Genre: Drama
Director: John Madden
Starring: Gwyneth Paltrow, Anthony Hopkins,
Hope Davis and Jake Gyllenhaal,
RunTime: 1 hr 39 mins
Released By: Golden Village
Rating: NC16 (Scenes of Intimacy)
Opening
Day: 12 January 2006
Synopsis
:
PROOF
is the compelling story of an enigmatic young woman haunted
by her father’s past and the shadow of her own future,
exploring the links between genius and madness, the tender
relationships between fathers and daughters and the nature
of truth and family.
On
the eve of her twenty-seventh birthday, Catherine (Paltrow),
a young woman who has spent years caring for her brilliant
but unstable father, a mathematical genius named Robert (Hopkins),
must deal not only with the arrival of her estranged sister,
Claire (Davis), but also with the
attentions of Hal (Gyllenhaal), a former student of her father’s
who hopes to find valuable work in the 103 notebooks of Robert’s.
As
Catherine confronts Hal’s affections and Claire’s
overbearing plans for her life, she struggles to solve the
most perplexing problem of all: How much of her father’s
madness – or genius – will she inherit?
Movie
Review:
Proof
is not so much about the subject of math and insanity as it
is about the issues of trust in oneself and in others. Directed
by John Madden (Shakespeare in Love), this movie is the film
adaptation of the 2001 Pulitzer Prize winning play written
by David Auburn. Think: A Beautiful Mind on a much smaller
scale, with less displays of crazy antics and more of a drama
that is performed on a realistic degree.
Portraying
Catherine, Paltrow plays a young woman who has to come to
grips with her father’s death and her own possible inheritance
of not only his genius, but also his mental illness.
The
story revolves around four main characters and the movie opens
with a tired looking Catherine. Being a young caregiver to
an elderly parent has taken its toil on her. Hair messy, clothes
worn and unkempt, she spends her 27th birthday alone in front
of the TV hallucinating that her father, Robert (Anthony Hopkins)
is still alive.
In
comes Hal (Jake Gyllenhaal), who has been spending a lot of
time up in her father’s attic. An old student of Robert’s,
Hal who is a math professor himself, is trying to search through
103 notebooks to see if there is anything worth publishing,
all of which were written during the five years when her father
was declared mentally unstable. Hal, who idolised her father,
also harbours romantic interest in her and adds to Catherine’s
dilemmas as she questions the motives of his actions.
Returning
to Chicago for the funeral, her sister Claire (Hope Davis),
almost immediately tries to take control of her sister’s
life, and constantly tries to convince Catherine that she
is mentally ill like their father.
The
problem really begins when Catherine provides Hal with a highly
complex proof about prime numbers and Catherine declares she
wrote it. Or did she? The question of authorship between father
and daughter becomes the catalyst in revealing the true nature
in all them.
Oscar
winner Gwyneth Paltrow gives a solid performance and it is
probably one of her best to date. Her character is rough around
the edges and immersed with self-doubt and insecurity of her
own santity. Her pain and confusion stifles her potential
and personality and in this case, she really gets misunderstood
often. Anthony Hopkins has a commanding presence in the flashbacks
and is convincing as a stern but loving father, who does not
realise how crazy he really is.
The
remaining supporting cast are worth mention too. Jake Gyllenhaal
might be a little too hunky for a math professor, but his
deliverance makes him believable enough, especially in his
dialogues with Paltrow. Lastly, Hope Davis makes a great character
to dislike in doing the wrong things for the right reasons.
Overall,
the movie gets better as it goes along, though if you are
a math geek, do not count on seeing a lot of technical details.
The story though simplistic is intelligent and realistic as
a real-life drama, and Gwyneth Paltrow is the main reason
why this movie works in the end.
Movie
Rating:
(An
intellectual movie with a talented cast, led by Gwyneth Paltrow
– the script and pace could do better, but it is engaging
enough with its concepts of life, love, sanity and trust.)
Review
by Jolene Tan
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