----------------------------Original message---------------------------- > So how > do film reviewers/ critics get all of the facts, such as character > names, actors, producer, cinematographer etc., for their articles? Do > they take notes whilst watching the film, dodging round the heads of > people standing up to leave as the credits roll, or are leaflets > distributed before or at the showing? Or do the reviewers, rather like > the girls in Heavenly Creatures, snuggle up to the poster outside for > the details? Well, all three actually. A press kit distributed by the studio/distributor is the best (because the most retrievable), then I like to call someone who might have a press kit (or check a review in "Variety" or "The Hollywood Reporter"), then my handwritten notes from the screening, then I might call another critic. I don't recall ever reading the poster for info, but why not -- it's as subject to proofreading and contractual stipulations as the credits or the press kit. There's this to remember, however, when determining where a mistake in a review was born: Only the critic -- and never the editor -- has seen the film in advance. Typos, illogicalities, etc. thus march unstayed into print, and the critic reads them at home when the paper comes out with the same sense of chagrin as someone who hasn't yet seen the film. Best, Shawn Levy | "In a far recess of summer [log in to unmask] | Monks are playing soccer."