Ad
related to: Proof (2005 film)Buy proof movie at Amazon. Free Shipping on Qualified Orders.
Search results
Proof is a 2005 American drama film directed by John Madden and starring Gwyneth Paltrow, Anthony Hopkins, Jake Gyllenhaal, and Hope Davis. The screenplay was written by Rebecca Miller and David Auburn and based on Auburn's Pulitzer Prize-winning play of the same name.
- $20 million
Oct 7, 2005 · Proof: Directed by John Madden. With Gwyneth Paltrow, Anthony Hopkins, Jake Gyllenhaal, Danny McCarthy. The daughter of a brilliant but mentally disturbed mathematician, recently deceased, tries to come to grips with her possible inheritance: his insanity.
- John Madden
- 198
- 2 min
Summaries. The daughter of a brilliant but mentally disturbed mathematician, recently deceased, tries to come to grips with her possible inheritance: his insanity. Complicating matters are one of her father's ex-students, who wants to search through his papers, and her estranged sister, who shows up to help settle his affairs. Catherine is a ...
People also ask
Is proof a good movie?
What happens at the end of Proof (2005)?
Is proof based on a true story?
What is the authorship of the proof?
Sep 22, 2005 · John Madden's "Proof" is an extraordinary thriller about matters of scholarship and the heart, about the true authorship of a mathematical proof and the passions that coil around it. It is a rare movie that gets the tone of a university campus exactly right, and at the same time communicates so easily that you don't need to know the slightest ...
Catherine (Gwyneth Paltrow) is a 27-year-old grieving after the loss of her father (Anthony Hopkins), a genius mathematician whose mind gradually deteriorated from mental illness.
- (143)
- Drama
- PG-13
Sep 30, 2005 · Proof (2005) PG-13 09/30/2005 (US) Drama , Mystery 1h 41m. User. Score. What's your Vibe ? Play Trailer. The biggest risk in life is not taking one. Overview. Catherine is a woman in her late twenties who is strongly devoted to her father, Robert, a brilliant and well-known mathematician whose grip on reality is beginning to slip away.