从“博客李淼”的留言中知道了以下几部物理学有关的好莱坞新电影,其中最吸引华人眼球的应该是根据1991年“卢刚事件”改编的中美合拍电影"Dark Matter“:
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/03/27/science/27dark.html?ex=1332648000&en=320d7eecb25490f6&ei=5088&partner=rssnyt&emc=rss
另外几部分别是:
* "The Theory of Everything" (2006) 【简介】Doug Holloway (de Vos)婚姻出现问题,银行账户差点变零,在生存出现危机时,他去找寻自己的亲生父亲,后者为著名物理学家Eugene Holland博士 (Victor Lundin) ,这名天才最近患上了大脑退化病。博士决心在失去理解能力前,证明艰涩难懂的‘超弦理论’—他得发明公式来证实上帝的存在。当这两个人在一起时,他们的任务合而为一,在上帝的荣耀下,寻找安慰和希望。
* "The Dark Side of the Force" is a pathway to many abilities considered to be unnatural. Palpatine, the boss of evil empire from “Star wars” series, is in the movie.
* “Fat man and Little boy” is a story of the first atomic bomb, Oppenheimer, etc. Paul Newman stars as general groves and David Politzer played a cameo as Robert Serber, an experimentalist.
* “Infinity” is based on two books of Feynman, the story of Feynman and his first wife during World War II, when Feynman worked on Manhattan Project and his wife died of TB.
若想知道更多细节,可以查询IMDB数据库。顺便在此转贴一下《纽约时报》3月27日关于"Dark Matter"的精彩影评,Brian Greene和丘成桐都发表了正面的看法:
March 27, 2007 (New York Times)
A Tale of Power and Intrigue in the Lab, Based on Real Life
By DENNIS OVERBYE
On Nov. 1, 1991, outraged that his doctoral thesis had been passed over for an academic prize, a young physicist at the University of Iowa named Gang Lu opened fire at a physics department meeting. He killed five people and paralyzed another before taking his own life.
The shootings devastated Iowa City and shocked a nation not normally used to thinking of physics as a life-and-death pursuit. Now they have been transformed into a celluloid nightmare for the rest of us.
At the Sundance Film Festival in January, “Dark Matter,” a fictional account inspired by the shootings, won the Alfred P. Sloan Prize for the best feature film dealing with science or technology — “not a genre that attracts a lot of people to work on,” in the words of Brian Greene, a physicist, mathematician and author from Columbia University who was on the panel of judges.
But the prize, not to mention a bloody ending reminiscent of “Bonnie and Clyde” or “The Wild Bunch,” may give a boost to its coming appearances on the film festival circuit. The movie, directed by Chen Shi-Zheng, written by Billy Shebar and starring Meryl Streep and Aidan Quinn, follows the adventures of a graduate student from Beijing, Liu Xing, who arrives at a fictional Valley State University to study under a famous cosmologist, Jacob Reiser (played by Mr. Quinn). Ms. Streep plays a philanthropist and patron of the university, who is an aficionado of Chinese culture who befriends Chinese students.
The professor is first impressed with Liu’s brilliance and diligence but turns against him when he begins to pursue a project that goes against his mentor’s favorite theory. He pulls the rug out from Liu’s doctoral thesis, meaning that the student will have to leave school and seek a job without his degree. Instead Liu, played by Ye Liu, gets a gun.
The title refers to the invisible clouds of something that seem to swaddle the galaxies, and to provide the scaffolding for the structure and evolution of the visible universe. In the early ’90s, when the movie is set, the existence and extent and nature of this dark stuff were the hottest questions in cosmology, and the arguments, jargon and even the graphs brandished by the movie’s protagonists seem ripped from popular science writing of the time.
But the movie isn’t really about science.
As Mr. Chen, the director, said, “It’s about power, in a way.” That would be the nearly feudalistic power that a graduate adviser has over his student, who after 16 or more years sitting in a classroom listening and regurgitating information must now change gears and learn how to produce original research. That grueling process has been the crucible in which new scientists are made ever since Plato mentored Aristotle, and although it rarely leads to murder [adjoining article], it can often lead to disaffection, strife and lifelong feuds.
“The film did a really good job of capturing the atmosphere of a research lab,” Dr. Greene said.
“Graduate students are like apprentices,” said Michael Turner, a cosmologist at the University of Chicago. “It’s from another era. It’s something we don’t do well anymore, hand-crafted training.”
Advisers, he noted, write recommendations, decide when it is time for a student to defend his or her thesis and divvy up credit for the work that gets done together. Astronomers still argue about whether Jocelyn Burnell-Bell, who discovered the first pulsar while a graduate student at Cambridge University in England, should have shared in the subsequent Nobel Prize given to her adviser, Antony Hewish.
Janet D. Stemwedel, a philosopher at San Jose State University, recently wrote on her blog, Adventures in Ethics and Science, “It’s hard to understand just how powerless you can feel as a graduate student unless you have been a graduate student.”
Dr. Turner said: “The bond between student and adviser is almost like getting married. You’re going to be working and interacting with this person the rest of your life.”
As the movie makes clear, the passage from student to junior colleague is only heightened in ambiguity and tension when you are thousands of miles from home and hardly speak the language.
James Dickerson, a physicist at Vanderbilt University who leads a committee on minorities in physics for the American Physical Society, said Asian students were often marginalized because of a perception, which he called “unstated racism,” that they are exceptionally smart and are there to work 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. As a result they wind up as cogs in the research machine and remain isolated from the rest of the community and the culture.
“It’s something not widely discussed in the physics community,” Dr. Dickerson said.
Shing-Tung Yau, a Harvard mathematics professor and mentor of many young mathematicians, said China’s one-child policy has added to the pressure on students.
“The Chinese family in general has high expectation on their children,” he said in an e-mail message. “When they realize that they cannot achieve it, they get very upset, especially the whole family have been telling their friends about him or her.”
“They also compete among themselves severely,” Dr. Yau added. “I observed that within my students.”
Dr. Lu, the Iowa gunman, was part of a wave of Chinese students recruited to come to Iowa to study plasma physics in the 1980s, when China was opening up to the West again after the Cultural Revolution.
Gerald Payne, a physics professor at Iowa then and now, said: “The selection process was very rigorous. We had exceptional students from China.”
By all accounts, however, Dr. Lu was troubled. Dr. Payne described him as very competitive and a loner, not good at socializing or expressing himself. He had isolated himself from other Chinese students and was living alone.