The Man Who Knew Infinity evaluation action
2021-12-23 08:01
In all fairness, the quality of "The Man Who Knew Infinity" is only modest, but it still allows the audience to watch it with relish. In fact, just a few simple and curious thoughts are enough to guide the mathematics layman audience to marvel at Ramanujan, the protagonist of the film step by step. This is probably the charm of the subject matter itself. The film has been portraying this kind of inner world that is almost psychic with mathematics, and it is extremely difficult to integrate with the general world around it. After the film tells the life of Ramanujan, it finally arrives, but it is actually such a beauty at the junction of the rational and divine worlds. In the film, the mathematician Hardy played by Jeremy John Irons sits in a black robe between light and shadow with deep eyebrows. This character is a little lighter than the peerless genius, he freely shuttles between the human world and another strange spiritual world, like a powerful translator between the genius and the mortal world. But when he and Ramanujan parted in the streets of London and bid farewell to their own futures, the audience would suddenly find that the busy carriage vendors on the street were covered with winter sunshine. "Mortal" may be the most cost-effective choice in the world
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Extended Reading
The Man Who Knew Infinity quotes
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G.H. Hardy: From an Indian clerk ill-educated in Madras. I would very highly value any advice you give me. Yours truly, S. Ramanujan.
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S. Ramanujan: I owe you so much.
G.H. Hardy: No, it is I who owe you.