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Copenhagen (2002)

Copenhagen (2002)
Member Rating:  
Adapted from the Tony award-winning play by Michael Frayn, Copenhagen is set in the titular Denmark capitol in the year 1941. According to existing records, it was in that city and year that German physicist Werner Heisenberg and his Danish mentor Neils Bohr met together on the brink of WWII. It will never be known what these two men, so politically divergent yet so much alike in their scientific goals, discussed during that fateful meeting (several attempts to reconstruct their conversation from memory proved both futile and bitterly divisive), though it is a matter of record that both men had discovered the methodology for splitting the atom -- which, of course, was the foundation for the atomic bomb. Frayn's play offers a fanciful yet utterly believable and incredibly witty and charming speculation on the words that might have passed between the idealistic Bohr (played by Stephen Rea) and the pragmatic Heisenberg (Daniel Craig) -- as recalled decades later by the principal characters from the vantage point of the Afterlife. Co-produced by Britain's BBC and U.S. public-TV outlet KCET, Copenhagen was first broadcast as an episode of the PBS Hollywood Presents anthology. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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Starring:
Stephen ReaDaniel Craig, (more)
Director(s):
Howard DaviesHoward Davies, (more)
Format(s):
DVD
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Synopsis of Copenhagen

Adapted from the Tony award-winning play by Michael Frayn, Copenhagen is set in the titular Denmark capitol in the year 1941. According to existing records, it was in that city and year that German physicist Werner Heisenberg and his Danish mentor Neils Bohr met together on the brink of WWII. It will never be known what these two men, so politically divergent yet so much alike in their scientific goals, discussed during that fateful meeting (several attempts to reconstruct their conversation from memory proved both futile and bitterly divisive), though it is a matter of record that both men had discovered the methodology for splitting the atom -- which, of course, was the foundation for the atomic bomb. Frayn's play offers a fanciful yet utterly believable and incredibly witty and charming speculation on the words that might have passed between the idealistic Bohr (played by Stephen Rea) and the pragmatic Heisenberg (Daniel Craig) -- as recalled decades later by the principal characters from the vantage point of the Afterlife. Co-produced by Britain's BBC and U.S. public-TV outlet KCET, Copenhagen was first broadcast as an episode of the PBS Hollywood Presents anthology. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

Theatrical Feature Running Time:
117 mins

Complete Cast of Copenhagen


Director(s):
Howard DaviesHoward Davies
Producer(s):
Megan Callaway
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    Member Reviews
     
    Rachel M.

    ...walking and talking and talking and walking! There wasn't much here as a movie...voiceover by all three protagonists, that is a bit much! I've given it 1/2 star because I know a bit more when I ejected it (albeit with a few of my choice curse words), than at the titles. Actually, I would have done away with the movie and just had the prologue and epi by Michael Frayn.

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    Robert O.

    You can't view this as a straight play and expect to be entertained. View it as physics. These three characters are like sub-atomic particles whirling around a nucleus. They exert a pull on one another, and they repel one another, and ultimately they embody quantum mechanics and light in their wave/particle duality. They will say the exact same line emphasizing different words, using different accents, and the line conveys different meanings. It's a stunning work of art, but you need to work to gain much out of it. You can't just watch it and expect to be entertained. That's like looking at a microscope and expecting to be entertained. Look deeper, and you'll be astonished.

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    P T.

    Very interesting dialogue between the great Neils Bohr and Werner Heisenberg but only if you love physics, particularly quantum mechanics as these giants were two of the founders of that wonderful theory. Although they never get heavy into the math or physics, they tease you with speak of the uncertainty principle and duality...Their style of speech is way cool. Daniel Craig reveals how great an actor he is in this movie and it will be interesting to see what movies he will do in future. May the net force be with you.

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