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  1. Vernon, Florida is a 1981 American documentary film produced and directed by Errol Morris profiling various residents living within the town of Vernon, Florida. [1] Originally titled Nub City , this follow-up to Gates of Heaven initially focused on residents of the Southern town who cut off their own limbs as a way to collect insurance money.

  2. Vernon, Florida: Directed by Errol Morris. With Albert Bitterling, Roscoe Collins, George Harris, Joe Payne. A documentary on the eccentric residents of Vernon, Florida.

    • (3.6K)
    • Documentary
    • Errol Morris
    • 1981
  3. In the 1980s, documentary filmmaker Errol Morris attempted to shoot a documentary about the town, but after he received death threats and was beaten up by the Marine veteran son of a Nub Club member, he turned his movie into a slice of life documentary about the eccentric residents of the town entitled in a film called Vernon, Florida.

  4. Jun 9, 2014 · Vernon is nested midway across the Florida panhandle, a short drive north of Panama City and the state’s alabaster beaches. Its population is less than a thousand people, and for better or worse it could be mistaken for any small town in the southern U.S.: a modest sprawl of weathered houses and municipal buildings stemming from an aortic ...

  5. Jul 7, 2014 · The 1981 film Vernon, Florida by Errol Morris has become an underground classic and a textbook example of the captivation of well-made documentary storytelling. It turns out that the impetus for Mo…

  6. Vernon, Florida, like his earlier study of pet cemeteries, Gates of Heaven, is the work of a true original. On the surface, it is simply a portrait of several somewhat eccentric residents of a slow backwater town...There's a taste of Samuel Beckett in the film's tone of droll, forlorn hopefulness, and something of Buster Keaton in the spacious frames and exquisitely deadpan comic timing.

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  8. May 23, 2015 · The film meanders and is basically a portrait of a small town with quaint, folksy people, who seem foreign to the art-house cinephiles who would see an Errol Morris documentary. It is an enjoyable way to spend an hour, but it does not compare with some of his best work. Film Rating: 5.5/10. Supplements.

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