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Why has it taken Hollywood so long to come up with a film about John Nash

00:00 Mon 25th Feb 2002 |

A.� The schizophrenic, Nobel prize-winning mathematician John Nash, revealed in Ron Howard's In A Beautiful Mind, lives up to Hollywood's idea of a genius - brilliant mind, but tortured personality.� The film, released this week in the UK, has earned Russell Crowe another Best Actor Oscar nomination. Howard is said to have been keen to make a film about Nash for some time, but Crowe's other commitments meant filming was only complete before Christmas.

Q.� Which other geniuses have been portrayed on the big screen

A.� Film tends to simplify genises - anyone who stands out attracts admiration and envy. In Amadeus the competent court composer Salieri is jealous of Mozart's musical talent, compounded by the fact Mozart is a self-possessed child.

Many producers choose to play geniuses as artists in torment. Pianist David Helfgott in Shine, poet Reinaldo Arenas in Before Night Falls, painter Jackson Pollock in Pollock or film-maker FW Murnau in Shadow of the Vampire, all of them generally suffered for their art.

Gwyneth Paltrow's new film The Royal Tenenbaums, released here on March 15, is about a clan of prodigies who have grown up into losers, haunted by the loss of their childhood talents.

In Good Will Hunting, Matt Damon's aptitude for mathematics is seen as more of a curse than a gift. At the end of the film, he's seen making a 'normal' life for himself by turning his back on his sums and making a new life with his girldfriend.

Q.� What about the mad and the bad

A.� The thriller Pi is the story of a dysfunctional maths genius whose research into the titular number leads him to dementia. Somewhere along the lines, it tells us that the super-intelligent are more prone to madness.

The mad scientific genius was born with Mary Shelley's Frankenstein, and Fritz Lang's Metropolis, made in 1926, created the shock-haired lunatic. He was the first power-mad boffin posied to take over the world.� The criminal and disfigured genius has been created in everything from Phantom of the Opera to James Bond villains and the Joker in Batman.

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By Katharine MacColl

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