I’m not talking about movies that make you think deep crazy stuff. I’m not talking about some new “existential twist” on common topics. I’m talking about movies that (seem to be) incarnations of classic philosophical thought experiments or movies that have a major philosophical problem as a main theme. I’m talking about movies that include topics that a serious student of philosophy needs to understand. There are also some great films based on the lives of famous philosophers. from Zizek! from I ♥ Huckabees from Thank You For Smoking Movies featuring a philosopher: Zizek! Examined Life Derrida The Ister The Pervert’s Guide To Cinema Being In… Read more

I’m not talking about movies that make you think deep crazy stuff. I’m not talking about some new “existential twist” on common topics. I’m talking about movies that (seem to be) incarnations of classic philosophical thought experiments or movies that have a major philosophical problem as a main theme. I’m talking about movies that include topics that a serious student of philosophy needs to understand. There are also some great films based on the lives of famous philosophers.



from Zizek!



from I ♥ Huckabees



from Thank You For Smoking

Movies featuring a philosopher:

Zizek!

Examined Life

Derrida

The Ister

The Pervert’s Guide To Cinema

Being In The World (2010)*

Movies with philosopher as a character:

Bill And Ted’s Excellent Adventure (2001)* (Tony Steedman as Socrates)

When Neitzsche Wept (2007)* (Armand Assante as Friedrich Nietzsche)

The Last Days Of Immanuel Kant (1994)* (David Warrilow as Immanuel Kant)

The Alchemist Of Happiness (2004)* (Abol Reza Kermani as Ahmad al-Ghazali)

Um Estrangeiro em Porto Alegre (1999)* (Nelson Diniz as Albert Camus)

Cartesius (Ugo Cardea as René Descartes)

Blaise Pascal ( Pierre Arditi as Blaise Pascal)

Socrates (Jean Sylvère as Socrates)

Socrates (1982)* (James Mason as Socrates)

Augustine Of Hippo (Dary Berkani as St. Augustine)

Beyond Good & Evil (Erland Josephson as Friedrich Nietzsche)

Wittgenstein (Clancy Chassay as Young Ludwig Wittgenstein)

Alexander (Christopher Plummer as Aristotle)

Famous thought experiments or discussion of a famous philosophical problem:

Rashomon – General intro to Subjectivity/Objectivity

Groundhog Day – Modern interpretation of The Myth of Sisyphus

Being There – Socially constructed reality; what I like to call The Problem of Communication

Being John Malkovich – The Inescapable Subjectivity of the Human Mind

I ♥ Huckabees – Loose Adaptation of the History of Philosophy in Narrative Form

A.I. – Any movie that has robots that think like humans will do

Eternal Sunshine – Materialism; Metaphysics of Memories

Minority Report – Freewill/Determinism

The Matrix – Most people will say this is all based on Plato’s cave. I think Cartesian Dualism is a closer influence. The main reason for this is that one is not in the same body when in the Matrix as without. The distinction between consciousness and body was brought up famously by Descartes.

The Truman Show – This is the true home of Plato’s Cave in modern movies. Although Truman never leaves the cave, a reality which he has only experienced as a shadow is implied and shown briefly.

Thank You for Smoking – Pre-Socratic/Postmodern Rhetoric

A Clockwork Orange – Person Identity; Political Theory; Justice; blah blah blah

Lake Of Fire – Ethical considerations of abortion

Inception – This film is brand new and is at the center of fierce discussion, which is the life blood of philosophical inquiry. As for the topics it raises itself: Although it can be argued that Nietzsche preceded Freud in discovery of the unconscious, the Freudian version is forefront in Inception. Freud’s psychoanalytic method had much to do with dreams and how they affect and describe us. Also, Cartesian skepticism, or The Problem of The External World, comes to surface.

Pi – The Ontology of Numbers

Waking Life – This feels more obligatory than anything else on here. If I include Alexander and Bill and Ted, I guess this one deserves to be here as well. But with all its pretension it actually offers a somewhat realistic cross section of the philosophical academic experience. Some thinkers sound like they are brilliantly laying out real solutions to real problems, some seem like they may be saying something insightful but are just not articulate enough, some are just too esoteric to tell and some are just simply on drugs.

Stranger Than Fiction – The Authentic Individual

Ikiru – Being-unto-death

The Seventh Seal – The Angst Of The Absurd

The Gods Must Be Crazy – I can’t even count how many times this movie was referenced in discussions about “Being and Time” by Martin Heidegger. The coke bottle is a piece of equipment that suddenly lands in a culture without the referential totality of coke bottles. As such, for the bushmen, the coke bottle ceases to be equipment though it retains readiness-to-hand as its mode of being.

Movies featuring the ideas of particular philosophers:

Nietzsche (2003)*

My Night At Maud’s

Nietzsche and the Nazis (2006)*

Movies based on Novels written by famous philosophers:

The Stranger (by Albert Camus)

Le Journal Du Séducteur (1996)* (by Soren Kierkegaard)

The Fountainhead (by Ann Rand)

Other:

The Elegant Universe (2003)*

M.A. Numminen Sings Wittgenstein (1993)* M.A. Numminen, accompanied by Pedro Hietanen, sings an excerpt from Ludwig Wittgenstein’s Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus in his inimitable style. -imdb

Movies marked with * were not on this site as of 07/11/10.