Philosophers in the Movies

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I noticed our local cinema is showing The Last Station which is about the last year of Leo Tolstoy’s life. Tolstoy is played by Christopher Plummer and his wife is played by Helen Mirren. The names of these two actors got me thinkng about philosophers portrayed in movies: Plummer, of course, played Aristotle in the film Alexander, and Mirren played Ayn Rand in The Passion of Ayn Rand. But I must admit I’m struggling to come up with many philosophers who have featured on the big screen. There is Derek Jarman’s Wittgenstein of course, and Nietzsche has made an appearance in a coupe of obscure movies such as When Nietzsche Wept and Liliana Cavani’s Beyond Good and Evil. I recall one director recently stating that he would like to make a movie about Socrates, but it actually surprises me that there isn’t one already (or is there?). Given how colourful the lives of philosophers can be (with the notable exception of Kant: that would be a very dull movie indeed!) I’m surprised I’m struggling to recall many films of them. Also, who would make the best philosopher to make a film of, and who would have the starrring role? Brad Pitt as a hunky Socrates (well, you had Keanu Reeves as that Buddha dude), or Ricky Tomlinson as Zizek?

And see http://maxim-lebedev.livejournal.com/61855.html for yet more comments…

Comments

Anonymous says:

I think a film on Descartes would be interesting (played by Johnny Depp) a strange philosopher played by the VERY strange actor.

David W... says:

Tony Steedman does a good Socrates in Bill and Ted's Excellent Adventure..

http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0824364/

Roy Jackson says:

I'm having trouble opening those links!

Descartes, yes, and Johnny Depp can play anyone weird. I also think Sarte would be good material for a film, although he admitted himself he was ugly so Hollywood may struggle to find someone to fit the bill.

Shelley says:

Maybe a movie about Sartre and Simone de Beauvoir? Maybe Simone Weil, philosopher and political activist? We have had Iris Murdoch, but I suppose, that was more to do with her illness. Bertrand Russell led an interesting life? Helena Bonham Carter for either Simone? Albert Finney or Kevin Spacey for Sartre? Anthony Quinn (but maybe he is too old or even dead now) bears a striking resemblance to Albert Camus. The question is who would play the University of Gloucestershire's esteemed philosophers Dave, Roy, Will and Emily? Ha!

Anonymous says:

Ha i think Ricky Gervais would have done a perfect Will

Anonymous says:

Turning it inside out, Roland Barthes appeared as Thackeray in a film version of the lives of the Brontes, and Cornel West is in a couple of the Matrixes (matrices?) – are these the only example of world-famous thinkers actually acting in movies?

Alan

Anonymous says:

Definitely – sometimes it was difficult to distinguish between Gervais and Large.

Maybe Gervais can be tempted into doing a film on this esteemed philosopher…

Feggy says:

I'd like to see a movie about Spinoza and Leibniz. But who would play them?

Anonymous says:

there is both augustine and descartes–
and indeed Zizek

Anonymous says:

I think Godzilla would be perfect for Spinoza, and King Kong perfect for Leibniz.

Ian McKellen as Bertrand Russell.
Jon Voight as Donald Davidson.
Helen Mirren as Martha Nussbaum.

And: Danny DeVito as Stanley Cavell (apt philosophically, too.)

Destre says:

I contest your suggestion that a film about Kant would be terrible. I appreciate that Kant's life and personality is commonly seen as boring. But for me, Kant is an inspiring philosopher and fills me with such passion.

i feel almost like you are posing a challenge to put out a good Kant movie out there (perhaps I'm tmepted to consider it). For me, Kant represents an aggressive system destroyer.

Imagine the stories of Kant walking down the streets of Konigsberg, and visualising another mental world where his thoughts are led to issues as diverse as the scientific status of phlogiston theory; the moral significance of poetry; or the powerful notion that the categories structure experience insofar as we can have any experience at all.

'When Nietzsche Wept' is a completely ahistorical fantastic farce, it's an enjoyable film and communicates a lot about his depression and how Ms. Salome was a very cruel woman. But some things were just far too unbelievable like the character 'Ziggy' being acquainted with Nietzsche(watch the film and you will know…)

If we allow such anachronisms. Maybe the story of Kant will jump forward to the future to see how influential he was; Hegel, Marx, PF Strawson, Godel, Hilbert and Poincare.

If a film about a great figure is immediately judged as bad before its even made because the protagonist was a virgin who didn't sleep late; then one may either tweak the details (a la 'When Nietzsche Wept') or explore the ideas of his philosophy through the media of film (a la Jarman..which is a much more interesting project).

Amber says:

Clearly Peter Falk (a la Columbo) as Socrates. (“I just have one little question I'd like to ask…”) – perhaps in the Protagoras, a dialogue with much comic potential?

Anonymous says:

Stephen Hawking appears as himself in a Star Trek The next generation episode…not a philosopher, but close enough.

Bertrand Russell appeared as a significant minor character in Tom and Viv, a film about T.S. Eliot and his wife.

Dan says:

There is of course Thomas More, who is portrayed in A Man for All Seasons

Gladiator features Marcus Aurelius, although I doubt (I haven't seen it) that it reflects much of the Meditations.

Anonymous says:

Peter Falk as Derrida, definately Steve Buscemi as Sartre.

stan says:

Loving the idea of Detective Inspector Derrida..

Blaise says:

There have been films made, very good ones I might add, about both Descartes and Blaise Pascal.

see here:

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0161382/

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0066839/

These were directed by Roberto Rossellini for Italian television with unknown actors staring in both. They can be found (on DVD w/ French and English subtitles) in this collection:

http://www.amazon.com/Eclipse-Rossellinis-Renaissance-Enlightenment-Collection/dp/B001ILTULA/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&s=dvd&qid=1267419281&sr=8-2-catcorr

Carrie says:

Sir Ben Kingsly played Gandhi in 1982.

Comedians as philosophers:
Harry Hill as Foucault
Julie Kavner as Arendt
Ben Stiller as Walter Benjamin
Žižek as Žižek

Anonymous says:

Armin Mueller-Stahl as Martin Heidegger.
Will Patton as Nietzsche

Anonymous says:

Tom Cruise could play Rousseau, and John Goodman as Hume.

Alain Badiou is apparently writing a script about Plato and would like Brad Pitt to play both Plato and Socrates. I don't know how that is real but it is.

Marcel says:

Re the post on Philos-L concerning films where philosophers of either good or ill repute appear as themselves. A few spring to mind: (i)Derrida appears in a film documentary of the same name (2002),(ii)Robert C Solomon appears (admittedly 'rotoscoped')in 'Waking Life'(2002).

Anonymous says:

Terry O'Quinn as John Locke. Andrew Divoff as Mikhail Bakhunin…

Ramón says:

This comment has been removed by the author.

Ramón says:

Rossellini: Pascal, 1972; Augustin d'Hipone, 1973; Descartes, 1973/74; L'Âge de Cosme de Médici, 1973

Liliana Cavani: Galileo; Al di là del bene i del male (Nietzsche)

An absolutely platonic film: Il conformista, Bertolucci.

And so on, there are a lot.
By the way, I can't imagine Pitt in Socrates. Socrates, Plato wrote, looked like a old and ugly satyr!

Anonymous says:

“Tom Cruise could play Rousseau, and John Goodman as Hume.”

I'd rather see John Goodman play Tom Cruise…

Anonymous says:

''Terry O'Quinn as John Locke. Andrew Divoff as Mikhail Bakhunin ''

The characters of Lost resemble many philosophers and scientists which I think is a good thing. Some characters have been directly named as philosophers such 'Desmund' David Hume, Jeremy Bentham. Where others have been linked to philosophers such as Rousseau, Burke and the ones you mention. Dostoevsky, Nietzsche and Plato have also been mentioned in episodes.

Also an episode in the first season was called 'Tabula Rusa' in which the philosophical notion was presented.

This can only be a good thing for philosophy!! I just hope we can see more in the future

WATCH LOST RPE STUDENTS !!!! 🙂

Anonymous says:

David Sosa appearing in Waking Life

Anonymous says:

What about the Monty Python Greeks v Germans football match, including Beckenbauer?…

Anonymous says:

Harvey Keitel as Socrates

Tom Frederic played Wittgenstein in /The Oxford Murders/ (http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0488604/fullcredits) in a very minor role.

Jay Quigley says:

A movie about Wittgenstein would be fascinating–at least to a philosophical audience; perhaps also to the general public. I nominate John de Lancie for the role (the guy who was Q in Star Trek).

Locke's life was interesting. And a lot of people have heard of Locke.

Hume's life would also be interesting simply because he was the formidable agnostic (falsely known to many of his time, I believe, as an atheist) philosopher of his era.

John Stuart Mill's life would perhaps be the most film-worthy of all. The reform that he and his colleagues worked to inaugurate was important and intersects nicely with his philosophical views (although I'm not sure I would want to convert a general audience to utilitarianism). It would also be easy to incorporate other important figures: James Mill, Jeremy Bentham, and of course Harriet Taylor (Mill)–complete with a love triangle! Apparently he was also the godfather of Bertrand Russell.

Sorry these suggestions are so Anglo-centric. Okay, to compensate, I'm sure movies about Socrates, Plato, and/or Aristotle, or Confucius, would draw crowds.

Anonymous says:

Holly Hunter could certainly capture the look and mannerisms of Martha Nussbaum.

Kurt Godel was a character in a pretty terrible romantic comedy starring Walter Matthau as Einstein and Meg Ryan as his niece.

Anonymous says:

Has anyone seen the philosophers' soccer match (Monty Python)?

Anonymous says:

This image of Anscombe and Geach is used a few times in the movie Closer.

Anonymous says:

Jon Lovitz would make a great Hume

Gaven says:

I think St Augustine would be an interesting character for a movie.

Anonymous says:

Steve Buschemi as Imre Lakatos? Can he do a piercing Hungarian accent? An eventful life. Jude Law as a young Jean Van Heijenoort. (Trotsky's bodyguard, a fling with Frida Kahlo, then a life in logic.) Jack Palance as the older. And Seymour Cassel as Karl Hempel. (Maybe in a film about the Vienna and Berlin Circles, Nazis, Schlick's murder…)

John says:

There are two films of Socrates (beyond Bill & Ted): one an Italian TV movie by Rossellini called Socrate (I have it on DVD) and another starring Peter Ustinov called Barefoot in Athens, which I haven't been able to locate. Aristotle appears in both the Alexander movies (old and new); Cicero appears in Cleopatra, as well as the BBC series Rome, Seneca appears in Quo Vadis, and Marcus Aurelius is in both Gladiator and Fall of the Roman Empire.

Stephen Voss says:

These seem pretty obvious …

Woody Allen as Kant

Gerard Depardieu as Hegel

Al Pacino as Vico

Humphrey Bogart as John Locke

and for more recent philosophers,

John Wayne as John Searle

Robert Redford as Robert Sleigh

Katherine Hepburn as Margaret Wilson

Queen Latifah as Elizabeth Anscombe

–Stephen Voss

Stephen Voss says:

Lassie as Wittgenstein
Peter Lorre as Foucault
Alfred Hitchcock as Paul Grice
Maggie Smith as Elizabeth Anscombe
Harry Secombe as Peter Geach
Alice Cooper as David Chalmers
John Lennon as John Austin
Bette Davis as Martha Nussbaum
Boris Karloff as Paul Feyerabend
Marty Feldman as Fred Feldman

Anonymous says:

As if Ayn Rand is a philosopher…

faustwriter says:

I haven't read all the comments so someone may have already noted that there is a long feature film about Jean Jacques Rousseau which also features a substantial depiction of David Hume. Also, Liliani Cavani wrote a scenario for a film about Simone Weil that never got made. I think that Walter Benjamin would make a good subject for a film.

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