Quote
"We came to create a revolution of the mind, not to canoodle on a hillock."

Pandaemonium (film)
Pandaemonium is a 2000 film, directed by Julien Temple, screenplay by Frank Cottrell Boyce. It is based on the early lives of English poets Samuel Taylor Coleridge and William Wordsworth, in particular their collaboration on the Lyrical Ballads (1798), and Coleridge's writing of Kubla Khan.
"We came to create a revolution of the mind, not to canoodle on a hillock."
"Its not the opium - its my mind. I spend every day trying not to think."
"Its only a mite. Its not as though he created a fully grown Doctor of Philosophy or a strapping great plough boy."
"You can feed him with ideas and images but I go hungry."
"Emily Woof as Dorothy Wordsworth"
"Well, as it happens, I care. Of course, you cant libel the dead. But this is dreadfully unfair to the Wordsworths. William never betrayed Coleridge. Their relationship was vexed, but essentially civilised and creative. Mary was a good friend to Coleridge. It is true that Dorothy was a victim of senile dementia - but it was many years after Coleridge died, and not drug-related. Kubla Khan was published quite normally. The Prelude is one of the two or three greatest poems in the English language. I know all this. Probably you do as well. But will those susceptible viewers, boning up the Romantics for their A levels, know it?"