Punxsutawney is a nice little model of democratic mutual support, once Phil learns to stop patronizing his neighbors and learns the real meaning of freedom. Some have seen Harold Ramis's clever film, among other things, a Buddhist allegory... or as a Nietzschean parable about eternal recurrence.
Is Groundhog Day one of the great philosophical movies? Viewed on the most trivial level it’s just another Hollywood rom-com, but on closer inspection it furnishes a dazzling treatment of Nietzsche’s concept of eternal recurrence, even illuminating Deleuze and Irigaray’s conflicting interpretations of this key Nietzschean idea. It also throws light on postmodern thinking regarding simulacra – representations without originals. Finally, it updates the ancient Greek myth of Sisyphus, casting its protagonist, played by Bill Murray, in the role of Sisyphus, the absurd hero... (Philosophy Now, continues)
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