John Nash

614 Words2 Pages

As a graduate student at Princeton in 1947, math genius John Nash (Russell Crowe) would not enter any of his lectures for trepidation of dulling his ingenious genius. Instead he spends his time writing formulas on windowpanes in search of an authentically pristine and revolutionary idea. Nash, the introverted protagonist, is not the most popular student on campus, which the viewer recognizes as largely being his own fault. He admits, "I’m quite well balanced; I have a chip on both shoulders. I don’t like people much and they don’t like me." Later on, as a professser, he also tells sweltering students wishing to let in fresh air and accompanying street noise, "Your comfort comes second to my ability to hear my own voice." However, even if moviegoers do not warm up to his abnormal, self-centred character immediately, they do learn to appreciate his quirky astuteness. Ostensibly, so does William Parcher, (Ed Harris) an agent with the Department of Bulwark. After Nash experiences his scientific …show more content…

He punches Dr. Rosen. A car chase involving an exchange of gunfire ends with Nash and Parcher’s bullet-riddled pursuers driving into a river. Elsewhere, characters brandish guns in a threatening manner. Newsreel footage shows the devastating power of a nuclear blast. Rosen’s people perform violent shock therapy on Nash. Several people are slapped. Alicia snaps under the stress, hurling a glass against a wall and smashing a mirror. To prove his story and his sanity, Nash gouges his arm to retrieve an implanted security device (lots of blood). There’s an intense scene in which a baby nearly drowns in a bathtub. Despite being a drinker and womanizer, Nash’s college roommate, Charles, is a faithful companion and constant source of encouragement. A loving uncle, Charles explains that he accepted custody of his young niece when his sister was killed in a car

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