Alain de Botton

Alain de Botton

Nacimiento : 1969-12-20, Zurich, Switzerland

Perfil

Alain de Botton

Películas

Apples, Pears and Paint: How to Make a Still Life Painting
Self
The history of still life painting with oil paints
The Future Is Now!
The Philosopher
A journalist (Liane Balaban) meets “Man of Today” (Paul Ahmarani) who, while a responsible citizen, is disengaged from greater society. He believes once he’s dead nothing more matters. As an experiment to see if she can turn his pessimistic view around, the journalist sends him on a journey of enlightenment to prove that the future does matter. Travelling the globe, he finds himself in surprising encounters with great minds in the arts and sciences. Starting with an unexpected poetry reading and conversation with experimental poet Christian Bök, Man of Today engages with architect Shigeru Ban, activist Francis Dupuis-Déri, philosopher Alain de Botton, artist Marlene Dumas, novelist Rivka Galchen, leading scientists and a ghost. Will the journalist succeed in turning a cynic into an optimist? Will it matter? What can one person do?
Mis últimas cinco novias
Novel
Considerándose un fracasado en el amor, Duncan (Brendan Patricks) se propone revisitar a sus cinco últimas novias para intentar averiguar qué salió mal en cada caso. Así, emprende un viaje por diferentes países buscando consejos de diferentes fuentes que le ayuden a mejorar, para acabar comprender que el amor es un campo de batalla donde sólo sobreviven los que mejor se adaptan. (FILMAFFINITY)
Status Anxiety
Himself
Social status in a capitalistic society is a major factor in how people live their lives. This social status greatly revolves around a person’s financial status. This film examines how the quest to move up the social ladder has brought untold depression and anxieties about ones self.
How Proust Can Change Your Life
Himself
A docu-drama portrait of the early-20th-century French author Marcel Proust, based on Alain de Botton's updated analysis of his work as a modern-day self-help guide. Ralph Fiennes plays Proust, with Phyllida Law and Donald Sinden as his contemporaries, while commentators including de Botton, Louis de Bernières and Doris Lessing explain their enthusiasm for his work.