Getting It Right
Aug. 16th, 2008 03:57 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Many people have examples of movies or television shows getting something egregiously wrong: bad science, bad linguistics, bad history, whatever. Rarer are examples of getting something unexpectedly right.
In the otherwise forgettable movie It's My Turn, Jill Clayburgh plays a math professor, and there is an early scene in which she gives a lecture, proving a theorem, a rather abstract result called the Snake Lemma. (It really deserves Theorem status - it's absolutely central to its sub-branch of mathematics - but it's always been called a lemma.) Now, in the proof of the Snake Lemma, there is a step where an alert student will look up and say, "Wait a minute...": something fishy has just been done. The professor, having probably been that alert student, has the response prepared: it is fishy, yes, but there's a justification for it in this case. ("Good. You are quick, but not yet quick enough." Brownie points for sourcing that one.)
In the movie, Clayburgh comes to that step. One of the students immediately raises the right objection; Clayburgh gives the right response. Letter-perfect. I didn't watch the movie much past that, but that scene has my love forever.
So, what's your favorite Getting It Right example?
In the otherwise forgettable movie It's My Turn, Jill Clayburgh plays a math professor, and there is an early scene in which she gives a lecture, proving a theorem, a rather abstract result called the Snake Lemma. (It really deserves Theorem status - it's absolutely central to its sub-branch of mathematics - but it's always been called a lemma.) Now, in the proof of the Snake Lemma, there is a step where an alert student will look up and say, "Wait a minute...": something fishy has just been done. The professor, having probably been that alert student, has the response prepared: it is fishy, yes, but there's a justification for it in this case. ("Good. You are quick, but not yet quick enough." Brownie points for sourcing that one.)
In the movie, Clayburgh comes to that step. One of the students immediately raises the right objection; Clayburgh gives the right response. Letter-perfect. I didn't watch the movie much past that, but that scene has my love forever.
So, what's your favorite Getting It Right example?
no subject
Date: 2008-08-16 11:49 pm (UTC)I believe Pe-Te's has gone out of business in the past few years, but back in the early days of the Johnson Space Center there wasn't much of *anything* in the vicinity. Pe-Te's was one of the few eateries out there in the Texas coastal bayou/swamp, and it was sort of "adopted" as a semi-official Astronaut Hangout.
For some reason, that's more meaningful to me than all the places where they get the tech details right.
no subject
Date: 2008-08-17 03:40 am (UTC)That said, I do dearly love the part in The Mummy where Evie is drunk as a skunk and proclaims her profession, then collapses face first into the sand.
no subject
Date: 2008-08-17 04:32 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-08-23 02:17 am (UTC)