Review of Kinsey (2004) by Alan J — 14 Mar 2008
This movie was paying tribute to Dr Kinsey the man who who revolutionized our understanding of human sexuality. As played by Liam Neeson in writer-director Bill Condon's excellent film biography, Indiana University researcher Alfred Kinsey was so consumed by statistical measurements of human sexual activity that he almost completely overlooked the substantial role of emotions and their effect on human behavior.
This made him an ideal researcher and science celebrity who revealed that sexual behaviors previously considered deviant and even harmful (homosexuality, oral sex, etc.) are in fact common and essentially normal in the realm of human experience, but whose obsession with scientific method frequently placed him at odds with his understanding wife (superbly played by Laura Linney) and research assistants.
In presenting Kinsey as a driven social misfit, Condon's film gives Neeson one of his finest roles while revealing the depth of Kinsey's own humanity, and the incalculable benefit his research had on our collective sexual enlightenment.
With humor, charm, and intelligence, Kinsey shines a light where darkness once prevailed.
This review of Kinsey (2004) was written by Alan J on 14 Mar 2008.
Kinsey has generally received positive reviews.
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