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Polis Is This: Charles Olson and the Persistence of Place

The best film about an American poet ever made
By WILLIAM CORBETT  |  September 12, 2007
3.5 3.5 Stars
insideTRAILERS_Polis_olsoni
THE FACTS OF WORK: Henry Ferrini's film is a clear working vision of American literary figure
Charles Olson.

From director Henry Ferrini and writer Ken Riaf, Polis Is This is the best film about an American poet ever made. Given travesties from Hollywood’s Tom and Viv to actors impersonating poets like Hart Crane and William Carlos Williams in public-television documentaries, that is not high enough phrase. Ferrini and Riaf present the complex American literary figure Charles Olson (1910–1970) in a clear way by focusing not on the facts of his life but on the facts of his work.

Ferrini exploited the great advantage he brought to the project: he lives in and knows Gloucester, Olson’s home, and the polis and place of the film’s title. His images are a visual analogue to Olson’s words, lit by the bracing clarity of Gloucester’s incomparable light. Some of these images illustrate Olson’s poems, but they do so in a way that might naturally occur to any reader. The interview subjects — students, friends, readers — are wide-ranging. Harvard Professor of Landscape (!) John Stilgoe encapsulates Olson’s thinking brilliantly, and poet Robert Creeley illuminates his friend’s work by referring to Miami Dolphins fullback Larry Csonka. In voiceovers, John Malkovich avoids speaking Olson’s words like an actor. Olson himself is seen in excerpts from a 15-minute documentary produced by NET in the 1950s, talking in his kitchen, walking Gloucester’s slushy streets. “Polis is eyes,” he wrote, and Ferrini gives his viewers the eyes to see Olson in Gloucester.

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  Topics: Reviews , Media, Poetry, National Football League,  More more >
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ARTICLES BY WILLIAM CORBETT
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  •   PLAIN SPOKEN  |  June 16, 2009
    In American prose, there is a plain style, a child of the 20th century, descending from Hemingway and Cather. The best New Yorker writers — James Thurber, Joseph Mitchell, Janet Malcolm — have it.
  •   GIVING GOOD GIMMICK  |  June 08, 2009
    To sustain a literary magazine over decades it pays to have a gimmick.
  •   REVIEW: MY VOCABULARY DID THIS TO ME: THE COLLECTED POEMS OF JACK SPICER  |  December 19, 2008
    Spicer believed that words are magic, that they have the power to "do" good and harm to people.
  •   SWEDISH SCHNAPPS  |  December 02, 2008
    Maj Sjöwall and Per Wahlöö's Martin Beck mysteries are back in a fourth American printing.
  •   SELECTED AND OTHERWISE  |  May 13, 2008
    Simic is a poet not of big gloomy poems but of small glooms and fears that haunt our waking lives and disturb our sleep.

 See all articles by: WILLIAM CORBETT

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