By: Samir Chopra

After viewing the rather disappointing Chopin: Desire for Love  a couple of years ago, I was struck again by how difficult it seems to be to make movies about artists, writers, or perhaps creators of all kinds. My viewing also served to remind me that movies about philosophers' lives are exceedingly rare, and the few that have been made–or rather, that I am aware of–haven't exactly sent cinemaphiles or students of philosophy running to the nearest box-office e.g., Derek Jarman's Wittgenstein was a disappointment, and the less said about the atrocious and unwatchable When Nietzsche Wept, the better.

What gives?  Have philosophers lived particularly dull lives–devoid of dramatic involvement in world affairs, the cultural history of their times, or matters of the heart? Does the philosopher's life, supposedly all inwardly directed contemplation,  need plenty of faux external action to make it palatable for the screen? I don't think so. Both the philosophers named above serve as immediate counterexamples to any such facile generalization. And certainly, movies on Enlightenment philosophers would make for some rather spectacular story-telling and serve as grand historical dramas as well. I suspect the problem lies elsewhere.

Most prominently, it seems to me the subject matter, while not intractably resistant to cinematic adaptation, does pose special challenges to directors, screenwriters and actors: the centerpieces of a philosopher's life are philosophical doctrines after all, and if the movie is to do justice to that life, then the doctrines have to be woven skillfully into both the form and the content of the movie. By this I mean it is not enough that the philosopher merely mouth off a selection of the greatest lines from his oeuvre. This would be an utter disaster. The doctrines have to, instead, be shown in their historical context; the problems they tackle have to be shown to be relevant to ordinary mortals; their poetic content needs to be made visible; and their philosophical content made comprehensible by showing its resonance with larger human themes. This would be easier obviously in the case of those considered political or moral philosophers and much harder with those writing on metaphysical or epistemological themes. (I wonder how Leibnizian  or Hegelian metaphysics would be brought to the big screen; but Descartes' epistemological doctrines in the Meditations seem amenable to an adaptation featuring a dialog with fictional interlocutors.)

The screenwriter and director have to find a way too, to incorporate a didactic or expository flavor that doesn't overpower the story-telling they have in mind. Jarman's Wittgenstein was never intended as a guide to Wittgenstein's philosophizing but the minor flirtations it engaged in in that dimension, were, I think, utter failures. In this regard, I'm curious whether Louis Menand's The Metaphysical Club could serve as the basis for a cinematic introduction to the American pragmatists.

That last point leads me to cast a quick vote for a movie I'd love to see: the life and times of the brilliant, tortured and singularly unfortunate Charles Sanders Peirce. Any movie-maker willing to take that task on will have a sympathetic, thoughtful biography–that written by Joseph Brent–to draw on. I doubt any directors read this blog, but if you're one, think about it. It's a great story, one worth bringing to the screen.

Note: A very slightly modified version of this post was originally published–under an almost identical title–at samirchopra.com. Any philosophical lives you'd like to see brought to the screen?

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16 responses to “Movies About Philosophers: Rare, Hard To Make, Desirable”

  1. NAH Avatar
    NAH

    The films “Iris” and “Hannah Arendt” exist and aren’t bad.

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  2. John Danaher Avatar

    There was a movie about Hannah Arendt a couple of years ago that seemed pretty watchable to me (i.e. I don’t know much about her work, or how accurately it was portrayed in the film, but I enjoyed watching the film). Since I happen to be reading a biography of his at the moment, I think John Stuart Mill’s life might make for an interesting film, particularly given its public face and the contemporary social and political backdrop.
    There are many others of course.

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  3. Guest Avatar
    Guest

    For as long as I’ve known about it, I’ve wanted to write a philosophically respectable film about Bertrand Russell’s extraordinary life. I’m writing a film and web series at the moment (neither about philosophers) but a film about Russell’s life is on my bucket list.

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  4. Patrick S. O'Donnell Avatar

    Marcus Aurelius has appeared in a couple of films, but I’d like to see a movie about Cicero.
    We might want to distinguish between Enlightenment philosophes and philosophers proper (the former including what today we refer to as public intellectuals and thus broader in scope than the latter class), in any case, I think Nicolas de Condorcet would be an ideal subject for film, including his remarkable wife and salon hostess, Madame de Condorcet.
    There’s plenty of biographical material to attempt a movie (or separate movies) about the lives, loves, and philosophical views of de Beauvoir and Sartre (Camus could come into the picture as well!), perhaps by focusing on a particular period, say, the war years, or the ’60s.
    To the extent one considers Václav Havel a philosopher, his life and views (with nods toward Jan Patočka…) would be ideal for the screen .
    I enjoyed the film “Iris” about Iris Murdoch, but if I recall correctly, it did not convey her philosophical views in any significant degree.

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  5. Chris Rawls Avatar
    Chris Rawls

    Started making my first documentary and it overlaps with philosophy of race. Jay Lampert has made short films on Hegel’s philosophy for the record. His recent essay on Deleuze, editing and film software, and related is highly original and philosophically rigorous.

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  6. Chris Rawls Avatar
    Chris Rawls

    Jay Lampert has made short films on Hegel’s philosophy for the record. His recent essay on Deleuze, editing and film software, and related is highly original and philosophically rigorous.

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  7. Mike Jacovides Avatar
    Mike Jacovides

    I’ve seen Stealing Heaven, which is a hoot, but you’re not going to learn anything about Abelard’s logic from that. I’ve also seen Roberto Rossellini’s Cartesius which may be the most didactic movie ever. I liked Agora, though I think the science was impossible.

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  8. David Avatar
    David

    I can see Bertrand Russell’s life being brought to the big screen. Given his interactions with many women, Wittgenstein, political protesting, and so on, I don’t see much difficulty in getting the attention of both non-philosophy and philosophy types for a couple of hours.

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  9. Sjdalf Avatar

    Roberto Rossellini made three films on Socrates, Descartes and Pascal. I was particularly surprised to discover that a movie was made about Pascal: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_IbN0ZxtERg
    Also, the great Spinoza has a short biopic: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4zbDGDdoq-o

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  10. Mark Kalderon Avatar
    Mark Kalderon

    2009’s Agora about Hypatia was OK, though the discussions of astronomy were embarrassingly thin

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  11. Chris Bertram Avatar

    I’ve been trying to get hold of a copy of Claude Goretta’s The Roads of Exile (about Rousseau) for years. I had hoped that it would resurface during the tercentenary, but no such luck.
    http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0077322/

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  12. Patrick S. O'Donnell Avatar

    For what it’s worth, I second the two comments above about the value of bringing “Bertrand Russell’s life…to the big screen,” especially in light of his family life, “social vision,” and political activism (although one hopes Ray Monk would not be the primary source for material!).

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  13. Matt Weiner Avatar
    Matt Weiner

    Foucault? Montague? Angela Davis? These aren’t necessarily the movies I’d like to see, but ones I could imagine getting made… and I wouldn’t expect too deep insight into the philosophy.

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  14. Matt Avatar

    It’s not really a “movie about philosophers”, but Bertrand Russell appears as a character in several important scenes in the movie about T.S. Eliot and his first wife, Tom & Viv. (It covers some of the time when Eliot was studying philosophy at Cambridge, and at least gives the impression that Russell might have had an affair with Vivian. I thought it was a pretty good movie. Russell (and some Bloomsbury Group types) are also back-ground figures (I’m not sure if he ever appears on stage, but he’s at least referred to several times) in the movie “Carrington”, about the relationship between the painter Dora Carrington and Lytton Strachey. It’s a file I like very much.

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  15. Guest Avatar
    Guest

    You can see Bertrand Russell – in pink fluffy slippers – in a Hindi anti-nuclear film on You Tube. He was around 90 at the time.

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  16. praymont Avatar

    How about a movie about Jean van Heijenoort, a logician who was Trotsky’s secretary and body-guard. Anita Burdman Feferman wrote his biography, From Trotsky to Gödel: The Life of Jean van Heijenoort.

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