Proof By John Madden: Movie Analysis

Improved Essays
The 2005 American drama movie “Proof” directed by John Madden narrates the story of a man named Robert who at one time was a brilliant mathematician but he is then affected by mental illness which leads him to death. Catherine, his daughter seems to have inherited her father’s brilliance as well as his instability. There is a strong bond between these two as she quitted school to take care of her dad. The movie brings attention not only the relationship between father and daughter but the sibling status between Catherine and Claire, as well as a connection between lovers. So many things circle around the movie starting from life to death, love and loss, skepticism and faith, and math and emotions.
Robert was a well-known and respected mathematician by many people including his students and fans he was a loving father with her daughter too. Catherine puts her life on hold and takes care of her dad for 5 years. One day she lost her father, as the illness got worst leading him to death. So, as she lost him, she felt empty. Catherine was a very closed-minded person, she did not have friends to hang out with, even the day of her birthday the only
…show more content…
There was a book hidden on one of the drawers in Roberts’s desks. The only person who knew about the book and had the key to it was her. She felt so comfortable with Hal that she decided to give him the keys to the drawer were the book was containing the development of a unique mathematic theory. He was ashamed of what he saw. Catherine claimed that she had developed it and neither Claire her sister and Hal believed her. He was so offended that she reacted in a bad way, as she started insulting Hal for it. She even decided to go to New York after she cried so much for her sister wanting to sell the house. The truth was disclosed and at the end Cathie decided to stay in Chicago and prove the world how brilliant she

Related Documents

  • Improved Essays

    Elby Chali Prof. Kendall Summer 2015 Drawing Is Just Like Being Able To Speak Rules is a novel written by an author named Cynthia Lord. There is a girl named Catherine and she is twelve years old. Catherine has an autistic brother, named David. Catherine frequently makes up rules for David.…

    • 729 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Introduction The Longest Yard, featuring Adam Sandler, as an ex-pro football player and present convict named Paul Crew, is a story of the struggles and tribulations prisoners endure during their track to becoming free citizens. The movie starts with Paul Crew being arrested for a DUI in the state of California and being sentenced to a prison called Allensville Penitentiary in Texas. While in this prison, Crew discovers what it is really like to be a convicted felon and what it is like to have to deal with other convicts, prison guards and the officials of the prison. Right off the bat Crew gets off to a bad start, which is not his fault, he gets in an argument with the warden of the prison about being the coach for an inmate football team that…

    • 2044 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Superior Essays

    The movie I chose to watch, “Identity,” is set in two different places. The first being in real life as Malcolm is being presented to the judge in charge of deciding his punishment for the murders of 6 people. The second, at the hotel in Nevada, is taking place completely in his mind. Malcolm has Dissociative Identity Disorder, or DID for short. His DID was most likely the result of the stressful upbringing he had as a child.…

    • 826 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Improved Essays

    There are many ways to describe a character. Some ways are through dialogue, character description, language etc. “Cathedral” by Raymond Carver and “Shiloh” by Bobbie Ann Mason, both made characters very similar. However, with similarities also comes differences. Both husbands from Carver and Mason’s short stories both felt unwanted by their wives but in different ways.…

    • 950 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    example of Catherine’s desire to be loved is implicitly implied through her seeing danger in every corner of the court because she believed that she is disposable because she is feeling unloved in a foreign place with rules and dangers that are unknown to her. Chomsky uses the insecurity that Catherine may have felt upon her first arrival in Russia to portray her as a feeble girl who needs to be loved in a potentially dangerous and hostile world. Chomsky uses small portions of the primary sources to show Catherine as a weak ruler who is constantly seeking love through her many lovers throughout the film. Chomsky shows her as a female ruler who needs support from strong masculine personalities such as her lovers and the Grand Chancellor and Vice Chancellor. These men, whom she typically has a love for in either a romantic way or fatherly way, play a large role in her decision-making throughout the film.…

    • 1039 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Discoveries are valuable as they have the power to challenge the individual's perspective of themselves and of the world around us which influences our development both emotionally and spiritually. Valuable Discoveries have a major presence in Che Guevara's Motorcycle Diaries as they influence Guevara's discovery of himself and also of his perception of reality, however slow their influence may be. The emotional responses towards valuable, but complex discoveries can both contribute negatively and positively towards the development of character, and is the key idea represented in Franz Kafka’s Metamorphosis. Social Injustice is a prevalent part in the world of the Motorcycle Diaries that challenges Guevara to question his previous conceptions…

    • 329 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    When I walk past someone that is physically and mentally different than myself, I assume and judge; but my assumption is not always right because I haven’t been in their shoes to where I can completely fathom their situation. People tend to evaluate others harshly when they don’t know them personally. In “The Cathedral” by Raymond Carver, the husband has a hard time understanding the relationship between the wife and the blind man, Robert. Throughout the story, Carver shows us that assumptions interfere with the overall impression of a person and that audible communication increases understanding by using literary devices and elements of character. Carver gives the husband a straight but, aggravated tone which characterizes him as pessimistic…

    • 697 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Blindness is defined in the dictionary in a word, sightless. The blind people’s life is extremely hard. They have to cope and adjust to be a part of the society. They have to depend on their other senses to explore the world around them. The good thing about it is they learn to use their other sense better than other people.…

    • 1062 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Decent Essays

    Many luxuries are granted to the citizens of the U.S. such as technology that helps us get through the day. These luxuries are not available to people in other countries and I believe that if I had to step into one of the four children in the movie On the Way to School I could handle living Carlos’s life. Carlos lives in Argentina and is 11 years old which is near my age, but that is the only thing we have slightly in common. We live completely different lives and Carlos does not have all the luxuries I have. Out of the all the other kids Carlos is the most modern of the four his clothes are similar to mine and he lives in a small house made up of bricks.…

    • 310 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Improved Essays

    In the drawer Hal finds what appears to be a proof (46). When Catherine finally admits to writing it, her sister, Claire, doesn’t believe her (47/61). Catherine, trusting Hal, asks him to tell Claire who’s book it is (62). Hal responds with, “I don’t Know.” (62).…

    • 1225 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    The Verdict, starring Paul Newman, portrays legal ethics and justice in a troublesome yet intriguing light. This touching story had its complexities in various forms. There were ethical violations, laws broken and personal values being challenged. It shed light on how discrepancies in the healthcare system can cause a life, and how law in the justice system can easily work for you or against you. One can gain immense perspective after watching this film on how brutal and cutthroat the justice system can be.…

    • 753 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Superior Essays

    Rules of the Game by Jean Renoir is a film that depicts members of upper-class French society and their servants prior to the beginning of World War II, showing their moral cruelty on the eve of impending destruction. Rules of the Game gives an insight into the history of France and how the difference in social classes made a vast difference in how one was treated and how one was judged or looked upon. Whether the upper classes did something good or bad most of the time they were looked at with good eyes and weren’t judged as badly as were those from the lower classes. By watching this film we can learn a lot about France’s culture, history, and society. We can also learn about the historical problems that the film caused and questions it raised.…

    • 1556 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Superior Essays

    Theme Of Proof Essay

    • 1508 Words
    • 7 Pages

    He tells her that he now knows she wrote the proof because it is written differently than Roberts work was. This moment serves as the climax of the story as Catherine’s claims are validated, and the audience sees that she is indeed a mathematical genius. With this Catherine achieves her super-objective of proving to herself among others that she is mentally stable and not delusional like her father had been. Though the resolution of the story is somewhat incomplete and leaves many questions for the reader to decide themselves, we clearly see that Catherine is truly able to overcome the odds. The doubts of others are quieted, and her own doubts quieted simultaneously.…

    • 1508 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Superior Essays

    The Green Mile is a 1999 American fantasy crime movie, directed by Frank Darabont and adapted from the 1996 Stephen King novel. The film, in great detail, encapsulates the idealistic life of a death-row prison warden in the 1932- during the Great Depression, and the encountering’s that are faced daily. The film is told in a flashback format of the protagonist, Paul Edgecombe, played by famous actor Tom Hanks, and his daunting experiences with the deadly inmates of a Louisiana death row penitentiary and the supernatural alleged-criminal, John Coffey, played by Michael Clarke Duncan. The film explores several techniques, such as the lighting, camera work, acting and sound to enthrall the audience. The movie highlights several controversial issues, from the treatment of the death row prisoners, to the dulled ambience of the death penalty.…

    • 1102 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Superior Essays

    In her book, “A Poetics of Postmodernism”, Linda Hutcheon identifies the term postmodernism, when used in fiction, to describe fiction that is at once metafictional and historical in the way it presents the texts and contexts of the past (Hutcheon, 40). This is what she calls historiographic metafiction. Most of the historiographic novels emphasize self-reflexivity and our paradoxical relations to past events. Historiographic metafiction somehow acknowledges the paradox of the past, that is to say, the past is accessible to us today only in the form of text. As Fredric Jameson reminds us, “history is not a text, but it is only accessible in textual form” (Homer, 4).…

    • 1361 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Superior Essays

Related Topics