求一篇a beautiful mind观后感

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  • Beautiful Mind

    A Beautiful Mind is a touching, emotionally charged film detailing

    the life of a brilliant academic who suffers from schizophrenia. This

    affliction slowly takes over his mind and we watch as his life crumbles

    apart around him. He abandons his students, alienates his colleagues and

    replaces his research with a fruitleand all-consuming obsession.

    Eventually he is taken into hospital where he is forced, with the help

    of electric-shock therapy and regular medication, to accept his

    condition and attempt to repair the shattered fragments of his life.

    He succeeds. Of course he succeeds, this is Hollywood and Hollywood

    likes a happy ending. In this case the happy ending is that, as an old

    man and after years of struggle, the poor academic is awarded the Nobel

    Prize. One interesting point though; it's a true story and our hero is

    none other than John Forbes Nash Jr.

    As a young man, John Nash was a mathematical genius. In 1947 he went

    to Princeton on a Carnegie Scholarship, and after three years had

    produced a 27-page dissertation for his doctorate in which he greatly

    expanded the field of Game Theory, transporting it from a position of

    relative obscurity into one of almost universal relevance.

    In the 1920s the father of Game Theory, Hungarian mathematician John

    von Neumann, had shown that mathematical models could be used to explain

    the behaviour of players in si-mp-le games. His work was limited in

    scope however, and although interesting, it appeared to be of little

    practical use.

    Nash's dissertation expanded on von Neumann's work, showing how Game

    Theory could explain complex as well as si-mp-le competitive behaviour.

    It wasn't a comprehensive solution to all game situations, but it did

    lay the foundations for the huge body of work on Game Theory which has

    been produced since.

    Unfortunately, very little of this comes acroin A Beautiful Mind

    because the director (Ron Howard) seems more interested in ma-ki-ng a

    film about a schizophrenic than a mathematician suffering from

    schizophrenia. At the start of the film we are shown a Hollywood

    template of a typically obsessive young academic, introverted, socially

    inept, dismissive of his colleagues' work. If the notes we see Nash

    scribbling on his windows were chemical formulae or rhyming couplets

    rather than mathematical equations, the character would have seemed

    equally plausible.

    This is not to say that Russell Crowe, who plays Nash, does a bad

    job. Indeed, he succeeds in giving his character a convincing

    plausibility rarely seen in mainstream cinema these days, and he was

    certainly a deserving Oscar nominee. It's just that we never see him

    doing any maths apart from the occasional scribbling on windows.

    And when his great breakthrough finally comes, Nash is not poring

    over his books in the library or gazing fixedly at his glaequivalent of a

    blackboard, he's in a bar, eyeing up a group of attractive young women.

    How visually convenient.

    But to be fair, this is a dramatisation based on Sylvia Nasar's

    best-selling book, not a documentary. Its aim is to entertain, not to

    enlighten, and it does this perfectly well. Russell Crowe produces

    probably his best performance to date and is equally convincing as both

    the awkward young genius and the tortured convalescent, struggling to

    rebuild his marriage and career. Jennifer Connolly (who won the Oscar

    for Best Supporting Actress) is excellent as Alicia, Nash's

    long-suffering wife, and there are several strong performances from the

    supporting cast, most notably Ed Harris as a mysterious character from

    the military and Paul Bettany as Nash's Princeton roommate.

    But Hollywood requires more from its films than a few good performances; it requires drama,