Proof


Proof

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Transcript


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This film contains some strong language

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(TV) "We all love the richness of a good eye cream."

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"But it does leave a richness or a greasiness under the eye."

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"Now let's take a look at that nasty salsa stain."

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"This shirt is ruined. Right? Wrong."

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-"Watch the stain-fighting power..."

-"..designed with women in mind."

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"If you can twist it, turn it, remove it,

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then you can fix it, replace it, or improve it.

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"My kits includes a guidebook..."

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"Plus they painted some people up like animals. And now it's over."

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"If you think you need to go to a gym to lose weight,

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stay in shape and have a body like this, think again."

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"This is Bowflex, the real workout..."

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"When you're looking for a home,

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your real estate agent is a big part of your life."

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"You need someone you can count on."

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"They studied science and medicine in skin care

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and combined those two in your skin solutions line."

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"I so much appreciate being here."

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"Nice to have you with us as always. We'd love to take your phone calls."

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"This really is a very..."

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"When you contact a RE/MAX agent to help you buy yourself a home,

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you expect service that's a little out of the ordinary."

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"RE/MAX agents average more experience

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and more sales than other agents."

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"So the next time you need outstanding real estate service,

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call RE/MAX."

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-Can't sleep?

-Oh!

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(Jesus!)

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Oh, you scared me.

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I'm sorry.

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What are you doing here?

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I just thought I'd check up on you. Why aren't you in bed?

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Your student's still here. He's up in your study.

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He's not my student any more.

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He's teaching now. He's a bright kid.

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-What time is it?

-After midnight.

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-So?

-So?

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Happy birthday.

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Dad!

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-Do I ever forget?

-Thank you.

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27. I can't believe it.

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Neither can I.

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-Goddamn, I forgot the glasses. You want me to...?

-No.

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This is the worst champagne I have ever tasted.

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-(LAUGHS)

-Dad, it's not even champagne!

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-The bottle's the right shape.

-"Windy Valley Vineyards."

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I didn't know they made wine in Wisconsin. You want some?

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I hope you're not spending your birthday alone.

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-I'm not alone.

-I don't count.

-Why not?

-I'm your old man.

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-Go out with some friends.

-Yeah, right.

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-Aren't your friends taking you out?

-Nope.

-Why not?

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-For your friends to take you out, you have to have friends.

-Ah.

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-Funny how that works.

-What about that cute blonde?

-What?

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Lives over on Ellis Avenue. You used to spend every minute together.

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-Christie Jacobson?

-Christie Jacobson.

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-That was in third grade, Dad.

-Oh.

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Last time I saw her was in a sandbox.

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What about Claire?

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She's not my friend. She's my sister.

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And she's in New York. And I don't like her.

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I thought she was coming in.

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Not until tomorrow.

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My advice, if you can't sleep, sit down and do some mathematics.

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-Please!

-Do it together, the old way.

-Can't think of anything worse.

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-Line by line, out loud.

-You don't want any?

-Get cracking.

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By the time I was your age, I had already done my best work.

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-How old were you?

-Hmm?

-When it started.

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(SIGHS) What?

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You know, when... you got sick.

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26, 27. Is that what you're worried about?

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I've thought about it.

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I went bughouse. Doesn't mean you will. It's not strictly hereditary.

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Listen to me.

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Life changes fast in your 20s, and it shakes you up.

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You're down. You've had a lousy couple of years.

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-No-one knows that better than me. You're gonna be OK.

-I am?

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Yes. I promise you.

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The simple fact that we can talk about this together is a good sign.

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-A good sign?

-Yeah.

-How could it be a good sign?

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Because crazy people don't sit around wondering if they're nuts.

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-They don't?

-No. They've got better things to do. Take it from me.

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A very good sign that you're crazy

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is an inability to ask the question, "Am I crazy?"

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Even if the answer is yes?

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Crazy people don't ask, you see?

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Huh.

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Let's call it a night. You go up and get some sleep.

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-In the morning -

-Wait.

-What's the matter?

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-It doesn't make sense.

-Sure it does.

-No.

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-Where's the problem?

-The problem is... You are crazy.

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-So?

-So you said a crazy person would never admit that.

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Ahhh. I see.

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So?

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It's a point.

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So, how can you admit it?

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Well, because...

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..I'm also dead.

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Aren't I?

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You died a week ago.

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Aneurysm. 63 years old. The funeral's tomorrow.

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-Ah!

-Oh, sorry.

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-Did I... Did I hurt you?

-No.

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-It's OK.

-Good.

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Mr Dobbs, gonna stand there forever? This is my daughter Catherine.

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-Hi.

-Hi.

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Mr Dobbs is in our infinite programme as he approaches

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completion of his dissertation, time approaches infinity.

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Catherine?

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-What?

-I'm sorry. I just wanted to say I'm done for the night.

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Good.

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-Champagne, huh?

-Yes.

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-Celebrating?

-Do you want some?

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-Sure.

-I'm done. Take the rest with you.

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Oh. Erm,... no thanks.

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-Take it. I'm done.

-No, I'm driving.

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Erm,... I'll let myself out.

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-Good.

-When should I come back?

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-Come back?

-Yeah. I'm no way near finished. Maybe tomorrow?

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We have a funeral tomorrow.

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You're right. I'm sorry. I was going to attend, if that's alright.

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Sure.

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-What about Sunday? Will you be around?

-You've had three days.

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You don't need anybody in your hair, but someone's got to go through

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-your dad's stuff.

-There's nothing up there.

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-There are 103 notebooks.

-He was a graphomaniac, Harold.

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-Do you know what that is?

-He wrote compulsively. Call me Hal.

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Like a monkey at a typewriter. 103 notebooks full of bullshit.

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-I'm prepared to look at every page. Are you?

-No!

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I'm not crazy.

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Well, I'm gonna be late. Some friends of mine are in this band.

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They're playing in a bar on Diversey, way down the bill,

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around 2:30. I said I'd be there.

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-Great.

-They're all in the math department. They're good.

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They have this song called "i". You'd like it. Lowercase "i".

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They just stand there. Don't play anything for three minutes.

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-Imaginary number?

-A math joke. You see why they're way down the bill.

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That's a long drive to see some nerds in a band.

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I hate when people say that. It's not really that long of a drive.

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-So they are nerds.

-Raging geeks. But they're geeks

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who can dress themselves and hold down a job at a major university.

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Some of them have switched from glasses to contacts.

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They play sports, play in a band.

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They get laid surprisingly often. So it makes you kind of question

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the whole set of terms - geek, nerd, wonk, Dilbert, paste-eater.

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You're in this band, aren't you?

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OK, yes. I play the drums. You wanna come? I never sing. I swear to God.

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-No, thanks.

-Alright, look, Catherine. Monday.

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-What do you say?

-Don't you have a job?

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-A full teaching load plus my own work.

-Plus band practice.

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-Plus I teach hockey to ten-year-olds.

-You make me sick.

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I have to do this if you'll let me.

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I loved your dad. I don't believe a mind like his can just shut down.

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He had lucid moments, a lucid year, a whole year three years ago. Sorry.

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Look, let me... Wait. You're 27 right?

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-How old are you?

-Doesn't matter.

-How old are you?

-I'm 26.

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When your dad was younger than us, he made major contributions

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-to three game theory, algebraic geometry -

-Don't lecture me.

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If I came up with a tenth of the shit your dad produced,

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I could write my ticket to any math department in the country.

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Give me your backpack.

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-Why?

-Because I wanna look inside it.

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-What?

-Open it up and give it to me.

-Come on.

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-You're not taking anything.

-I wouldn't!

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-You want something you can publish?

-Sure.

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-Then you can write your own ticket?

-No, it'd be for your dad.

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-You have something in that backpack.

-What?

-Give it to me!

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You're being paranoid.

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Just because I'm paranoid doesn't mean there isn't something in that -

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You said that there was nothing up there, didn't you? Didn't you?

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-Yes.

-So what would I take, right?

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You're right.

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Thank you.

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Oh, what the hell...?

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This isn't an airport.

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You can come back.

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(SIGHS)

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The University Health Service is very good.

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I'm fine.

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Also... exercise is great.

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I go running along the lake a couple mornings a week. It clears my head.

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-It's not too cold yet. If you wanted to, I could pick you up.

-No, thanks.

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Alright. Well, I'm gonna be late for the show. I'd better go.

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Good night.

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-Wait. You forgot your jacket.

-Oh, no, you...

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I'm paranoid?

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-Wait.

-You think I should go jogging?

-Just hold on.

-Get out.

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-Get out of my house!

-Let me explain.

-You stole it!

-Show you something.

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-I'm calling the police.

-What? Don't. Look, I borrowed the book, alright?

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Cos I found something your father wrote. Not math. Something he wrote.

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-I'd like to report a robbery.

-Put the phone down.

-A robbery.

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-It's about you.

-He's in the house!

-Here's your name.

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-I'm at 4655...

-"Catherine", see? "Catherine."

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-South...

-"Not a bad day. Some good news from Catherine."

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I'm not sure what that meant. I thought you might.

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-When did he write this?

-"Ma'am?"

-Three years ago.

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"Machinery's not working yet, but there's cause for optimism."

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-The machinery is his mind, his ability to do mathematics.

-I know.

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"Talking with students helps, so does riding in buses."

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"Most of all Cathy."

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"Her refusal to let me be institutionalised,

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caring for me herself, has certainly saved my life."

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"Made writing this possible."

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"Made it possible to imagine doing math again."

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"Where does her strength come from? I can never repay her."

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"Today is her birthday. She is 24. I'm taking her to dinner."

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-What are we going to do on your birthday?

-Dad...

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Let's get out of this neighbourhood.

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Let's go to the north side or Chinatown. Greektown.

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-I don't know what's good any more.

-Dad?

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-Hmm?

-I'm going to school.

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When?

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I'm gonna start at Northwestern at the end of the month.

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Northwestern?

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I shouldn't have tried to sneak it out.

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It sounds stupid, but I was gonna wrap it.

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Happy birthday.

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What's wrong with Chicago?

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You still teach there.

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I'm sorry. That is too weird, me taking classes in your department.

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It's a long drive.

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-Not that long. It's half an hour.

-Still, twice a day.

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Dad.

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I'd live there.

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You'd actually want to live in Evanston?

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I'd still be close. I can come home whenever you want.

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Look, you've been well. You've been really well for almost seven months.

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You don't need me here every minute of the day.

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(SIREN WAILS)

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(SIREN CONTINUES TO WAIL)

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Yes?

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Someone here call the police?

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No, honey. I think we should put the aqua plates on the registry

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and the brown couch.

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Your mother wants to buy us a substantial piece of furniture.

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It's the biggest thing that I could find that will fit in our apartment.

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Well, don't worry about it, honey. I'll be home by tomorrow night.

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Yeah, let's just get through today first.

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Hold on a second. Hi!

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Huh? Erm... I don't know. She didn't pick up when I called.

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Hopefully better than yesterday.

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First thing I'll do is throw her in the shower, get her out in the sun.

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-Better. Much.

-Thanks.

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-You feel better?

-Yep.

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You look a million times better.

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-Have some coffee.

-OK. No. Black.

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Have a little milk.

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-Have a banana.

-No. Thank you.

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Well, it's a good thing I brought food. There is nothing in the house.

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-I've been meaning to go shopping.

-Do you want a bagel?

-No.

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I hate breakfast.

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-Coffee.

-Still making those lists, huh?

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It's... It's a compulsion.

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Do you ever cheat and tick off something you haven't done yet?

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Well, I would only be cheating myself.

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Right.

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Did you use that conditioner I brought you?

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No. Shit. I forgot.

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It's my favourite. You'll love it, Katie. I want you to try it.

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-I'll try it next time.

-You'll like it. It has jojoba.

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What is jojoba?

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It's something they put in for healthy hair.

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Hair is dead.

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-What?

-It's... It's dead tissue.

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-You can't make it healthy.

-Whatever. It's good for your hair.

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-Like what? A chemical?

-No. It's organic.

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-It can be organic and still be a chemical.

-I don't know what it is.

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-Heard of organic chemistry?

-It makes my hair look, smell and feel good,

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and that is the extent of my information about it.

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You might like it if you decide to use it.

0:17:320:17:35

Thanks. I'll try it.

0:17:350:17:37

If you don't have anything to wear for today,

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we could go shopping downtown.

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-OK.

-It'll be fun.

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My birthday present.

0:17:470:17:49

Great.

0:17:490:17:52

-Is there anything else you need?

-No. I'm cool.

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-Anything at all while I'm here?

-Uh-uh.

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I thought we'd have some people over tonight.

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-If you're feeling OK.

-We are burying Dad this afternoon.

0:18:030:18:08

You have to have something. People expect it. And it's the only time

0:18:080:18:12

I can see any old Chicago friends. It'll be nice.

0:18:120:18:15

I think Dad would've wanted us to have a good time.

0:18:150:18:20

It's a funeral, but we don't have to be completely grim about it.

0:18:200:18:24

-Mitch says hi.

-Hi, Mitch.

0:18:280:18:31

He sends you his love. I told him you would see him soon, and...

0:18:310:18:35

-We're getting married!

-No shit.

-Yes!

0:18:350:18:39

-We just decided.

-Yikes.

-Yes.

0:18:390:18:41

-Oh. When?

-In January.

0:18:410:18:44

You know, his job is great. I just got promoted.

0:18:440:18:48

Huh.

0:18:480:18:50

-You will come?

-Yeah. Sure. In January?

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I mean, it's not like I have to check my schedule or anything. Sure.

0:18:540:19:00

-Do you know what you wanna do now?

-No.

0:19:000:19:03

-Do you wanna stay in Chicago?

-I don't know.

0:19:030:19:06

-Do you wanna go back to school?

-I haven't thought about it.

0:19:060:19:10

Well, there's a lot to think about. How do you feel?

0:19:100:19:13

Physically? Great. Except my hair seems unhealthy.

0:19:130:19:17

-I wish there was something I could...

-Come on.

0:19:170:19:20

What is the point of all the questions, Claire?

0:19:200:19:23

Katie, some police officers came by while you were in the shower.

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Yeah?

0:19:280:19:30

They said they were checking up on things

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and wanted to see how everything was.

0:19:330:19:36

That was nice of them. What about this?

0:19:360:19:39

They said they responded to a call last night and came to the house.

0:19:390:19:42

-Yeah?

-Did you call the police last night?

0:19:420:19:45

-Yeah.

-Why?

0:19:450:19:47

Because I thought the house was being robbed.

0:19:470:19:50

-But it wasn't?

-No. I changed my mind.

0:19:500:19:54

The police told me you seemed disoriented and abusive.

0:19:540:19:58

-These guys were assholes, Claire.

-They seemed perfectly nice.

0:19:580:20:02

They wouldn't leave. They wanted me to, like, fill out a report.

0:20:020:20:06

-Were you abusive?

-This one cop kept spitting on me when he talked.

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-It was disgusting.

-Did you use the word "dickhead"?

0:20:110:20:14

I don't remember.

0:20:140:20:17

-Did you tell one cop to go... have sex with the other cop's mother?

-No.

0:20:170:20:22

-That's what they said.

-Not... with that phrasing.

0:20:220:20:25

-Did you strike one of them?

-They were trying to come into the house.

0:20:250:20:29

-Oh, my God.

-No! I may have pushed him a little.

0:20:290:20:32

-They said you seemed disturbed.

-They were trying to search my house!

0:20:320:20:36

-You called them.

-Yes. But I didn't actually want them to come.

0:20:360:20:40

So, why did you call?

0:20:400:20:42

Because I was trying to get this guy out of the house.

0:20:420:20:47

-What is this man's name?

-Hal.

0:20:470:20:50

Harold. Harold Dobbs.

0:20:500:20:53

Because the police said that you were the only person there.

0:20:530:20:56

Because he left before they got there.

0:20:560:20:59

-With the notebooks?

-Claire, don't be stupid.

0:20:590:21:02

There are over a hundred notebooks. He was only stealing one

0:21:020:21:06

to give it back to me. I let him go

0:21:060:21:08

so he could play with his band on the north side. What about this?

0:21:080:21:12

-His band?

-He was late.

0:21:120:21:14

He wanted me to come with him. I was like, "Yeah, right."

0:21:140:21:18

-Is Harold Dobbs your boyfriend?

-No!

0:21:180:21:22

-Are you sleeping with him?

-Euw! No.

0:21:220:21:26

-He's a math geek.

-And he's in a band?

0:21:260:21:29

-A rock band?

-A marching band. He plays trombone.

0:21:290:21:33

Yes. A rock band.

0:21:330:21:35

-What is the name of this band?

-How should I know?

0:21:350:21:39

-Harold Dobbs didn't tell you the name of his rock band?

-No.

0:21:390:21:44

-Well, is Harold Dobbs -

-Stop saying "Harold Dobbs".

0:21:440:21:49

-Is this person -

-Harold Dobbs exists!

0:21:490:21:53

-Sure he does.

-He's a mathematician at the University of Chicago.

0:21:530:21:57

Call the freaking math department.

0:21:570:21:59

Mitch has become an excellent cook. It's like his hobby now.

0:22:020:22:06

He buys all these gadgets. Garlic press, olive oil sprayer.

0:22:060:22:11

Every night there's something new.

0:22:110:22:14

The other day he made vegetarian chilli.

0:22:140:22:17

What are you talking about?

0:22:170:22:20

Stay with us for a while.

0:22:200:22:24

-I'm OK here.

-Chicago is dead. New York is so much more fun.

0:22:240:22:29

Well, the fun thing is not really where my head's at at the moment.

0:22:290:22:34

-You look so tired.

-I am.

-I think you could use some downtime.

0:22:340:22:37

-Downtime?

-Katie, you've had a hard time.

0:22:370:22:41

-I'm perfectly OK.

-You're upset and exhausted.

0:22:410:22:43

-I was fine until you got here.

-Wait.

0:22:430:22:47

-Catherine!

-Who is that?

0:22:470:22:51

Harold Dobbs!

0:22:570:22:59

Hi.

0:22:590:23:01

OK?

0:23:010:23:03

I really don't need this, Claire.

0:23:030:23:06

I'm fine, you know. I'm totally fine.

0:23:060:23:09

And then you show up here with these questions. Like, "Are you OK?"

0:23:090:23:13

With that soothing tone of voice. And the poor policemen.

0:23:130:23:16

I think the policemen can handle themselves.

0:23:160:23:19

And bagels and bananas and jojoba? And "Come to New York."

0:23:190:23:24

And vegetarian chilli?!

0:23:240:23:27

I mean, it really pisses me off, so just save it!

0:23:270:23:31

I'm Claire. I'm Catherine's sister.

0:23:310:23:34

Oh, hi. Hal. Nice to meet you.

0:23:340:23:37

He had to go back and fix the paper in galleys.

0:23:370:23:40

He pretty much held it together with baling wire.

0:23:400:23:44

This is a man who, back in the UK, at the age of 22 basically invented

0:23:440:23:49

the mathematical techniques for studying rational behaviour

0:23:490:23:53

and gave the astrophysicists plenty to think about

0:23:530:23:56

when he came over here.

0:23:560:23:59

Men like Robert Llewellyn come into the world very rarely.

0:23:590:24:05

And we will miss the man... intensely.

0:24:070:24:10

But... the work will endure.

0:24:110:24:15

(POIGNANT CLASSICAL MUSIC)

0:24:210:24:25

I'm not on the programme. (MUSIC STOPS)

0:24:430:24:46

Wow. I can't believe how many people are here.

0:24:500:24:55

I never knew he had this many friends.

0:24:550:24:58

Where have you all been for the last five years?

0:24:580:25:03

I guess to you guys he was already dead, right?

0:25:030:25:06

I mean, what's a great man without his greatness?

0:25:060:25:10

Just some old guy.

0:25:100:25:13

So you probably wanna catch up on what you missed out on.

0:25:130:25:18

Erm...

0:25:180:25:20

He used to read all day.

0:25:200:25:23

He kept demanding more and more books.

0:25:240:25:27

I was getting them out of the library by the carload. There were hundreds.

0:25:270:25:31

And then one day I realised he wasn't reading.

0:25:310:25:35

He believed aliens were sending him messages

0:25:360:25:40

through the Dewey decimal numbers in the library books.

0:25:400:25:43

He was trying to work out the code.

0:25:430:25:46

He used to, erm, shuffle around in his slippers.

0:25:460:25:51

He talked to himself.

0:25:510:25:53

He stank.

0:25:530:25:56

I had to make sure he bathed, which... was embarrassing.

0:25:580:26:02

Then he started writing 19, 20 hours a day.

0:26:030:26:07

I got him this huge case of notebooks. He used every one.

0:26:070:26:11

I dropped out of school.

0:26:110:26:14

You see, he was convinced that...

0:26:170:26:19

..he was writing the most beautiful, elegant proofs.

0:26:200:26:25

Proofs like music.

0:26:250:26:28

I'm glad he's dead.

0:26:350:26:37

Catherine.

0:26:430:26:45

Catherine!

0:26:570:26:59

Don't call the cops.

0:27:030:27:06

I can't believe I just said that.

0:27:070:27:09

No. It definitely pushed the envelope.

0:27:090:27:12

(SIGHS)

0:27:130:27:15

-I think I need to go home.

-I'll drive you.

0:27:150:27:18

No, that's OK. I'm gonna walk.

0:27:180:27:20

-It's a long walk.

-Thanks.

0:27:200:27:24

Their daycare is excellent. We're starting to apply for preschools,

0:27:350:27:39

which locks you into a commitment.

0:27:390:27:42

-Oh, it does?

-(BOTH) Yeah.

0:27:420:27:46

-Do you ever miss Chicago?

-No.

0:27:460:27:49

I mean, er...

0:27:490:27:52

Erm,... No.

0:27:520:27:54

You have the house now, though.

0:27:540:27:56

You and Mitch should move back and fix it up.

0:27:560:27:59

You look great.

0:27:590:28:01

Claire gave it to me.

0:28:010:28:04

I like it.

0:28:040:28:06

It doesn't really fit.

0:28:060:28:08

Sure it does.

0:28:080:28:10

-You can't prove it.

-Well, I can try and disprove the opposite.

0:28:100:28:16

I can prove that it doesn't not fit.

0:28:160:28:19

-How?

-I could take a vote.

0:28:190:28:22

-To your old man. Helluva guy.

-Thank you.

-Too bad he went nuts.

0:28:240:28:29

-(LAUGHS)

-Helluva guy anyway.

0:28:290:28:32

-What do you do?

-I'm a currency analyst.

0:28:320:28:35

I probably inherited one thousandth of my father's talent.

0:28:350:28:38

Are you a mathematician?

0:28:380:28:40

-Ooh. Christ, no. Theoretical phys-physics.

-(LAUGHS)

0:28:400:28:44

-To the physicists.

-Drink up.

0:28:440:28:47

(SIGHS) When do you think they'll leave?

0:28:470:28:50

No way to know. Mathematicians are insane.

0:28:500:28:54

I went to this conference last fall.

0:28:540:28:57

I've never been so exhausted in my life.

0:28:570:29:00

48 straight hours of partying, drinking, drugs, papers, lectures.

0:29:000:29:03

-Drugs?

-Amphetamines mostly.

0:29:030:29:06

I don't. Some older guys are hooked. They think they need it.

0:29:060:29:09

-Why?

-There's this fear that your creativity peaks around 23

0:29:090:29:13

-then it's all downhill from there.

-That's what my dad thought.

0:29:130:29:17

I guess all the really original work, it's... all young guys.

0:29:170:29:21

-Young guys?

-No, there are some women.

0:29:210:29:24

-Really? Who?

-There's a woman at Stanford. I can't remember her name.

0:29:240:29:29

-Sophie Germain?

-Yeah.

0:29:290:29:32

I think I've seen her at meetings. I've never met her.

0:29:320:29:36

She was born in Paris in 1776.

0:29:360:29:39

Then I've definitely never met her.

0:29:390:29:42

Ah, I'm...

0:29:430:29:46

Sophie Germain. I'm stupid. Germain primes.

0:29:460:29:50

-Right.

-Double them, and add one, you get another prime.

0:29:500:29:53

-Like two is prime, double plus one is five, also prime.

-Right.

0:29:530:29:57

Or 92,305 times 2 to the 16,988th plus one.

0:29:570:30:03

Right.

0:30:030:30:05

That's the biggest one, the biggest known one.

0:30:050:30:09

< Coming through!

0:30:100:30:12

Oh, what the hell are they doing here?

0:30:120:30:15

(GENERAL CHATTER)

0:30:160:30:19

(ROCK MUSIC PLAYS)

0:30:190:30:21

(ALL CHEER)

0:30:540:30:56

OK.

0:30:570:30:59

Now we'd like to play a song in tribute to a great man,

0:30:590:31:03

a great mathematician.

0:31:030:31:05

It's called "i".

0:31:050:31:08

One, two, one, two, three...

0:31:110:31:14

(SILENCE)

0:31:170:31:19

(VARIOUS CHUCKLES)

0:31:190:31:22

(CHUCKLES)

0:31:280:31:29

(LAUGHS)

0:31:300:31:33

(JAZZY PIANO MUSIC PLAYS)

0:31:470:31:49

You're probably right. That book I stole?

0:31:500:31:53

I'm starting to think it's the only lucid one,

0:31:530:31:57

-and there's no math in it.

-No.

0:31:570:32:01

I mean, I'll keep reading, but if I can't find anything

0:32:010:32:05

-in the next couple of days...

-Back to the hockey rink?

0:32:050:32:09

Yep.

0:32:090:32:10

And your own research.

0:32:100:32:13

Such as it is.

0:32:130:32:16

What's wrong with it?

0:32:160:32:19

The big ideas aren't there.

0:32:190:32:22

Well, it's not about big ideas.

0:32:240:32:26

It's... It's work. You got to chip away at a problem.

0:32:260:32:30

-That's not what your dad did.

-I think it was, in a way.

0:32:300:32:35

I mean, he'd attack a problem from the side,

0:32:350:32:38

you know, from some weird angle.

0:32:380:32:41

Sneak up on it, grind away at it.

0:32:410:32:44

I don't know.

0:32:460:32:48

I'm just guessing.

0:32:480:32:51

I enjoy teaching.

0:32:510:32:53

-You might come up with something.

-It's not gonna happen. I'm 26.

0:32:530:32:57

Remember the downward slope?

0:32:570:32:59

-Have you tried speed? I heard it helps.

-Yeah.

0:32:590:33:03

(LAUGHS)

0:33:030:33:05

So...

0:33:160:33:18

This is my room.

0:33:180:33:20

Wow. You read a lot of math.

0:33:310:33:33

No. I read Cosmo. That's just window dressing.

0:33:340:33:38

You're a mysterious person, Catherine. You know that?

0:33:380:33:43

-You want a drink?

-I'm OK.

0:33:460:33:49

We never got to celebrate your birthday.

0:33:490:33:52

OK.

0:33:530:33:55

Erm...

0:34:030:34:05

I'm sorry. I just... I'm a little drunk.

0:34:050:34:09

It's OK.

0:34:090:34:12

(SIGHS)

0:34:200:34:22

I'm a little out of practice.

0:34:240:34:27

I always liked you.

0:34:300:34:32

-You did?

-But then I thought,

0:34:330:34:36

"You don't flirt with your doctoral adviser's daughter."

0:34:360:34:39

-Especially when your adviser's crazy?

-Especially then.

0:34:390:34:44

I saw you at my dad's office once. Do you remember?

0:34:460:34:50

I can't believe you remember that.

0:34:500:34:52

I remember you.

0:34:520:34:55

I thought that you seemed...

0:34:550:34:58

not boring.

0:34:590:35:02

Oh, I'm sorry.

0:35:140:35:17

Oh, I feel like I'm gonna crack open like...

0:35:180:35:21

-Like what?

-An egg.

0:35:210:35:24

Or one of those really smelly French cheeses

0:35:260:35:28

-that ooze out everywhere when you cut them.

-(CHUCKLES) Nice.

0:35:280:35:32

(BAND PLAYS POIGNANT SONG)

0:35:450:35:48

(GASPS)

0:36:350:36:37

(SOBS)

0:36:480:36:50

Catherine?

0:37:000:37:02

(CONTINUES TO SOB)

0:37:020:37:04

(BIRD TWITTERS)

0:37:200:37:22

How long have you been up?

0:37:340:37:37

A while.

0:37:370:37:39

Is your sister up?

0:37:410:37:43

No.

0:37:430:37:45

Her flight leaves in a couple of hours. I should probably wake her.

0:37:450:37:49

Let her sleep. She was doing some serious drinking

0:37:490:37:53

-with theoretical physicists.

-(CHUCKLES)

0:37:530:37:56

I'll make her some coffee when she gets up.

0:37:560:38:00

Sunday mornings I usually go out, get the paper, have some breakfast.

0:38:000:38:05

OK.

0:38:050:38:08

-Do you wanna come?

-Oh.

0:38:100:38:13

Well, I should probably stick around until Claire leaves.

0:38:130:38:17

OK.

0:38:170:38:19

Do you mind if I stay?

0:38:210:38:23

No.

0:38:250:38:27

You can work if you want.

0:38:270:38:30

Alright.

0:38:300:38:32

-Should I?

-You can if you want to.

0:38:330:38:36

-Do you want me to go?

-You wanna go?

-I wanna stay here with you.

0:38:360:38:39

-Oh.

-Wanna spend the day with you, if at all possible.

0:38:390:38:43

I wanna spend as much time with you as I can. If I'm coming on strong

0:38:430:38:48

and scaring you, I'll begin back-pedalling immediately.

0:38:480:38:52

How embarrassing is it if I say last night was wonderful?

0:39:030:39:07

It's only embarrassing if I don't agree.

0:39:090:39:12

So?

0:39:120:39:14

Don't be embarrassed.

0:39:140:39:17

What?

0:39:240:39:26

(SIGHS)

0:39:280:39:30

Here.

0:39:350:39:37

The drawer in the desk in my dad's office.

0:39:400:39:44

What's in there?

0:39:440:39:47

Now?

0:39:520:39:54

-Good morning!

-Please, don't yell. Please.

0:40:260:40:30

-Are you alright?

-No. Theoretical physicists.

0:40:300:40:35

-What happened?

-Thanks a lot for leaving me alone with them.

0:40:350:40:39

-That band!

-Yeah.

0:40:390:40:43

-They were terrible.

-They were OK.

0:40:430:40:46

-They had fun, I think.

-Well, as long as everybody had fun.

0:40:460:40:50

-Your dress turned out alright.

-I love it.

0:40:500:40:53

-You do?

-Yeah. It's wonderful.

0:40:530:40:57

-I was surprised you even wore it.

-I love it, Claire. Thanks.

0:40:570:41:02

You're welcome.

0:41:020:41:04

Well, you're in a good mood.

0:41:040:41:06

-Should I not be?

-Are you kidding? No, I'm thrilled.

0:41:060:41:10

It's just... I... Hold on a second, Katie.

0:41:100:41:13

-I just... I'm leaving soon, and...

-I know. You said.

0:41:130:41:18

I would still like you to come to New York.

0:41:180:41:21

Yes. January.

0:41:210:41:23

I would like you to move to New York.

0:41:230:41:28

Move?

0:41:280:41:30

You could stay with us at first, and then you could get your own place.

0:41:300:41:35

I've already scouted some apartments for you. Really cute places.

0:41:350:41:39

What would I do in New York?

0:41:390:41:41

You could do whatever you want. You could work. Go back to school.

0:41:410:41:46

-Claire, this is pretty major.

-I realise that.

0:41:460:41:49

I know you mean well, OK?

0:41:510:41:53

Well, to be honest, you were right yesterday.

0:41:540:41:57

It's been a weird couple of years.

0:41:570:41:59

I think I'd just like to take some time and figure things out.

0:41:590:42:03

It would be easier for me to get you set up in an apartment in New York.

0:42:030:42:07

I don't need an apartment. I'll stay in the house.

0:42:070:42:10

We're selling the house.

0:42:100:42:12

What?

0:42:120:42:14

I'm hoping to do the paperwork this week. I know that seems sudden.

0:42:140:42:18

No-one was here looking at the place. Who are you selling it to?

0:42:180:42:21

The university. They've wanted it back for years.

0:42:210:42:25

-I live here!

-Come to New York. We'll have fun!

0:42:250:42:28

-I don't believe this!

-It would be so good. You deserve a change.

0:42:280:42:32

It'll be a whole new adventure for you.

0:42:320:42:35

-Why are you doing this?

-I want to help.

0:42:350:42:38

-By kicking me out of my house?

-This is my house, too.

0:42:380:42:42

Please! You haven't lived here for years.

0:42:420:42:44

I know that. You were on your own. I really regret that, Katie.

0:42:440:42:48

-And now I want to help.

-You wanna help now?

-Yes.

0:42:480:42:53

Dad is dead.

0:42:530:42:55

-I know.

-He's dead. Now that he's dead,

0:42:550:42:59

you fly in for the weekend and decide you wanna help? You're late!

0:42:590:43:03

Where have you been? Where were you five years ago?

0:43:030:43:07

-I was working.

-I was here.

0:43:070:43:09

-I lived with him alone.

-I was working 14-hour days,

0:43:090:43:15

paid off the mortgage on this house while living in a studio apartment!

0:43:150:43:20

-You had a life, finished school.

-You could've finished school.

0:43:200:43:23

-How?

-I told you a million times to do anything you wanted.

0:43:230:43:28

-And what about Dad?

-He was ill.

0:43:280:43:30

He should've been in a full-time professional care situation.

0:43:300:43:34

-He didn't belong in the nuthouse.

-He might have been better off.

0:43:340:43:39

He needed to be here in his own house,

0:43:390:43:42

near everything that made him happy.

0:43:420:43:44

Maybe. Or maybe professional care would have done him more good

0:43:440:43:48

than rattling around in this mausoleum, you looking after him.

0:43:480:43:53

And his remission? Three years ago he was healthy for a year.

0:43:530:43:56

-He went downhill again.

-He might have been worse in a hospital.

0:43:560:44:00

He might have been better. Did he ever do any work again?

0:44:000:44:03

-No.

-No. And you might have been better.

0:44:030:44:07

Better... than what?

0:44:090:44:12

You had so much talent.

0:44:120:44:14

You think I'm like Dad?

0:44:160:44:18

I think you have some of his talent

0:44:190:44:22

and some of his tendency

0:44:220:44:24

-toward instability.

-Claire.

0:44:240:44:27

In addition to the cute apartments

0:44:280:44:31

that you've scouted for me, have you devoted

0:44:310:44:35

some of your considerable energies towards scouting out

0:44:350:44:38

another type of living facility for your bughouse little sister?

0:44:380:44:42

No. No! Absolutely not. That is not what this is about.

0:44:420:44:45

-Don't lie to me, Claire!

-Resources that I've investigated -

0:44:450:44:49

-Oh, my God!

-If you wanted to.

0:44:490:44:52

-The doctors and the people in New York are the best.

-Jesus!

0:44:520:44:55

-You wouldn't have to live -

-I hate you!

-Don't yell.

0:44:550:44:58

-I hate you! (FOOTSTEPS APPROACH)

-What are you doing here?

0:44:580:45:02

How long have you known about this?

0:45:020:45:05

A while.

0:45:050:45:08

Why didn't you tell me about it?

0:45:090:45:11

I wasn't sure if I wanted to.

0:45:110:45:14

Thank you!

0:45:150:45:17

You're welcome.

0:45:170:45:19

What's going on?

0:45:200:45:23

-Catherine, thank you!

-I thought you might like to see it.

0:45:230:45:26

-What is it?

-It's incredible.

-What is it?

0:45:260:45:28

Oh, it's a result, a proof. It looks like a proof. It's a proof.

0:45:280:45:32

A very long proof. I haven't read through it all yet or checked it.

0:45:320:45:36

I don't know if I could check it.

0:45:360:45:39

If it's a proof of what I think it is, it's a very important proof.

0:45:390:45:43

What does it prove?

0:45:430:45:45

It may prove a mathematical theorem about prime numbers,

0:45:450:45:49

something that mathematicians have been trying to prove

0:45:490:45:52

-since there were mathematicians.

-You know about this?

0:45:520:45:55

-Is it any good?

-It's historic, if it checks out.

0:45:560:46:00

What does it mean?

0:46:000:46:02

It means that when everybody thought your dad was crazy,

0:46:020:46:06

he was doing some of the most important mathematics ever.

0:46:060:46:09

If it checks out, you publish instantly, hold press conferences.

0:46:090:46:13

All newspapers will want to talk to the person who found this notebook.

0:46:130:46:18

-Catherine? Catherine.

-I didn't find it.

0:46:180:46:22

-Yes, you did.

-No, I didn't.

0:46:220:46:25

-Did you find it or did Hal find it?

-I didn't find it.

-I didn't find it.

0:46:260:46:30

I wrote it.

0:46:320:46:35

-Hey, guys.

-Where you headed?

-I'm late for Bhandari.

0:46:580:47:01

You know what he's like. Better get there. Catch you later.

0:47:010:47:04

Yeah?

0:47:190:47:21

Ah. Catherine.

0:47:210:47:24

-So nice of you to drop by.

-Sorry I'm late.

0:47:240:47:28

-This work of yours...

-I know. I'm sorry.

0:47:280:47:32

-I mean, it's interesting.

-You think so?

0:47:320:47:35

In that it has nothing to do with the problems I'd asked you to solve.

0:47:350:47:39

-It won't happen again.

-What happened? Simply couldn't control yourself?

0:47:390:47:43

No. I just... I thought I should get all those ideas down

0:47:430:47:47

while they were in my head. Then it was morning.

0:47:470:47:50

I couldn't come in with nothing.

0:47:500:47:52

But this is the third time that inspiration's overtaken you

0:47:520:47:55

at the moment when you had to submit to my idea

0:47:550:47:58

of what it is you should be learning.

0:47:580:48:01

-A third? Really.

-Differential equations don't interest you.

0:48:010:48:05

No, they do. I mean... Yeah, they absolutely do.

0:48:050:48:08

-Oh, but they didn't last night.

-Not as much as usual.

0:48:080:48:13

I mean...

0:48:160:48:19

I'm worried that your work is deteriorating.

0:48:190:48:22

There are some good ideas here,

0:48:220:48:25

but... it isn't a coherent mathematical argument.

0:48:250:48:30

-Well, I didn't get time to finish it.

-But mathematics isn't jazz.

0:48:300:48:34

Even the craziest mathematics is working towards a proof.

0:48:340:48:38

Not all the mathematicians in my family are crazy.

0:48:380:48:41

-I wasn't using the word in a clinical way.

-I know. I know.

0:48:410:48:45

Just for the record.

0:48:450:48:47

How is your father?

0:48:490:48:52

I don't know. I haven't been able to get in touch with him for a week.

0:48:520:48:56

He's fine. Last time I talked to him, he was fine.

0:48:560:49:00

He's been fine for months now. Nine months.

0:49:000:49:04

-Yeah. He was a great man.

-He still is.

0:49:040:49:08

(SIGHS) You're gonna fail me, aren't you?

0:49:110:49:14

I'm giving you another chance to redo the problem set.

0:49:140:49:18

You need an A. You're quite capable of earning one.

0:49:180:49:22

Thank you.

0:49:230:49:26

Professor Bhandari?

0:49:280:49:30

-Yeah?

-Don't... Don't worry about me, OK?

0:49:300:49:33

I'm gonna write you a really nice fat set of answers

0:49:330:49:37

that you're really gonna like.

0:49:370:49:40

(SIGHS)

0:49:580:50:01

(PHONE RINGS)

0:50:040:50:07

"Hi. We're not here. Please leave a message. (BEEP)"

0:50:120:50:16

Claire? Hi. Listen.

0:50:160:50:18

When was the last time you spoke to Dad?

0:50:180:50:21

Tuesday? Oh, God.

0:50:220:50:25

No, it's fine. It's just that I normally talk to him every day

0:50:250:50:29

and I haven't been able to get a hold of him.

0:50:290:50:32

Well, I'm glad that you're sure everything's fine.

0:50:320:50:36

I feel much more comfortable. Thank you.

0:50:360:50:39

What do you mean, "What could have happened?"

0:50:390:50:41

He could've had a car accident. Could've fallen, broken his hip.

0:50:410:50:46

He could be running naked down the Midway for all I know.

0:50:460:50:50

Yes, Claire, I know that you care about Dad.

0:50:510:50:55

Yeah, as much as me. OK. Now can I please get off the phone?

0:50:550:50:59

Dad?

0:51:320:51:34

Hello!

0:51:370:51:39

Dad?

0:51:560:51:58

Dad!

0:52:130:52:15

-Dad?

-Catherine, hi. What a surprise.

0:52:480:52:53

-What are you doing out here?

-I'm thinking.

0:52:530:52:57

Writing.

0:52:570:52:59

-It's 30 degrees. It's the middle of the night.

-I know.

0:52:590:53:03

-Aren't you cold?

-Of course I am. I'm freezing my ass off. (LAUGHS)

0:53:030:53:07

-So, what are you doing out here?

-It's too hot in the house.

0:53:070:53:11

The radiators clank and I couldn't concentrate.

0:53:110:53:14

I've been calling and calling. Did you not get my messages?

0:53:190:53:23

It's a distraction.

0:53:230:53:25

-I didn't know what was going on. I had to drive here.

-I can see that.

0:53:250:53:30

-Why don't you answer the phone?

-I'm sorry, Catherine.

0:53:310:53:34

But it's a question of priorities, work takes priority. You know that.

0:53:340:53:39

-You're working?

-(LAUGHS)

0:53:390:53:41

Goddammit! (LAUGHS)

0:53:410:53:44

I'm working! (LAUGHS)

0:53:440:53:48

I mean, I say "I".

0:53:480:53:51

Machinery.

0:53:520:53:54

The machinery's working, Catherine.

0:53:540:53:57

It's on full blast.

0:53:570:54:00

All the cylinders are firing.

0:54:000:54:03

I'm on fire. That's why I came out here, to cool off.

0:54:030:54:08

I haven't felt like this for years.

0:54:080:54:11

-You're kidding.

-No.

0:54:110:54:13

-I don't believe it.

-I don't believe it either, but it's true.

0:54:130:54:17

It started a week ago.

0:54:170:54:19

I woke up. I came downstairs, made a cup of coffee.

0:54:190:54:23

Before I could pour the milk in, someone put a light on in my head.

0:54:230:54:27

-Really?

-Not the light. The whole grid. I lit up!

0:54:270:54:31

-It's like no time has passed since I was 21.

-You're kidding me.

0:54:310:54:35

No. I'm back. I'm back!

0:54:350:54:37

In touch with the source! The font.

0:54:370:54:39

Whatever the source of my creativity was, I'm in contact with it.

0:54:390:54:44

I'm sitting on it. It's a geyser, I'm shooting up in the air on it.

0:54:440:54:48

-God.

-(LAUGHS) I'm not talking about divine inspiration.

0:54:480:54:52

It's not funnelling into my head, onto the page.

0:54:520:54:54

I'm not saying it won't be a tremendous of work, it will be.

0:54:540:54:58

It's not gonna be easy. But the raw material is there.

0:54:580:55:02

I see places for the work to go, new techniques.

0:55:020:55:05

I'm gonna get whole branches of the profession talking to each other.

0:55:050:55:09

I'm sorry. I'm being rude.

0:55:090:55:13

-(GIGGLES) How's school?

-School's fine.

0:55:140:55:18

-You're working hard?

-Sure.

-Faculty treating you alright?

-Yes.

0:55:180:55:22

-Made any friends?

-Yes.

-You dating?

-Dad!

0:55:220:55:25

No details necessary if you don't want to provide them.

0:55:250:55:28

-School is fine. I want to talk about what you're doing.

-Great. Let's talk.

0:55:280:55:33

-This work...

-Yes.

0:55:330:55:35

-It's here?

-Part of it, yes.

0:55:350:55:38

-Can I see it?

-It's all at a very early stage.

0:55:380:55:41

-I don't care.

-It's not complete. To be honest, it's all in progress.

0:55:410:55:44

-I think we're talking years.

-It's OK. Just let me see anything.

0:55:440:55:49

-You really want to?

-Yes.

0:55:490:55:52

-You're genuinely interested?

-Dad, of course.

0:55:520:55:55

-Of course. It is your field.

-Yes.

0:55:550:55:59

-You know how happy that makes me?

-Yes.

0:55:590:56:03

I think there's enough here to keep me working the rest of my life,

0:56:030:56:07

and not just me. I was, er...

0:56:070:56:10

I was starting to imagine I was finished, Catherine.

0:56:100:56:13

Really finished. I was terrified I'd never work again.

0:56:130:56:18

-Did you know that?

-I wondered.

0:56:180:56:21

I was absolutely bloody terrified. (LAUGHS)

0:56:210:56:25

Then I remembered something. I remembered you.

0:56:250:56:28

Your creative years were beginning.

0:56:280:56:31

You'd get your degree, do your own work.

0:56:310:56:34

If you hadn't gone into math, that would've been alright.

0:56:340:56:38

Now Claire's done well for herself. I'm satisfied with her.

0:56:380:56:42

I'm proud of you! (LAUGHS)

0:56:420:56:46

I know you've got your own work, and I don't want you to neglect that.

0:56:470:56:51

You mustn't neglect it. But I could probably use some help.

0:56:510:56:55

To be honest, I'd like you to help me, to work with me, if you want to.

0:56:550:56:58

If you can work it out with your schedule. I could help.

0:56:580:57:02

Make some calls, talk to your teachers.

0:57:020:57:05

I'm sorry. I'm getting ahead of myself.

0:57:060:57:09

Oh, Jesus, look, enough bullshit. You asked to see something.

0:57:090:57:13

Let's start with this. I have roughed something out.

0:57:130:57:17

It's a general outline for a proof.

0:57:170:57:20

It's a major result. It's important.

0:57:200:57:23

It's not finished but, er... you can see where it's going.

0:57:230:57:28

Er...

0:57:310:57:34

Here.

0:57:370:57:39

It's very rough.

0:57:500:57:53

-Was there any other work in here?

-No.

0:57:590:58:02

-That's the only...

-Can I see it?

0:58:020:58:04

I'm sorry. I just...

0:58:110:58:14

So you wrote this incredible thing, but you didn't tell anyone?

0:58:140:58:18

I'm telling you both now.

0:58:180:58:22

-Catherine, I'm sorry, but I find this very hard to believe.

-Claire...

0:58:220:58:27

-This is Dad's handwriting.

-It's not!

0:58:270:58:30

-It looks exactly like it.

-That is my writing.

-I'm sorry.

0:58:300:58:35

Well, ask Hal. He's been looking at Dad's writing all week.

0:58:350:58:38

-Well, I don't know.

-Hal, come on.

0:58:380:58:41

-I'm not a handwriting expert.

-Whose writing does it look like?

0:58:440:58:48

It looks... I don't know what Catherine's handwriting looks like.

0:58:480:58:52

-It looks like that.

-OK. OK.

0:58:520:58:56

I think it's early, and everybody's tired and not in the best state

0:58:560:59:00

-to make emotional decisions. Let's take a breath.

-You don't believe me.

0:59:000:59:04

-I don't know... I really don't know anything about this.

-Never mind.

0:59:040:59:11

I don't know why I expected you to believe me about anything.

0:59:110:59:16

Could you tell us the proof? And that would show that it was yours.

0:59:160:59:20

-You wouldn't understand it.

-Well, tell it to Hal.

0:59:200:59:24

I mean, I could.

0:59:240:59:26

We could sit down and talk it through. It might take a while.

0:59:260:59:30

-You can't use the book.

-For God's sake, it's 40 pages long!

0:59:300:59:34

I didn't memorise it. It's not a muffin recipe.

0:59:340:59:38

Oh, Jesus, this is stupid!

0:59:380:59:41

-Hal, tell her.

-Tell her what?

0:59:410:59:43

-Whose book is that?

-I don't know.

0:59:430:59:46

What is the matter with you?

0:59:470:59:50

You've been... You've been going through this other stuff.

0:59:500:59:54

-There's nothing even remotely like that up here.

-Catherine...

0:59:540:59:58

OK. OK.

0:59:581:00:00

OK, we'll sit down and I'll talk you through the proof. OK? OK?

1:00:001:00:05

If Claire will please let me have my book back!

1:00:051:00:08

-Alright. OK, talk him through it.

-It would take days.

1:00:081:00:12

-It still wouldn't prove that she wrote it.

-Why not?

1:00:121:00:14

Your dad may have written it and explained it to you later.

1:00:141:00:17

I'm not saying he did. There's no proof...

1:00:171:00:20

Of course there isn't! But come on! He didn't write it.

1:00:201:00:24

He couldn't have. Even in the year he was well, he couldn't work.

1:00:241:00:28

You know that. You're supposed to be a scientist.

1:00:281:00:31

Here's my suggestion. I know some guys at the department

1:00:311:00:33

-who knew your dad's work. Let me take this to them.

-What?

1:00:331:00:38

I'll tell them that we found something potentially major.

1:00:381:00:41

We're not sure of the authorship. I'll sit down with them

1:00:411:00:45

and we'll figure out what we've got. It might take a couple of days,

1:00:451:00:49

-but then we'd have a lot more info.

-That's an excellent suggestion.

1:00:491:00:52

-You can't! You can't take it.

-I'm not taking it.

1:00:531:00:57

-This is exactly what you wanted.

-Oh, come on. Jesus!

1:00:571:01:00

You don't waste any time, do you? No hesitation.

1:01:001:01:03

You can't wait to show them your brilliant discovery.

1:01:031:01:07

-I'm trying to determine what it is.

-I'm telling you what it is.

1:01:071:01:10

-You don't know!

-I wrote it!

-It is your father's handwriting!

1:01:101:01:14

It looks an awful lot like the writing in the other books.

1:01:171:01:20

Maybe your writing looks exactly like his. I don't know.

1:01:201:01:24

It does look like his.

1:01:241:01:28

It's one of his notebooks, the exact same kind he used.

1:01:281:01:31

I told you. He gave it to me.

1:01:311:01:36

I didn't show this to anyone.

1:01:381:01:40

I wanted you to be the first to see it.

1:01:401:01:45

I didn't know I wanted that until last night.

1:01:451:01:48

-I trusted you.

-I know.

1:01:481:01:52

-Was I wrong?

-No.

1:01:521:01:54

I should've known that she wouldn't believe me, but why don't you?

1:01:541:01:58

I know how hard it'd be to come up with this.

1:01:581:02:01

You'd have to be your dad at the peak of his powers.

1:02:011:02:04

Just because you geeks worshipped him does not mean he wrote the proof.

1:02:041:02:09

He was the best! My generation hasn't produced anything like him.

1:02:091:02:13

He revolutionised the field twice before he was 22. I am sorry.

1:02:131:02:17

You took classes at Northwestern -

1:02:171:02:19

-My education wasn't at Northwestern!

-Even so, it doesn't matter.

1:02:191:02:22

It's too advanced. I don't even understand most of it.

1:02:221:02:25

-You think it's too advanced?

-Yes.

1:02:251:02:30

-Too advanced for you?

-You could not have done this work.

1:02:301:02:35

-But what if I did?

-Well, what if?

1:02:351:02:39

It would be a real disaster for you.

1:02:391:02:42

Wouldn't it? You and the other geeks who barely finished your PhD's,

1:02:421:02:48

who are marking time doing lame research,

1:02:481:02:52

bragging about the conferences they go to. Wow.

1:02:521:02:55

Playing in an awful band and whining that

1:02:551:02:59

they're intellectually past it at 26 because they are!

1:02:591:03:03

Catherine. Catherine.

1:03:171:03:20

(CRASH!)

1:03:221:03:24

When are you going to do some mathematics with me?

1:03:291:03:32

-I can't think of anything worse. Want some Parmesan?

-I'm all alone.

1:03:321:03:36

I've important things to say. You're not helping. You used to love it.

1:03:361:03:40

-Not any more.

-You knew what a prime number was before you could read.

1:03:401:03:43

-Well, now I've forgotten.

-Don't be lazy, Catherine!

1:03:431:03:48

I haven't been lazy. I've been taking care of you.

1:03:491:03:53

You dropped out of school. Sleep till noon. Eat junk. You don't work.

1:03:531:03:58

Dishes pile up. Some days you don't even get out of bed.

1:03:581:04:02

-Those are the good days.

-They're fever days, you sweated them away.

1:04:021:04:06

You'll never know what work you lost cos you were moping in your bad.

1:04:061:04:11

Up until four in the afternoon sometimes. I have you on my clock.

1:04:111:04:15

You know I'm right.

1:04:151:04:17

I'm told by some very important people. You know I know.

1:04:171:04:21

-I've lost a few days.

-How many?

-I don't know.

1:04:241:04:28

-I bet you do. I bet you count.

-Knock it off!

1:04:281:04:31

-How many days have you lost?

-A month. Around a month.

1:04:311:04:35

-Exactly.

-Dad, eat your dinner.

1:04:351:04:38

-How many?

-33 days.

1:04:381:04:40

-Be precise, for Christ's sake!

-I slept till noon today.

1:04:401:04:44

-Make it 33 and a quarter days.

-Yeah, alright.

1:04:511:04:56

-You're kidding.

-No.

1:04:561:04:58

-Amazing number.

-It's a depressing fucking number.

1:04:581:05:01

If every lost day were a year, it'd be an interesting fucking number.

1:05:011:05:06

-33.25 years is not interesting.

-Stop it. You know what I mean.

1:05:061:05:10

-1,729 weeks.

-1,729. Great number.

1:05:101:05:13

(BOTH) The smallest number expressible

1:05:131:05:15

as the sum of two cubes in two different ways.

1:05:151:05:17

12 cubed plus 1 cubed equals 1,729.

1:05:171:05:20

And 10 cubed plus 9 cubed... Yes, we've got it. Thank you.

1:05:201:05:24

You see? Even your depression is mathematical.

1:05:241:05:29

Stop moping.

1:05:291:05:31

Do some work.

1:05:321:05:36

(KNOCK ON DOOR)

1:06:011:06:03

'Catherine?'

1:06:031:06:06

Katie, honey?

1:06:091:06:12

Catherine.

1:06:231:06:26

(TV PLAYS)

1:06:261:06:29

I figured out how to get a lower bound for L.

1:06:421:06:46

Modification of Landau-Siegel.

1:06:481:06:51

What if this L had a Siegel zero?

1:06:521:06:55

You'd need an effective version.

1:06:551:06:58

Shit!

1:07:041:07:05

Catherine!

1:08:411:08:43

Catherine!

1:08:461:08:48

Catherine!

1:10:091:10:11

-What?

-Aah! Jesus!

1:10:111:10:15

-God, you scared me. What are you doing there?

-Sorry.

1:10:151:10:20

-I just... I wanted to...

-It's wonderful news.

1:10:201:10:24

I think I've got it.

1:10:261:10:28

Catherine! Katie.

1:10:321:10:36

Katie, what is it?

1:10:361:10:39

-It's not mine. It's his. It's not mine.

-What, honey?

1:10:391:10:44

What, honey? What's the matter?

1:10:441:10:47

I stole it from him. I stole it. It's not mine.

1:10:471:10:51

-What do you mean, you stole it?

-It's not mine. (SOBS)

1:10:511:10:55

-I killed him. I killed him.

-No, honey. No.

1:10:551:10:58

I never should have written it. I never should have written it.

1:10:581:11:01

-You're OK.

-I never should have written it.

1:11:011:11:05

Is it...? Is it possible, honey, that...?

1:11:051:11:09

Is it possible that you just wanted to so badly and you...

1:11:091:11:15

..deserved to do something special like this thing, this proof?

1:11:151:11:20

Is it possible that you just...

1:11:201:11:23

imagined that you wrote it? Hmm?

1:11:231:11:27

Is it possible that it really was Dad's after all?

1:11:271:11:32

Hmm? Is that possible?

1:11:321:11:36

You didn't kill him, sweetheart.

1:11:401:11:43

He just died, that's all.

1:11:431:11:45

He just died.

1:11:471:11:50

"Hi. We're not here. Please leave a message. (BEEP)"

1:11:521:11:56

"Catherine. It's me again. I really need to speak to you."

1:11:561:12:00

"Please call me back."

1:12:001:12:03

Claire!

1:12:291:12:30

-(PANTS) I thought you'd left.

-I had to delay my flight.

1:12:321:12:37

Where's Catherine? I need to talk to her.

1:12:371:12:40

-She's inside.

-This thing... checks out.

1:12:401:12:45

I've been over it with two sets of guys, old geeks and young geeks.

1:12:451:12:49

It's weird. I don't know where the techniques come from,

1:12:491:12:52

it is very hard to follow, but we can't find anything wrong with it.

1:12:521:12:56

I mean, there may be something wrong with it, but we can't find it.

1:12:561:13:00

I have not slept. It's real.

1:13:001:13:05

Thank you.

1:13:051:13:07

I had to swear them to secrecy. They were jumping outta their skins.

1:13:071:13:11

One email, it's all over. I threatened them. I think we're safe.

1:13:111:13:16

They're physical cowards. Where's Catherine?

1:13:161:13:20

This is not a good time.

1:13:201:13:23

-You're leaving?

-The flight is at noon.

1:13:241:13:28

-You're taking her away?

-Yes.

1:13:281:13:31

-To New York?

-Yes.

1:13:311:13:33

-You're just gonna drag her away?

-She's happy to come.

1:13:331:13:36

-I'd like to speak to Catherine.

-She doesn't want to see you.

1:13:361:13:40

-Does she have any say in this?

-She's been completely out of it!

1:13:401:13:45

Five days she wasn't speaking!

1:13:451:13:47

Do you want your coat, sweetie? It's cold.

1:13:511:13:54

I'll get your things. The movers will get anything we've forgotten.

1:13:541:13:59

Are you alright?

1:13:591:14:01

It works.

1:14:111:14:14

I thought you might wanna know.

1:14:141:14:17

-I had to see you.

-I'm leaving.

1:14:191:14:22

-Just wait a minute.

-What? What do you want?

1:14:221:14:25

You have the book. She told me that she gave it to you,

1:14:251:14:29

so do whatever you want with it. Publish. Go for it.

1:14:291:14:34

Have a press conference. Tell the world what my father discovered.

1:14:341:14:37

I don't think your father wrote it.

1:14:371:14:40

-You thought so last week.

-That was last week!

1:14:421:14:46

I spent this week reading the proof. I think I understand it.

1:14:461:14:50

Uses newer mathematical techniques, things developed in the '80s, '90s.

1:14:501:14:55

Non-commutative geometry, random matrices.

1:14:551:14:58

I learned more mathematics this week than in three years of grad school.

1:14:581:15:02

-So?

-So the proof is very...

1:15:021:15:04

-..hip.

-Get some sleep, Hal.

1:15:051:15:07

-What was your father doing these last 20 years?

-Are you done?!

1:15:071:15:11

He wouldn't have been able to master new techniques.

1:15:111:15:14

-He was a genius.

-But he was nuts.

1:15:141:15:16

-So he read about them later.

-Maybe.

1:15:161:15:19

The books he would've needed are upstairs in your room, some of them.

1:15:191:15:22

He dated everything. Even his most incoherent entries, he dated.

1:15:221:15:26

-There are no dates in this.

-The handwriting.

1:15:261:15:29

Parents and children can have similar handwriting.

1:15:291:15:34

Interesting theory.

1:15:341:15:38

-I like it.

-I like it, too.

1:15:381:15:42

It's what I told you last week.

1:15:421:15:46

I know.

1:15:471:15:49

-You blew it.

-This is yours, Catherine.

1:15:501:15:53

It's too bad, cos the rest of it was really good.

1:15:531:15:58

"I loved your dad. I always liked you."

1:15:591:16:01

"I wanna spend every minute with you." That's killer stuff.

1:16:011:16:05

I meant it.

1:16:051:16:07

You got laid and you got the notebook. You're a genius.

1:16:071:16:11

-Talk to me, Catherine. This proof is yours.

-Forget it.

1:16:111:16:16

You have to deal with it. You can't just ignore it.

1:16:161:16:19

-Get it publish.

-Leave me alone.

-Take it at least.

-I don't want it.

1:16:191:16:23

-Come on! I'm trying to correct things.

-You can't!

1:16:231:16:26

Do you hear me?

1:16:261:16:29

You think you've figured something out?

1:16:291:16:32

You run over here all pleased with yourself cos you changed your mind?

1:16:321:16:36

Now you're certain? You don't know anything.

1:16:361:16:40

The book, the math, the dates, the writing,

1:16:401:16:44

all that stuff you just decided with your buddies, it's just evidence.

1:16:441:16:47

-It doesn't prove anything.

-OK, what would?

1:16:471:16:50

Nothing.

1:16:501:16:53

You should have trusted me.

1:16:551:16:58

I... I know.

1:16:581:17:02

Claire sold the house?

1:17:081:17:11

-She wants me in New York. She wants to look after me.

-What?!

1:17:141:17:19

Do you need looking after? You looked after your father for 5yrs.

1:17:191:17:23

So maybe it's my turn.

1:17:231:17:26

-There is nothing wrong with you.

-We should be on our way, honey.

1:17:261:17:30

You can't just walk away, pretend like it never happened

1:17:301:17:33

and then get a job at Urban Outfitters. Just take it.

1:17:331:17:37

Katie, honey, let's go.

1:17:371:17:39

Stay in Chicago. You're an adult.

1:17:391:17:42

-I gotta go.

-Please!

1:17:421:17:45

-No.

-Catherine, this isn't about me.

1:17:451:17:48

Katie, come on.

1:17:481:17:50

-Don't you owe this to yourself at least?

-Goodbye, Hal.

1:17:501:17:54

Catherine!

1:18:091:18:11

Catherine!

1:18:131:18:15

-Hi. And where are you going today?

-To New York City.

1:18:511:18:54

Can I see some photo ID, please?

1:18:541:18:56

Hmmm.

1:19:141:19:15

Wow. You sure got a lot done.

1:19:211:19:25

Well, I had five extra days.

1:19:251:19:27

I need some more coffee. Do you want some?

1:19:301:19:33

-Am I on that list?

-What?

1:19:331:19:37

"Square away crazy sister" - check.

1:19:371:19:42

That's not fair, Katie.

1:19:431:19:46

I just wanna take care of you.

1:19:461:19:48

'Catherine!'

1:20:001:20:03

-What?

-Aah! Jesus!

1:20:031:20:07

-God, you scared me. What are you doing there?

-Sorry.

1:20:071:20:13

-I just... I wanted to...

-It's wonderful news.

1:20:131:20:17

I think I've got it.

1:20:181:20:20

What do you think?

1:20:281:20:31

-Wow, Dad.

-Can you believe it?!

1:20:501:20:54

I knew you had it in you.

1:20:541:20:58

That's a pretty mealy-mouthed response. What do you think?

1:20:581:21:01

-Let's talk it through.

-Not tonight. I'm tired.

1:21:011:21:05

This is the beginning of our real work together.

1:21:051:21:08

You think I've stolen the thunder because I broke through first?

1:21:081:21:12

-This is only the beginning.

-We should call it a night.

1:21:121:21:16

Read out the first couple of lines.

1:21:161:21:18

We go line by line, out loud, see if there's a better way, a shorter way.

1:21:181:21:21

No. Come on. Tomorrow.

1:21:211:21:24

I've waited years for this, goddammit.

1:21:241:21:27

-Let's do some work together.

-I think we should get some sleep.

1:21:271:21:31

-Not until we talk about the proof!

-I don't want to.

1:21:311:21:34

Goddammit, open the goddamn book! Read me the lines!

1:21:341:21:39

"Let X equal the quantity of all quantities of X."

1:21:591:22:05

"Let X equal the cold."

1:22:051:22:09

"It is cold in December."

1:22:091:22:12

"The months of cold equal November through February."

1:22:121:22:17

"There are four months of cold and four of heat,

1:22:171:22:22

leaving four months of indeterminate temperature."

1:22:221:22:26

"In February it snows."

1:22:261:22:29

"In March the lake is a lake of ice."

1:22:291:22:33

"In September the students come back and the bookstores are full."

1:22:331:22:38

"Let X equal the month of full bookstores."

1:22:381:22:44

"The number of books approaches infinity

1:22:441:22:48

as the number of months of cold approaches four."

1:22:481:22:52

"I will never be as cold now as I will in the future."

1:22:521:22:59

"The future of cold is infinite."

1:22:591:23:03

"The future of heat is the future of cold."

1:23:051:23:10

"The bookstores are infinite

1:23:121:23:16

and so are never full except in September."

1:23:161:23:20

I'm exhausted.

1:23:391:23:41

I can't wait to get back to the coffee at home.

1:24:511:24:55

We have a place where we buy all our coffee. They roast it themselves.

1:24:551:24:59

They have an old roaster. You can smell it on the street.

1:24:591:25:04

You can smell it from our place, four storeys up. It's wonderful.

1:25:041:25:08

"Manhattan's best." Some magazine wrote it up.

1:25:081:25:13

(LAUGHS) I mean, who knows? But it's very good.

1:25:131:25:18

I think... I'm actually gonna give up coffee

1:25:181:25:22

-cos it's bad for my nerves.

-Catherine.

1:25:221:25:26

Catherine!

1:25:271:25:29

'How many days have I lost?'

1:25:491:25:53

'How can I get back to the place where I started?'

1:25:571:26:01

'I'm outside a house, trying to find my way in.'

1:26:051:26:11

'But it is locked and the blinds are down

1:26:111:26:16

and I've lost the key.'

1:26:161:26:18

'And I can't remember what the rooms look like or where I put anything.'

1:26:181:26:23

'And if I dare go in inside, I wonder...

1:26:271:26:33

will I ever be able to find my way out?'

1:26:331:26:38

Sometimes in my head I think it works, and then...

1:27:131:27:17

sometimes I just think it's...

1:27:171:27:20

crazy.

1:27:201:27:23

There's nothing wrong with you.

1:27:231:27:26

I think I'm like my dad.

1:27:281:27:31

I think you are, too.

1:27:331:27:35

I'm afraid I'm like my dad. (CRIES)

1:27:391:27:42

You are not him.

1:27:421:27:44

-Maybe I will be.

-Maybe, and maybe you'll be better.

1:27:441:27:49

It was like...

1:27:541:27:57

..connecting dots.

1:27:581:28:00

Some nights I could connect three or four of them,

1:28:021:28:05

and some nights they'd be really far apart.

1:28:051:28:10

I'd have no idea how to get to the next one, if there was the next one.

1:28:101:28:15

It just seems really stitched together and lumpy.

1:28:161:28:20

Dad's stuff was way more elegant.

1:28:201:28:23

Talk me through it and tell me what's bothering you.

1:28:231:28:27

You got a bit of ground to make up, Dobbs. You know that?

1:28:281:28:35

And there's no way to prove that I wrote it.

1:28:401:28:43

No. But we could sit down, we could talk it through

1:28:451:28:49

and determine if you couldn't have.

1:28:491:28:53

'If I go back to the beginning I could start it over again.'

1:29:211:29:26

Here.

1:29:261:29:28

-'I could go line by line.'

-OK.

1:29:281:29:31

'Try and find a shorter way.'

1:29:311:29:34

-There are a lot of...

-'I could try to make it... better.'

1:29:341:29:39

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