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Minimalism: A Documentary About the Important Things

  • 2015
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 18m
IMDb RATING
6.6/10
17K
YOUR RATING
Minimalism: A Documentary About the Important Things (2015)
How might your life be better with less?
Play trailer2:45
1 Video
22 Photos
Documentary

How might your life be better with less?How might your life be better with less?How might your life be better with less?

  • Director
    • Matt D'Avella
  • Stars
    • Dan Harris
    • Ryan Nicodemus
    • Rick Hanson
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.6/10
    17K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Matt D'Avella
    • Stars
      • Dan Harris
      • Ryan Nicodemus
      • Rick Hanson
    • 118User reviews
    • 4Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:45
    Official Trailer

    Photos22

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    Top cast30

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    Dan Harris
    Dan Harris
    • Self - Author - 10% Happier
    Ryan Nicodemus
    Ryan Nicodemus
    • Self - The Minimalists
    Rick Hanson
    Rick Hanson
    • Self - PhD - Neurospychologist
    Jesse Jacobs
    Jesse Jacobs
    • Self - Entrepreneur
    Shannon Whitehead
    Shannon Whitehead
    • Self - Sustainable-Apparel Consultant
    Sam Harris
    Sam Harris
    • Self - PhD - Neurospychologist
    Juliet Schor
    Juliet Schor
    • Self - PhD - Economist & Sociologist
    Patrick Rhone
    Patrick Rhone
    • Self - Author - Enough
    Yarrow Kraner
    Yarrow Kraner
    • Self - Director & Photographer
    Joshua Fields Millburn
    Joshua Fields Millburn
    • Self - The Minimalists
    Graham Hill
    Graham Hill
    • Self - Founder - Lifeedited
    David Friedlander
    David Friedlander
    • Self - Communications Director - Lifeedited
    Frank Mascia
    Frank Mascia
    • Self - Architect
    Tammy Strobel
    Tammy Strobel
    • Self - Author - You Can Buy Happiness (And It's Cheap)
    Jay Austin
    Jay Austin
    • Self - Tiny-House Designer
    Jacqueline Schmidt
    Jacqueline Schmidt
    • Self - Illustrator & Designer
    Gail Steketee
    Gail Steketee
    • Self - PhD Compulsive-Hoarding Expert
    Colin Beavan
    Colin Beavan
    • Self - Author - No Impact Man
    • Director
      • Matt D'Avella
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews118

    6.616.9K
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    Featured reviews

    3ignastio

    Rich Bros keep less stuff.

    A succession of wall street types clear a fair deal of stuff out of their big, fancy, rich bro condos. It hard to empathise with people like this, especially the "homeless" guy who has access to enough money to constantly move around the world staying in hotels.

    They may be able to cut 6 shirts down to 2, but they clearly can't escape the stranglehold of capitalism. Buy their new book.
    6cartesianthought

    I like the cause, but this documentary doesn't add much to it.

    Minimalism can be an eye-opening message for anyone who hasn't been exposed to it, but for most, it's too little too late. Documentaries like Food Inc and An Inconvenient Truth were ahead of their time, coming out before the zenith of the information age. But minimalism has pervaded through blogs, books, Youtube, college lectures and TED already, and making this documentary at this time was a very safe choice.

    It has a little bit of everything, some dialogue from semi-famous bloggers (and Sam Harris), a few anecdotes, pictures, data, some shots of Americans being iphone-addicted slobs. It has a lot of good one liners but doesn't particularly go into any one thing in depth. I don't think I walked away from it knowing anything I didn't already know.

    Every now and then, I do need a little reminder to cut back on my excess and focus on quality rather than quantity, and this movie does that. It's useful for that.But this joins a long line of works with the cliché message of "avoid consumerism, find fulfilment in your life and live in the woods maybe".
    7aashishhere

    Good introduction to the concept

    I liked the message of the documentary. It argues that we don't need all the extra stuff that we are constantly collecting. This is obstructing us from things that really matter. You don't make space for that since consuming seems more fulfilling myopically and seems more urgent. There were examples of multititude of people speaking about apparels, home space, career related things which we just get hooked on to without rethinking if that is for us. The documentary didn't get very deep in the challenges of implementing it, or even the nuances and how several people have adopted it in their daily lives. There were traces of meditation helping, connecting with people, implementing this within a family or just your spouse. But it felt a little superficial. But overall I recommend it. The next time you are purchasing something, if this movie triggers a deliberation, then it has left a mark. It seems to have done for me.
    8alice-kim75

    Great Documentary, Easy Access to Minimalism

    I am one kind of person who live for more stuff, actually I care much about what people think, and of course what I own. When they compliment me for the success I got with those expensive stuff, I feel proud and happy but not for long. I keep buying stuff, to maintain the proudness about these. Afterall I realize people don't really care about what I got. The movie is somehow describe me, people may call they're crazy to go backward to the norm of society. Yes they do. But It's a good thing for us both in term of metal health and physical health when the environment get more burden from scare resources and pollution. And why this movie don't give any specific direction to minimalism and the purpose of it. I think it advice us to give be concentrate on each individual's important things. And that's what different between people. We can't tell exactly. We gonna find out our all ways. I feel grateful watching this. I will give myself a time to grow and become a minimalist, not because they ask me to or I admire them. But just because I'm tired of the way I used to live : Living for more.
    3leifthor-1

    Pretentious well-to-do people downsizing a difficult thing to empathize with...

    Having spent the last two-and-a-half years living on a 25 foot long sailboat, I am in a position to say a word or two about minimalism. And it could be said that in the realm of living a minimalistic life people who live on boats have been doing it for a long long time, much longer than what these filmmakers propose.

    What I appreciate about the film is that it does propose a great many good thoughts for conversation on how life can be more full with less stuff.

    Unfortunately where this film fell quite flat for me was in that most of the interviews are with people who are well- to-do making six-digit incomes and deciding that they don't want a big house instead choosing to live a minimalistic life which is fine. But a great many people choose to live minimalistic lives that are not as wealthy, and are simply working-class folks.

    And as some of the reviewers here have pointed out a film about minimalism should be perhaps much shorter and to the point, so here is mine on the advantages of a minimalistic lifestyle.

    I am asked often what it is like for my life on my small sailboat and the answer is that I have found stuff creates anchors. Like the death with ten thousand small cuts these anchors are each and of themselves so tiny, so small, so insignificant, that one does not notice them but in totality they wind up creating a sort of quicksand trapping you in place, doing a thing so that you may hold on to these things.

    And that a life where your identity is deeply embedded in the things around you that are yours is in fact an extremely hollow form of existence.

    As it stands for the warmer half of the year when I arrive home from work if there is wind, 15 minutes later I'm out sailing with very few anchors trailing behind.

    I'm glad someone is saying these things about minimalism, I'm just not so sure these guys did the best job of it.

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    Related interests

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    Documentary

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Filmed in Missoula, Montana.
    • Quotes

      Jay Austin: We're not going to ever be able to achieve the environmental gains that we're seeking while still expecting our lives to be the same. We're going to have to give up a lot. The secret is that a lot of that we're not actually going to miss.

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    FAQ14

    • How long is Minimalism: A Documentary About the Important Things?Powered by Alexa

    Details

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    • Release date
      • December 15, 2016 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official site
      • Official Site
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • 極簡主義:記錄生命中的重要事物
    • Production company
      • Catalyst
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross US & Canada
      • $261,865
    • Gross worldwide
      • $261,865
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 18m(78 min)
    • Color
      • Color

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