If they remake this for some reason, can we not shy away from the queer elements?
What it's about
Distrustful of everyone around him, Martin doesn’t immediately believe other people’s accounts of objects he can’t see due to blindness, so he takes photographs to compare what they said. The only person in his life is Celia, his housekeeper, until he meets Andy, an agreeable dishwasher with a talent for description.
The take
Empirical truth is something that is observable, objective, and verifiable. However, without the ability to observe, one must find other means to obtain a set of observations– repeated, consistent answers to eventually parse out the reality. One must obtain proof. Proof is an Australian drama about a blind photographer named Martin, who uses his photos to get multiple viewpoints of what was present in that specific moment. Writer-director Jocelyn Moorhouse brilliantly uses that idea to craft a character that wields objectivity in order to protect himself and keep himself distant, as seen through the way he instantly trusts Andy due to his straightforward demeanor, and the way he attempts to drive away his housekeeper Celia to get her to see the worst of him, instead of the idealized, perhaps fetishized, image she creates of him. Proof challenges the photograph as a medium of truth, as well as the idea of complete honesty and trust in another person.
What stands out
The depiction of blindness isn’t perfect– Hugo Weaving isn’t blind and Martin’s trust issues and the explanation of how he uses other senses are a tad exaggerated. Still, the film doesn’t go through the usual cliché on depicting blindness, as it’s more interested in the dynamics of the love triangle rather than making an overarching statement about disability.
Comments
Add a comment
Your name
Your comment
UP NEXT
UP NEXT
UP NEXT
More like this in
The Remarkable Life of Ibelin (2024)
A gamer with disability crafts a life and community in online roleplay in this unconventional, moving documentary
8.3
The Real Charlie Chaplin (2021)
This documentary expertly (and entertainingly) draws the complicated man behind the beloved caricature
7.8
The Trial of the Chicago 7 (2020)
A star-studded and riveting legal drama with a blockbuster feel.
8.1
The Guilty (2018)
A minimalist, razor-sharp thriller that will have you gasping for air.
9.0
System Crasher (2019)
A tale of trauma and one of the most talked about movies on Netflix in 2020.
9.0
Forgotten Love (2023)
The stunning third take of the classic Polish pre-war melodrama
7.7
His Three Daughters (2024)
Three sisters deal with life and death in this moving family portrait
8.9
The Merchant of Venice (2004)
Al Pacino does justice to a Shakespearian icon in this comedy turned drama
7.0
Hail Satan? (2019)
Forget everything you think you know about the Satanic Temple