The Theory of Everything - videos, teasers and stills from filming

All videos, teasers and footage from the filming of the film "The Theory of Everything"
The Theory of Everything (2014)
Timing: 2:3 (123 min)
The Theory of Everything - TMDB rating
7.833/10
11044
The Theory of Everything - Kinopoisk rating
7.939/10
231016
The Theory of Everything - IMDB rating
7.7/10
507000
Watch film The Theory of Everything | Pop Up Trailer
Pop Up Trailer
English
2:40
Watch film The Theory of Everything | Stars
Stars
English
0:32
Watch film The Theory of Everything | Believe
Believe
English
0:31
Watch film The Theory of Everything | Barrage
Barrage
English
0:31
Watch film The Theory of Everything | Now Playing
Now Playing
English
0:17

What's left behind the scenes

  • The film is based on the memoirs of Jane Hawking, "Travelling to Infinity: My life with Stephen" (2007).
  • Actor Adam Godley, who played a cameo role as a doctor at Cambridge Hospital, portrayed the father of Stephen Hawking in the film "Hawking" with Benedict Cumberbatch, which was released ten years before this picture.
  • Harry Lloyd, playing one of Stephen’s friends, is the great-great-great-grandson of writer Charles Dickens. Felicity Jones played the lead female role in the biopic about Dickens, "The Invisible Woman" (2012).
  • The original title of the film is "The Theory of Everything".
  • After watching the film, Stephen Hawking sent director James Marsh an email, in which he praised Eddie Redmayne’s portrayal of him, saying that at times it felt as though he was seeing himself on screen.
  • In addition to his voice (which is copyright protected), Stephen Hawking also provided the filmmakers with his Medal of Freedom and his dissertation.
  • Before filming began, Eddie Redmayne met Stephen Hawking only once. During their three-hour conversation, Redmayne was unable to ask Hawking a single personal question. Ultimately, he found other ways to prepare for his role. The actor lost around 7 kilograms and trained with a dance instructor for four months to learn how to control his body. He visited 40 people suffering from amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. And during filming, he remained motionless with a hunched back even between takes, which ultimately led to the actor developing a curvature of the spine.
  • It took screenwriter Anthony McCarten 10 years to bring this story to the big screen. Of those, he spent three years trying to convince Jane Hawking to agree to a film adaptation of her book.
  • Just like Stephen Hawking, Eddie Redmayne studied at Cambridge University.
  • The film's soundtrack was recorded at Abbey Road Studios.
  • Initially, Lesley Manville was cast in the role of Queen Elizabeth II, but her character was ultimately removed from the film.
  • The phrase "Daisy, Daisy, give me your answer, do," which Hawking uses while experimenting with his new speech device, is taken from the lyrics of the song "Daisy Bell (Bicycle Built for Two)", written by Harry Dacre in 1892. This song was used for the very first demonstration of computer-synthesized speech in 1961.
  • When Jane Hawking looks at Jonathan Jones standing on the runway, another aircraft (with separate turbofan engines) can be seen in the foreground – it’s a modified Boeing 747 used in the film *Casino Royale* (2006). This aircraft is not airworthy and is located at the airfield in Dunsfold (Surrey, UK). Before Jane gets on the plane, snowy mountain peaks can be seen in the background, which were obviously added using computer graphics, as there are no mountains in Dunsfold.
  • The phone number on the napkin begins with the Cambridge telephone code – 0223 – which was only introduced several years after the events depicted in the film.
  • During the lecture in London, three requirements of the Hawking-Penrose theorem can be seen on the upper board behind Penrose. This theorem was not published until 1970.
  • When Jane receives a letter from Stephen, a microphone reflection can be seen in the upper right corner of the screen.
  • When Stephen looks at the napkin on which Jane wrote her number, it can be noticed that the handwriting differs in different frames.
  • When Stephen Hawking's life is rewound in reverse, it is visible that the scenes of him falling ill at the Wagner concert and the footage of his surgery are mixed up.
  • In the scene at the summit, after the release of his book, Stephen Hawking sees a young woman drop her pen. Afterwards, in his imagination, he gets up from his wheelchair to pick up the pen. However, in the overall shot he picks it up with his right hand, while in the close-up – with his left.
  • When the train traveling from Cambridge to London is shown, it features liveries from the southern region, which are not found on trains running the Cambridge-London route.
  • When Jane is talking to Stephen on the phone, a ring can be seen on the ring finger of her left hand. Later, during the croquet game, the ring appears on the ring finger of her right hand, after which it disappears completely until the scene of their wedding.
  • During the ball, the constellations Sagittarius and Scorpio are visible in the night sky, however, at the latitudes of Cambridge, these constellations cannot be seen at such an altitude above the horizon.
  • When Hawking is shown the laboratory in Cambridge, he is told that it was there that Rutherford became the first person to split the atom. In reality, this happened when Rutherford was head of the physics department at the University of Manchester.
  • In the scene where family members drive to Bordeaux in a car, they are driving a Volvo 740 (745) station wagon. At the same time, the film shows that Timothy was still a very young child at that time. This car only went into production in 1984, while Timothy Hawking was born in 1979.
  • In the scene where Jane helps Stephen put on a sweater, at the moment Stephen is filmed from the back, the sweater is already on his shoulders, and in the next moment, when filmed from the front, the sweater is only on his neck.
  • The film is based on Jane Hawking’s memoir, “Travelling to Infinity: My life with Stephen” (2007).
  • Actor Adam Godley, who played the episodic role of a doctor at Cambridge Hospital, played Stephen Hawking’s father in “Hawking” with Benedict Cumberbatch, which was released ten years before this film.
  • Harry Lloyd, playing one of Stephen’s friends, is the great-great-great-grandson of writer Charles Dickens. Felicity Jones played the leading female role in the Dickens biopic “The Invisible Woman” (2012).
  • The original title of the film is “The Theory of Everything”.
  • The phrase “Daisy, Daisy, give me your answer, do,” which Hawking uses while experimenting with his new speech device, is taken from the lyrics of “Daisy Bell (Bicycle Built for Two),” written by Harry Dacre in 1892. This song was used for the very first demonstration of computer-synthesized speech in 1961.
  • When Jane Hawking looks at Jonathan Jones standing on the runway, another aircraft (with separate turbofan engines) can be seen in the foreground – it’s a modified Boeing 747 that was used in the film “Casino Royale” (2006). This aircraft is not airworthy and is located at the airfield in Dunsfold (Surrey, UK). Before Jane boards the plane, snowy mountain peaks can be seen in the background, which were clearly added using computer graphics, as there are no mountains in Dunsfold.
Did you like the film?

© ACMODASI, 2010-2026

All rights reserved.
The materials (trademarks, videos, images and text) contained on this site are the property of their respective owners. It is forbidden to use any materials from this site without prior agreement with their owner.
When copying text and graphic materials (videos, images, text, screenshots of pages) from this site, an active link to the site www.acmodasi.in must necessarily accompany such material.
We are not responsible for any information posted on this site by third parties.