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Proof (2005) Proof
is at its most
spellbinding in its
winter setting.
Surely it has to do
with reclusive star
Gwyneth Paltrow's
frosty demeanor and
muted facial
features, or Anthony
Hopkins white tufts,
icy stare, and
lion's presence, but
most likely it is
because the subject matter
of John (Shakespeare
in Love) Madden's
soft, unassuming
film based on David
Auburn's play is
math, the
coldest, most
unfriendly
intellectual pursuit
in God's creation.
Paltrow plays
Hopkins' daughter as
she grieves
following his death
and begins to wonder
and dread that she
not only shares his
mathematical genius
but his crippling
madness as well.
Nothing makes me
feel more like an
absolute dunce than
numbers and their
supposed relevance.
I've been told that
math is an
astounding
universal language,
one that we could
use to communicate
with aliens. I guess
in case of an alien
encounter we could
look to the math
geeks to interpret
but until then, the
whole Pythagorean
circumference of a
cosine thing is well
beyond me. Proof
does succeed in
making the average
moviegoer care, at
least for the
moment, about math,
or more importantly,
the mathematical
machinery that can
exist in a brilliant
human brain.
The argument Proof
makes in its cool,
sophisticated way is
that sometimes it is
difficult to clarify
the line between
insane individual
and insane genius.
Without intending to
do much else but
portray the ways
genius can
negatively affect
families and
relationships, the
movie suggests, as
many have already
conjectured, that
the most absolutely
brilliant
individuals are very
much susceptible to
breaking down
mentally and
psychologically. The
mystery element in
Proof is provided as
audiences must wade
through flashbacks
of Paltrow's
Catherine and decide
whether she is a
loony liar and
plagiarist or
sparkling
misunderstood genius
who has written a
forty page proof (a
mathematical theory
explained via a
language equation)
that will change the
face of the field.
While this mystery
unfolds, we are
thankfully
introduced to two
outside players in
Catherine's life,
her well-meaning but
all too mortal
sister (played with
perfect slyness by
Hope Davis) and a charming mathematician
love interest (Jake
Gyllenhaal who often
comes off like he's
acting and aware of
his performance).
These two additions
allow us to truly
study Catherine and
it creates a human
being out of her,
not simply the
stereotypical
academic unable to
connect to the real
world.
The story is clearly
written by someone
with some affection
for the intellectual
process and those
who rigor through
the process to
create lasting work.
In that sense, Proof
is quite
accomplished in its
unpresumptuous
presentation of one
defining moment in
the life of a gifted
young woman
struggling with the
burden of an
unparalleled mind.
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