In the Donald Hall interview for Paris Review (reprinted in Hall's Remembering Poets, p. 225), Pound says: "There is a lot of competition [with opetry] that never was there before. Take the serious side of Disney, the Confucian side of Disney. It's in having taken an ethos, as he does in *Perri*, that squirrel film, where you have the values of courage and tenderness asserted in a way that everybody can understand. You have got an absolute genius there. Youhave got a greater correlation of nature than you have had since the time of Alexander the Great....And now what one has got with the camera is an enormous correlation of particulars. That capacity for making contact is a tremendous challenge to literature. It throws up the question of what needs to be done and what is superfluous." Michael Alleman -----Original Message----- From: Ezra Pound discussion list of the University of Maine [mailto:[log in to unmask]]On Behalf Of Seunghyeok Kweon Sent: Tuesday, November 23, 1999 3:22 PM To: [log in to unmask] Subject: Inquiry Ezra Pound had a lot of interest in media to present new modern poetry. In addition, he had an interest in the other media, such as music and the visual arts. In the age of film, I think, Pound also had an interest in it. Someonw told me that Pound compared Flaubert's novel to the movie. Except that brief information, I do not have any further knowledge on Pound's interest in film. Has he never gone to see any movie? Seung