pigeon Tunnel
      7.0
      • Director
      • 2023
    • Timothy Leary and Joanna Harcourt-Smith in My Psychedelic Love Story (2020)
      My Psychedelic Love Story
      6.2
      TV Movie
      • Director
      • 2020
    • Chipotle: Behind the Scenes of Behind the Foil
      Short
      • Director
      • 2020
    • Global Meltdown (2019)
      Global Meltdown
      TV Mini Series
      • Director (directed by)
      • 2019
    • American Dharma (2018)
      American Dharma
      7.0
      • Director
      • 2018
    • IBM: Watson - Bradesco Bank
      Short
      • Director
      • 2018
    • Wormwood (2017)
      Wormwood
      7.0
      TV Mini Series
      • Director
      • 2017
    • Hiram A. Murray and Hiram A. Murray III in Omaha Steaks: Father's Day (2017)
      Omaha Steaks: Father's Day
      Video
      • Director
      • 2017
    • Hiram A. Murray and Alyssa J. Murray in Zillow Hiram's Home (2016)
      Zillow Hiram's Home
      TV Movie
      • Director
      • 2016
    • Elsa Dorfman in The B-Side (2016)
      The B-Side
      6.7
      • Director
      • 2016
    • IBM: Watson - Woodside Energy
      Short
      • Director
      • 2016
    • Op-Docs (2011)
      Op-Docs
      8.1
      TV Series
      • Director
      • 2011–2016

    Producer



    • Chaos: The Manson Murders (2025)
      Chaos: The Manson Murders
      5.6
      • producer
      • 2025
    • 67 Bombs to Enid (2024)
      67 Bombs to Enid
      • executive producer
      • 2024
    • Separated (2024)
      Separated
      6.6
      • producer
      • 2024
    • Orin O'Brien in The Only Girl in the Orchestra (2023)
      The Only Girl in the Orchestra
      6.6
      Short
      • executive producer
      • 2023
    • Nina Gottlieb in Nina & Irena (2023)
      Nina & Irena
      8.1
      Short
      • executive producer
      • 2023
    • John le Carré in The Pigeon Tunnel (2023)
      The Pigeon Tunnel
      7.0
      • producer
      • 2023
    • Timothy Leary and Joanna Harcourt-Smith in My Psychedelic Love Story (2020)
      My Psychedelic Love Story
      6.2
      TV Movie
      • producer
      • 2020
    • Enemies of the State (2020)
      Enemies of the State
      6.0
      • executive producer
      • 2020
    • Global Meltdown (2019)
      Global Meltdown
      TV Mini Series
      • producer
      • 2019
    • American Dharma (2018)
      American Dharma
      7.0
      • producer
      • 2018
    • Wormwood (2017)
      Wormwood
      7.0
      TV Mini Series
      • executive producer
      • 2017
    • The Lure (2016)
      The Lure
      7.3
      • executive producer
      • 2016
    • Deann Borshay, Angela Davis, Peter Dinklage, Dr. Riyadh, Bonita Dearmond, and Mohamed Bangura in P.O.V. (1988)
      P.O.V.
      7.9
      TV Series
      • executive producer
      • 2014–2016
    • National Bird (2016)
      National Bird
      7.0
      • executive producer
      • 2016
    • Brian Posehn in Uncle Nick (2015)
      Uncle Nick
      5.9
      • executive producer
      • 2015

    Writer



    • Errol Morris in Tune Out the Noise (2023)
      Tune Out the Noise
      7.4
      • Writer
      • 2023
    • John le Carré in The Pigeon Tunnel (2023)
      The Pigeon Tunnel
      7.0
      • written by
      • 2023
    • A Wilderness of Error (2020)
      A Wilderness of Error
      6.5
      TV Mini Series
      • based on the book by
      • based on the book "A Wilderness of Error: The Trails of Jeffrey MacDonald" by
      • 2020
    • Global Meltdown (2019)
      Global Meltdown
      TV Mini Series
      • written by
      • 2019
    • Three Short Films About Peace (2014)
      Three Short Films About Peace
      TV Series
      • Writer
      • 2014
    • Donald Rumsfeld in The Unknown Known (2013)
      The Unknown Known
      7.0
      • Writer
      • 2013
    • The Thin Blue Line (1988)
      The Thin Blue Line
      7.9
      • written by (uncredited)
      • 1988

    • In-development projects at IMDbPro

    Videos6

    What to Watch After "Tiger King"
    Clip 4:33
    What to Watch After "Tiger King"
    "A Perfect Tabloid Story"
    Clip 0:44
    "A Perfect Tabloid Story"
    "A Perfect Tabloid Story"
    Clip 0:44
    "A Perfect Tabloid Story"
    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:08
    Official Trailer
    Theatrical Trailer
    Trailer 2:25
    Theatrical Trailer
    Tabloid
    Trailer 2:14
    Tabloid
    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:22
    Official Trailer

    Personal details

    Edit
    • Official sites
      • Errol Morris.com
      • X
    • Born
      • February 5, 1948
      • Hewlett, Long Island, New York, USA
    • Spouse
      • Julia Sheehan1984 - present (1 child)
    • Children
      • Hamilton Morris
    • Other works
      Made a documentary where people from around the world and culture-makers were asked about their favorite movies and what they think of the medium of film for the 74th Academy Awards in 2002.
    • Publicity listings
      • 1 Biographical Movie
      • 2 Interviews
      • 7 Articles

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Werner Herzog promised that he would eat his shoe if Morris ever completed Gates of Heaven (1978), which he actually did at the movie's premiere. Les Blank's short documentary Werner Herzog Eats His Shoe (1980) shows the whole story.
    • Quotes
      I directed one dramatic feature under really unfortunate circumstances. Someone asked me, Well why did you do this?" And I said, "Well really it's quite simple. I did this for the same reason that everybody does everything in Hollywood: vanity and greed." But I plan to go on and make others.
    • Trademarks
        [Noir] "Film Noir" stylized cinematography

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