The Professor and the Madman

The incredible true story that defined our world.

7.1
20192h 4m

Professor James Murray begins work compiling words for the first edition of the Oxford English Dictionary in the mid 19th century, and receives over 10,000 entries from a patient at Broadmoor Criminal Lunatic Asylum, Dr. William Minor.

Production

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Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: The Professor and the Madman | Official Trailer (HD) | Vertical Entertainment

The Professor and the Madman | Official Trailer (HD) | Vertical Entertainment

Thumbnail for video: The Professor And The Madman Official Trailer

The Professor And The Madman Official Trailer

Cast

Photo of Mel Gibson

Mel Gibson

James Murray

Photo of Sean Penn

Sean Penn

Dr. William Chester Minor

Photo of Natalie Dormer

Natalie Dormer

Eliza Merrett

Photo of Jennifer Ehle

Jennifer Ehle

Ada Murray

Photo of Jeremy Irvine

Jeremy Irvine

Charles Hall

Photo of Anthony Andrews

Anthony Andrews

Benjamin Jowett

Photo of Ioan Gruffudd

Ioan Gruffudd

Henry Bradley

Photo of Stephen Dillane

Stephen Dillane

Dr. Richard Brayne

Photo of Steve Coogan

Steve Coogan

Frederick James Furnivall

Photo of Laurence Fox

Laurence Fox

Philip Lyttelton Gell

Photo of Lars Brygmann

Lars Brygmann

Max Mueller

Photo of Brendan Patricks

Brendan Patricks

Winston Churchill

Photo of Adam Fergus

Adam Fergus

Alfred Minor

Photo of Brian Fortune

Brian Fortune

Head Board Member

Photo of Aidan McArdle

Aidan McArdle

Defence Attorney Clarke

Photo of Kieran O'Reilly

Kieran O'Reilly

Minor's Father

Photo of Bryan Murray

Bryan Murray

Henry Liddell

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Reviews

M

SWITCH.

4/10

In all likelihood, you will leave this film with a little more of an understanding of how the dictionary came to be, and a little more resentment for Gibson (one of the producers) for pushing this project to happen, regardless of its lacklustre subject. It's pleasant enough, but it's clear England must produce a certain number of period dramas a year and 2019 was just about to fall under the quota - thank god for the dictionary movie.

Usually with book-to-film adaptations, there is a spike in sales of said book - I can't imagine anyone rushing out to buy a dictionary after this though.
- Brent Davidson

Read Brent's full article...
https://www.maketheswitch.com.au/article/review-the-professor-and-the-madman-mel-gibsons-dictionary-origin-story-a-dry-read

M

mitohobe

8/10

I really like it. It had a story within a true Story. Which in my opinion made it a little complex and exciting. Good for young adults and up. Teenagers might not find it so compelling but that's just a short time in their life when they're looking for total entertainment and action. This is not that film but there is a great story to be told with a interesting backdrop of facts. Mel Gibson is excellent!! Be ready to be surprised with a few turns and twists. I really like this movie. I think it was very entertaining and interesting and at times exciting. Get your popcorn ready kick back and enjoy a movie that every other word is not the f word or the GD word. I really enjoyed it and as usual, Mel Gibson always deliver.

G

CinemaSerf

7/10

This is the best effort I've seen from Sean Penn since "Milk" almost twelve years ago. His portrayal of the schizophrenic William Chester Minor who, having spent almost 40 years of his life in Broadmoor psychiatric hospital, became one of the single most significant contributors to the orginal Oxford Dictionary of English is superb. He captures the flaws of this paranoid etymologist warts and all, and gels very well with Mel Gibson who, as the compiler of the tome - Dr. James Murray - also turns in a good, strong and, latterly, sympathetic and understanding performance too. This is essentially a double-hander with Natalie Dormer, Eddie Marsan and Steve Coogan helping to explain the story and releasing some of the emotional steam from time to time. It's a little slow in places, two hours could have done justice to this interesting story which seems overly padded at time. As you'd expect; it looks great with plenty of serious attention to detail and it also shines a little light on Victorian/Edwardian attitudes to mental illness.

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