Mathematics-Mathematics in Cinema
Leaving the Wilbur Theater in Boston after seeing the play Proof, a theatergoer remarked "This is the year of mathematicians." Proof is now a movie (Directed by Miramax, staring Gwyneth Paltrow and Anthony Hopkins), adapted from David Auburn's Tony and Pulitzer winning play. Three of the four main characters are mathematicians. The father character is loosely based on John Nash, but the story is fiction and takes a very different path from A Beautiful Mind, focusing on the daughter.
The title is apt. Proof's plot is filed with attempts to prove things: sanity, love, correctness of care decisions, theorems, authorship, adulthood to an older sibling. Even the champaign bottle in the first scene is a mysterious counterexample.
In particular, the story asks if proof checking can be an act of love. Checking is violent work. You must try to demolish someone else's creation. But what if you love that person? Is it better to trust condescendingly or to seek the truth and resolve any doubts?
Proof's themes are universal, but the emotional life of mathematicians is dealt with well. Stereotypes are dissected. The math jokes aren't great but it's fun to hear the two waves of laughter: from the people who get them immediately and those that have to wait for the playwright's explanation. Proof's ending is mathematically satisfying. NYU's Courant Institute hosted a symposium on Proof. PG-13. (There's a seduction scene in the play.)
I hated the first half of this movie. The caricature of cryptography, right out of "Mercury Rising," made me squirm. I was tempted to walk out, but I had this review to write, so fortunately I stayed. The second half was wonderful and made complete sense of Act I. All those Hollywood spy cliches turn out to be a brilliant device to let us see what happens from from John Nash's perspective.
There is one good math scene where Nash and some fellow grad students are in a bar and a bevy of young women walk in, lead by a very attractive blonde. Nash realizes that all the guys hitting on the blonde would not be an optimal strategy and that this dating situation is a counter example to the claims of classical economic theory. The insight leads to his Nobel-prize winning result. If true, this would be the best eureka yarn since Newton and the apple. Otherwise the math was a little weak. Lots of scrawled equations do not a math movie make. More of an explanation of Nash's work would have been welcome.
A Beautiful Mind is also one of the finest love stories ever filmed. After reading how Andrew Wiles enjoyed the full support of his wife while holed up in his attic for seven years proving Fermat's Last Theorem, I thought there should a hall of fame for great spouses of mathematicians. Mrs. Nash could be another charter member. PG-13 (One mild bedroom scene, guys on the make, high emotional intensity)
I haven't seen this musical play about Wiles' proof (featuring songs like "There's a Big Fat Hole in your Proof" and "Math Widow"), but I have the album. The play is available on VHS video tape and DVD from the Clay Institute and there is a fine review of it in the Notices of the AMS.
Quantum mechanics beats Newton's as a metaphor for human thought. Our actions are only a projection of the super-positioned thoughts swirling in our brains. Why did Werner Heisenberg as director of the Nazi nuclear program fail to build an atomic bomb? Distaste for Hitler? Lack of resources? Incompetence? A complex linear combination of all three? Will we ever know? Did he?
In Copenhagen the ghosts of Heisenberg, Niels Bohr and Bohr's wife, Margrethe, explore the motives behind their meeting in 1941. Along the way they explain a fair amount of physics, exhibit some good mathematical thinking and let us experience the deep emotional bond between teacher and protege.
In the opening scene of this romantic comedy, Jill Clayburgh, playing a mathematics professor, proves the "snake lemma" of homological algebra:
0 -> A -> B -> C -> 0
| | |
0 -> A'-> B'-> C'-> 0
to an obnoxious graduate student. To the best of our knowledge, this is the most erudite mathematical scene in a major motion picture, though spoiled somewhat by a heavy handed portrayal of the grad student. The rest of the film is mostly math-free, unfortunately. R
Dustin Hoffman has moved to his wife's home town in Cornwall, England in the hope of getting some astrophysics done. His bored wife's flirtations lead to serious trouble. Somewhere along the line she mischievously changes a plus sign to a minus sign in a set of gravitational equations on a blackboard. Hoffman's response when he finally notices is by far the best and most realistic portrayal of a mathematician in action in the movies.
Caution: The moral of this film is "don't mess with a mathematician," so, as you might expect, a great deal of violence occurs. R
Good Will Hunting (1997)
Like its Fields-medalist Salieriesqe math professor, this movie begins by putting a hard problem on the blackboard: Can anyone save a defiant, troubled kid from working-class South Boston who happens to be a Ramanujan-level genius?
But instead of a convincing solution, we get easy answers. Robbin William's soberly played shrink brushes past Hunting's intelligence to get at his abusive childhood, never contemplating genius as an equal source of pain. The women are either on a pedestal or deserve to be. The movie plinks every soft target that gets in it sights: gullible psychotherapists, corporate recruiters, snotty Harvard students, the NSA, even MIT custodial foremen.
The film's best aspect is the love and care lavished on getting South Boston right. If they had only done as well by the mathematicians, depicted here as corporate, arrogant, joyless and cold. The movie shows the outside of MIT, but not the inside.
There is so much
talent here that I want to give an Incomplete and make them turn in a
more thoughtful version next semester. Too bad serious movies don't get
sequels.
R (mostly for foul language it would seem)
This a movie about madness, not mathematics. The math, computer science, theology, and pharmacology are bad. (One faux pas is a suggestion that one could try all possible 216 digit numbers.) But they are brilliantly combined with music, and camera work to place us in the tormented mind of a paranoid obsessive seeking the central truth of the universe --which is excreted by computers just before they melt down -- while he is pursued by Wall Street brokers and Hassidic Jews who know he is onto something. See the Pi page for more links. R
Robin Williams explains Newton's Law of Gravitation to a life drawing class in this '90s remake of the 1961 Absent Minded Professor, and there is a lot of pseudo-science in the background -- even the titles are filled with math symbology. But the story has been whimsyectomized: the long suffering girlfriend, promoted to college president, really suffers, the professor feels her pain, the goons are scary, and there is a poignant death scene. If the Professor can make a robot fly, why does he need flubber? Still, the movie-clip-emoting robot redeems the movie, out cuteing R2D2. Weebo deserved an Oscar for best supporting actress. PG
This space reserved for Unabomber - The Movie
"Math didn't make him kill, it just made him hard to catch."
(It seems there was a TV docudrama Unabomber: The True Story (1996) )
Tom Hanks plays a twelve year old boy whose wish to be big is granted by a magical arcade game. His ability to find work and even succeed mocks the adult world. At a dinner party, Hanks helps the young son, whom the real adults are ignoring, with his homework. In the process he offers a nice explanation of basic algebra. PG
A high school math teacher, played by Edward James Olmos, gets a group of inner city kids to learn calculus, amazing and threatening the educational establishment. Some decent calculus teaching is shown in this true story. PG
A Brief History of Time (1992)
Biography of one of our greatest living physicsts, Stephen Hawking, though a bit light on his work. G
Freelance spies track down an all powerful code breaking chip developed by a mysteriously funded mathematician named Gunter Janek. In a brief scene, the long-haired, white-suited Janek lectures on the possibility of finding a faster way to factor numbers, shouting lots of big math words, but not really explaining anything. Still, the film correctly points out that a breakthrough in factoring could happen and would be worth a lot to criminals and people who break codes. The mathematician Len Adleman advised on the making of this move. Click here for his story. PG-13
Mel Gibson plays a former teacher turned recluse whose face is badly disfigured. He befriends a troubled boy and helps him prepare for a military school's entrance exam. In one of his lessons, Gibson shows the boy how to find the center of any circle by constructing the perpendicular bisectors of two chords. The figure he draws isn't quite general enough: the chords share a common point and they needn't. But that's the least of their troubles as the secret of Gibson's past comes back to haunt their relationship. PG-13
In this somewhat morbid chronicle of five generations of sturdy women, we see Antonia's granddaughter Theresa, who grows from a child prodigy to become a mathematician, lecturing on cohomology and reading a monograph on differential geometry in preference to nursing her baby. In a movie filled with stereotypes, we should not expect a woman mathematician to be anything but cold. One nit: Theresa says "X comma A" while reading a diagram during her lecture scene but it appears in the subtitles as "X.A". The translators must habitually change European commas into English decimal points. Dutch. Unrated, Quite a bit of S.ex and Violence
The Mirror has Two Faces (1996)
Hunk math prof Jeff Bridges explains the Twin Prime Conjecture (that there are infinitely many pairs of primes only two numbers apart) to dowdy english prof Barbara Streisand who actually gets it. She critiques his calculus teaching. Bridges proposes. I thought the "before" Straisand was cuter. PG-13
Trivia question: what is the relationship between the Twin Prime Conjecture and the infamous floating point bug in Intel's original Pentium chip? Click here to find out.
Jodie Foster is perfect when she defines prime numbers for a group of Washington bigwigs and is greeted by blank stares. But why does the movie have to work so hard explaing her devotion to science? The book's nonsense about pi is not in the movie. PG
If you want to know what a scientific computer looked like in the good old days, see Stanley Kubrick's classic satire on nuclear doomsday with its fine scenes of an IBM 7094/ 1401 installation. Peter Sellers almost saves the world with a transistor radio hidden in a 1403 printer.Unrated. OK, I think, for older teens
A Hill on the Dark Side of the Moon (1983)
( Berget paa maanens baksida (1983))
Roger Cooke asks "how in the world did you overlook [this] story of Sonya Kovalevskaya's stay in Sweden--advertised as the feminist movie of the 1980's. Actually, as a female colleague said to me after seeing it, 'That movie says that to be a female mathematician you have to be ugly, neurotic, and a bad mother.' Since I have spent considerable time researching and writing about Kovalevskaya, I concur. Mathematically they missed the point entirely about Kovalevskaya. On the plus side, where else would you see actors portraying Weierstrass and Mittag-Leffler?"
"On the personal side, they also got it wrong. I remember thinking Meg Ryan was hardly the ideal actress to play Einstein's brilliant niece in IQ, but she'd have been about right physically (with her hair dyed brown) to play Kovalevskaya. Instead they got an extremely homely Swedish actress to play the part, and they made her a temperamental prima donna at her first lecture in Stockholm. Actually, she was diffident to the extreme, and always afraid she wasn't doing a good enough job. As for my colleague's comments, well, Kovalevskaya was neurotic and a bad mother, but she wasn't ugly. A century after her death, though, she still leaves a legacy of two very brilliant mathematical results." Search google.com with the key word " Kovalevskaya" for more resources about her.
" P.S. There is a mountain on the far side of the moon that the Soviets named after Kovalevskaya (their robot space ship [Luna 3] was the first to photograph the far side of the moon). I presume that's the reason for the title, though no reference is made to it in the movie, either at the beginning or the end."
Sweden 7 (~PG)
Walter Matthau as Albert Einstein plays matchmaker for his niece played by Meg Ryan. Judy Ann Brown's favorite scene is where Meg Ryan attempts to explain to Tim Robbins why she can't dance with him: she can only walk half the distance between them and then half again and half again and she will never reach him. Rhiju Das was impressed when Meg Ryan's character puts the Schrodinger equation on the board, in operator form.PG
This dark, nihilistic film has generated the most letters to Math in the Movies. A group of people are trapped in a nightmare lattice of cubic rooms and have to figure out how to escape. Cartesian coordinates and prime numbers play a key role. The moral: factor or die! The most interesting math here is in thinking about how they made the movie. R brutal violence, language
Death of a Neapolitan Mathematician (Morte di un Matematico Napoletano) (1992)
Laura Parigi, from Florence, Italy and Dan Schnabel suggest this Italian movie, written and directed by Mario Martone. It's the story of an important Italian mathematician looking at the last week of his life before he kills himself in 1959. I haven't seen it yet. Unrated
Jon Reeves says you must see, this biopic about Richard Feynman. There's a priceless scene where he has a calculating duel with a guy with an abacus. Feynman, using pencil and paper, adds a bit slower, but multiplies slightly faster, and really whips him in the cube root competition. Afterward, he explains it all to his fiancee. PG
A bright 8-year-old is placed in a program for gifted children. Edie Bennett liked the scene where a teacher has several odd and even numbers on the board and asks how many of them are divisible by 2. Tate raises his hand and answers "All of them." PG
Dr. Sidney J. Kolpas points out this Danny Kaye musical comedy with a song about the Pythagorean Theorem. I haven't seen it yet, but IMDB reviewers give it high marks. Unrated
Math ?
Film ?
While were on the topic of the Pythagorean Theorem, here is a storyboard proof:
(I found this in Glimpses of Algebra and Geometry by Gabor Toth (Springer, 1997) and on the Web . Anyone know who invented it?)
Star Trek : Wolf in the Fold (1967)
Simon Plouffe suggest the scene in this episode from the first TV series where Spock asks the computer to compute Pi to the last digit.
"You mentioned that in the movie It's My Turn (1980), except for all-too-brief glimpse of the proof of the snake lemma of homological algebra, the rest of the film is math-free. But actually, there are some tid-bits scattered here and there throughout.
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Jill has an exchange with a precocious boy, probably junior high school age, about prime numbers. This was a big disappointment for me: mathematically precocious kids this age are a lot smarter than was represented in the exchange.
- At one point, some University administrator, probably a Dean, mentions to Jill Clayburgh that 'Group theory is a really hard area to work in'. I wish our own administrators would believe that.
- Jill's father, at one point, introduces his daughter as a mathematician who is working in finite simple groups. How many group theorists have parents who know what they do? Also, I heard as an anecdote, that this scene had to be edited. The father had first introduced his daughter as someone working in the area of finite, simple, ABELIAN groups. A mathematician (or someone knowledgeable about the subject) present during the screening broke out in laughter on hearing this.
- Jill, at one point working on the back of an envelope, is frustrated that she `can't quite get this 2-fusion problem to work out'.
- The movie ends on an up-beat note, mathematically, when the obnoxious grad student and Jill share (in a rather cryptic exchange) some clever insight that would lead to the solution of the classification problem. Interestingly enough, 1980 (the year of the movie) is the more-or-less agreed date that the finite simple groups were classified."
TV biography by Roberto Rossellini. Anyone know where to find a copy?
"A mathematician is a machine that converts coffee into theorems." Several other mathematicians appear in this film. See the credits. (photo)
A BBC made-for-TV flick with Derek Jacobi playing Alan Turing. The movie spends most of it's time on Turing's personal fairly successful stag life, but Jacobi does a wonderful job in two or three scenes describing the thrill of doing mathematics. This was ae play, as well.
From Yahoo Movies: In March 1943, cryptoanalysts at Bletchley Park, Britian's top code-breaking center, are facing their worst nightmare: Nazi U-boats have unexpectedly changed the code by which they communicate with each other and German High Command. An Allied merchant shipping convoy with 10,000 passengers and vital supplies is in danger of attack. The authorities turn for help to Tom Jericho, a brilliant young mathematician and code breaker, presently on sick leave. Unknown to colleagues, Jericho has another equally baffling enigma to unravel: Claire, the woman he loves, has disappeared just when the authorities suspect there may be a spy in Bletchley. To get to the bottom of both mysteries he enlists the help of Hester, Claire's best friend. Together they keep one step ahead of the secret services and investigate Claire's mysterious life, reaching a conclusion that uncovers international and personal betrayals.
A BBC program on Wiles proof and its tribulations. A transcript of the program is available online.