
A BEAUTIFUL MIND - PG13
Stars: Russell Crowe, Ed Harris, Jennifer Connelly, Christopher Plummer, Paul Bettany, Adam Goldberg
Director: Ron Howard
Writers: Akiva Goldsman - Based on the book by Sylvia Nasar
What makes A Beautiful Mind a beautiful movie are the powerful story upon which it is based and
the luminous acting skills of its star Russell Crowe in portraying John Nash, a genius mathematician,
whose life was elevated by remarkable revelations and then torn asunder by harrowing delusions. It is a
brilliant performance strongly supported by actress Jennifer Connelly's turn as Nash's loving wife Alicia.
The story begins at Princeton University in 1947 where John Nash has come from West Virginia for his graduate
degree in Mathematics. He is shy yet arrogant, desperate for achievement and recognition and entirely at a
loss as to how to accomplish either. He's the ultimate nerd. Without social skills or focus,
Nash wanders the campus looking
for just one original idea to set him apart and above the mediocrity. As his life revolves around
numbers, Nash believes he can solve any of life's riddles by just reducing them to a series of
numerical equations and analyzing the patterns within. Then one day, as luck would have it, Nash discovers
his greatest mathematical moment and his success is all but ensured. He wins a coveted position at the country's
most prestigious defense lab called Wheeler at the campus of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
As part of a funding arrangement, Nash is forced to split his time between important research and
teaching graduate studies. It is in his own classroom that he meets the aggressive and beautiful
Alicia who manages to snag his interest and turn him into a husband before he can calculate the
probability of success.
Soon after, Nash's life takes another turn, a very dangerous one in which
he finds himself descending into paranoid schizophrenia that threatens his marriage, his brilliant
career and his life.
During those years between his rise and fall, we meet important characters in Nash's life: fellow students Sol
(Adam Goldberg) and Martin Hansen (Josh Lucas), a high strung
roommate Charles Herman (Paul Bettany), his mentor Prof. Helinger (Judd Hirsch), one mysterious and threatening
defense department official, William Parcher (Ed Harris) and finally Doctor Rosen (Christopher Plummer).
We see a period in which gentlemanly good manners ruled academia at the same time the country was in the midst
of the 'Red Commie' scare. Through it all, it is Alicia's love, loyalty and belief in his capacities
that helps put Nash back on the path to some sense of sanity.
The film spans almost 50 years and shows his inspiring, long sought recovery which
climaxes with his astonishing 1994 Nobel Prize for Economics. All the stuff of a good Hollywood drama, to be
sure, despite a goodly number of liberties taken both with Nash's characterization as well
as specifics of his life. One irksome detail is that the film, in its attempt to maintain suspense,
never actually explains who was the person ultimately responsible for having Nash committed
to a psychiatric facility for testing.
Lotta says: Russell Crowe gives us an immaculate portrayal of a complex individual in a demanding role,
convincing as the shy yet egotistical genius and mesmerizing as the vulnerable and beleaguered
wimp trying desperately to cope with the enormous responsibility brought on by the bullying
agent Parcher. His only failing is a mumbled and murky West Virginia accent, which when mixed with
his natural Australian inflections, leaves him occasionally sounding a bit like Winston Churchill.
The film, directed by Ron Howard, is a mature look at a mature subject that depicts
ingeniously the terrors of schizophrenia. There is great sympathy for the character without the tale
being overly sentimental.
Reviewed 12/26/01
|