Ashley wrote:Actually I really loved this movie. I think as far as "disturbing" goes, it really messes with your head--after a while, you don't know what is real and what is in the character's head (because this is what he is grappling with too--he doesn't know what is real and what he has made up). But I wouldn't call it scary by ANY means, and trust me I'm the biggest baby there is about this stuff. I recommend giving it a go, I loved it thoroughly. If you can handle the way The Matrix made your brain feel, you can handle this.
piloswine wrote:It is based on a true story as well, which makes it all the more ineresting. IT is one of those movies that is almost good enough for me to buy, but not quite. my math tacher loved it.
bigsleepj wrote:Depends on what you called true. It omits certain facts about the main character, but that aside its a very good, excellent movie.
piloswine wrote:True, but most movies that are "based on real events" dont tell the story the way things actually happened. The Great Escape was based on an actual escape but many characters were lumped together, ect.
* While this film is inspired by the life of John Nash, there were elements from his life that were deliberately omitted: a) he was married several times b) in the past, he had several hetero- and homosexual affairs c) He fathered a child out-of-wedlock in his twenties.
* John Nash didn't receive the Nobel prize alone, but with colleague Reinhard Selten and Hungarian-born János Harsányi. "Game Theory" was initiated by Hungarian born John von Neumann and Austrian born Oskar Morgenstein in 1944.
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