Daniel London is a Actor and Producer American born on 1973 at Pittsburgh (USA)
Daniel London
Daniel London participated to
17 films (as actor, director or script writer).
Among those,
2 have good markets following the box office.
Here are the best films classified by number of entries :
Actor
, 1h55
Directed by Tom ShadyacOrigin USAGenres Drama,
Biography,
Comedy,
Comedy-dramaThemes Medical-themed films,
Films about suicideActors Robin Williams,
Daniel London,
Philip Seymour Hoffman,
Monica Potter,
Daniel London,
Bob GuntonRoles Truman
Rating68%
A suicidal Hunter "Patch" Adams (Robin Williams) commits himself into a mental institution. Once there, he finds that using humor to help his fellow patients gives him a purpose in life. Because of this he wants to become a medical doctor and two years later enrolls at the Medical College of Virginia (now known as VCU School of Medicine) as the oldest first year student. He questions the school's soulless approach to medical care and clashes with the school's Dean Walcott (Bob Gunton), who believes that doctors must treat patients as patients and not bond with them as people. Because of this and incidents such as setting up a giant pair of legs during an obstetric conference, he is expelled from the medical school, although he is later reinstated due to his methods actually helping patients improve. Adams encourages medical students to work closely with nurses, learn interviewing skills early, and argues that death should be treated with dignity and sometimes even humor.Producer
, 1h52
Directed by Denys Arcand,
Jacques W. BenoîtOrigin CanadaGenres Drama,
Comedy,
Comedy-drama,
Crime,
RomanceThemes Medical-themed films,
Films about sexuality,
Transport films,
Erotic films,
Aviation films,
Films about cancerActors Rémy Girard,
Stéphane Rousseau,
Roy Dupuis,
Louise Portal,
Dorothée Berryman,
Marie-Josée CrozeRoles Producer
Rating74%
Continuing seventeen years after Arcand's The Decline of the American Empire, the film centres on an exploration of the characters first met in the original film and their children, newly introduced. The older generation are still largely social-democrats and proponents of Quebec nationalism, but both political and economic developments after the “Quiet Revolution” of the 1960s, as well as their own aging, make their left-wing stance seem somewhat anachronistic.