Now regular
readers will know that I am not Russell Crowe’s biggest fan. If I’m honest I
can’t stand the guy. In the vast majority of roles that I've seen him in he is
wooden and bland, and I don’t like him as a person. However, A Beautiful Mind
is the exception to this. This is the Academy Award winning film about the life
of John Nash and his struggle with schizophrenia.
John Nash starts
off as a student of mathematics at Princeton and immediately the audience sees
that he is a very dedicated and hard-working individual. He is striving
immensely hard for an ‘original idea’ in order to revolutionise his field. His
room-mate is his polar opposite, but they get along very well despite him not
getting on well with other people. During his teaching of a class at Princeton
he meets a student in the typical manner – she is the one who challenges the
teacher. After he finishes at Princeton he becomes a codebreaker and is
subsequently sought by the secret services to break a Russian code about a bomb
that is planning to be dropped on America. He has since married Alicia, the
student in his class, and they have a son. However all is not what it seems,
and she begins to get suspicious of his behaviour, calling in a psychiatrist to
help him. He is subsequently diagnosed with schizophrenia and we wee how his
life is dramatically affected by this. His room-mate at Princeton, his
room-mate’s niece and the secret services agent are all revealed to be
hallucinations, and Nash’s life begins to fall apart. After an incredibly long
struggle with his illness Nash is awarded the Nobel Prize for his contribution
to modern business and economics, and this is a heartwarming conclusion as he
dedicates his achievement to his wife who is ‘his reason’.
Now, much as it
pains me to say this, Russell Crowe is absolutely incredible in A Beautiful
Mind. A few posts back I compared Johnny Depp in Pirates of the Caribbean to
Dustin Hoffman in Rain Man and Robert de Niro in Awakenings. Well now Russell
Crowe can be added to that list. He is spectacular at getting the little parts
of the character right. His gait and the manner in which he walks so
consistently throughout the film is brilliant, and his speech and accent, which
I have criticised Crowe for before, is almost nailed on throughout the movie.
Despite being a thoroughly unlikable character, the audience immediately takes
to John Nash as the underdog of life, and Russell Crowe brings a strong sense
of engagement and emotion to the role. The emotions that Nash experiences when
he is first committed is conveyed beautifully by Crowe, and even better is his
emotion at the end. I watched A
Beautiful Mind recently with my Mum and she was saying how tragically sad it is
at the end, and I agree. I can only praise Russell Crowe for his acting in this
film, and am genuinely surprised that he missed out on the Academy Award for
Best Actor. Having said that, I haven’t seen Training Day, so I can’t possibly
comment.
Jennifer Connelly
plays John’s wife, Alicia Nash, and she does a very good job. By no means can
it be easy to play the wife of a schizophrenic man, and Connelly does
fantastically well to convey the emotion, frustration and difficulty that this illness
brings to the lives of everyone affected by it. Now the film embellishes the
finer details of John and Alicia’s marriage a bit. In reality they divorce
during the stages of John’s illness, but John lived in her house after his was
discharged. They re-married in 2001, but the film doesn't mention any of this.
I think that whether or they were married doesn't matter though. To me, them
not being married is incidental as she still devotes a substantial amount of
her time to taking care of him. I wouldn't have tipped her for an Academy Award
based on A Beautiful Mind, but I am not going to begrudge her it. She puts in a
very good performance in a very tricky role.
The other
supporting actors are fairly incidental, and like the other films with actors
that steal the show, Ed Harris, Christopher Plummer and Paul Bettany sort of
fade into the background. Their roles in the film aren't especially
exceptional, and while none of them put in a staggeringly bad performance, they
are massively overshadowed by the fantastic character that Russell Crowe
creates. I cannot think of a single aspect of his character that I don’t like.
From his dedication to his work, through his dismay at losing, his joking about
hallucinations, his determination to ignore the hallucinations and his
mannerisms when he reaches old age and is accepted and lauded by everyone I
find his character so charmingly lovable that I am always rooting for him. It
might be my background in psychology or the fact that this type of film is my
absolute favourite, but I really like the character.
John Nash is
undoubtedly a genius, and undoubtedly not enough people are aware of his
influence. A Beautiful Mind is the opportunity to find out about someone you
might not have heard about. If you have heard about him then it is an emotional
and enjoyable journey through the struggles of a man whose difficulties many of
us cannot begin to comprehend. I rate this film so highly, and consider it to
be one of the best winners of the Best Picture award. There is no-one that I
wouldn’t recommend it to, and would encourage everyone to watch it. I myself
watched it again yesterday, and already I want to see it again.
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