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A Beautiful Mind
 
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A Beautiful Mind

Russell Crowe , Ed Harris , Ron Howard    PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested)   VHS Tape
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (393 customer reviews)

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A Beautiful Mind manages to twist enough pathos out of John Nash's incredible life story to redeem an at-times goofy portrayal of schizophrenia. Russell Crowe tackles the role with characteristic fervor, playing the Nobel prize-winning mathematician from his days at Princeton, where he developed a groundbreaking economic theory, to his meteoric rise to the cover of Forbes magazine and an MIT professorship, and on through to his eventual dismissal due to schizophrenic delusions. Of course, it is the delusions that fascinate director Ron Howard and, predictably, go astray. Nash's other world, populated as it is by a maniacal Department of Defense agent (Ed Harris), an imagined college roommate who seems straight out of Dead Poets Society, and an orphaned girl, is so fluid and scriptlike as to make the viewer wonder if schizophrenia is really as slick as depicted. Crowe's physical intensity drags us along as he works admirably to carry the film on his considerable shoulders. No doubt the story of Nash's amazing will to recover his life without the aid of medication is a worthy one, his eventual triumph heartening. Unfortunately, Howard's flashy style is unable to convey much of it. --Fionn Meade

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Customer Reviews

393 Reviews
5 star:
 (196)
4 star:
 (80)
3 star:
 (51)
2 star:
 (39)
1 star:
 (27)
 
 
 
 
 
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4.0 out of 5 stars (393 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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1.0 out of 5 stars Not about John Nash, May 8 2004
By 
Jack Seay (Lubbock, TX United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Did the screenwriter even read the book? Perhaps just a one paragraph summary. Nearly every important event of his life is left out, and almost none of the events in the movie are in the book. This might be an entertaining inspirational movie, if they hadn't used John Nash's name and the title of his biography. It's not about him. It is 99% fiction. The real story of his life is much more bizarre and would make a better movie. Crowe really knows how to play the part of a tortured soul, but he did it better in "The Insider". I think he could have done it here with a story actually based on the life of John Forbes Nash, Jr. I hope someone makes a movie or miniseries about the real man.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Opie really learned how to make a movie, didn't he?!, April 13 2004
By 
M. R. Sheffield (Herkimer, NY) - See all my reviews
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A beautifully filmed, well acted, touching movie. I waited two years after its release to see it and regret that I did so. This is one of the few perfect movies I have ever seen. A perfect movie is one that could not, in my humble opinion, have been any better than it is. Russell Crowe is perfectly cast. The music score is wonderful. The cinematography is top of the art. The story, based on the life of a noted living mathematician, is complicated but deftly handled. When "A Beautiful Mind" won Best Picture at the Academy Awards over "The Fellowship of the Ring," I was sorely disappointed. But now that I've finally seen it, I know why it won. And now it's on my "Top Ten Movies of All Time" list. Watch it and I bet it'll be on yours too.
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4.0 out of 5 stars I need to believe that something extraordinary is possible.., Mar 28 2004
By 
Jess (Colorado Springs, CO USA) - See all my reviews
A Beautiful Mind (ABM) has become a paramount work of Ron Howards, ranking on Internet Movie Database (IMDb) as 246 in the top 250 movies. ABM tells the story of Dr. John Forbes Nash (Russell Crowe), a young, introverted scholar. The story of Nash picks up in the late 1940's when he is at Princeton, and starting his doctoral program. Although Nash is not a stereotypical genius, his work speaks novels about his mind. Nash was once told that he was given two helpings of brains and one of heart.

Soon after, Nash comes up with a genius economic theory that blasts his competition out of the water, giving him a choice on where he wants to continue his studies. He chooses Wheeler Labs in an MIT campus, where he meets Alicia Larde (Jennifer Connelly) while teaching. The love story starts immediately at this point, where Alicia starts attracting John by seeing other solutions to problems, and, in essence, challenging him. The heat of the classroom gets to the students, and Alicia stands up, opening the windows John had just closed to politely ask the construction workers to take their work elsewhere while they learn. Aww, again. All the while, John believes he has been working for the government decoding numbers that were plastered on a wall.

Alicia and John start a romantic affair after they stand under the stars, connecting "dots" as stars, making little things like an octopus. Their tryst begins in a restaurant where John is late, but brings a gift for Alicia. He remembers a line from their time standing outside at the formal event about her love for colours, and the prism he gives her shows every colour in the spectrum. Of course, this is a love story, and the expected "aww!" comes here.

All the while, John is fighting in his own mind with three specific characters: William Parcher (Ed Harris), Charles Herman (Paul Bettany), and little Marcee Herman (Vivien Cardone). Parcher has John convinced that the Russians are after him, and that if he dares speak to anyone about the confidential work he is engaged in, Parcher will let the Russians after him. The self-proclaimed prodigal roommate of Charles comes during John's days at Princeton during the doctoral program. Marcee is Charles' niece, and seems to be with Charles all the time.

When the characters come to the realization that Nash is indeed, 'crazy in love' with his work, they also see that the people John talks about never seem to appear at social functions, such as his wedding. John is committed to a psychiatric facility while giving a guest lecture at a university. After being subjected to multiple treatments of insulin shock therapy, John finds himself competent enough to battle the illness on his own. Fast forward to 1994, John is approached by a committee which nominates him for the nobel prize in economics for the game theory. John accepts it, and gives a speech about his wife, Alicia. Aww.

This movie starts out as totally intriguing one, but as much as I adore it, let us face it, it's a total love story, and I am a sap. Although this isn't a normal slap-you-in-the-face plot, the more subtle approach is cute. "I need to believe that something extra ordinary is possible...," says Alicia to John, proving her strong love for him. It was extra ordinary on how Howard pulled this film to such a beautiful presentation and plot.

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