Plot: In this true story, Greg Kinnear plays Bob Kearns, a college professor who, in the sixties, came up with the intermittent wind shield wiper. He took his invention to Ford Motors and the company- rather than allow him to manufacture the product himself, supposedly stole his patent. Kearns spent the next twenty years in & out of court trying to get the company to admit they stole his design.
Review: It’s a real shame that FLASH OF GENIUS died such a horrible death at the box office this weekend, as this real life David & Goliath story is one of the more engrossing films I’ve seen lately.
Bob Kearns’ story truly is stranger than fiction. Here’s a nice family man who likes to occasionally tinker around with inventions in his basement- and one day he comes up with something extraordinary- the intermittent windshield wiper. Nowadays, this product is a standard feature in even the crappiest cars, but forty years ago- it seemed like science fiction. Try as they might, big time automakers could not figure out how to make this simple idea work.
Despite the poignancy of Kearns’ story- it would have been very easy to have made FLASH OF GENIUS into an unbearably schmaltzy tale a- la PATCH ADAMS. Thankfully, first time director Marc Abraham (who I should note is a veteran producer, and actually produced CHILDREN OF MEN- which I think qualifies him for sainthood) wisely take a very simple, almost documentary like approach to the material.
In many ways, the film is actually a lot like an HBO film- which I should add is a compliment and not a criticism. Like their excellent docudramas, the story is filmed in a straight forward manner, and the proceedings are not overly fictionalized.
Despite the expertise behind the camera, the real MVP is the film has to be Greg Kinnear, who gives a career best performance as Kearns. While I’ve always liked Kinnear, I must admit to occasionally finding him a little on the bland side- but he really knocked this one out of the park. A lot of actors probably would have overplayed the role, particularly in the climatic court-room scenes where Kearns defends himself against a bunch of high priced corporate lawyers. Kinnear never lets you forget that he’s playing a fairly fragile and timid guy, and while it’s probably too low key to ever get the award recognition it deserves- it’s some really fine work.
While it will probably be out of theaters fairly soon, hopefully FLASH OF GENIUS will catch on when it hits DVD/ cable, as it really deserves to be seen. If you want o see something with a little more substance than BEVERLY HILLS CHIHUAHUA- check it out. Just do it soon.
Grade: 8/10