In the early 1960s, Yale University
social psychologist Stanley Milgram, himself the son of Jews that escaped the...
In the early 1960s, Yale University
social psychologist Stanley Milgram, himself the son of Jews that escaped the Holocaust, wondered how ordinary people could be persuaded to act so pitilessly as the Nazi war criminals.
Michael Almereyda's biopic about controversial American
social psychologist Stanley Milgram is hypnotic, and to a fault, but it still... Continue reading Experimenter
Where other biopics seem to have made up their minds about their famous figures before the opening credits roll, this remarkable study of
social psychologist Stanley Milgram remains curious, exploring and questioning his life, career and findings.
Peter Sarsgaard portrays
the social psychologist Stanley Milgram in «Experimenter.»
Beginning in 1961 at Yale, renowned
social psychologist Stanley Milgram (Peter Sarsgaard) wielded the baton on a series of psychological experiments in which subjects believed they were administering electrical shocks to an amiable and innocent subject, a stranger, in... Read more»
Beginning in 1961 at Yale, renowned
social psychologist Stanley Milgram (Peter Sarsgaard) wielded the baton on a series of psychological experiments in which subjects believed they were administering electrical shocks to an amiable and innocent subject, a stranger, in an adjacent room.
In 1961,
social psychologist Stanley Milgram conducted the «obedience experiments» at Yale University.
Slipping between several planes of reality with the nimbleness of a jazz ensemble, Michael Almereyda «s Experimenter, starring Peter Sarsgaard as late
social psychologist Stanley Milgram, is more of a delectable treat than the dark subject matter might lead you to believe.
Not exact matches
In his classic text The Individual and the
Social World,
psychologist Stanley Milgram warned against overstating the case for urban incivility: «In some instances it is not simply that, in the city, traditional courtesies are violated; rather, the cities develop new norms of noninvolvement.»
The experimenter in this film is
Stanley Milgram (Peter Sarsgaard), a
social psychologist who performed controversial experiments on human subjects dating back to the 1960's.
The name
Stanley Milgram might not ring a bell for a lot of people, but his work as a
social psychologist might.
The Memory Maps attracted the attention of
social psychologists such as
Stanley Milgram with whom Welch collaborated in a 1975 exhibition at the Piltzer Gallery in Paris.