Posts tonen met het label India. Alle posts tonen
Posts tonen met het label India. Alle posts tonen

zaterdag 16 juli 2016

Today's Review: The Man Who Knew Infinity



Took a while (vacation will do that), but here's a long overdue review for your approval:

The Man Who Knew Infinity - recensie

Mathematics is generally considered by mainstream audiences as a rather dull topic, but movies about mathematicians often have little trouble finding an audience. There's an odd fascination with the socially awkward minds of geniuses who spend their entire live crunching numbers, or so the success of A Beautiful Mind or more recently The Theory of Everything and The Imitation Game has proven. However, with the success of such films, there's a risk of such biopics finding themselves limited to a specific formula. A misunderstood genius+a harsh, unaccepting society+British acting talent=boxoffice success, such a formula might state. Problem is, these geniuses in question were anything but formulaic people so there ought to be a little more to it than generic writing to make modern audiences fully appreciate their work. Case in point, the legendary Srinivasa Ramanujan and the feeble The Man Who Knew Infinity.

The mathematical wonder Ramanujan was born a poor Indian with an uncanny gift for understanding numbers and dreaming up formulas way beyond the comprehension of his social environment in the early 20th Century. It took a while for his talent to be recognized and even longer for it to be put to good academic use, when he finally moved to Cambridge. There he baffled the minds of his fellows in the short years that remained to him. What made this incredible mind tick? The Man Who Knew Infinity unfortunately is more concerned with focusing on the culture of discrimination Ramanujan faced at academia. In the movie, the misunderstood genius spends most of his time being subjected to racist exclusion rather than getting any work done. And so he stays mostly misunderstood to the audience, who can't begin to comprehend just how unusual his formulas were and what grand ramifications they had for the world of mathematics. Ramanujan is just repeatedly stated to be a genius, and that's that.


Dev Patel portrays this specific genius and does an adequate job carrying the movie as such, but his talent is basically wasted as the ongoing victim of racial slurs who just keeps looking miserable and unhappy. As the genre's conventions have it, it's up to the assembled British talent to keep the movie alive beyond that. With Jeremy Irons as Ramanujan's close friend Hardy, the film does have one great card to play in keeping us interested both in Ramanujan's plight and mathematics in general. The movie is as its most interesting when Irons graces the screen, guiding us and the protagonist through the academic world and mathematical lore of the early 1900s and sharing many an intriguing anecdote about both. These scenes make for the film's most interesting moments, which are constantly hindered by Ramanujan facing yet another insult regarding his cultural roots or skin colour. We get it, racism is bad. Unfortunately, more emphasis is put on this particular message than we would care to hear. Suffering is after all a trope of the genre and worked for its predecessors: as Turing struggled with his homosexuality in The Imitation Game and Hawking with his debilitating condition in The Theroy of Everything, so Ramanujan is subjected to the racism of the day.

Which is too bad, since an unusual mind like Ramanujan's didn't deserve to be explored in such a generic period piece as The Man Who Knew Infinity. The movie carefully stays within the boundaries of the genre rather than, like the man it honours, exceeding such boundaries. It drones on endlessly about the poor man's plight rather than making us fully appreciate his work, his field of expertise and his lasting legacy. The Man Who Knew Infinity, sadly, is rather a predictable and dull movie, which hinders general moviegoers to consider mathematics something other than just that exactly. Well, at least Jeremy Irons tried...

maandag 14 mei 2012

Darjeeling Limited, The



Rating: ***/*****, or 7/10


So far, Wes Anderson's worst film. However, a more apt description would be this is his least good film, since it's by no means a bad movie, once again utilizing his signature colourful style to great visual effect. It's the overly sentimental plot that gets stuck in family drama (another Wes Anderson staple) a little too often that's the main problem. Three brothers (Owen Wilson, Jason Schwartzman and Adrien Brody), all very different from one another, trek across India by train in hopes of a bonding experience after having drifted apart due to the death of their father. They also set out in search of their mother (Anjelica Huston) who resides in those parts. Each has their personal demons to overcome in the process, be they drug related, depression, or a troubled relationship with a woman. While exploring the beauty of India via the railroad, each deals with his problems in his own way, which leads to various hilarious moments in the first half of the film, among other things involving a beautiful female train attendant, her overprotective lover and a venomous snake. Anderson's usually offbeat and oddball comedy sadly is traded in for overly melodramatic family squabbling and reconciliation in the picture's second half. Overall, this movie is a mixed bag, but far from a failure and otherwise as 'Wesandersonesque' as they come. Featuring bit parts of Natalie Portman and Wes Anderson's personal muse Bill Murray.
As a compendium piece to flesh out the Jason Schwartzman character, Anderson directed the short film Hotel Chevalier, which was shown as a short feature in front of The Darjeeling Limited in many theaters. It worked as a footnote released together with the main film, but by itself it seemed like an excuse to have Natalie Portman take off her clothes, which is also not a bad thing per se.


Starring: Owen Wilson, Jason Schwartzman, Adrien Brody


Directed by Wes Anderson


USA: Fox Searchlight Pictures, 2007


woensdag 1 februari 2012

Alexander




Rating ***/*****, or 5/10

Epic biopic follows the life and times of Alexander the Great (Colin Farrell, refusing to loose his Irish accent, so all the other actors portraying Macedonians had to adapt to him), and highlights the man himself far more than his accomplishments. So while we are treated to large scale battle scenes and his brave trek across Persia and Asia in grand, sweeping scenes and vista shots, we also get a closer look at his troubled relationship with his parents (a seductive Angelina Jolie and a boorish, abusive Val Kilmer) and his love life, which included a supposed homosexual affair with his close friend Hephaistion (dreamy Jared Leto). Oliver Stone's focus on Alexander's screwed up personal relationships is a bold, but ultimately doomed attempt to explain the man's motives and his sometimes mysterious decisions, which undermines the picture as a whole by making it feel unbalanced and overly melodramatic. Stone himself wasn't really pleased with the final product either, and made a total of three released cuts, adding several scenes, loosing others and playing with the sequential order of events. A good try, but never satisfactory in whatever form.


Starring: Colin Farrell, Jared Leto, Angelina Jolie

Directed by Oliver Stone

USA, UK, Italy and many other countries: Warner Bros Pictures, 2004