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Heeb Issue #14 : Everyone’s A CriticGood Chemistry
Mayim Bialik’s Top 5 Celluloid Scientists
Photo by Nicole Weingart Texy by Mayim BialikSomehow we convinced Bialik to take a moment from her hectic schedule and survey the best specimens of Jewish scientists that American cinema has to offer. Her 200-page thesis was due the same week as this assignment, though, so forgive her for leaving out Mel Brooks’ character from The Muppet Movie.
Harold Ramis as Dr. Egon Spengler
Ghostbusters (1984)
Complete with whiny voice, stilted manner and thick glasses, Egon is perhaps the quintessential scientist. And who doesn’t love a guy who collects “spores, mold and fungus”? IMDB.com calls his character simply a “scientific genius,” the vague grandiosity of which is so ’80s sci-fi comedy. But the guy did protect the world from an onslaught of otherworldy monsters and demons, so I’m OK with the label.
Yahoo Serious as Albert Einstein
Young Einstein (1988)
This Tasmanian take on Einstein’s early years features Mr. Serious doing some pretty awful comedy (a box of apples falling on his head inspires the theory of relativity) and some equally awful science (he splits the “beer atom” in order to insert more bubbles). However, it is refreshing and empowering for all scientists to see one of science’s greatest minds transformed into a bumbling beer brewer.
Jennifer Tilly as Amy Hopkins
Moving Violations (1985)
In this film about a group of drivers sentenced to attend traffic school, Tilly plays a rocket scientist. With her squeaky yet endearing voice, she certainly puts a new… face on scientists. I guess “it doesn’t take a rocket scientist” could be replaced with “it doesn’t take Jennifer Tilly.” Also, the paucity of female scientists in movies is killing me, so we must include her.
Gene Wilder as Dr. Frederick Frankenstein
Young Frankenstein (1974)
Perhaps the most intricate of surgeons is the neurosurgeon—working with the precious and priceless brain, the regulator of all body functions, thought and speech processes, and perhaps even the soul. Gene Wilder is priceless in this tremendous portrayal of the creativity, madness and true hysteria of the neuroscientist. Do I gush?
Jeff Goldblum as Dr. Ian Malcolm
Jurassic Park (1993)
Goldblum plays the über-scientist in this series. He’s gloomy, wears black and traipses around muttering fatalistic ramblings that come true… at least when they’re about bringing dinosaurs back to life after millions of years of extinction. Nevertheless, Goldblum’s calm character is the antithesis to most filmic “mad” scientists, and he provides contrast for Sam Neill and Laura Dern’s constantly astonished performances. Plus, who doesn’t love that Jews can in fact be 6’4”?











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