Baseado na história de Stephen Hawking, o filme expõe como o astrofísico fez descobertas relevantes para o mundo da ciência, inclusive relacionadas ao tempo. Também retrata seu romance com Jane Wilde, uma estudante de Cambridge que viria a se tornar sua esposa. Aos 21 anos de idade, Hawking descobriu que sofria de uma doença motora degenerativa, mas isso não o impediu de se tornar um dos maiores cientistas da atualidade.
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00:00:00A CIDADE NO BRASIL
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00:01:30O universo sempre existe, e sempre vai.
00:01:33Steven?
00:01:34O universo fica o mesmo.
00:01:36Steven?
00:01:52O que é isso?
00:01:54O que é isso?
00:02:00Ok, espera. Quanto tempo temos aqui?
00:02:04Eu não quero estar tarde. Arnaud Penzias foi tarde para o Nobel Prize?
00:02:07Eu não acredito.
00:02:10Estamos gravando agora?
00:02:11Sim.
00:02:13Eu te juro que isso é o mais profundo que você vai ouvir em sua vida toda.
00:02:21O som, ou a história?
00:02:25O som ou a história?
00:02:28O que é a diferença?
00:02:30O que é?
00:02:43O que é?
00:02:45O meu amor me envia.
00:02:46O meu problema que está criado para voltar para o docemente.
00:02:50O processo sempre existente e continuará.
00:02:53O que não mudou, nunca mudou.
00:02:56Nada mudou.
00:02:58It's my theory
00:03:04And I've given it a name
00:03:06I've called it
00:03:08Steady State
00:03:10Good night
00:03:15Good night Professor Hoyle
00:03:17That's Hoyle
00:03:19That's Hoyle
00:03:22Hello
00:03:25Hello
00:03:26Who are you?
00:03:29I'm Jane Wilde
00:03:30We haven't, have you?
00:03:31No
00:03:32I'm a friend of Stephen's
00:03:36We met at another party
00:03:39And he invited me
00:03:40To this party
00:03:41Hello
00:03:51Hello
00:03:51How are you?
00:03:54Fine
00:03:55Good
00:03:57You?
00:03:59Um, still fine
00:04:00Thanks
00:04:01Sorry
00:04:02You're, um, you're
00:04:05Oh no, thanks
00:04:06Thank you very much
00:04:07They're a terrible fiddle, aren't they?
00:04:13Yes
00:04:14Terrible
00:04:16Thanks
00:04:20Thanks
00:04:20Steven
00:04:27It's a party
00:04:30People might want to dance
00:04:46Can't dance to Wagner
00:04:47To Stephen
00:04:50To Stephen
00:05:07Happy birthday
00:05:15Happy birthday
00:05:16Should we go outside?
00:05:18What?
00:05:19It makes me feel small
00:05:31Very small
00:05:32Very small
00:05:33Very small
00:05:33All that out there
00:05:34Us, here
00:05:36Don't worry
00:05:36Galileo was wrong
00:05:38St Albans is absolutely the centre of the universe
00:05:41Galileo died
00:05:44321 years ago today
00:05:46On your birthday?
00:05:48Changed the way we thought about everything
00:05:49People are frightened of change
00:05:52My father and I used to come out here in the middle of the night and look at the stars
00:05:56Huh?
00:05:57I actually saw a star die once
00:05:59Of course, it actually happened about 200,000 years ago
00:06:02But the news didn't reach St Albans until 1956
00:06:04Lights fast, but it isn't that fast
00:06:07Sorry
00:06:08Physics
00:06:10They're all so far away
00:06:13But they don't seem it
00:06:14I mean
00:06:14I feel like you might stretch and reach and you might just touch them
00:06:18You better hurry up
00:06:19With your stretching and reaching
00:06:20Because they're getting further away
00:06:21What?
00:06:22Galaxies are moving away from us
00:06:24The coast of one's at about 6 million miles an hour
00:06:26And the distance of one's at about 200 million miles an hour
00:06:28I believe in God
00:06:30Oh, sorry
00:06:33I just wanted to say it
00:06:34I don't know why
00:06:35It's all right
00:06:36You said you felt small
00:06:40Does God make you feel less small?
00:06:44There's nothing wrong with feeling in science
00:06:46Feeling matters
00:06:46All the best ideas are felt
00:06:48And then argued about later
00:06:49Einstein said he could feel
00:06:50And his little finger
00:06:51If an idea was right
00:06:52So you're in good company
00:06:53And you like Wagner
00:06:54Actually
00:06:55No, I don't
00:06:58I think he's
00:07:00What?
00:07:02Pompous
00:07:03And ridiculous
00:07:05Who do you like then?
00:07:08Rachmaninoff
00:07:09What?
00:07:13Nothing
00:07:14Brahms
00:07:15Stephen?
00:07:18I didn't say anything
00:07:18The Beatles
00:07:22Who?
00:07:24Never mind
00:07:25Jane
00:07:26Jane
00:07:26Yes?
00:07:29Please please me
00:07:30What?
00:07:32Love me do
00:07:33We should go in
00:07:42I can't get up
00:07:47Come on
00:07:48I can't
00:07:49Very funny
00:07:51I can't get up, Jane
00:07:53I'll go and get help
00:07:59Hello, Jane
00:08:00Hello
00:08:01Can you hear me?
00:08:08What's wrong with you?
00:08:09I can't get up
00:08:10Well
00:08:11Give me your hand
00:08:13Will it hurt?
00:08:19Truth
00:08:20Yes
00:08:22A little bit more
00:08:24That's good
00:08:27Now hold
00:08:28Hold still
00:08:29This might be
00:08:47A little bit more
00:08:48Uncomfortable
00:08:48How old are you, Stephen?
00:09:01I'm 21
00:09:02How old are you?
00:09:07I'm older than you
00:09:08How much older?
00:09:11I'm 33
00:09:12Oh
00:09:13Same age as him
00:09:15I'm going to run
00:09:16In some night
00:09:17Get hot
00:09:17And what do you do?
00:09:20Oh, no, wait
00:09:21Let me guess
00:09:21Insurance salesman
00:09:24Or banking, maybe?
00:09:26I'm a
00:09:26I'm a cosmologist
00:09:28Oh, good for you
00:09:29Just started my PhD
00:09:32Or rather
00:09:34I've just started
00:09:34To think about
00:09:35What my PhD might be
00:09:36Okay
00:09:37Now, this will take
00:09:39About five minutes
00:09:40Sometimes it helps
00:09:44To talk about
00:09:45Something completely
00:09:46Different
00:09:46To take your mind
00:09:48Off all this
00:09:49And then
00:09:50Your time
00:09:51Suspended in space
00:09:53Will pass more quickly
00:09:54Time and space
00:09:58Do not exist
00:09:58Independently of each other
00:09:59Is that so?
00:10:02Or the universe
00:10:03Really?
00:10:07Matter
00:10:08And energy
00:10:09In the universe
00:10:10Warp
00:10:11And distorts
00:10:12Space-time
00:10:13Space-time's curved
00:10:20Space-time's curved
00:10:20Space-pod
00:10:20Systems
00:10:28Co- Schön
00:10:29뭐 yet?
00:10:36Episode 4
00:10:37Space-time'sader
00:10:37Annoying
00:10:38We are done
00:10:39Space-time'sоде
00:10:40And when the awakening
00:10:40All aboard
00:10:41Could go
00:10:41To find another
00:10:42Space-time's sąs
00:10:43Azure iceen
00:10:43Cכל
00:10:44And now
00:10:45I'm so blown
00:10:46Ah, I'm so glad
00:10:47Have a surprisingly
00:10:48PHONE RESTRAÇÃO
00:10:51Hello.
00:10:55No.
00:10:56No, we... we don't know.
00:10:59Lots of tests.
00:11:03Yes, yes.
00:11:05Goodbye.
00:11:08Who was it?
00:11:09The girl from the party.
00:11:18Ah! The X-ray of your spine with the die-in shows that you don't have anything pressing on your spinal cord.
00:11:35That's good, isn't it?
00:11:36It's a process of elimination.
00:11:38You were a team. I mean, you're both getting the Nobel Prize this evening.
00:11:53I put them up for the job.
00:11:55And they wouldn't let me in on the interview.
00:11:58So I loitered around.
00:12:00When Bob and the interview committee came out, doing their handshakes, and thank you for coming and we'll let you know, I moved in.
00:12:07You gave him the job, right? You gave Bob the job, didn't you?
00:12:14There was this kind of embarrassed pause.
00:12:18So I told him straight.
00:12:20Bob and I are gonna walk down the corridor right here, and right out that door right there.
00:12:26And if you don't want Bob to have the job that he was born to do, then you call it before we go through that door.
00:12:34Longest walk of my life.
00:12:3662 paces.
00:12:37And we never look back.
00:12:39They won't tell me what they're thinking.
00:12:40Doctors don't.
00:12:41They don't know themselves yet.
00:12:42I'm a doctor, Isabelle. I know what they're like.
00:12:43You're a tropical disease expert, Dad.
00:12:44I know doctors.
00:12:45Thank you.
00:12:46Thank you.
00:12:47Thank you.
00:12:48What, Isabelle?
00:12:49Nothing.
00:12:50What, Isabelle?
00:12:51Nothing.
00:12:52I've arranged for you to have a private room.
00:12:53No.
00:12:54I'll stay on the ward like everyone else.
00:12:55I'll stay on the ward like everyone else.
00:12:56Thank you.
00:12:57Thank you.
00:12:58Thank you.
00:12:59Thank you.
00:13:00Thank you.
00:13:01Thank you.
00:13:02Thank you.
00:13:03Thank you.
00:13:04Thank you.
00:13:05Thank you.
00:13:06Thank you.
00:13:07Eles não conhecem eles ainda.
00:13:08Eu sou a doctor, Isabel, eu sei o que eles são.
00:13:10Você é a tropical-disease expert, Dad.
00:13:12Eu conheço a doença.
00:13:15O que, Isabel?
00:13:16Nada.
00:13:18Eu tenho para você ter um privado.
00:13:20Não.
00:13:22Eu vou estar na rua como todos os outros.
00:13:37Sejam bem-vindos.
00:13:38Sim.
00:13:40Ah, não.
00:13:45Tchau, não.
00:13:51Tchau.
00:13:52Tchau.
00:13:55Tchau, Tchau.
00:13:55Tchau, eu estou a cantar.
00:14:07So, você tem que ir para Oxford ou Cambridge?
00:14:16Eles não querem me.
00:14:19Eu estava pensando em Westfield.
00:14:21É um all-lady's college.
00:14:26É um Gerson model, eu acho.
00:14:30E é muito...
00:14:32Scrabble.
00:14:34Vamos jogar Scrabble.
00:14:37Scrabble.
00:14:49Leukemia.
00:14:52É 12.
00:14:53Leukemia.
00:14:56Leuke.
00:14:57Leuke.
00:14:58Leuke.
00:15:03Leuke.
00:15:04Bom dia.
00:15:34Pigeons.
00:15:35The 20-foot horn had a couple of pigeons living inside it.
00:15:38Pigeons?
00:15:39Pigeons.
00:15:40What was it for, the 20-foot horn, apart from pigeon nesting?
00:15:44We wanted to measure noise from the outer edges of the Milky Way.
00:15:47Arno built a cold load.
00:15:49What's that?
00:15:50Five imperial gallons of liquid helium.
00:15:52You know how much helium that is?
00:15:53It's a hell of a quantity of helium.
00:15:55It gives you an unbelievably accurate reference against which you can measure the noise you receive.
00:15:59Arno is very precise. He makes these things better than anyone.
00:16:02Maybe it's the German in me.
00:16:04You're German?
00:16:05First six years of my life and a big chunk of my temper.
00:16:11Bob made a great switch.
00:16:12To connect the receiver alternately to the antenna and the cold load reference.
00:16:16Were you born in Germany?
00:16:18When?
00:16:20The 1940s?
00:16:21No, 1930s.
00:16:23Noise is heat.
00:16:24The higher the heat, the more intense the noise.
00:16:28You may want to ask, did we get noise?
00:16:31We got a lot of noise, which means a lot of heat.
00:16:34Far more than the Milky Way should have given us.
00:16:37That was our work from then on in.
00:16:39Day after day, what's all this heat?
00:16:42What the hell is this hiss?
00:16:43It's a nice day, isn't it?
00:17:04Dad, in the night, poor lamb.
00:17:05I want to know what's happening to me.
00:17:24Usually, I would sit down with a patient and his family.
00:17:27Please.
00:17:27Motor neurone disease.
00:17:35What is it?
00:17:36What happens?
00:17:37Motor neurones in the brain, which signal movement, they're dying.
00:17:43So?
00:17:44The brain stops telling muscles to move.
00:17:48The signal's not sent.
00:17:49The muscles are not used.
00:17:51So, they waste away, slowly.
00:17:55How slowly?
00:17:55Muscle wastage causes immobility.
00:18:00How slowly?
00:18:01It's gradual paralysis.
00:18:05And then what?
00:18:07The respiratory muscles, unlike most other muscles, work automatically.
00:18:12Breathing?
00:18:13Yes.
00:18:14They don't waste away so quickly.
00:18:16But they do.
00:18:17They do waste away.
00:18:19Yes.
00:18:22So what?
00:18:22I won't be able to breathe properly.
00:18:25And then I won't be able to breathe at all.
00:18:29So, you know, like, um, like drowning.
00:18:33What about the brain?
00:18:34I mean, the brain itself?
00:18:37Untouched.
00:18:39The brain is left untouched.
00:18:40One task.
00:18:46Bye.
00:18:49One.
00:19:02One.
00:19:03One.
00:19:03One.
00:19:04Two.
00:19:043.
00:19:051.
00:19:06Two.
00:19:06Three.
00:19:06Three.
00:19:07Two.
00:19:07One.
00:19:08One.
00:19:08Two.
00:19:08Two.
00:19:09Two.
00:19:09O que é isso?
00:19:39O que é isso?
00:20:09O que é isso?
00:20:11O que é isso?
00:20:13O que é isso?
00:20:17e ele queria saber a resposta muito ruim.
00:20:27E eu disse que não se preocupe.
00:20:30Eu vou descobrir por ele.
00:20:36Eu nunca fiz.
00:20:41Você nunca foi um homem sentimental, Frank.
00:20:44Não.
00:20:46Eu não acho que nós podemos começar agora.
00:20:49Eu vi isso.
00:20:51O que mais jovem você é quando você tem motor neurônio,
00:20:54o mais mais rápido, o mais rápido.
00:20:59Bem jovem é...
00:21:01é uma coisa ruim, Isabel.
00:21:07Tem dois anos, provavelmente, não mais.
00:21:09Então nós devemos apoiá-lo.
00:21:12Então nós devemos apoiá-lo.
00:21:15Sim.
00:21:16Você faz isso...
00:21:49Eu não sei se apoiar.
00:21:50Eu não sei se apoiar.
00:21:51O que é que é que você precisa de um Ph.D.?
00:21:57Depende do assunto.
00:21:59Com um bom bom?
00:22:00Com um bom bom, dois anos.
00:22:04O que é o seu supervisor?
00:22:06Chama, Denis Chama.
00:22:115,869,713.6 milhão.
00:22:17Around a milky way.
00:22:18O que é que nós estávamos recebendo de um pouco de um pouco de um pouco de um pouco de um pouco de um pouco de um pouco de um pouco de um pouco de um pouco de um pouco.
00:22:37Eu não me lembro.
00:22:39Nós tínhamos uma grande lista de ideas.
00:22:41Talvez foi eu.
00:22:42Talvez foi você.
00:22:43Você era um grupo.
00:22:46Talvez foi eu.
00:22:47Talvez foi eu.
00:22:47Talvez foi eu.
00:22:48Talvez foi um bom bom testado na 50s.
00:22:52Talvez foi o o ovo.
00:22:53Talvez foi o que nós tínhamos.
00:22:55Mas isso teria diminuído.
00:22:56E o que nós tínhamos?
00:22:57Total constante.
00:22:59Não diminuí-se.
00:23:00Back à minha lista.
00:23:00E o que nós tínhamos?
00:23:01Tchau, tchau!
00:23:02Tchau, tchau.
00:23:02Tchau, tchau.
00:23:02Tchau, tchau.
00:23:03Obrigado.
00:23:33Obrigado.
00:24:03Obrigado.
00:24:11Sharma.
00:24:13Dennis.
00:24:15Yes.
00:24:19I don't know. S-H-A-R-M-A?
00:24:23I think it's Italian.
00:24:33It's Italian.
00:24:35It's Italian.
00:24:37And it's Italian.
00:24:39And it's Italian.
00:24:41So, this is Italian.
00:24:43This is Italian.
00:24:45It's Italian.
00:24:47I'm like, look.
00:24:49I have a nice wine.
00:24:51It's Italian.
00:24:53If it's Italian.
00:24:55Then you can eat.
00:24:57You can eat it.
00:24:59You can eat it.
00:25:01Denis Sharma?
00:25:17Yes.
00:25:19Frank Hook.
00:25:31Hello, young man.
00:26:01Oh, I know you.
00:26:05Stephen Hawking.
00:26:07I applied for you to supervise my PhD.
00:26:12Too busy, was I?
00:26:13Yes, I think so.
00:26:17Brains, balls and cash.
00:26:19I'm sorry?
00:26:21Physics.
00:26:22In this country, it's a battlefield and a bloody one.
00:26:24You need brains, which ought to be enough, but it isn't because you need cash to fund whatever your brain's working on.
00:26:28And to get cash out of anyone in this country, you need balls because they'll try and stop you.
00:26:34You'll see.
00:26:35You found a subject?
00:26:38Any ideas?
00:26:41I don't know yet.
00:26:42Well, when you do, remember this.
00:26:46You'll have to fight for what you believe in, tooth and nail, or the buggers will stop you.
00:27:02Physics means everything to him.
00:27:04I want him to be happy, Mr. Sharma.
00:27:08What can I do?
00:27:09I want you to set him a question that he can finish.
00:27:13Something easy enough for him to finish.
00:27:17Before he dies.
00:27:18Could you do that?
00:27:23Please?
00:27:27My students and my science are everything to me.
00:27:33I try to be true to both.
00:27:35Which is why I can't do what you ask me, Dr. Hawking.
00:27:43I'm sorry.
00:27:44I'm sorry.
00:27:48Cosmology.
00:27:58The ghetto science.
00:28:00All speculation and no proof.
00:28:02Ghetto science?
00:28:03How did we get here?
00:28:04Where are we going?
00:28:04What is time?
00:28:05It asks us all the big questions.
00:28:07Stephen.
00:28:09Have you got a subject?
00:28:10Have you brought a big idea back with you?
00:28:12No.
00:28:1320 years.
00:28:14The greatest achievement of physics in the 20th century, Rutherford, Oppenheimer, what
00:28:20have they given us?
00:28:21The atomic bomb.
00:28:22What's the point in asking how we got here and where we're going if Einstein and your mob
00:28:28have already got us ready for it?
00:28:29Blaming Einstein for that is like blaming Isaac Newton for plane crashes because he discovered
00:28:33gravity.
00:28:34Very clever.
00:28:36Very smart.
00:28:36But a smartness isn't the real world, is it?
00:28:39Cosmologists aren't interested in the real world.
00:28:41You see that girl?
00:28:43What about her?
00:28:44Stephen's going to make her fall in love with you.
00:28:49Using only Einstein's theory of relativity.
00:28:51George?
00:28:53Pound says it can't be done.
00:28:54I really don't think this is a good idea.
00:28:56The honor and integrity of our entire subject is at stake here.
00:29:00All right.
00:29:01All right.
00:29:02Do it.
00:29:03Excuse me.
00:29:05Have you got the time, please?
00:29:07I make it half past seven.
00:29:09What time do you make it?
00:29:11You already know the time.
00:29:13I know my time.
00:29:15Are you trying to be funny?
00:29:17Time's not a universal quantity.
00:29:20We used to think that it was.
00:29:21We used to think that it was just there, marching on at the same pace for everyone everywhere.
00:29:26Like a railway track that stretched to infinity.
00:29:30Time was eternal.
00:29:30Now we know that it isn't.
00:29:35Well.
00:29:36You have to know this.
00:29:37It's incredibly important.
00:29:40Time's not a background thing.
00:29:42It's not an absolute against which everything else is measured.
00:29:45It's dynamic.
00:29:47Dynamic?
00:29:48Active.
00:29:50Active.
00:29:51If you were to travel east very, very quickly.
00:29:54Out of sight.
00:29:55The far east.
00:29:57The far, far east.
00:29:57Far, completely out of sight.
00:30:00Yes, completely out of sight.
00:30:01And I stayed here.
00:30:02Your time would slow down relative to mine.
00:30:04Like I'd get really, really slow.
00:30:12If you went very, very fast.
00:30:15If I went very, very fast.
00:30:20I'd get really, really slow.
00:30:22Your time would, relative to mine.
00:30:24Oh, totally out of sight.
00:30:33Time's very important.
00:30:40What star sign are you?
00:30:42What?
00:30:45I don't know.
00:30:52You all right?
00:30:53Fine.
00:30:56Ian?
00:30:57Yes, please.
00:30:58I don't know you personally.
00:31:04Did you want another?
00:31:07Who is that?
00:31:09Roger Penrose.
00:31:10Brilliant brain.
00:31:11He'd be a professor within three years.
00:31:13Sorry.
00:31:14Could I?
00:31:16The thing is, just then, um,
00:31:17I was thinking about mathematics and not beer,
00:31:19and sometimes when I'm thinking in a number of different dimensions,
00:31:21I can't come back very quickly to words and beer
00:31:23and whether I want more of it.
00:31:25It's because of the pictures in my head.
00:31:26I don't know how to make the words come.
00:31:29Do you see?
00:31:31Fine, Tom.
00:31:32Yes, please.
00:31:41Fine, Tony.
00:31:42No, no, no, no, no.
00:31:54Fine, look, all right.
00:31:57Bye, y'all.
00:31:58I'll trade these.
00:31:59Fine.
00:32:02Bye.
00:32:02Tchau, tchau.
00:32:32Tchau, tchau.
00:33:02Tchau, tchau.
00:33:09I'm all right.
00:33:11I'm fine.
00:33:18Fine.
00:33:21Fine.
00:33:22Denmark's a prison.
00:33:34Then is the world one?
00:33:36A goodly one, in which there are many confines, wards and dungeons, Denmark being one of the worst.
00:33:42But we think not so, my lord.
00:33:44Why, then, tis none to you.
00:33:45For there is nothing either good or bad, but thinking makes it so.
00:33:50To me it is a prison.
00:33:52Why, then, your ambition makes it one.
00:33:54Well, it is too narrow for your mind.
00:33:56Oh, God, I could be banded in a nutshell and count myself a king of infinite space, were it not that I have bad dreams.
00:34:06What are you thinking?
00:34:14I was, uh, thinking about Einstein and relativity.
00:34:18Oh.
00:34:19And stars.
00:34:21Oh.
00:34:21It's possible for a perfect star to collapse into nothingness.
00:34:26If it's a perfect sphere, then it can collapse and become infinitely dense, so dense that everything is pulled down into nothing.
00:34:32But the conditions have to be right.
00:34:34What conditions?
00:34:35Yeah, if it is a perfect sphere, if, uh, the play's been very moving, if, uh, the evening's very beautiful, the conditions have to be ideal.
00:34:48It's possible for the pull of gravity to stop everything escaping, everything in nothing.
00:34:59Oh, no.
00:35:01It wasn't that bad, was it?
00:35:03Oh, my bag.
00:35:04I left it in the theatre.
00:35:05Shall we?
00:35:15Oh, no, you can see a star.
00:35:17Look, there, you can see.
00:35:21Found it!
00:35:29Hamlet doesn't act.
00:35:31That's his fatal flaw.
00:35:33If he acted, if he did something...
00:35:34Be sure to play.
00:35:36He'd save his life.
00:35:37He'd save his life.
00:35:37ha, he'd say to each other.
00:35:40No, he can see a star.
00:35:41I'm not a star.
00:35:42I'm not a star.
00:35:43He'd or he'd save my life.
00:35:46God's 먼저 has died.
00:35:48I'm not a star.
00:35:54He'd save his life.
00:36:02Isn't it enough to learn how to agree?
00:36:03Tchau, tchau.
00:36:33Tchau, tchau.
00:37:04The universe expands.
00:37:07As galaxies move apart, new galaxies are formed to fill the gaps left behind.
00:37:15The new replaces the old at just the right rate.
00:37:20Nothing changes.
00:37:21Wherever you are in the universe, Andromeda, Mars or Scarborough, it always looks the same.
00:37:29Because it is the same.
00:37:31I want to do something significant.
00:37:34The universe is a steady state universe.
00:37:39It is very attractive, steady state.
00:37:41Cut.
00:37:42Thank you, gentlemen.
00:37:43And reassuring.
00:37:44Yes.
00:37:45Maybe it's attractive because it's reassuring.
00:37:48Emotionally, it's far harder to conceive of a universe that started, a universe that hasn't always been around.
00:37:53Einstein?
00:37:54Look what he did when his work looked like he was predicting there was a beginning to the universe.
00:37:58He ran away from the prospect of a beginning.
00:38:00No, because he saw that a beginning would mean a breakdown of all the laws of science.
00:38:04How can science explain something that isn't there?
00:38:08That's the thing about the idea of a Big Bang.
00:38:10The thing about the idea of a Big Bang is that it's wrong, irrational and wrong.
00:38:14It's my turn, Big Bang.
00:38:16I made it up.
00:38:17Do you know why I called it that?
00:38:18Because it sounds like a cartoon.
00:38:20Big Bang theory is cartoon physics.
00:38:23Dennis agrees with me, don't you, Dennis?
00:38:25Lunch.
00:38:27The Pope is a Big Bang man.
00:38:29Because?
00:38:30Because before the Big Bang, there was nothing.
00:38:34No space, no time, no matter, no science, no rules, which leaves room for, guess who?
00:38:42Lord God Almighty.
00:38:46Religion is the enemy of science, young man.
00:38:49If Catholicism had its way, we'd all still be living on a flat earth at the centre of the universe with hell down below and heaven just somewhere to the left of the moon.
00:38:57This is 1963.
00:38:59God is dead.
00:39:01Stay away from Big Bangs.
00:39:03Cartoons are bad for you.
00:39:09White dielectric material.
00:39:11I'm sorry?
00:39:12Lots of it.
00:39:13Inside the antenna horn.
00:39:14Had to be it.
00:39:15Had to be the cause of the hiss.
00:39:16White dielectric material.
00:39:18Yes.
00:39:18Pigeon shit.
00:39:19All over the horn.
00:39:21You know what we did?
00:39:22Unbelievable.
00:39:23Unbelievable.
00:39:23What did you do?
00:39:24We posted them.
00:39:25The pigeons?
00:39:26We posted the pigeons.
00:39:27The people we worked for had internal mail in offices all over America.
00:39:30We posted the pigeons as far away as we could send them.
00:39:33Did it work?
00:39:33They came home.
00:39:34They were homing pigeons.
00:39:35They weren't ready to leave.
00:39:37So what did you do?
00:39:39He, he, uh...
00:39:41We had the pigeons shot.
00:39:44No, Bob had the pigeons shot.
00:39:46You killed the pigeons.
00:39:47A technician?
00:39:48A technician killed the pigeons.
00:39:49And then we cleared out all the white dielectric material from inside the horn.
00:39:52On our hands and knees, in our white lab coats, inside the horn, scraping away the white stuff.
00:39:57And?
00:39:57The pigeons were innocent.
00:40:01The hiss was still there.
00:40:05The pigeon shit was not the hiss.
00:40:09Is that all right?
00:40:10Can I say that on television?
00:40:11What am I doing wrong, Dennis?
00:40:22Dennis?
00:40:23Yeah?
00:40:26Do you think I could have some more paper?
00:40:28Dennis has studied.
00:40:29Do you know what it is?
00:40:32It's Stephen.
00:40:33Are they going to like each other?
00:40:34You what?
00:40:35Another lunch of advanced theoretical physics.
00:40:38Oh, hello.
00:40:38Hello.
00:40:39Hello.
00:40:42Tomatoes.
00:40:44Could you?
00:40:46Thin slices.
00:40:55Hello.
00:40:56Roger Penrose.
00:40:58Yes, I know.
00:40:59Have you two met?
00:41:02Rosciutto.
00:41:05Help yourselves.
00:41:07Mozart could go to sleep and wake up with whole symphonies in his head and no idea how they got there.
00:41:14Whole symphony in his head, complete.
00:41:16How can that be?
00:41:17Music is temporal.
00:41:18How can you pack a whole symphony into just one moment?
00:41:21Well, maybe it's because music is a way of thinking that goes way beyond language.
00:41:26Maybe that's what genius is.
00:41:27Thinking without time.
00:41:29All roads lead to physics.
00:41:31I think thought, mathematical thought, can exist completely without words.
00:41:36I don't think thinking is verbal.
00:41:38In fact, I think words come in the way.
00:41:41I think you can do without words.
00:41:42Poets have always been obsessed with time.
00:41:59Frinking it.
00:42:00Controlling it.
00:42:02Stopping it.
00:42:03T.S. Eliot?
00:42:04Time present and time past are both perhaps present in time future.
00:42:07And time future contained in time past.
00:42:10Rupert Brooke stands the church clock still at ten to three.
00:42:13Blake, to see the world in a grain of sand and heaven in a wild flower,
00:42:18hold infinity in the palm of your hand and eternity in an hour.
00:42:22Erle Merrick.
00:42:24Who?
00:42:26There was a young lady named Bright whose speed was faster than light.
00:42:30She set out one day in a relative way and returned on the previous night.
00:42:34It's unstable.
00:42:43Sorry?
00:42:44Go on.
00:42:45It's unstable.
00:42:47You need a negative energy field in order to create the new matter,
00:42:51which makes it unstable.
00:42:53Hoyle's steady state.
00:42:54It's a problem, isn't it?
00:42:57Isn't it?
00:42:58You like hawking very much, don't you?
00:43:25Will he have the time?
00:43:29What?
00:43:30Does he have enough time left to get what he's after?
00:43:35I hope so.
00:43:36A time-symmetric mean theory of gravity.
00:44:01It's brilliant.
00:44:02Hoyle at his best.
00:44:04Did you start as his PhD student?
00:44:06Are you off to my job?
00:44:07Did you?
00:44:08Are you?
00:44:09No.
00:44:10Yes, he's a great scientist.
00:44:13His work on the production of helium inside stars is, er...
00:44:17What's the word?
00:44:18Beautiful.
00:44:19And so is this.
00:44:21I do the checking.
00:44:22It should be refereed by a committee, but Hoyle doesn't have time.
00:44:25Can I see?
00:44:26I have to go.
00:44:47Just give me a few more minutes.
00:44:49I have to go now.
00:44:51Leave it with me.
00:44:52Okay, but don't...
00:44:55What?
00:44:56Eat it?
00:45:02Just leave it on my desk.
00:45:04Okay.
00:45:22Let's go.
00:45:32Let's go.
00:45:32Tchau.
00:46:02Tchau.
00:46:32Tchau.
00:47:02Tchau.
00:47:32Tchau.
00:47:42Oh, pearly.
00:47:44Are you all right?
00:47:46Uh, tutto bene.
00:47:48You look like you've had a wild night.
00:47:52Something like that.
00:47:54So, the Royal Society this afternoon.
00:47:59Você lembra Stephen Hawking?
00:48:29A CIDADE NO BRASIL
00:48:59A CIDADE NO BRASIL
00:49:29A CIDADE NO BRASIL
00:49:59A CIDADE NO BRASIL
00:50:01A CIDADE NO BRASIL
00:50:03A CIDADE NO BRASIL
00:50:07A CIDADE NO BRASIL
00:50:11A CIDADE NO BRASIL
00:50:13A CIDADE NO BRASIL
00:50:15A CIDADE NO BRASIL
00:50:17A CIDADE NO BRASIL
00:50:19A CIDADE NO BRASIL
00:50:21A CIDADE NO BRASIL
00:50:23A CIDADE NO BRASIL
00:50:25A CIDADE NO BRASIL
00:50:27A CIDADE NO BRASIL
00:50:29A CIDADE NO BRASIL
00:50:33A CIDADE NO BRASIL
00:50:35A CIDADE NO BRASIL
00:50:37A CIDADE NO BRASIL
00:50:39A CIDADE NO BRASIL
00:50:43A CIDADE NO BRASIL
00:50:45A CIDADE NO BRASIL
00:50:47A CIDADE NO BRASIL
00:50:49A CIDADE NO BRASIL
00:50:51A CIDADE NO BRASIL
00:50:53FALL ARE PUT YOU UP TO IT
00:50:54HEY?
00:50:55SOMEBODY'S PUT YOU UP
00:50:56TO SABOTAGING ME
00:50:57JUST WRONG
00:50:58THAT'S ALL
00:50:59I HAD TO SAY IT DIDN'T I
00:51:00THE PHYSICS IS WRONG
00:51:01WHY DID YOU SHOW HIM THE PAPER?
00:51:06I HATE THEM BEING SHOWN
00:51:10TO ANY BUGGER
00:51:11Science isn't theatre.
00:51:26Needs to be said.
00:51:27In that way?
00:51:31How long has it been since you started with me?
00:51:35You don't like the idea of me attacking steady state theory.
00:51:37You didn't answer my question.
00:51:38Because you're a steady state man yourself.
00:51:41Okay, I'll answer it for you.
00:51:4312 months.
00:51:44So the idea of me attacking steady state...
00:51:47My father ran a cotton mill.
00:51:49When I was 21, I told him I wanted to be a physicist.
00:51:53He hated the idea.
00:51:55He wanted me to take over the business from him.
00:51:57So he told me that I couldn't be a physicist
00:51:59unless I got a fellowship to pay for it.
00:52:02He thought I wouldn't get it.
00:52:04He thought I would buckle.
00:52:06I worked like a dog.
00:52:07What has this to do with me attacking steady state?
00:52:09I know what it's like to have obstacles in your path.
00:52:12I know what it's like to be told you can't do something.
00:52:15That's why I became a teacher.
00:52:18I would never, ever stop a student of mine
00:52:20from pursuing something
00:52:21because I didn't agree with their opinion.
00:52:24Never.
00:52:24I know you can do more than make brilliant attacks on others.
00:52:30Do something.
00:52:32All of your own.
00:52:34Be original.
00:52:39Kyle?
00:52:44Run.
00:52:44Run.
00:52:44Maybe it's New York.
00:53:14Maybe the hiss is New York, we said.
00:53:17New York?
00:53:18How?
00:53:18Well, we figured that if any city in the world
00:53:21could give you three degrees of hot radio noise,
00:53:24it must be the Big Apple.
00:53:26My family alone could probably make this much hiss.
00:53:28We were struggling to think what else it could be.
00:53:30You were guessing?
00:53:31How could we claim to be making very sensitive radio astronomy measurements
00:53:35with all that man-made stuff around?
00:53:37We pointed the antenna at New York City.
00:53:40All that energy spread out across the northern horizon,
00:53:43arcing from subway rails,
00:53:45hum from power lines,
00:53:47the radar amplifier at Kennedy Airport
00:53:49spewing out radio noise by the kilowatt.
00:53:51And I'm thinking,
00:53:52just maybe,
00:53:53just maybe,
00:53:54this town,
00:53:55this town of all towns,
00:53:57might crank up three degrees of hiss.
00:54:00You said you were from Germany.
00:54:02When did you leave Germany?
00:54:04Maybe we should stop filming.
00:54:06We came to America when I was six years old.
00:54:11We lived in a two-room apartment in the garment district.
00:54:15Me, my brother, and my parents,
00:54:16and the cockroaches in the kitchen.
00:54:19We were poor.
00:54:21That's why I became a physicist.
00:54:24Not to get rich,
00:54:25not to win the Nobel,
00:54:27to stop being poor.
00:54:29New York wasn't it.
00:54:30We pointed the 20-foot horn at the city,
00:54:32and it gave us a reasonable amount, but...
00:54:34Not enough heat.
00:54:35Not enough.
00:54:35To win the Nobel Prize,
00:54:38you have to find something.
00:54:39Am I right?
00:54:40It's not about thinking or theory.
00:54:43It's about discovery.
00:54:45But do you have to be looking for the thing that you find?
00:54:48Science can be slow work.
00:54:51It's hardly ever about eureka moments in the bath.
00:54:55You need precision,
00:54:58tenacity,
00:55:00dedication.
00:55:01German talents.
00:55:05You're all busy, then, Mr Hawking.
00:55:16He wouldn't let me out of his sight, not once.
00:55:18Scared I might run amok, I think.
00:55:20Oh, rules, rules, rules.
00:55:22Um, Penrose Lecture, London.
00:55:25Otherwise engaged?
00:55:30Stephen,
00:55:31you all right?
00:55:33Fine.
00:55:34Fine.
00:55:35Oh, your two favourite words.
00:55:38Is it all right for me to have come?
00:55:41Fine.
00:55:41No, it's not your turn.
00:55:51What are you doing?
00:55:53It's in the rules.
00:55:54I've croaked you,
00:55:54so I go again.
00:55:55Can you keep doing that?
00:56:25Of course I can.
00:56:29It's what you're supposed to do,
00:56:31get your opponent's ball as far away from you as possible,
00:56:33and then...
00:56:34What?
00:56:35What is what you do in croquet?
00:56:44Go on.
00:56:46A Penrose Lecture at London.
00:56:48It's all right.
00:56:49Go, now.
00:56:51Work.
00:56:52Work.
00:56:53Work.
00:56:53Work.
00:57:01Work.
00:57:02O que é isso?
00:57:32O que é isso?
00:58:02O que é isso?
00:58:32O que é isso?
00:59:02O que é isso?
00:59:04O que é isso?
00:59:06O que é isso?
00:59:08O que é isso?
00:59:10O que é isso?
00:59:12O que é isso?
00:59:14O que é isso?
00:59:16O que é isso?
00:59:18O que é isso?
00:59:20O que é isso?
00:59:22O que é isso?
00:59:24O que é isso?
00:59:26O que é isso?
00:59:28O que é isso?
00:59:30O que é isso?
00:59:32O que é isso?
00:59:34O que é isso?
00:59:36O que é isso?
00:59:38O que é isso?
00:59:40O que é isso?
00:59:42O que é isso?
00:59:44O que é isso?
00:59:46O que é isso?
00:59:48O que é isso?
00:59:50O que é isso?
00:59:52O que é isso?
00:59:54O que é isso?
00:59:56O que é isso?
00:59:58O que é isso?
01:00:00O que é isso?
01:00:02O que é isso?
01:00:04O que é isso?
01:00:05O que é isso?
01:00:07O que é isso?
01:00:10O que é isso?
01:00:11E quando uma star se deslizou, a singularidade é inevitável.
01:00:35A topologia não se preocupa com a coisa do que se mova,
01:00:40É sobre como as coisas se conectam.
01:00:41Big thinking.
01:00:42Big, bold thinking.
01:00:44It takes you to places where the rules say you can't go.
01:00:47And it's fast.
01:00:48You say that it's fast.
01:00:52I've tried to be truthful with you.
01:00:55I'm not going to stop now.
01:00:58There's nothing more we can do.
01:01:01There's no treatment, Stephen.
01:01:06Sorry.
01:01:10They've washed their hands of him.
01:01:14We've got to carry on, friend.
01:01:16Carry on.
01:01:17Carry on.
01:01:18We have to do a lot more than carry on.
01:01:22Vitamin B.
01:01:24Hydroxycobalamin.
01:01:25Steroids.
01:01:27I haven't washed my hands of you.
01:01:29They're wrong.
01:01:30You understand?
01:01:31They're wrong.
01:01:32The lot of them.
01:01:40Well done.
01:02:00Oh.
01:02:01Oh.
01:02:02Oh.
01:02:03Oh.
01:02:04Oh.
01:02:04Oh.
01:02:05Oh.
01:02:05Oh.
01:02:06Oh.
01:02:07Oh.
01:02:08Oh.
01:02:08Você não fala sobre sua doença.
01:02:33Ele não fala sobre isso.
01:02:36Nós respeitamos isso. É simples, realmente.
01:02:38O que você acha que eu deveria fazer?
01:02:43Não é verdade. Não responde, George.
01:02:47Eu acho que eu deveria ir para o St Albans e ir para um bom março.
01:02:52Eu acho que é terrível que você não fala sobre isso.
01:03:00Eu acho que é terrível.
01:03:02Eu acho que é terrível.
01:03:04Eu acho que é terrível.
01:03:09Eu acho que é terrível.
01:03:11Eu acho que é terrível.
01:03:13Eu acho que é terrível.
01:03:16Eu acho que é terrível.
01:03:18Eu acho que é terrível.
01:03:23Eu acho que é terrível.
01:03:25Eu acho que é terrível.
01:03:27Eu acho que é terrível.
01:03:29Eu acho que é terrível.
01:03:30Eu acho que é terrível.
01:03:32Eu acho que não er Reality.
01:03:33Você não é errado.
01:03:34É terrível.
01:03:35e não florescente.
01:03:39Você é um cientista científica.
01:03:42Eu vou te dizer tudo sobre como...
01:03:44...washing balas...
01:03:45...reacta em luz da luz.
01:03:47Uma das grandes perguntas do nosso tempo...
01:03:49... sobre a luz da luz da luz.
01:03:51Você quer dançar?
01:03:53Eu não sei o que você deveria fazer.
01:04:05Eu sei o que você quer.
01:04:08A casa, a casa, a filha...
01:04:11...a vida juntos.
01:04:13O impossível.
01:04:23Eu estou pensando sobre o Galilão...
01:04:25...como ele...
01:04:27...como ele...
01:04:29...como ele...
01:04:31...como ele...
01:04:33...como ele...
01:04:35...como ele.
01:04:36Estou pensando sobre Galilão...
01:04:38...como ele.
01:04:39Está falando sobre o que ele...
01:04:41...fraintando a gente.
01:04:43E aí?
01:04:46Está claro!
01:04:49Eu me lembro de Galilão...
01:04:51...como ele.
01:04:53Imagine what it must have felt like
01:04:56To be told that the sun didn't go round the earth
01:04:58Horrible
01:04:59Or that the earth isn't flat
01:05:01It is, isn't it?
01:05:03Flat, Jane
01:05:04Don't tell me it isn't flat
01:05:07Oh no, oh no
01:05:09If you look me in the eye now
01:05:11And told me it isn't flat
01:05:12I don't know what I'd do
01:05:14I'd be inconsolable
01:05:17Totally desolate
01:05:20Stephen
01:05:23Stephen
01:05:28Did you have any idea what it might be?
01:05:35Did you think you knew?
01:05:38Or was it just guessing?
01:05:40Is that what you're trying to say?
01:05:43A Nobel Prize for guesswork?
01:05:45Is that the story you're after?
01:05:47Let me tell you something
01:05:48Are we still filming?
01:05:49Good, good
01:05:50In 1939
01:05:52My mother and father put me on a train
01:05:54Filled with Jewish children heading to England
01:05:56Kinder transport
01:05:58Are you okay?
01:06:00The Nazis were letting some children go
01:06:03Not the adults
01:06:04Just some children
01:06:05At the station
01:06:08My mother looked into my face
01:06:11And said for me to look out for my little brother
01:06:13Not to let our suitcase out of my sight
01:06:16And don't lose your name tag
01:06:18Arno Penzius
01:06:19Here
01:06:19You lose your name tag
01:06:21You lose your name
01:06:22And you lose everything
01:06:23And she went
01:06:25How old were you?
01:06:27I was six
01:06:28Did you see her again?
01:06:30I was six
01:06:31My little brother was five
01:06:32She didn't cry
01:06:36She made like it was a normal thing
01:06:41And not crying was part of that
01:06:43Can you imagine how hard it must have been not to cry?
01:06:47To put your boys on a train like that and not to cry
01:06:50I've hated suitcases ever since
01:06:54He likes to unpack
01:06:56My mother and my father got out
01:07:01Six months later we sailed for America together
01:07:04England saved my life
01:07:08America gave me a brand new one
01:07:11But I never
01:07:13I never dreamed of this happening
01:07:16We discovered this
01:07:26We found this
01:07:28We discovered this
01:07:29What is it?
01:07:41This clock
01:07:47It was fine when I got it
01:07:50When I went to America
01:07:51And it started to run backwards
01:07:52It stops my students getting too complacent
01:07:55About the nature of time
01:07:56I don't know why I came here
01:08:00It's just
01:08:01Music
01:08:11Bach didn't finish it
01:08:14He died before he finished it
01:08:17But it's so perfect
01:08:18Everything he's done before is so perfect
01:08:22It's as if it doesn't end
01:08:25You can hear it after it stops
01:08:28Listen
01:08:30Can you hear it?
01:08:45Can you hear it?
01:09:00I'll see you in Cambridge
01:09:30I thought that was us
01:09:43So didn't I
01:09:46But it wasn't
01:09:47No, it was them
01:09:50Backwards now
01:09:54We are having a time with it
01:09:56It's this platform
01:09:59Platform
01:10:00Platform one
01:10:01It's never straightforward here
01:10:04You don't know what's going to happen next
01:10:05Sometimes I tell my husband about it
01:10:08But he doesn't listen
01:10:09He just says
01:10:10It's platform one
01:10:11It's the Cambridge platform
01:10:13Of course strange things are going to happen
01:10:15It's the platform for Cambridge
01:10:17Nobody else knows it's there
01:10:20Apart from Cambridge types
01:10:22Backwards
01:10:23Backwards
01:10:23Yes
01:10:24You reverse time
01:10:26Of course you reverse the direction of time
01:10:28Yes
01:10:30Are you a Cambridge type?
01:10:33Yes
01:10:33And I love you
01:10:34Deeply and forever
01:10:36Roger
01:10:43Roger
01:10:44Roger
01:10:45Roger Penrose
01:10:57Roger Penrose
01:10:59Stop
01:11:00You all right?
01:11:07What would it all look like?
01:11:09What?
01:11:10What if Einstein was right?
01:11:12About what?
01:11:13Pencil and some paper
01:11:14Chalk
01:11:18Time-space diagram
01:11:21What comes first?
01:11:23Make
01:11:23Time?
01:11:27You have to think about
01:11:28Reversing the direction of time
01:11:30Time going the other way
01:11:32What?
01:11:33What for?
01:11:34Go on
01:11:34Don't stop
01:11:35Go on
01:11:35Now
01:11:35The present us
01:11:36Here we are
01:11:37Looking back through time
01:11:39Light
01:11:40Dense matter
01:11:44In space
01:11:45Warping space-time
01:11:46Causing the light rays
01:11:48Bending the light rays
01:11:49Towards each other
01:11:50Look
01:11:51The past is perfect
01:11:54What are you saying?
01:11:56What if the whole of the universe
01:11:58Were trapped in a region
01:11:59Whose boundaries
01:11:59Drinks to zero
01:12:01A singularity
01:12:02In nothingness
01:12:02Sure, sir
01:12:04Words for collapsing
01:12:06Dying stars
01:12:07It proves that a singularity
01:12:09Must exist
01:12:09What if it works
01:12:11Could it work, Roger?
01:12:12What would it mean
01:12:13If it did?
01:12:14A collapse in reverse
01:12:15Which is?
01:12:15An explosion
01:12:16Back
01:12:39Sorry, what?
01:12:57What are you saying?
01:12:59Write it down
01:13:10Why don't you
01:13:13Write it down
01:13:14Trinity Hall
01:13:24Sorry, mate
01:13:25Trinity Hall
01:13:27Oh, right
01:13:29What's the matter
01:13:30With him?
01:13:39Have you heard of Bishop Usher?
01:13:4117th century
01:13:42He calculated the date
01:13:44Of the start of the universe
01:13:46How?
01:13:47By adding up
01:13:48All the ages of people
01:13:49In the Old Testament
01:13:49And how old is the universe?
01:13:54It started at some point
01:13:55In the night
01:13:55Of the 22nd of October
01:13:574004 BC
01:13:59So old
01:14:01So old
01:14:02Something I want to ask you
01:14:17Where was I going
01:14:18When I saw you
01:14:18At the station
01:14:19No
01:14:21Stephen
01:14:24Are you all right?
01:14:27Fine
01:14:27The thing is
01:14:31I was wondering
01:14:34Whether you consider
01:14:37Marrying me
01:14:38You probably want time
01:14:43To think about it
01:14:44I love you
01:14:45Does that mean
01:14:46You're about to say no?
01:14:50Time
01:14:50Time to think
01:14:53How old is it?
01:15:23Tchau, tchau.
01:15:53Tchau, tchau.
01:16:23Tchau, tchau.
01:16:53Tchau.
01:17:23Tchau.
01:17:53Tchau.
01:17:55Tchau.
01:17:57Tchau.
01:17:59Tchau.
01:18:01Tchau.
01:18:03Tchau.
01:18:05Tchau.
01:18:07Tchau.
01:18:09Tchau.
01:18:39Tchau.
01:18:41Tchau.
01:18:43Tchau.
01:18:45Tchau.
01:18:47Tchau.
01:18:49Tchau.
01:18:51Tchau.
01:18:53Tchau.
01:18:55Tchau.
01:18:57Tchau.
01:18:59Tchau.
01:19:01Tchau.
01:19:31Tchau.
01:19:41Tchau.
01:19:43Tchau.
01:19:45Tchau.
01:19:47Tchau.
01:19:49Tchau.
01:19:51Tchau.
01:19:53Tchau.
01:19:55Tchau.
01:19:57Tchau.
01:20:07Tchau.
01:20:09Tchau.
01:20:11Tchau.
01:20:13Tchau.
01:20:15Tchau.
01:20:17Boa tarde.
01:20:29Oh!
01:20:30Hello.
01:20:32Dane, women aren't allowed.
01:20:34No, não allowed.
01:20:35Against the rules.
01:20:38I'll...
01:20:39I'll go.
01:20:41I'll...
01:20:41Goodbye.
01:20:45I, uh...
01:20:47I have to go and see the bursar at Keyes.
01:20:52They've given me a fellowship.
01:20:57Are you coming?
01:21:14It's the same rule for everyone at Keyes.
01:21:16There's no special treatment when it comes to housing.
01:21:18I'm not like all the rest.
01:21:20That's what they all say.
01:21:21You listen to me.
01:21:23And you listen very carefully.
01:21:25This man cannot walk upstairs.
01:21:27His illness won't allow it.
01:21:28And his illness will get worse.
01:21:30He needs housing with easy access.
01:21:32And you are going to find it for him.
01:21:34Because if you don't, all the newspapers will hear about how the bursar of this college treats a man of huge courage, brilliant mind, and the capacity to imagine faith like a piece of nothing.
01:21:45Do you understand me?
01:21:46And he's going to be my husband.
01:21:47And he's going to be my husband.
01:21:48What he's done is to make Einstein work.
01:22:01He's made Einstein...
01:22:04There's a word that physicists like to use very occasionally.
01:22:10Beautiful.
01:22:13He's made Einstein beautiful.
01:22:14Yes, but what...
01:22:17What has he done?
01:22:20Your son has opened up something which I thought, we all thought, was closed.
01:22:27Einstein appeared to be predicting it, and then he turned away.
01:22:33There could have been a beginning.
01:22:34The universe may not always have been here.
01:22:45If you're right, which you're not, there should be some leftover radiation from the Big Bang, and somebody should have heard it.
01:22:52But they haven't, have they?
01:22:54I wonder why that could be.
01:22:56Could it be because it isn't there?
01:23:00Where's the fossil, Hawking?
01:23:02Where's the fossil?
01:23:04We have to go on.
01:23:23It connects.
01:23:25You understand?
01:23:27It goes right through Dachau.
01:23:30Right through childhood.
01:23:32Right through cockroaches and suitcases and...
01:23:34Right through America and the American dream, which I have lived.
01:23:40You understand me?
01:23:44This noise.
01:23:46This goddamn beautiful hiss.
01:23:51It connects.
01:23:52It's the sound of the beginning of time.
01:23:57The leftover heat from the Big Bang.
01:24:04The three degrees that hasn't cooled yet.
01:24:07It's everywhere.
01:24:07It's everywhere.
01:24:14It's all around us.
01:24:15It's 15 billion years old.
01:24:17And we found it.
01:24:19That's our discovery.
01:24:26We have to go get the prize, Arnold.
01:24:28What was there before the Big Bang?
01:24:48Well, whatever it was, it wasn't time or space or matter.
01:24:51There's room for God.
01:24:52There's room for God?
01:24:53Yes.
01:24:54In theory.
01:24:58So what now?
01:25:00I'm going to eat cran brulee and a huge number of chocolate truffles and fight very hard.
01:25:08To get you to see how wonderful Wagner is and how Brahms is not so wonderful.
01:25:13I meant with work.
01:25:15A theory of everything.
01:25:17I've been looking at the very big.
01:25:19And now I want to look at the very small and see how one may unify gravity and quantum mechanics.
01:25:27How long might a theory of everything take?
01:25:3020 years, no more than that.
01:25:32That fast?
01:25:34That fast.
01:25:38I believe in the possible.
01:25:39I believe small though we are, insignificant though we may be, we can reach a full understanding
01:25:49of the universe.
01:25:52You were right when you said you felt small looking up at all that out there.
01:25:57We are very, very small.
01:26:01But we are profoundly capable of very, very big things.
01:26:05Where are you going?
01:26:15Things to do.
01:26:18Things to do.
01:26:19Things to do.
01:26:35Can you hear me?
01:26:40Can you hear me?
01:26:46Can you hear me?
01:27:01Can you hear me?
01:27:03Tchau, tchau.
01:27:33E aí
01:28:03Tchau, tchau.
01:28:33E aí