The Theory of Everything (2014)

Movie · 2014 · Drama, Romance · 2h 3m · PG-13 · English

Curator score: 5.8/10 (1.2M ratings)

His mind changed our world. Her love changed his.

Overview

The Theory of Everything is the extraordinary story of one of the world’s greatest living minds, the renowned astrophysicist Stephen Hawking, who falls deeply in love with fellow Cambridge student Jane Wilde.

Ratings

Director

James Marsh

Production

Working Title Films, Working Title Films

Cast

Eddie Redmayne, Felicity Jones, Charlie Cox, Emily Watson, Simon McBurney, David Thewlis, Maxine Peake, Harry Lloyd, Tom Prior, Sophie Perry, Finlay Wright-Stephens, Alice Orr-Ewing, Thomas Morrison, Michael Marcus, Gruffudd Glyn, Paul Longley, Guy Oliver-Watts, Lucy Chappell, Charlotte Hope, Abigail Cruttenden

Where to watch

Netflix, Netflix Standard with Ads

Curator Review

Verdict

A polished, emotionally accessible biopic-romance with strong performances and elegant craft, but it leans hard into sentiment and simplifies both Stephen Hawking’s intellect and the marriage at its center. It works best as a moving relationship drama rather than a rigorous portrait of scientific genius.

Best for

  • viewers who like prestige biopics with awards-caliber acting
  • audiences looking for an emotional, accessible love story
  • fans of inspirational true stories and period drama

Skip if

  • you want a deep film about scientific ideas or Hawking’s work
  • you dislike melodramatic, inspirational biopic storytelling
  • you prefer a more unsentimental or politically complex portrait of marriage and disability

Overview

James Marsh’s film is built around a very specific appeal: it turns an intimidating public figure into a human-scale love story. Eddie Redmayne and Felicity Jones give it warmth and fragility, and the period detail is polished without feeling showy. As a piece of mainstream prestige cinema, it is carefully made and often genuinely affecting.

Worth noting

The tradeoff is that the movie is more interested in emotional legibility than intellectual depth. Hawking’s scientific legacy is mostly background texture, and the script smooths over messier parts of the marriage in favor of a clean, inspirational arc. That makes it easy to watch, but also a little frustrating if you expect a fuller biographical portrait.

Bottom line

If you approach it as a romantic drama about endurance, care, and the cost of devotion, it lands well. If you want a film that wrestles seriously with genius, disability, or the ethics of biographical simplification, it may feel thin. Still, it remains a strong example of the modern awards biopic at its most polished and accessible.

Top Letterboxd reviews

Sean Gilman (1.5★) · 1836 likes

Undecided as to which is more offensive: 1. The implication that Hawking's work can only be understood, or even be relevant to us, an audience of normal dumb people, in how it validates or invalidates our concept of God. 2. The depiction of infidelity in which Jane's is fraught and melodramatic, to the point that mere knocking on another man's tent causes her husband to collapse into coma and never speak again (someone should do the math on this causality… more

DirkH (1.5★) · 1001 likes

So this is the film we give the greatest mind of our generation? Wow. Dull, overly sentimental, providing only soap opera insights and saying Nothing about Everything. Performances aside, this is nothing more than manipulative, melodramatic piffle. And the most ironic thing is that to Jane, Stephen was more than his disease, to her it was always about the man. Too bad the film didn't follow suit.

Karsten (1.5★) · 734 likes

What is this CBS in the morning ass bullshit?

cinemasauron (3.5★) · 713 likes

People really need to set their expectations right before diving into this so-called biopic of Stephen Hawking coz The Theory of Everything isn't about the various breakthroughs Hawking made in his academic career but mainly concerns his relationship with his first wife, Jane Wilde Hawking. Remember that it is adapted from Jane's memoir and is told from her perspective, not Stephen's. The story follows Jane & Stephen Hawking who meet for the first time at a party in 1963 and notice… more

Romario De la Rosa (3.5★) · 663 likes

I'm a bit divided on this film, I really loved the first hour of the film, I found Hawking's beginnings quite interesting and the love story was quite well constructed, Jones and Redmayne's chemistry was great. My main problem with the film was the second hour, I would have liked to have seen them focus a little more on Hawking's achievements, there was never a clear conflict between the couple which left me a little confused with the final result and in general it became a bit cliche and boring.

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Topics

biopic, romance, prestige drama, period piece, inspirational, emotional, caregiving, disability, awards season, British drama

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