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A Beautiful Mind

Stella Daily writes: "The unlikely subject of Ron Howard's film A Beautiful Mind , based on the 1998 Sylvia Nasar book of the same name, is John Forbes Nash Jr., a mathematical genius whose doctoral thesis earned him a Nobel Prize -- and a schizophrenia patient whose illness kept him out of the academic community for decades. The John Nash of the film is a brilliant young man who doesn't quite fit in, ignores his classes, is gawky with women and, above all, is consumed with a desire for an original idea. It is easy to like this Nash, with his Southern drawl and his earnest demeanor, and to sympathize with him as he fights his way back from insanity." Stella explains below why things aren't quite that simple. A Beautiful Mind author Sylvia Nasar pages 464 publisher Simon & Schuster rating 9 reviewer Stella Daily ISBN 0684819066 summary A beautifully written biography, more complex and troublesome than the film it inspired.

The John Nash of Nasar's biography, while less likable, is far more fascinating and multidimensional than his cinematic counterpart; he is a draft dodger, a vicious prankster (one practical joke of Nash's involved filling a light fixture with water, which could have electrocuted a hapless victim when he turned on the light), and an arrogant braggart.

Hollywood has whitewashed much from Nash's life; besides working to dodge the Korean War draft out of fears that it would hurt his career, Nash fathered an illegitimate son whom he refused to help care for, despite the fact that his own circumstances were far better than those of the child's mother. The woman he married, Alicia Larde, is portrayed in the film as the one and only love of Nash's life; no mention is made of their 1963 divorce. (Nearly forty years later, the couple remarried.) To read Nasar's biography is to discover fascinating episodes like Nash's stint in Europe, when he attempted several times to renounce his American citizenship and obtain political asylum, and his encounters with fellow patient and Pulitzer prizewinning poet Robert Lowell in a Massachusetts mental hospital.

The book is as absorbing a history lesson as it is a story; Nasar sets Nash's life beautifully in the context of his time. Nash's bisexuality, for example, was much more of an issue then than it would be now; while today many areas have laws against discrimination based on sexual orientation, in 1954 not only was it legal for employers to dismiss a homosexual employee, but any evidence of homosexuality was sufficient grounds to deprive a government employee of security clearance. Later, the reader learns of many once-credited treatments for mental illness, like insulin injections (thought to deprive the brain of sugar and thus kill off defective brain cells), colonic irrigation, and even "fever therapy," given by inoculating patients with malaria or typhoid. Nasar's description of the politics by which Nobel prizes are awarded, a process purposely shrouded in mystery by the various committees involved, is a particularly fascinating read. Her inclusion of these and other details paints a rich historical picture that's a pleasure to read.

The one thing missing from A Beautiful Mind is, of course, the voice of John Nash himself. Where possible, Nasar plucked quotes from his writings and the recollections of friends and colleagues, but Nash himself maintained, as he put it to a New York Times reporter, "a position of Swiss neutrality" toward his biographer. Throughout the extraordinary story of Nash's life -- his rapid rise to fame, his loves, his illness, his disappearance for decades from the academic community, and his recognition at last as a Nobel laureate, one wants to ask him, "What were you thinking?" Unfortunately, it's a question Nasar was unable to answer.

One true merit of the movie, so highly altered from Nash's real story (and, considered apart from the facts, it is both moving and interesting), is that it will undoubtedly inspire many to pick up Nasar's beautifully written biography. It's time to meet the real John Nash.

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10 of 291 comments (clear)

  1. 11/09/01 = :) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Troll

    w377 D0n3 b1N lad3n!

  2. Russell Crowe's imagination by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Troll

    Imagine
    by John Lennon

    Here is my ass
    Which you may kiss.
    Take time and aim well
    You don't want to miss.

    For if you aim low
    And your lips they do fall
    Then you will find
    You'll be sucking my balls.

    If you aim high
    Despite your true heart
    Sucks to be you
    Now you're eating my fart.

    [bridge]

    my cunt is a'drippin',
    your lips are a'sippin',
    my ass is a'crappin',
    your mouth is a'lappin'

    all that comes out of an oracifce
    you eat for a main course-ifice
    poop and pee, all a'yummy
    Sitting proud inside your tummy!

    rip stephen king

  3. Posterboy for eurotrash? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Troll
    Indeed.

    A draft dodger, faggot and an irresponsible father?

    I don't see why a corrupt person like this should get any publicity. Heaven knows the kids in the universities are going to start imitating his sinful ways and doom our great country!

  4. Only Hollywood or the NSDAP could do this... by CDWert · · Score: 2, Troll

    I have seen the movie, it ok , more enttertaining when you watch it as FICTION, which basically it is.

    Only hollywood could turn a Bisexual, Schitophrenic, Deadbeat dad into someone you fell for, or the Nazi's propoganda machine did with that whole crew of loonies.

    Its amazing, it sells so sugar coat it. I doubt many would have wanted to see Crowe portay the REAL Nash.

    BUT in this country, and much of the world, the CONSUMER rules, who wants to see a movie about an asshole no matter how smart he is.

    --
    Sig went tro...aahemmm.....fishing........
    1. Re:Only Hollywood or the NSDAP could do this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Troll


      Consumerism indeed dictates the direction of evenual product. Consider the raising of $1, from $5 to $6, that your mom is charging for a blow job. What the fuck?! At the 375,000 sucks she gives each year, that's a hell of an income increase! Too bad she'll waste it all on coke. What a cunt.

  5. Re:Of course he could! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Troll
    Yeah, right.

    Keep on believing that geek boy until I smash your head in for glancing at my woman!

  6. Re:Nasar's flawed image of genius by Ozx · · Score: 0, Troll

    Godel was always arrogant and always thought he was correct, regardless of his actual expertise... He had many arguments and 'enemies' in various educated circles...

    There are those that are mentally superior in various things that are socially inept and at the same time are unwilling to deal with people that aren't as capable in their field... People should expect this, because it's simply the case... It's not that you're given a "free pass" by being an asshole to mentally handicapped people, and decide one day to do that... That's just how you are... An idiot doing that will still seem like an idiot, just like a whiney fuck on Slashdot complaining that his 'brilliance' was overlooked because he doesn't see himself as a socially inept fuck that must reduce others to a pulp lest they be ignored entirely.

    The number of brilliant people I know that display no arrogance in their normal operation are pretty rare... Those that won't display arrogance in an argument are absolutely nonexistent... At best they try to be subtle about their trump cards, they're never truly humble... Why the fuck should they be, again?

  7. Eddie Izzard says it best... by hicktruckdriver · · Score: 0, Troll

    "J. Edgar Hoover, what a fuckhead he was, when he died they found out he was a Transvestite, they said, 'ah, that explains his weird behaviour'. Yeah, Fuckin Weirdo Transvestite!"

    --
    darius
  8. Re:His bisexuality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Troll

    Actually, it's another example of the homosexual lobby trying to hide the fact that homosexuality is a mental illness.

  9. Re:Hero worship & makeover by EatAtJoes · · Score: 0, Troll

    Plenty of biographers get mushy (or starry-eyed, or sexually aroused) over their subjects. Do you really think it's possible to spend such an inordinate amount of time writing/researching one person and stay objective?

    When writing about another human, objectivity is as false of a stance as any other ... ultimately a biographer is a narrator, so their personality, feelings, beliefs do a lot to make or break the work. I wouldn't trust someone who claims complete objectivity.