- Who is Louis Dudek? He is a professor at McGill a poet, an academic and a publisher.
- Who is Dr. Bernhard Beutler? He is a german doctor that studied Louis Dudek's work in his doctorate on imagism in Canadian poetry.
- How did the interviewer, Frank Bonkowski, come to meet Dr. Beutler? He was a student at the Goethe Institut in the 1970s.
- Why is it worthwhile reading poetry? It is the highest form of art, it is imaginative and it liberates the soul.
- What kind of poetry did Louis Dudek write? Realist lyric poetry influenced by the Imagists with a style that doesn't use a lot of adverbs and adjectives. The city is sometimes the setting.
- What happened the first time Dr. Beutler met Dudek? He asked his where he was and said he was at McGill, he then asked to meet him halfway. He was very direct.
- What did Leonard Cohen say about Dudek? He said that Louis Dudek was one of the greatest professors at McGill, he was sweet, generous with his time and he was always full of encouragement. Cohen was one of his students: "Louis Dudek was a legend to me".
- What does the poem "Early Morning" mean to you? To me, it's about how so many things happen around you that will not impact you and about how mundane so many things are.
- What erroneous interpretation did Dr. Beutler give the poem "As Mayflowers"? He believed it was a reference to the ship the Mayflower that brought the first europeans to America, when it was really about spring.
- What message does the work of Dudek leave for young people? To have a responsible urge to be creative.
The Visual Elements of the Film Adaptation of: Of Mice and Men 1. Ca mera movement/Framing: Two techniques are used in the film to immerse the viewer in story. The first is the use of hand-held camera. These are used sparingly as they are not to disorient the viewer (unlike in thriller or action movies), but to create the illusion of being a part of the film. When the characters are crouching in a river to hide at the beginning of the movie, the hand-held camera used, along with its height (placement), imitate the point of view of a person; the slight shakiness of the frame mimics the shakiness a person crouching in a river would have; the height at which the camera is placed is at eye level. The second technique is obstructing the shot. Using elements of the environment, whether it's a tree branch or a door frame, the shots are partially blocked, as if we are an observer present at the scene and not a viewer watching the work of a professional camer...
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