In theory, making a movie about a person’s life should be an
easy task. If the person’s life story is well known or well documented, connecting
the dots or taking the story from A to Z should practically take care of
itself. The trouble in that approach is that if the story is too well known, the movie can wind up
being perfunctory and boring. The trick to make it work and work well is to
find the human element or the true heart of the story and to stick with it.
Such is the task for director James Marsh as he tackles the life story of famed
astrophysicist Stephen Hawking.
Stephen Hawking (Eddie Redmanyne) fights through a debilitating
disease which eventually leaves him without movement and speech. With his wife
Jane (Felicity Jones) at his side and despite his physical limitations, Hawking
tirelessly works and publishes his theories on the origins of the universe…even
when his marriage is tested.
THE THEORY OF EVERYTHING right away avoids any of the old clichés
of the standard biopic by starting the story during Hawking’s collegiate years.
There is no monkeying around with scenes of him as a child having daddy issues
or messing around with lost loves. Director James Marsh immediately gets down
to business getting to the story; he right away gets to Hawking as a brilliant
student who falls in love and excels mentally despite his body failing him. Just
as Hawking was fascinated with the concept of time and the makeup of the
universe, Marsh builds a fascination around his story which has a familiar, yet
incredibly fresh feel.
The science that Hawking grapples with is on full display
when it needs to be. Hawking works hard to prove his theories on black holes,
relativity, and singularity…but all that science by far does not bog down or
derail the film. THE THEORY OF EVERYTHING slowly transforms into a love story;
this is all about Stephen and Jane and how they affect each other through the
years…and there emerges the human element that is heartbreaking and uplifting at
the same time. If this film were the Solar System, the scientific elements
would be the planets…spinning around the radiant heart, or Sun.
James Marsh does some exquisite work in bringing his film to
life. Things are photographed beautifully, and his gentle touch in the intimate
and not-so-intimate moments is perfect. Marsh also uses Hawking’s theories on
the universe as metaphors for his character’s lives, and it works so well it
blows the mind.
For as great as the film is composed, it all seems small
compared to the outstanding, stupefying, mesmerizing, tearjerking and stunning
performance of Eddie Redmayne as Hawking. Redmayne is brilliant and charming
during the early goings of the film even before
his character’s body begins to fail…and when it does, he proves his worth
was one of the best actors working today. Redmayne contorts his body in such
ways that must have painful to do,
and he somehow transmits his charm and charisma even when his speech gets
worse. Felicity Jones matches Redmayne in stride, and the supporting cast of
David Thewlis, Emily Watson, Charlie Cox, and Simon McBurney are all excellent.
For those of us who are even slightly familiar with Stephen
Hawking, the finale leads us right where we expected to be but is very much
worthwhile because the trip was so full of heart. Much like the universe, THE
THEORY OF EVERYTHING has many levels working at once…and shines brighter than
any star.
BOTTOM LINE: See it
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