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Proof


Directed by: John Madden
Starring: Gwyenth Paltrow
Genre:
Drama
Run Time: 99
min.
Release Date:
September 2005
On The Web:
Official
Site
Teaser:
Movie Trailer
Reviewed by
Byron Merritt |
Proving or disproving
something is the goal of many mathematicians. But PROOF takes that
equation into an entirely different dynamic. Gwyneth Paltrow
(RUNNING
WITH SCISSORS) as Catherine gives the best performance of
all in this ensemble cast. She's the daughter of a genius (Anthony
Hopkins, BOBBY) who'd lost his mind and recently
died. But his brilliance was legendary. His equations changed
mathematical history. And when Catherine appears to be just as brilliant
as her father, her fears drive her to extremes. She feels she may be
losing her mind, too, so she hides her intellect behind a mask of
despair, longing for her lost father. Behind this facade we see her own
battle with depression and her worries that she may be too much like her
father. Will she end up just as mad as he? This is the question that
eats at Catherine throughout the story.
Jake Gyllenhaal (BROKEBACK
MOUNTAIN) plays Hal, the love interest, as well as a math
student trying to come up with his own proof (i.e. mathematical
breakthrough). He's pouring over Catherine's father's final papers,
trying to determine if there was anything of value left in his fractured
mind just before his death. And when Catherine gives him a key to the
desk, Jake uncovers what could be a discovery of monumental importance.
But who wrote it? The father ...or the daughter? Hope Davis (THE
MATADOR) stars as Claire, Catherine's distant sister who returns
to town to help bury their father and to tick Catherine off of her
"to-do list." She was the other shining star in the film, acting as a
neurotically classic type-A personality.
Although Proof held my interest, it's impact on me was negligible. There
was no "hallelujah" moment where everything fit together or where an
actor or actress did something extraordinary. They just ...were.
The pacing of the film was pretty laid back, too. Director John Madden
seemed in no particular hurry to get a resolution to the audience, which
isn't necessarily a bad thing. But for a "family dynamic" film, there
could've (should've) been something more gripping that held my interest.
I will say that the picture was acted and shot well. Just not "very"
well. Anthony Hopkins was just Anthony Hopkins, for instance.
Psychology students might eat this story up, but for the general
population it may fall pretty flat.
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Image from Proof

DVD cost: $14.99
Purchase:
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Film Review Stew
Favorite? No.
Stew Poo-Poo? No.
Newsworthy:
The role of Catherine was
originated by Mary-Louise Parker in 2000 at the Walter Kerr Theatre in
New York. Her performance won her a 2001 Tony Award for Best Actress in
a Play and a 2001 Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Actress in a Play.
Movie Quote: "You'd
better get cracking. By the time I was your age, I'd already done my
best work."
Other Actors/Actresses
from Proof
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