Happy Talk: Simon Critchley + Philip Seymour Hoffman

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  • čas přidán 3. 02. 2014
  • In Memoriam: Philip Seymour Hoffman
    Just over a year ago philosopher Simon Critchley met with Philip Seymour Hoffman for the final in a series of on-stage conversations called Happy Talk. In a searching dialogue that in hindsight seems prescient, the actor wrestles with the concepts of happiness, love, and death with the same courage and compelling insight that he brought to his roles. Recorded at the Rubin Museum of Art on December 17, 2012
    Learn More:
    rubinmuseum.org/events/event/p...
    About the Rubin:
    The Rubin Museum of Art is a dynamic environment that stimulates learning, promotes understanding, and inspires personal connections to the ideas, cultures, and art of Himalayan regions.

Komentáře • 260

  • @yt30417
    @yt30417 Před 8 lety +134

    God damn he was so brilliant. I am moved to tears when I think that he won't ever come back and make some wonderful movies. There's nobody out there like him.

    • @truthlivingetc88
      @truthlivingetc88 Před 6 lety

      Are you happy ?

    • @RaketKAT
      @RaketKAT Před 6 lety

      I am, dispite shizzle, but would be more happy if anyone had another tip on great in depth but amusing personal interviews like this one, or inspiring lectures by professors that I could watch ?

    • @matthewpalumbo2782
      @matthewpalumbo2782 Před 6 lety

      Please be careful with your language. We aren’t all comfortable with it. Sorry, just needed to do this. I’m trying to be careful figuring out what I need and what I want. Sorry, just please be more careful. It’s my fault today because I chose to scroll down to count how many comments were made before someone typed RIP. It’s the comment that makes me wonder when I should start talking to more people in CVS.

    • @fasteddylove876
      @fasteddylove876 Před 5 lety

      @@matthewpalumbo2782 Not quite sure what you mean by your last 2 sentences?

    • @russellpanken
      @russellpanken Před 2 lety

      god damn right

  • @444ltr
    @444ltr Před 4 lety +18

    movies are empty without him. He was such a brilliant actor that he left a void in the film industry
    that cannot be filled,

  • @FightingKami
    @FightingKami Před 5 lety +43

    "The task of an actor is to defend everyone you play." That whole segment was one of the most profound pieces of acting advice I've ever heard.

    • @tatie7604
      @tatie7604 Před 10 měsíci

      Yes, we know that. That's the lowest level of building character. But some characters aren't worth defending or playing. There's a price for advancing depravity. If you never realize this you will be both a pawn and a target for someone else's agenda.
      That's all I'll say unless you want to pay me.

    • @tatie7604
      @tatie7604 Před 10 měsíci

      You haven't been to NYU. You aren't an actor.

    • @redonline808
      @redonline808 Před 8 měsíci

      @@tatie7604chill

  • @Socrates...
    @Socrates... Před 9 lety +108

    happiness is the forgetfulness of oneself in the moment

    • @antonioaguirre3989
      @antonioaguirre3989 Před 8 lety +9

      I confused "forgetfulness" for "forgiveness" and I really liked

    • @gottalight9379
      @gottalight9379 Před 5 lety

      Word

    • @mattg5431
      @mattg5431 Před 5 lety

      Antonio Aguirre i think forgiveness of oneself in the moment would be contentment, not happiness

    • @hugh-johnfleming289
      @hugh-johnfleming289 Před 4 lety +2

      Happiness requires hard work and diligence. Waiting or searching for it is the act of a fool.

    • @TheFirefighter1971
      @TheFirefighter1971 Před 3 lety

      Buddha is negative and worthless. If he was here today he would be a hard bottom.

  • @LadiesOfThePleiades
    @LadiesOfThePleiades Před 7 lety +32

    There is so much love when he talks about his kids.

  • @denisespurlock
    @denisespurlock Před 6 lety +15

    It hurt me so bad when Philip passed away. Top quality performance in all he did. RIP, Philip!

  • @alexalien2456
    @alexalien2456 Před 10 lety +102

    Philip Seymour Hoffman: "Pleasure is not happiness. I kill pleasure. I take take too much of it and therefore make it unpleasurable. Like too much coffee and you're miserable. I do that to pleasure often. There's no pleasure that I haven't actually made my self sick on. And so I look at pleasure and kind of get scared."
    Simon Critchley: "I get paid to think - and not think that much."

    • @bobjohnson4318
      @bobjohnson4318 Před 5 lety +5

      I actually like that you did that Simon Critchley quote, I was thinking of it from another angle. I am a management consultant, and if you do TOO much thinking for the client, they begin to resent you, even if the answers are good ones. So yes, many of us get paid to think and then paid at even higher rates to not think too much.

    • @Yonverpage
      @Yonverpage Před 4 lety +5

      @Genghis Calm Ignore him bro, they're just a troll.

    • @henryosborne7052
      @henryosborne7052 Před 4 lety +5

      Lisa Surlie
      Do we need to call your parole officer? It seems that you’re off your meds.

    • @henryosborne7052
      @henryosborne7052 Před 4 lety +3

      Lisa Surlie
      You know, there are a lot of people that having great results with shock treatment. You should look into it.

    • @debbiepowers4743
      @debbiepowers4743 Před 3 lety +1

      I don’t like the interviewer he seems to be trying to impress someone

  • @greenbeagle13
    @greenbeagle13 Před 4 lety +17

    Great video. PSH is such a "common man"..., and the BEST actor ever - as in E-V-E-R..., hate that he is gone.

  • @tinman652
    @tinman652 Před 3 lety +5

    Oh damn, he was really thoughtful and intelligent.

  • @TheWaterlou25
    @TheWaterlou25 Před 9 lety +31

    I don't want him to be gone. I feel like I lost a close family member. R.I.P. This interview made me cry.

    • @kallemick
      @kallemick Před 7 lety +2

      I felt the exact same when he died :( I never even met him and had only seen some of his movies at the time but it truly felt like i had lost someone close to me ...

    • @TheKingWhoWins
      @TheKingWhoWins Před rokem +1

      Here in October of 2022 to say the same thing

  • @naui_diver9290
    @naui_diver9290 Před 4 lety +6

    Amazing person...greatly missed

  • @judewilding5093
    @judewilding5093 Před 3 lety +6

    I'm so gutted I discovered Mr Hoffman after his death, he's just unreal, I admire his hard work more than anything.

    • @pauliebots
      @pauliebots Před 12 dny

      Same here. I was aware of him but not his brilliance. I am now watching all his stuff...amazing dude.

  • @videovedo36
    @videovedo36 Před 6 lety +7

    I'm only 12 minutes into the conversation and it's already unsettling and painful to listen to some of the things said, in light of what happened. Part of the reason I "fell" for Hoffmann were some beautiful, deep, honest, clever interviews I read which showed a complex and fascinating mind (&soul). I cried like an incredulous baby over his death (and the death of David Bowie, for other reasons, which is kind of a coincidence for me now with Critchley also being a superfan) and felt we were being robbed of some incredible art to come. Of some incredible sensitivity, lived through, displayed, donated. Being extremely insightful, selfaware, intelligent (and able to be daringly creative) is no shield at all, ever.

  • @Daneiladams555
    @Daneiladams555 Před 5 lety +5

    Hoffman is the real philosopher here

  • @alexalien2456
    @alexalien2456 Před 10 lety +42

    Philip Seymour Hoffman was a great philosopher.

    • @thinkingwithmartinheidegge4150
      @thinkingwithmartinheidegge4150 Před 5 lety

      Why can't you face the horror of getting old? upload your pic as an old man as your profile

    • @hugh-johnfleming289
      @hugh-johnfleming289 Před 4 lety

      A dead junkie? Talented and lost, sure. Someone I would take wisdom from? No.

    • @Yonverpage
      @Yonverpage Před 4 lety +8

      @@hugh-johnfleming289Who said you should take advice from him? It isn't a philospher's job to give advice, it's to stimulate thought and exploration.

    • @StellarJAGuar
      @StellarJAGuar Před 3 lety

      @@thinkingwithmartinheidegge4150 is er in the middle of ddd and the internet and the other day that he eeeweeedrrreeeeeeerrrree

    • @chadwilliams9141
      @chadwilliams9141 Před 3 lety

      @@hugh-johnfleming289 wisdom can be gained. Someone's short falls should not take away from their insights. Don't go throwing stones at glass houses.

  • @kinotarantino1
    @kinotarantino1 Před 5 lety +4

    I miss this guy so much!

  • @LunaLu-00
    @LunaLu-00 Před 6 lety +6

    "by identifying the point in the past were we were deformed, we can become perfect again" exactly :)

  • @chungiemunchin
    @chungiemunchin Před 10 lety +18

    PHS sits humbly, like a kid being taught something new and interesting when the subject of death is brought up near the end of the interview. His body language communicates something altogether different from the rest of the interview....like a student who is simply listening. Very few actors leave such a feeling of what could have been when they die....PHS was the greatest!!!!

  • @katioushcka
    @katioushcka Před 8 lety +12

    Thank you, Simon!! One of my favourite interviews with Philip Seymour Hoffman!

  • @AlexanderVerney-Elliott-ep7dw

    If we watch the exchanges between Hoffman and Critchley we immediately sensation that Hoffman is a natural philosopher whilst Critchley comes across as a natural actor and acts at philosophising without actually philosophising at all and Hoffman has an overwhelming abundance of dasein whilst Critchley has an underwhelming poverty of dasein that is no dasein at all since Critchley is vacuous as an absolute-absence-not-being-there whilst Hoffman is vivacious as a potent-presence-being-there . When we all watch this video we uncannily and unwittingly realise that it is actually Hoffman who is the real philosopher and Critchley who is the real actor as Critchley comes across as acting all the time whilst Hoffman comes across as philosophising all the time .

  • @angelastiles1630
    @angelastiles1630 Před 10 lety +4

    And then there's happiness in the form of contentedness.

  • @kal2487
    @kal2487 Před 3 lety +3

    "Be careful when you cast out your demons that you don't throw away the best of yourself.”-Friedrich Nietzsche.
    There is something about this interview that reminds me that those dark parts of ourselves we try to hide, are the parts that need the most acceptance and when exposed are also the most healing to other people.

  • @GoldenGateNum9
    @GoldenGateNum9 Před 2 lety +1

    *Watching the late Seymour Hoffman in Twister 1996 the other day, one of my favorite movies, I realized what a tragic waste his passing was.*

  • @CaroleDiTosti
    @CaroleDiTosti Před 9 lety +17

    This is an incredible interview. Critchley is absolutely wonderful to have discussed these issues with Hoffman...a loving individual. I always knew Hoffman was deep and brilliant. You cannot have created the body of empathetic work he created with the depth of love for the most foul of human traits...that he created. His death was a sacrifice...but we learn from his work...and I will now read Critchley. Thankful he is on our shores.

    • @therightsofthereader6094
      @therightsofthereader6094 Před 7 lety

      Carole Di Tosti I am fascinated by Critchley after this conversation. you should check out his talk on his book SUICIDE A DEFENSE. It's really informative and strangely life-affirming. And you should also read TH

  • @angelinafigueroa988
    @angelinafigueroa988 Před 10 lety +5

    But I am so "happy" to get to watch Philip, such a great, great actor. love his work, his persona, the way he talks, just a guy next door. There are not words...

  • @daneiladams
    @daneiladams Před 9 lety +9

    Phil talks about being and how hard it is but I find it quite easy to be at times, and very pleasurable especially when there is no "I" to mess with things.....just sitting and being

  • @el6178
    @el6178 Před 2 lety +2

    I think the first ingredient to take out of someone"s life to help them 'just be', is fame, the worry for the approval of others. On the other hand, the ancient glory was a confirmation that you lived a meaningful life. We re going to miss Hoffman. His imense generosity.

  • @MeetLeAnne
    @MeetLeAnne Před 9 lety +20

    We love you, Phil. Always. You can never be replaced. You were a gifted storyteller, and thank you for your contribution to this planet, but Goddamnit, if you had only reached out. Fucking depression. Fucking Addiction. Fuck. Fuck. Fuck. *huge sad sigh*

    • @thehollywoodfarmer
      @thehollywoodfarmer Před 8 lety

      +Meet LeAnne My "Goddammit," and my heartbreak over this interview, which shows so gloriously his beautiful, insightful, sympathetic soul, gave birth to a poor short cinematic tribute in which I try to draw him back into life, literally. I tried to give him exactly this voice. Which sounds like it's coming out of a heart which is both bursting with love and so deeply broken.

  • @tosu9185
    @tosu9185 Před 10 lety +10

    enable ratings, the comment section will prob be a mess anyway, not the likes tho. Philip was brilliant. he deserves this video to be watched.

  • @lifemusic1980
    @lifemusic1980 Před 2 měsíci

    I've never been so excited to see a video in my suggested videos. 💙

  • @zumokik
    @zumokik Před 9 lety +17

    "Blank on Blank" brings me here.

  • @Shayler78
    @Shayler78 Před rokem +1

    Some say happiness is a choice, that we are as happy as we allow ourselves to be.

  • @PPLL463
    @PPLL463 Před 3 měsíci

    Dam , what a shame , that he is no longer here !

  • @annip5573
    @annip5573 Před 10 lety +5

    I have just found this interview. It makes me still very sad to see and hear him, mentioning his children.....

  • @Weird-City
    @Weird-City Před 10 lety +13

    Happiness is a false God (an impossible goal).
    I think we should strive for contentment. That's the closest we can get to "happiness".

  • @velmagardea2143
    @velmagardea2143 Před 10 lety +3

    will be missed forever. RIP Phillip!

  • @annip5573
    @annip5573 Před 10 lety +2

    And thanks very much for the upload.

  • @EzeICE
    @EzeICE Před 10 lety +8

    Wow this is kind of difficult to watch. We have lost a great one. But thanks for the upload. RIP Mr. Hoffman.

  • @markporter702
    @markporter702 Před 5 lety +2

    Best PSH interview I have seen.

  • @susmith7837
    @susmith7837 Před 13 dny

    The Talented Mr Ripley. So smart so cool.

  • @AndrewClark4MarkRacing
    @AndrewClark4MarkRacing Před 9 lety +3

    Excellent and yes, sadly missed. Thank you for this.

  • @scottfine4169
    @scottfine4169 Před 10 lety +3

    Wonderful!!!!

  • @Daneiladams555
    @Daneiladams555 Před 4 lety +2

    Happiness doesn't require "the other"
    Being there, I can be happy as a fuck sitting on a bench in the sun without anyone there

  • @helenpruzan6970
    @helenpruzan6970 Před 3 lety +1

    That was ...so good!!!

  • @TheLuvthatjoker
    @TheLuvthatjoker Před 10 lety +4

    Thank you star's. Thank you moon. Thank you... *Master*

  • @Darwin8765
    @Darwin8765 Před 10 lety +3

    so amazing.. thanks for sharing

  • @RobertDustinSmith
    @RobertDustinSmith Před 10 lety +3

    Great talk

  • @joanpascal7745
    @joanpascal7745 Před 9 měsíci

    loved his work!!!

  • @WitnessMinistries360
    @WitnessMinistries360 Před 9 lety +3

    Many people (meaning most) try to divide and subdivide LOVE up into slices (Such as happiness, joy, pleasure. . . ) and try to just go after the slices they desire like at an all you can eat pizza buffet! True LOVE encompasses and endures all things and still LOVES! (Which is what unconditional LOVE is and does!) [Expand this post below!] FLESHLY "LOVE" is conditional attempting to over-compensate in the perpetuation and justification of itself both in the giving and the receiving of excessive conditional-love for NOT being itself unconditionally LOVING! (Which is in and of itself an endless vicious self-perpetuating cycle!) Dysfunction and division can NEVER be solved with further dysfunction and division! (NO-MATTER how ones slices and dices it) Which just keeps up the MULTIPLYING and DIVIDING of itself! LOVE is about being WHOLE and undivided both individually and collectively! NOT division which is perpetuated by ones self-imposed FEAR of lack and limitation! (TRUTH and ones CREATED-REALITY are two completely different things!)

  • @georginam824
    @georginam824 Před 2 lety

    Love this man - I recently wondered if he might have lived. If so, I understand. To live amongst them and survive is excruciating. I respect you and if you are still on this earth in this lifetime, I respect you even more. I get it.

  • @eclay432
    @eclay432 Před 3 lety

    He was the best actor I have ever seen, ever! Aside from that I feel for him and his family. Unfortunately I know exactly how he was feeling and it is rough, real rough.

  • @laraoneal7284
    @laraoneal7284 Před 2 lety +1

    Such an extraordinary and fascinating conversation. I’m mesmerized by Philip Hoffman.

  • @ZloyHouseCasino
    @ZloyHouseCasino Před 10 lety +1

    Lovely Actor .

  • @davidpfau8221
    @davidpfau8221 Před 10 lety +22

    "There is no pleasure that I haven't made myself sick on."

  • @nancybeveridgetaylor3256
    @nancybeveridgetaylor3256 Před 4 lety +4

    Phillip Seymour Hoffman was so mentally ill , so addicted, so tortured. I get him, as an intersexed person person who has struggled with all of this all my life! I struggled with sexual abuse, and then bulimia and depression and other food issues related to my sexual abuse, until my adult life. And then my intersexulity came out at 15 years old! And then no help until I got help my self at 19 years old! My intersexulity was never diagnosed until I was 19, when I had researched my own issues!!

  • @debbiepowers4743
    @debbiepowers4743 Před 3 lety +2

    Very astute observation Phillip. I kill pleasure by taking too much of it. It’s what killed him. What a loss for us.

  • @mutsa_
    @mutsa_ Před 6 lety +1

    Philip ❤️

  • @nancybeveridgetaylor3256
    @nancybeveridgetaylor3256 Před 4 lety +3

    When you leave religious chains, and go on, sometimes you never get free. As a psychiatric nurse, who has struggled with addiction myself, after I retired I got help!

  • @colinviray4833
    @colinviray4833 Před 8 lety +9

    It's like they had a contest to see who could act more tired, hungover, whilst pontificating.

    • @FOXAMG63
      @FOXAMG63 Před 3 lety

      I think they both needed that cup of coffee.

  • @Vanq123123
    @Vanq123123 Před 10 lety +1

    In Memoriam .

  • @frankdoane2898
    @frankdoane2898 Před měsícem

    I remember happiness. I just don't remember how to get back there.

  • @laraoneal7284
    @laraoneal7284 Před 2 lety

    Simon is a fascinating man also. Sometimes I think you can be TOO INTELLIGENT and it can be self destructive. RIP Philip Hoffman.

  • @michelangelocaravaggio261

    Happiness is being safe, secure and loved, by yourself as well as others.
    Happiness is innocence.

    • @truthlivingetc88
      @truthlivingetc88 Před 6 lety

      mmm not a bad statement

    • @LunaLu-00
      @LunaLu-00 Před 6 lety

      I liked the 2nd sentence

    • @truthlivingetc88
      @truthlivingetc88 Před 6 lety

      you don`t look very innocent

    • @lukaskaltenmaier3808
      @lukaskaltenmaier3808 Před 4 lety

      Interesting!
      But then happiness would be irretrievable once lost. Is it the knowledge of ones 'sin' / lost innocence? Because that you could maybe suppress or forget, for a while at least. Then again the truth has a way of always coming back to haunt you.

  • @Vanq123123
    @Vanq123123 Před 10 lety

    AGREE.

  • @Arashocky
    @Arashocky Před 7 lety +3

    It is so strange to see Simon talking about death with Philip...

  • @geezerpoet
    @geezerpoet Před 4 lety

    Happiness comes on you accidentally as you do worthwhile things. Happiness comes from activity.

  • @nancybeveridgetaylor3256
    @nancybeveridgetaylor3256 Před 4 lety +4

    When you are struggling with addiction and wrangling from a life time of religious monstrosities, it may never leave you.

  • @orangewarm1
    @orangewarm1 Před 10 měsíci

    Life is dhukkha - the first nobel truth. Dont expect happiness.

  • @scottfine4169
    @scottfine4169 Před 10 lety +2

    Crazy him talking about this when he had such a dark deep secret with Heroin.

  • @ebenclukey7293
    @ebenclukey7293 Před 10 lety +15

    So this is what philosophers do. Wow. Phil shoot's down the expert's concept of happiness in 30 seconds. "I kill pleasure."

    • @pratyushpriyadarshi8130
      @pratyushpriyadarshi8130 Před 7 lety +1

      You missed the part where he talks about the play virtue in controlling that pleasure.

  • @MrsP474
    @MrsP474 Před 3 lety

    I wish I had known him.

  • @TheNeverposts
    @TheNeverposts Před rokem

    RIP

  • @ThatsNotPoetry
    @ThatsNotPoetry Před 9 lety +35

    He is actively describing depression. It's so sad to see.

    • @greenbeagle13
      @greenbeagle13 Před 4 lety +11

      @Lisa Surlie - You are such an amazing bore - saying the same immature comment over and over and over... Go get a job, and please don't get pregnant anymore - wow.

  • @rapunzelagain
    @rapunzelagain Před 10 lety +3

    Oh, sweet, sweet, sweet Phil. I've nothing to add. Except that his New York accent is very strong in this video, no? Just an observation.

  • @ancientsignals
    @ancientsignals Před 3 lety +1

    41:50 "We live in a culture that denies death and flees death and is therefore constantly shocked by it because we keep it at the edges all the time. We don’t have the rituals. We don’t know what to do. We're confused by death and death is somehow obscene. We need to shove it somewhere else."

  • @VWGTI2013
    @VWGTI2013 Před 4 lety +3

    He was hilarious in Along Came Polly.

  • @martinbell6550
    @martinbell6550 Před rokem

    0 seconds ago
    Good early questions. He talks of being connected with his kids when they are okay. I sense that happiness is to do with connection but not when it is dependent on the outcome: such as, ‘being okay’. That is just fortuitous. I suspect happiness is when we are connected but our state of connection is not dependent on things being good or bad. We experience trauma whilst connected which distracts us from connection but whilst we are present and connected with our circumstances there is real happiness and it is possible to deal with trauma whilst connected. The tendency is to cover over the connection and I suspect that it is sometimes necessary to do that. I love PSH but his existential pain was overwhelming. Sadly I suspect that also made him the great actor he was.

  • @chuckblack8227
    @chuckblack8227 Před 10 lety +5

    Feel happiness. Feel feelings. Thinking about it is silly. Everyone has missed the point.

  • @noabaak
    @noabaak Před 3 lety

    Here’s a person talking of happiness about one year before his own death. He was found dead with a needle in his arms and left w/ 35M dollars. The very fact reflects what happiness should be. It’s not what states but demands of you. - NYC, 2/25/2021

  • @chopin65
    @chopin65 Před 5 lety +1

    This is one view of happiness. I am of the opinion that happiness originates in a logical and well executed mind, of a life of thought in addition to one's life in a society, family, loved... The life of the mind should be as vivacious and energetic as the life of a person. We have, for example, art. We are the only species in earth that has art, poetry, and music. This distinguishes us from other animals. We have religion. Name another species that has that? We explain nature with mathematics and science, and build technology and redefine how we dream month to month with mathematics, science, and technology. We are the great living paradox of what we call Earth. I think what we do is as important way to frame the question. To otherwise do so is an act of hubris, which is the true faith of humanity. We assume we can plan outcome, when we can merely inherit it.
    This was a great talk, however.

  • @moosiki
    @moosiki Před 10 lety +3

    Ι love the way he pronounces the word ευδαιμονία (eudaimonia)

    • @amorreale22
      @amorreale22 Před 10 lety

      yea, and isn't it usually translated as 'flourishing'?

    • @moosiki
      @moosiki Před 10 lety

      Anthony Morreale in Greek ευδαιμονία means intense happiness

  • @oniriclink0000
    @oniriclink0000 Před 10 lety

    Is there any subtitled version? I would really appreciate,because i only understand half of things and is so fucking interesting!!!

  • @samanthafischer2200
    @samanthafischer2200 Před 10 lety +1

    anyone know what sermon he is talking about? or if it is online somewhere?

  • @cahillgreg
    @cahillgreg Před 3 lety

    7th anniversary of his passing - RIP

  • @davecourtois5142
    @davecourtois5142 Před 10 lety +1

    To Philip... who escape to the valley
    By Dave Courtois.
    the valley of endless dream
    How far is your gate, How deep is your game...
    When it came in? where is go out? did you feel on the edge?
    Role in, roll out, be the limit, see a little further...
    Take your time, be it, stay in, pop out.
    Look around and be it, be it. Push it, pull out, make it
    inside out. Object of nothing, subject to logic, the
    action will be magic.
    Lost in the infinite measure of space.
    You are the none sens of the direction you take.
    Being the experience, what else can be lost. Be the subject,
    be the object, be the action, you are nothing more
    than music.
    Travel around, be the destination, you are welcome. Teach it,
    put it on paper, repeat it, repeat it, repeat it, make it real.
    Cut the equation whit a mirror, let reflect the illusion.
    There so much to forgot before you know, you are not
    what you think.
    Be useful to be use, make yourself fit. Be put in peace, fit in
    the puzzle, who appreciate the landscape. Pattern of the past,
    kaleidoscope in motion, keep it changing... Faction of fractal, colourful
    limits of infinity falling in the dance of time.
    Afraid to be forgot, afraid to be nothing, afraid to be apart...
    Run, run, run to reach your speed. Move to exist, put your trace,
    Is there a race? Win the prize you pay. Prisoner of movement,
    how long is your road? don’t be afraid by the end!
    Wake-up wake-up, and see the real part of the dream. Now sleep to
    to make it yours. You are welcome at the valley of endless
    dream!

  • @NetRiverside
    @NetRiverside Před 10 lety +10

    He was just too smart for his own good...sometimes is better to be born dumb and stupid....

  • @jameswest4819
    @jameswest4819 Před 3 lety +2

    Seymour did not really understand happiness. He was really pursuing what he thought might be happiness. Pleasure, getting high, power, fame...it all may or may not give us that nebulous concept of fulfillment. It is not the same for everyone. So many people never get there because there is always something better.

  • @FOXAMG63
    @FOXAMG63 Před 3 lety

    PSH was a kind and generous soul. Brilliant and generational talent.

  • @nadinesnoopy
    @nadinesnoopy Před 10 lety

    Teachers....

  • @aaronsmyth7943
    @aaronsmyth7943 Před 3 lety

    33:25 Simon Critchley mentions a film here, does anyone know the name of it, because I couldn't understand him? Thanks.

    • @richardhyde9945
      @richardhyde9945 Před 4 měsíci

      "Synecdoche, New York" with PSH as the main character.

  • @klik-klik28
    @klik-klik28 Před 10 lety +3

    I'm kind of tired of how people seem to think he was incredibly troubled and unhappy to take heroin. of course i have no idea what went on in his life, but he might just had a void in his life that tried to fill, many people do it. Or releave stress. Or he was temporarily lost. Maybe he had undiagnosed mental problems that he was trying medicate himself.
    Of course he was a dad that should make you more careful in your actions.
    But Somehow I can't think he was deeply unhappy, from listening to his interviews. I think maybe he was demanding too much from himself and he was unlucky to get addicted and consequently die.
    Just a thought.

    • @klik-klik28
      @klik-klik28 Před 10 lety +1

      Actually I take some of my comment back, listening to this interview it sounds like he was suffering from issues with addiction: "There is no pleasure that I haven't made myself sick on."
      He was obviosly a deep thinker and emotional guy. being in the public eye and having acting as you profession must have been draining. His roles were many times quite dark, he took his acting and fatherhood seriously and he worked a lot. His psyche and body might have been drained.

  • @bobjohnson4318
    @bobjohnson4318 Před 5 lety

    I agree with one commenter below... the women in the audience and their fucking nervous laughter when things are serious puts me on edge. Do you think its a comedy routine with Hoffman and a philosopher? Please, go see some standup.

  • @casperguylkn
    @casperguylkn Před 10 lety

    Someone made the argument before, and I wish I could find the article, it debates Jack Black and PSH going for the same roles at least when both were earlier in their career. Anyone ever hear of that? It would seem at one time, that may had been true, but PSH took a big left turn. Closest I could find is this short article. www.hollywood.com/news/movies/3498341/jack-black-haunted-by-philip-seymour-hoffman?page=all

  • @annip5573
    @annip5573 Před 10 lety +1

    My English is not good enough, can anybody please tell me the name of the play/production Philip Seymour Hoffman is talking about at the beginning of the talk, thanks in advance.

    • @81995sometime
      @81995sometime Před 10 lety +2

      “Ivanov" by Chekhov -- performed by Ethan Hawke

    • @annip5573
      @annip5573 Před 10 lety

      LissaLissa Taylor Many thanks!

  • @Misserbi
    @Misserbi Před 3 lety

    Happiness is the point of life? Purposely choosing not to be is simply organizing a system. Go to the lowest and you will know what I mean. We are supposed to find that again?

  • @gotnotruck
    @gotnotruck Před 7 lety

    BUT YOU BOTH ARE LAUGHING AND SEEM TO BE ENJOYING YOURSELVES. (CAPS FOR BAD EYES).

  • @elisamaxveranimichela8727

    è tanto triste per tanti motivi mi dispiace tanto ke si sia lasciato yrvolgere da gente ke vende morte

  • @Martyrium1
    @Martyrium1 Před 2 lety

    que alguien lo traduzca al español!

  • @anaximander66
    @anaximander66 Před 6 lety +15

    How annoying that must have been for Hoffman to express something profound and painful as killing all pleasures and listen to the chorus of child like thinkers laugh. Why is that funny, because it was evoked by Hoffman? A truly wise and profound thought wasted on people who don't have the maturity to contemplate it with him. I know that sounds very judgmental but I'm so tired of this mentality, that everything is a joke. What stuck me was the oversight that we tend to ignore the small things as we get older. We can't get under a table and pretend it's a submarine anymore, like we lose something as we gain knowledge. Such an elusive thing, that we need more than there is to obtain wonder in this life. Of course I think there is more than what's in this life but still, from a purely existential perspective, it is quite a perplexing mystery.

    • @gabrielsmith6600
      @gabrielsmith6600 Před 5 lety +2

      it was funny dude, things can be funny and wise. He even delivered it to be funny and relatable.

    • @zachuang8895
      @zachuang8895 Před 5 lety

      get your head out of your arse steve

    • @trumancapote9097
      @trumancapote9097 Před 4 lety +1

      AMERICA has become a fucking JOKE!!

    • @hazuinf
      @hazuinf Před 3 lety

      I think they were laughing in recognition

  • @L-xb6my
    @L-xb6my Před 3 lety

    34:43 what movie is he speaking of?