Temperament and the Movies
What movies show the temperaments in an interesting light? The following
is an index and sometimes guide to good movies that should give you some
insight into the temperaments in the extreme (but in complex depth, too).
On the other hand, there are many movies that combine the temperaments
or give their heroes/villians more positive or negative traits that are
in the real world. Great movies often come from having protagonists
with a definitive temperament in interesting circumstances, where the individual
can show his strengths and weaknesses of character.
Artisans
Obviously, most of the movies are about Artisans -- they dominate life,
literature, and the movies. They are the most exciting, the most
visible: they are where the action is. The action heroes of numerous
action films are cardboard version of Operator Artisan, par excellance.
Obviously, there are so many movies that involve Artisans, I can only point
to a few which serve as icons or serve to highlight the complexity of the
Artisan temperament.
Crafter Artisan
Rounders,
1998 [Internet database]
[Reviews]
One of the most interesting movies implicitly dealing with temperament
I have found is Rounders: This movie contrasts two characters of
the same temperament variant, the Crafter Artisan, but implicitly contrasts
the "good" and the "bad". Matt Damon plays the "good" Crafter, and
Ed Norton plays the "bad" Crafter. Both interested in having impact:
being wizards at their craft (either good or bad), where the game "poker"
is their Crafter tool.
Promoter Artisan
Patton,
1970 [Internet database]
[Reviews]
George C. Scott got his infamous Oscar for playing Patton. Ok,
its a more of a documentary of a real person-- but what a documentary about
an over-the-top, brilliant, Promoter Artisan: General George S. Patton
-- one of the best SOBs, who had a signficant role in making World War
II less costly in human lives by being a great general -- smashing and
slashing across Europe as the spearhead of the allied effort.
Composer Artisan
Amaedeus
[Internet database] [Reviews]
Tom Hulce, as Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Performer Artisan
Life
is Beautiful [Internet database] [Reviews]
Robert Benigni
Guardians
The Guardians are, of course, the opposite of the Artisans: in the movies,
they often serve as the foils of the Artisans, often created as minor or
cardboard characters to help or hinder the Artisans. But there are several
movies which can show the Guardians as interesting and sometimes sympathetic
characters, despite their bad press.
Supervisor Guardian
The
Bridge over the River Kwai, 1957 [Internet
database]
Alex Guinness, in his Oscar winning role as the unbending, determined,
by the book, British colonel in a Japanese concentration camp, shows the
tenacity and strength of character that the Supervisor Guardian can possess,
and that they can lead their minions to accomplish great things.
Inspector Guardian
The
African Queen [Internet database] [Reviews]
Katherine Hepburn
Provider Guardian
Places
of the Heart,1984 [Internet database] [Reviews]
Sally Fields
Protector Guardian
High
Noon, 1952 [Internet database] [Reviews]
Gary Cooper
Idealists
Teacher Idealist
Dead
Poets Society,1998 [Internet
database] [Reviews]
Robin Williams, as English professor John Keating inspires his students
to a love of poetry and to seize the day.
Counselor Idealist
Gandhi,
1982 [Internet database]
[Reviews]
Ben Kingsley, Oscar winning performance as Mohandas K Gandhi, is the
iconic example of the Counselor Idealist in action. By sheer use
of "soul power" Gandhi battled the British Empire and his own people's
religious hatred to bring peace and freedom to his countrymen.
Champion Idealist
The
Way We Were, 1973 [Internet
database] [Reviews]
Barbara Streisand
Healer Idealist
The
Grapes of Wrath, 1940 [Internet
database] [Reviews]
Henry Fonda as Tom Joad
Rationals
Rationals are not well represented in movies, given that the other temperament
do not understand them in meaningful matter. Either they are portrayed
as gawky nerds, absent-minded professors, or diabolical mad scientists.
Not often subject to biographical movies that are popular, for most of
their lives are not very interesting to the other temperaments.
Fieldmarshal Rational
MacArthur
[Internet database] [Reviews]
Gregory Peck as General Douglas MacArthur.
My
Fair Lady [Internet database]
[Reviews]
Rex Harrison as Professor Henry Higgins.
Mastermind Rational
Contact
[Internet database] [Reviews]
This movie is pretty special in that it was based on a story written
by a famous Rational, and scientist, Carl Sagan. Even more unusual,
it had two Rationals, as featured characters, one being the main character,
a female, Dr. Ellie Arroway: played by Jody Foster and the other, Dr. David
Drumlin, played by Tom Skerritt. It also featured a subplot, a small debate
about a subject of interest to Rationals (big science versus small science),
which, of course, does not interest the other temperaments.
A
Beautiful Mind [Internet
database] [Reviews]
This was interesting movie in that hit the mark in one way and completely
missed the mark in another. Played by Russell Crowe, John Nash, a
real person and brilliant mathematician, was not particularly likable Mastermind
in real life [he was truly arrogant, egotistical, and very much a loner].
But Nash did become crazy, and the film tries to convey it in dramatic
terms. The film takes liberty with the truth, evident by the fact
that a Mastermind would not have acted crazy in the way portrayed in the
film. Call it artistic license. At least Ron Howard, the director,
did a brilliant job in trying to visually convey the gist of Nash's thesis
work, the Nash equilibrium, to a lay audience. I wish they would
have chronicled Nash's meeting with John Von Neumann, which was recounted
in the book which the film was based on, and illustrated the classic case
of a older brilliant mind (Von Neumann) missing the significance of Nash's
work, of which Nash received a Nobel Prize. Not surprisingly, the
movie is interesting if not at all accurate, but the book is more interesting,
more accurate, although also too speculative in psychology.
Inventor Rational
Tucker:
The Man and his Dream [Internet database] [Reviews]
Jeff Bridges as Tucker
Architect Rational
The
Story of Louis Pasteur, 1935 [Internet
database] [Reviews]
Paul Muni as Louis Pasteur
The
Fountainhead, 1949 [Internet
database] [Reviews]
Cary Cooper is poorly cast ( he a nice wooden Artisan actor), and Ayn
Rand is melodramatic in her script, but at least you get a glimpse of the
complex thinking of an Architect Rational (a small glimpse, which of course,
few are interested). On second thought, the Fountainhead is terrible as
a film. Its shows you how desperate I am to find a film which gets
near the Architect Rational. Maybe there never will be good film
that lets people understand the Architect. Just as Good
Will Hunting misses the point, Matt Damon and Ben Affleck authors of
the movie, used Ramanujan as inspiration of their character, Will Hunting.
Ramanujan,
The
Man Who Knew Infinity, even if you imagined him as not a devote Hindi,
would not abandon his mathematics for a girl. Sorry, Matt and Ben,
you Artisans might put girls before theory, but a genius Architect Rational
is compelled by his theory. It DOES matter to him: he would not abandon
it -- for anything. Matt and Ben: please stick to playing and writing
about Artisans, nice entertaining try though.
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