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A Beautiful Mind
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| Genre | Drama, DVD Movie, Blu-ray Movie, Mystery & Suspense |
| Format | Multiple Formats, Anamorphic, Closed-captioned, Dolby, Special Edition, Widescreen, NTSC |
| Contributor | Mike Hill, Judd Hirsch, Austin Pendleton, Jason Gray-Stanford, Jennifer Connelly, Adam Goldberg, Josh Lucas, Christopher Plummer, Russell Crowe, Ron Howard, Dan Hanley, Akiva Goldsman, Ed Harris, Brian Grazer, Anthony Rapp, Paul Bettany See more |
| Language | English, French |
| Runtime | 2 hours and 16 minutes |
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Product Description
Product Description
Winner of 4 Academy Awards, including Best Picture, A Beautiful Mind is directed by Academy Award winner Ron Howard and produced by long-time partner and collaborator, Academy Award winner Brian Grazer. A Beautiful Mind stars Russell Crowe in an astonishing performance as brilliant mathematician John Nash, on the brink of international acclaim when he becomes entangled in a mysterious conspiracy. Now only his devoted wife (Academy Award winner Jennifer Connelly) can help him in this powerful story of courage, passion and triumph.
Bonus Content:
- Feature Commentary with Director Ron Howard
- Feature Commentary with Screenwriter Akiva Goldsman
- Deleted Scenes with Director's Commentary
- DVD-ROM Features Including Total Axess
- Production Notes
- Cast and Filmmakers
- A Beautiful Partnership: Ron Howard & Brian Grazer
- Development of the Screenplay
- Meeting John Nash
- Accepting the Nobel Prize in Economics
- Casting Russell Crowe & Jennifer Connelly
- The Process of Age Progression
- Storyboard Comparisons
- Creation of the Special Effects
- Scoring the Film
- Inside A Beautiful Mind
- Academy Awards
- Theatrical Trailer
- A Beautiful Mind Soundtrack
- Now Showing
Amazon.com
A Beautiful Mind manages to twist enough pathos out of John Nash's incredible life story to redeem an at-times goofy portrayal of schizophrenia. Russell Crowe tackles the role with characteristic fervor, playing the Nobel prize-winning mathematician from his days at Princeton, where he developed a groundbreaking economic theory, to his meteoric rise to the cover of Forbes magazine and an MIT professorship, and on through to his eventual dismissal due to schizophrenic delusions. Of course, it is the delusions that fascinate director Ron Howard and, predictably, go astray. Nash's other world, populated as it is by a maniacal Department of Defense agent (Ed Harris), an imagined college roommate who seems straight out of Dead Poets Society, and an orphaned girl, is so fluid and scriptlike as to make the viewer wonder if schizophrenia is really as slick as depicted. Crowe's physical intensity drags us along as he works admirably to carry the film on his considerable shoulders. No doubt the story of Nash's amazing will to recover his life without the aid of medication is a worthy one, his eventual triumph heartening. Unfortunately, Howard's flashy style is unable to convey much of it. --Fionn Meade
Product details
- Aspect Ratio : 1.85:1
- Is Discontinued By Manufacturer : No
- MPAA rating : PG-13 (Parents Strongly Cautioned)
- Product Dimensions : 7.75 x 5.5 x 0.5 inches; 4.8 Ounces
- Director : Ron Howard
- Media Format : Multiple Formats, Anamorphic, Closed-captioned, Dolby, Special Edition, Widescreen, NTSC
- Run time : 2 hours and 16 minutes
- Release date : June 25, 2002
- Actors : Russell Crowe, Jennifer Connelly, Ed Harris, Paul Bettany, Adam Goldberg
- Subtitles: : Spanish, French
- Producers : Brian Grazer, Ron Howard
- Language : English (Dolby Digital 5.1), English (Dolby Digital 2.0 Surround), French (Dolby Digital 5.1)
- Studio : Universal Studios Home Entertainment
- ASIN : B00005JKQZ
- Writers : Akiva Goldsman
- Number of discs : 2
- Best Sellers Rank: #18,303 in Movies & TV (See Top 100 in Movies & TV)
- #3,592 in Drama DVDs
- Customer Reviews:
Customer reviews
Reviewed in the United States on April 26, 2019
Top reviews from the United States
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I am a borderline schizophrenic sociopath. I find my delusions are tempered, as this mans were, by interacting with people. Yet I have so few relationships. Because people do not offer me the long suffering they did this man. After I freak out before them they disappear. Leaving me only to God to keep paranoia from sending me into psychosis.
I've found, though I've been kicked out or houses, churches, the college I graduated from, ect, ect....I've found that running adds on CL to buy stuff gives me interactions to spare with people who can always be replaced after I piss them off. Many of whom I do. Being a contractor who works cheap helps too.
But if a schizophrenic person can't be useful enough for people to overlook their many offenses they are almost certainly doomed to isolation until the hallucinations are all they have.
The saddest thing about this movie is this man was not outcast to the dregs of society because he was genius. While so many who are not geniuses are cast out. Left only to paranoid delusions for company.
The movie uses the effects of the illness in a genius way to help us understand who the main character is and what he goes through everyday. I enjoyed the movie, and was intrigued by the life of this mathematical genius. Perhaps our world would be much different if he wasn't schizophrenic, if he wasn't a math genius, if his life wasn't his life. I found myself wanting to know more about this person, the disease, and why we still know so little about it.
I loved that at the end of the movie, I was left with the thought that no matter what you go through, it's really how you deal with it that can be either very sad and depressing or uplifting, motivating, even impowering. We all have a choice on how we deal with things that happen to us, and this movie is an interesting example of what it looks like to want something, to be something that consumes your thoughts your life to the point that even something as serious as schizophrenia might change how your mind sees that something and what the path looks like to achieve it, but wont derail you, because you refuse to let it... and what if that path is actually a better one, a clearer one?
Howard crafts the sincere beginnings of a hopeful mathematician to the paranoid struggle of a broken man. A Beautiful Mind builds empathy for Nash with Roger Deakins' gorgeous shots and James Horner's haunting score. The somber notes swell from lovely to lonely moods.
Russell Crowe is inspired as John Nash. He plays the character with such sympathy and nuance. You feel for Nash and his plight because of how realistically genuine Crow portrays Nash.
Furthermore, Jennifer Connelly is incredible as Nash's wife. She suffers just as much as he does, but in a different way. Connelly's capability to demonstrate a working wife struggling to provide for her family at odds is something to behold.
Similarly, Ed Harris and Paul Bettany play fascinating supporting roles. You watch their characters take on a whole new meaning by the end. The way that Harris and Bettany play these roles is shocking and entertaining to the last frame with them.
Lastly, I love Christopher Plummer's smaller cameo role as the Dr. Rosen. He is empathetic and intriguing in his performance. We get to see Plummer dive into how to speak to someone troubled with a level of respect and understanding.
Overall, I think most audiences will love A Beautiful Mind. Every since it was released in 2001, I have had this movie burned into my mind. It is memorable evermore.
Portrayed by Russell Crowe, I was haunted for many years by his portrayal of a man who had fallen so far down into the abyss of insanity...who then somehow harnessed his genius to ignore the insane part of himself and go on to live a successful, quasi normal life. It inspired me to break out of some my own hang-ups to go on do and experience things I'd never previously dreamed I could be involved with, both in the business world and in my family.
Top reviews from other countries
Something else the reviewer might not have is a high level of intellect as is often the case too with schizophrenics, as the highly analytical mind contributes to it. John Nash was a Nobel Prize winning mathematician, I merely studied chemistry at Oxford University, so whilst not nearly in his league I possess some degree of brainpower myself.
The delusions for a start are based in truth, so for the esteemed reviewer to trash the style of the presentation, well I'm not too sure where the expertise to say that has come from. When I had my first "psychotic episode" in 1994, when I, my family and friends, work colleagues (I was also doing a pressurised and demanding job in both stress level and long hours) and medical helpers all hoped it was a one-off (the "label" changes to schizophrenia once it keeps recurring), I also had hallucinations, delusions, altered perception of reality.........in other words a created and false reality. John Nash's perceived reality is not stretched or unique at all. When he jokes about his "saviour complex", often called a "messiah complex" (a term cleverly and hilariously utilised by Russell Brand), indeed there are many delusional schizophrenics that are consumed in that particular delusion very commonly. I would assert that if Jesus Christ (yes I know he was a normal guy just bear with me) came a second time - a joke for Christians - he would be locked up as well as his ideas would be indistinguishable from all the other messiahs. Perhaps he has already been, and lived and died without recognition? Maybe a number of times!
Delusions can be like that or perhaps involving extra-terrestrials, waking nightmares where the subconscious mind invades the conscious mind with ideas from anywhere. Things one has read about, seen in horror movies. Paranoia, as Nash displays all the time - one of the very worst phases is when one begins to be treated by mental health professionals - you don't know who they are, or where you are or what's in store. I was "sectioned", so like Nash, locked up. You fear for your life, or worse. Highly paranoid. It's absolutely terrifying.
The other thing that happens, as in the movie, is that once you start to take your medication, and of course that takes some while due to the huge distrust of the whole environment, if it begins to work and the mind settles, you don't understand that the drugs have achieved that, so you stop taking them because you are getting better, back towards normality. So you relapse. Very common indeed.
So the film is highly realistic, take it from someone that's been there and around others that have been there. As well as the fact that Nash went through this stuff, for real (unreal).
I agree with the reviewer that says that Russell Crowe should have won the Oscar that Denzel Washington got. I am a big fan of Denzel and of Training Day but this performance is just streets ahead. And when you put this performance against the one Crowe was recognised for, in Gladiator, you've got an actor that can pretty much do anything. His arrogant claim to be the best actor in the world might well be a fair appraisal, if not the best of all then in the company of Pacino, Washington, De Niro, DiCaprio, Hoffman (that's Dustin and not Philip Seymour), underrated giant Gene Hackman and such.
I have watched this today for the second time, I saw more, laughed more and certainly cried more than the first. To see someone fall from a great height from high achiever to pure madness (the reactions of the people around him and their horror and disbelief that a man so clever suddenly can make no sense of anything) is heartbreaking to anyone, just imagine having been through it it's like a petrifying gaze into some cosmic mirror.
And then to see how he was able to regain control, to recognise the love of his unfaltering wife and her belief in him, to keep the demons at bay, and to rise to accept the Nobel Prize after going through such horrific and alienating experiences, is indeed beautiful. I think that in the last quarter of an hour of the film (especially the "pens" scene), my tears were an uncontrollable flood. A similar feeling to the last scene of It's A Wonderful Life but a hundred times more because of the life that I lead and have led.
Simply one of the greatest films I have ever had the privilege to see. I hope not too many people have had to look into that cosmic mirror when watching it, though it has much more power if you have.
In my view the main performances (Crowe, Connelly and Harris) are outstanding and the story is well paced, I also like the way it requires attention to what is going on on screen.
It's however a film and some of the criticisms about it being a sanitised version of John Nash's life may well be justified, but that does not detract from the overall achievement of a watchable film which clarifies some of the issues with the condition, as well as mapping the life of an influential mathematician.
I love this film, perhaps because I can relate to the main character a little more than I really should be able too.
This is a fantastic film about one of the greatest mathematicians of all time. The kind of people films should be made about. The recent film 'The Man Who Knew Infinity' is very similar, and also a thing of beauty.
A Beautiful Mind is a powerful yet touching movie, that allows you a glimpse into the broken mind of a genius.
This is definitely a film that you can watch again and again and get something new from it every time.
I love it.



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