| A BEAUTIFUL MIND |
2001 - USA
Director: Ron Howard - Reviewed by Kerri
[SPOILER ALERT!] [DON'T SAY WE DIDN'T WARN YOU!] This is a biopic of celebrated math scholar and economics Nobel Prize winner John Forbes Nash, who suffered... (here's the spoiler...) from paranoid schizophrenia. The film opens with his foray into school at Princeton, where is is already a social outcast, a quirky genius, and an excessive worrier of finding "that one orginal idea." It is here he meets roommate Charles (Paul Bettany), who becomes his best friend, and Alicia (Jennifer Connelly), whom he falls in love with. He gets his idea, impresses the professors, lands a plum assignment at MIT, and marries Alicia. Life seems to be rolling along. Suddenly John finds himself in the middle of a plot to keep the Russians from obliterating America because he's an expert code-breaker. His life becomes a turmoil of secrecy and paranoia as he feverishly works to find conspiracies in magazines. When he fears danger, his paranoia gets out of hand, until Dr. Rosen (Christopher Plummer) commits him to an institute and declares him crazy. Here's where the bulk of the film begins, and why it was important not to know whether he was crazy or not before seeing this. As you're watching this film, you're wondering, too, what is real and what is not. Is he really part of government work and is America in danger? Or are they delusions in his own mind? Not knowing anything about the film before I went in, it was exciting to watch; it is essential that the audience doesn't know what's real or what's made up because then you understand to some extent what John is going through. Had I read the synopsis beforehand, I would have been robbed of this brilliant cinematic trick. I don't know if the producers meant for that to happen, or didn't care if we were let in on the joke, but I do give them credit for not giving it away in the trailers. Jennifer Connelly gives an excellent performance as the backbone of the world crumbling around her; Ed Harris and Paul Bettany steal the show, and it doesn't hurt that Adam Goldberg is in it, either. Russell Crowe may see yet another Oscar nomination his way... (though a particular gripe of mine is that how many math geniuses have the good looks or the physique of Russell Crowe? Hubba hubba!). He does portray John with amazing emotion and wit throughout. I did find a few flaws with some of the scenes but it's Hollywood after all. I thought it did a remarkable turn from your basic social-outcast-genius story to one of intrigue, excitement, and human spirit. (See here for Thom's contrasting review.) (Read Jerry's interview with Ron Howard about A Beautiful Mind.) |
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