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(2001) rt: 136m **½
Director: Ron Howard
Starring: Russell Crow, Ed Harris, Jennifer Connelly, Christopher
Plummer
Tagline: He Saw The World In A Way No One Could Have Imagined.
Nothing says "reality" like bending
and twisting a "true story" to your will--bending it so
it will fit into your narrow little, Hollywood world. Gay sex? Never!
Drug abuse? Not in a Ron Howard film! I understand this movie is less
biopic and more a study on the devastating effects of schizophrenia
(hee-hee), but why alter the truth to make it more palatable? Nash's
true life is actually a much more disturbing and sad tale than what
comes across in the film. Granted, going insane can't be all that
much fun, but this movie turns it into an after-school special. Add
on top of that Ron Howard's plodding, painfully slow directorial style,
and you have a real snoozer on your hands. Plus, Crow spends the entire
movie mumbling and blocking his words with strange, distracting hand
motions. There' something infinitely parodical about all of Crow's
performances. You can see Crow trying to act like a crazy person in
this film. You could see him trying to act like a hero in Gladiator.
Everything ends up feeling vaguely like a Saturday Night Live
sketch. His not-so-subtle performance makes him into more of a caricature
than the portrait of a man in crisis. Howard also makes a feeble attempt
to create some sort of Sixth
Sense-type thing. On a second viewing, I have a feeling the trickery
wouldn't hold up. The selflessness shown by Nash's wife (Connelly)
is no doubt romanticized to a large extent. Howard is the king of
the overly-romanticized, slow-motion scene. He always seems to concern
himself with the process behind everything. While these intricate
details are interesting in books, they make for dull movies and give
a somewhat cheeseball air to the narrative. Why heap all this praise
on an Academy Award winning film, you ask? It is my job as a lame
purveyor of lame Hollywood movies to tear them down. [DVD, MF]
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