The Theory of Everything

3.67
    The Theory of Everything
    2014

    Synopsis

    The Theory of Everything is the extraordinary story of one of the world’s greatest living minds, the renowned astrophysicist Stephen Hawking, who falls deeply in love with fellow Cambridge student Jane Wilde.

    Votre Filmothèque

    Cast

    • Eddie RedmayneStephen Hawking
    • Felicity JonesJane Hawking
    • Charlie CoxJonathan Hellyer Jones
    • Emily WatsonBeryl Wilde
    • Simon McBurneyFrank Hawking
    • David ThewlisDennis Sciama
    • Maxine PeakeElaine Mason
    • Harry LloydBrian
    • Tom PriorRobert Hawking (Age 17)
    • Sophie PerryLucy Hawking (Age 14)

    Recommandations

    • 91

      Hitfix

      Many moviegoers may think they already know a good deal about Hawking’s achievements, but they would do themselves a disservice to miss out on Redmayne’s almost perfect performance.
    • 80

      The Guardian

      It's a film to leave you reeling but cheered, too. It's about battling love, as well as illness. A universal story, extracted from a unique one.
    • 80

      Variety

      What’s onscreen is less a cerebral experience than a stirring and bittersweet love story, inflected with tasteful good humor, that can’t help but recall earlier disability dramas like “My Left Foot” and “The Diving Bell and the Butterfly.”
    • 75

      The Playlist

      The film is a boilerplate biopic, but with stunning cinematography and a couple of fierce performances, The Theory of Everything is nothing if not an accomplished and emotional work of cinema.
    • 70

      The Hollywood Reporter

      Facing the physical challenges of depicting Hawking’s disability, Redmayne pulls it off with enormous grace and endurance.
    • 67

      IndieWire

      No matter how much The Theory of Everything showcases the incredible process through which Hawking maintains a connection to the rest of the world, it falls short of burrowing inside his head.
    • 60

      CineVue

      With so many elements working on such a high plain, it is ultimately a shame that The Theory of Everything remains a formulaic biopic with a scope far narrower than its subject. Still, it broaches universal themes through the story of a man who studies the universe, and succeeds in being a life and love-affirming along the way.
    • 60

      The Telegraph

      It’s certainly Redmayne’s film, and his performance is everything you could ask for: completely convincing in its physicality, credible in its pain, and warmly but not crassly optimistic in its nearly constant good temper.

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