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[스크랩] [晶慶][SCRAP] DEAD POETS SOCIETY

박풍규 2007. 3. 23. 23:55

 

 

 

 

 

 Dead Poets Society

 

Dead Poets Society is a 1989 film which tells the story of an English teacher at a 1950s boys' school who inspires his students to overcome their reluctance to make changes in their lives and stirs up their interests in poetry and literature.

The film was set at the fictional Welton Academy in Vermont, but it was actually filmed at St. Andrew's School in Delaware. A novelization by Nancy H. Kleinbaum based on the movie's script has also been published.

 

Synopsis

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.
Seven boys, Neil Perry (Robert Sean Leonard), Todd Anderson (Ethan Hawke), Knox Overstreet (Josh Charles), Charlie Dalton (Gale Hansen), Richard Cameron (Dylan Kussman), Steven Meeks (Allelon Ruggiero) and Gerard Pitts (James Waterston) attend the prestigious Welton Academy prep school. The school's values are based on four principles: Tradition, Honor, Discipline and Excellence. The boys lampoon these principles as Travesty, Horror, Decadence, and Excrement.

Among the teachers the boys meet on their first day of class is the new English teacher, Mr. Keating (played by Robin Williams), who tells the students that they can call him "O Captain! My Captain!" if they feel daring. His first lesson is unorthodox by Welton standards, taking them out of the classroom to focus on the idea of carpe diem. In a later class Keating has one of the boys read the introduction to the poetry textbook, which describes how to place the quality of a poem on a scale, and give it a number, a process that was popular in literary circles at the time. Keating, much to the astonishment (and delight) of the students, finds the idea ridiculous and has them rip out the introduction. Eventually he has the students stand on his desk as a reminder to look at the world in a different way.

The rest of the movie is a process of awakening, in which the boys (and the audience) discover that authority can and must always act as a guide, but the only place where one can find out his or her true identity is within himself or herself. To that end, the boys secretly revive an old literary club to which Mr. Keating was a member called the Dead Poets Society. However, when the faculty learns of its existence, they demand to know who is involved to punish them for subverting the school.

This free thinking brings trouble for one of the boys, Neil, who decides to pursue acting, rather than medicine, the career his father chose for him. Mr. Keating urges Neil to tell his father how he feels before starring in a play, a production of A Midsummer Night's Dream in which Neil had the role of Puck, but he could not bear facing his father. Neil eventually shoots himself in his father's office with his revolver after even the boy's triumphant performance in the play fails to please him.

As a consequence of Neil's suicide, Mr. Keating becomes the scapegoat of the schools's headmaster, Mr. Nolan, and is forced to leave Welton Academy. The film concludes with the boys, led by the previously very timid Anderson, standing on their desks — in front of Mr. Nolan — addressing Mr. Keating as "O Captain! My Captain!" showing him that his messages have been understood and appreciated.


 

Awards and nominations

It won the Academy Award for Writing Original Screenplay, and was nominated for Best Actor in a Leading Role (Robin Williams), Best Director and Best Picture.

The film has become standard viewing for many high school English classes in North America.


Trivia

The passage in the poetry textbook Keating has his students read from at the beginning of the movie is taken nearly word-for-word from an early chapter of Laurence Perrine's Sound and Sense: An Introduction to Poetry, which is still occasionally used by AP English classes in the United States.

The inspiration for the Keating character is University of Connecticut English professor Sam Pickering, a former teacher of author Thomas Schulman at Montgomery Bell Academy in Nashville, Tennessee.


Quotes

No matter what anybody tells you, words and ideas can change the world.
Sucking all the marrow out of life doesn't mean choking on the bone.
Listen, you hear it? — Carpe — hear it? — Carpe... carpe diem... seize the day, boys, make your lives extraordinary.
O Captain! My Captain!

Further Reading

Stefan Munaretto: Nancy H. Kleinbaum/Peter Weir. Der Club der toten Dichter (Dead Poets Society). Hollfeld: C. Bange Verlag. 2005 (Königs Erläuterungen und Materialien. Band 431) ISBN 3-8044-1817-1


External links

Carpe Diem, A Dead Poets Society Page
Dead Poets Society at the Internet Movie Database
Crazy Dave's Dead Poets Society filmography
AntiRomantic.com: Dead Poets Society - Death of a Romantic
Online Critical Resources on DPS

 

 

 

 

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dead_Poets_Society

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