Stirling Newberry wrote: >... If you have to show people everything, then with any inner labor, >there is nothing to *show*. The author sits and types. We learn about the >process only by what they do to release themselves from it. We can show >memories perhaps, in the form of film. But not thinking, not the inner >dialog. > >The limitation is not one inherent in film. Quite the reverse. It is a >limitation on our taste in film. I'm more and more coming to the conclusion that it's also a limitation in filmmakers. I mean, Leonard Bernstein's talk about how Beethoven put together his Fifth Symphony through an examination of the sketches manages to make that process very interesting. I'd also recommend the film "Pi," about a very disturbed mathematician, which at least makes intelligible something of how a mathematician sees the world. Watching "Pi" was in many ways an irritating experience for me, but I can honestly say that by the end of the movie, the protagonist's obsession with the golden spiral became my vicarious obsession. Steve Schwartz