Hare by Carolyn Jess-Cooke

Poet: | Nationality: , | Filmmaker:

Irish poet, writer and visual artist Melissa Diem’s translation into film of a piece by the Belfast-based poet Carolyn Jess-Cooke, another of the commended poems from the 2013 National Poetry Competition. One of the judges, Julia Copus, said of it:

The carefully controlled domestic setting of this poem is held in a tense balance with the uncontrollable wildness of the outside world. Here, a common disquiet – centring on the fragility of a newly-created life – is freshly captured by the surprising image of a hare, that could at any moment go bounding off for good over the night fields.

The Poetry Society and Alastair Cook’s Filmpoem project deserve commendations of their own for enabling such inspired poetic collaborations as this.

One Comment

  1. Reply

    A stunning poem about the disorientating precariousness of new motherhood. I love how the mystical is interspersed with the practical every-day images and the night field vision the film gives us.

Leave a Reply to Becky Cherriman (@BeckyCherriman) Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.