NFB Collection
Poet: Irving Layton Observed
198652 min 3 secFilm: Documentary
Direction: Donald Winkler
Production: William BrindBarrie Howells
Canadian poet Irving Layton has always masked himself in controversy. Here, in front of the camera, he unexpectedly agrees to be unmasked. In sharp, evocative images, the private Layton responds to the world of experience from Montréal to Greece. The camera captures him in the very process of transforming such moments into poetry. The 1981 Nobel nominee not only reads and explicates his own writings, but also speaks incisively about Canadian literature itself, defining it metaphorically as a "double hook" that combines "beauty and terror." It is the singular achievement of this film to actually show such art emerging as Layton transforms incidents of his life into words that may last. The poet is truly observed.
Availability
Subject categories
- Literature and Language - Canada > Canadian LiteratureEnglish-language WritersPoets and PoetryPortraits
- Literature and Language > Portraits
Credits
- director
- Donald Winkler
- producer
- William Brind
- executive producer
- Barrie Howells
- photography
- Barry Perles
- sound
- Claude Hazanavicius
- Jean-Guy Normandin
- editing
- Torben Schioler
- sound editing
- Abbey Jack Neidik
- music
- Alain Clavier