Proof is important. Without it, nothing.

Philip 2022-01-06 08:01:54

A really underrated film. There is some romance in the film, but the most part is about the proof of love, the love between father and daughter, the trust between lovers. Theory should always be justified, and love should be as well.

The most touching part is the dialogue between the father and daughter in a very cold night with many light snowflakes. The father said the daughter “You are genuinely interested in it? You know how happy that makes me. I think that can keep me fill the rest of my life, not just me. Now I am starting to feel I am finished, really finished. I was terrified that I would never work again. Did you notice that?” Then his eyes were lit by the desire to work with his daughter. Finally, he got a real good helper, a inheritor with the ability to continue.

And the dialogues in the film are humorous. For example, a band will perform a rock piece of music with the name “I”, but all is just nothing, silent as “i” is imaginary number in maths. The music is inaudible as well.

The performance of Gwyneth Paltrow in this film was even better than that in “Shakespeare in Love”. I even think she is English, not American. And Anthony Hopkins never fails to live up to my expectations.

Just finish my short introduction by citing the last words “If I go back to the beginning, I can start it over again. I can go line by line trying to find shorter way. I can try to make it better.”

View more about Proof reviews

Extended Reading

Proof quotes

  • Hal: Well, I'm gonna be late. Some friends of mine are in this band. They're playing in a bar on Diversey, way down the bill, they go on about 2 to 2:30. I said I'd be there.

    Catherine: Great.

    Hal: They're all in the math deparment, they're really good. They have this song called 'i', you'd like it. Like lower-cased i. They just stand there and don't play anything for three minutes.

    Catherine: Imaginary number.

    Hal: It's a math joke... You see why they're way down on the bill.

    Catherine: That's a long way to drive to see some nerds in a band.

    Hal: You know, I hate when people say that. It's not really that long of a drive.

    Catherine: So, they are nerds.

    Hal: Oh, they're raging geeks. But they're geeks who, you know, can dress themselves and hold down a job at a major university. Some of them have switched from glasses to contacts. They, uh, play sports, they play in a band, they get laid suprisingly often... So, it makes you kinda question the whole set of terms. Geek, nerd, wonk, dilbert, paste eater...

    Catherine: You're in this band, aren't you.

    Hal: Ok, yes. I play the drums. You wanna come? I never sing, I swear to God.

  • Robert: I hope you're not spending your birthday alone.

    Catherine: I'm not alone.

    Robert: I don't count.

    Catherine: Why not?

    Robert: I'm your old man. Go out with friends.

    Catherine: Yeah, right.

    Robert: Aren't your friends taking you out?

    Catherine: Nope.

    Robert: Why not?

    Catherine: For your friends to take you out, you have to have friends. Funny how that works.