Rosamund Pike stars as Marie Curie in the film Radioactive, now streaming on Amazon Prime.

A resolute young woman in Paris in the 1890s sets the scientific world ablaze with her revolutionary discoveries in Radioactive, a film about the life of Marie Curie, based on the 2010 graphic novel Radioactive: Marie & Pierre Curie, A Tale of Love and Fallout, by Lauren Redniss. Director Marjane Satrapi's film is part earnest biopic, part arthouse film, elevated by a luminous, intense, and riveting performance by Rosamund Pike (Gone Girl) as Marie Curie.

(Some spoilers below for those unfamiliar with the life of Marie Curie.)

Satrapi is perhaps best known for her powerful autobiographical memoir, Persepolis, depicting her childhood in Iran during the Islamic Revolution in graphic novel form, which she later adapted into an animated film. So it's not surprising that she would admire Redniss' graphic novel about Marie Curie. Still, Satrapi admitted in an interview that she was initially reluctant to take on the project. "I was like, why the hell would you make another script about Marie Curie? There are already four of them," she told WWD. In the end, she became "obsessed" with making the film, which she views as being as much about the aftermath of Marie Curie's discoveries as her life and science.

While Satrapi used the draft screenplay by Jack Thorne as the basis for her film, she also mined Marie's diaries and letters for material and met with the Curies' granddaughter, nuclear physicist Hélène Langevin-Joliot, to learn more about this singular woman. "I really tried to portray her as a human being," Satrapi told WWD. "She's not perfect and she doesn't do everything right—but who does?" (The American Institute of Physics has long maintained a detailed online exhibit, "Marie Curie and The Science of Radioactivity," for those keen to delve into the details. I also highly recommend Susan Quinn's 1996 biography Marie Curie: A Life and, of course, Redniss' wonderful graphic novel.)

Per the official premise: "Radioactive is the incredible, true story of Marie Skłodowska Curie and her ground-breaking scientific achievements that revolutionized medicine with her discovery of radium and polonium, ultimately changing the face of science forever. Marie was the first female to win the Nobel Prize and the first person in history to win the esteemed award twice."

The film opens in 1934 with a 66-year-old Marie (Pike) collapsing in her lab and being whisked off to the hospital. As she is wheeled down a corridor, we get glimpses of the woman's life, before settling on Marie as a young woman in Paris, keen to prove herself with her scientific research. From there, the story unfolds mostly chronologically. We see the prickly Marie clash with physicist Gabriel Lippman (Simon Russell Beale, Penny Dreadful)) over her frustrations with her laboratory space; his response is to evict her entirely. A chance encounter with Pierre Curie (Sam Riley, Maleficent) leads to the latter offering to share his own laboratory.

Elemental discoveries

  • Rosamund Pike gives a luminous portrayal of Marie Curie. YouTube/Irène
  • Sam Riley plays Pierre Curie. YouTube/Amazon Prime
  • Love blooms between two passionate scientists. YouTube/Amazon Prime
  • Wedding day. YouTube/Amazon Prime
  • The radiant couple. YouTube/Amazon Prime
  • A honeymoon bicycling in the countryside. YouTube/Amazon Prime
  • Back to work! Marie working with pitchblende. YouTube/Amazon Prime
  • Science as manual labor. YouTube/Amazon Prime
  • Analyzing the remnants after processing. YouTube/Amazon Prime
  • A new element. YouTube/Amazon Prime
  • Pro tip: Do not sleep with a radioactive element, however pretty that green glow may seem. YouTube/Amazon Prime
  • Radium-inspired dream state in the wake of Pierre's tragic death. YouTube/Amazon Prime

Pierre is fascinated by the science and equally entranced by the passion and temerity of the woman. He proposes a research partnership, offering her the use of a new type of electrometer he and his brother Jacques have invented, capable of measuring extremely low electrical currents—precisely what was required to detect the very faint currents in air that are evidence of uranium rays. Love blooms, and the two marry in a small civil ceremony. (Marie's navy blue wedding dress proves equally serviceable in her laboratory work.)

After a honeymoon spent bicycling through the countryside, the lovers resume their experiments, eventually announcing the discovery of two new elements: polonium and radium. They make this momentous announcement before their academic peers, with Marie announcing, "We are here to tell you that you have fundamentally misunderstood the atom." It was Marie who coined the term radioactivity and proposed the revolutionary hypothesis that, while most atoms are "finite and stable," some are not, "and in their instability, they emit rays."

The film continues to follow Marie's life, from Pierre's tragic death—he was run down by a horse-drawn cart while crossing the street—and her scandalous affair with married physicist (and Pierre's former student) Paul Langevin (Aneurin Barnard, Dunkirk), to winning a second Nobel Prize (in chemistry). We see her 18-year-old daughter, Irène (Anya Taylor-Joy, Split, Glass), persuade her to help bring portable X-ray units onto French battlefields during World War I, before we come full circle to Curie's death, with one final shot centered on a photograph of the famous 1927 Solvay Conference. Marie Curie is the only woman pictured in this meeting of the world's most notable physicists, on hand to discuss what was then the fledgling field of quantum theory.

Most of the liberties taken with the history involve condensing timelines to streamline the narrative—pretty much de rigueur for any biopic. The Curies had already been married for six months when Wilhelm Roentgen discovered X-rays (winning the very first Nobel Prize in physics in 1901). Henri Becquerel published his insight that uranium salts emitted rays that would fog a photographic plate in early 1896. Becquerel's uranium rays so fascinated Marie that she made them the focus of her own research.

Much of Marie's early life in Poland is, at best, briefly relayed in flashbacks during Radioactive, including Marie's mother dying from tuberculosis when Marie was just 11. Meanwhile, a youthful, failed romance with the son of an affluent family with whom Marie served as governess is never mentioned at all.

Satrapi has cleverly woven in details not just of the science of that age but also its art and broader intellectual circles. Case in point: it is true that the Curies greatly admired the American modern dance pioneer Loie Fuller, who was all the rage in Paris at the time. Fuller was also a pioneer in theatrical lighting, using lights of different colors to illuminate the silk fabrics she wore during performances. Her famous "Serpentine Dance" was captured on film by the Lumière brothers in 1897, and it would inspire choreography for Taylor Swift's Reputation tour more than a century later.

The admiration was mutual: Fuller was so captivated by the Curies' radium experiments that she wrote to them in 1905, asking about the possibility of making a costume out of radium (she was unaware of just how limited a supply was in existence). Marie politely advised against it. Undeterred, Fuller worked fluorescent salts into a black gauze dress that she wore to perform her "Radium Dance," creating the illusion of twinkling stars or ghostly lights surrounding her as she swirled on a darkened stage. Fuller's striking visuals are recreated to great effect in a couple of scenes in Radioactive.

A scandalous scientist

  • Marie has a tense relationship with Professor Gabriel Lippman (Simon Russell Beale). YouTube/Amazon Prime
  • Nonetheless, she becomes the first female professor at the Sorbonne. YouTube/Amazon Prime
  • A packed house for her first lecture. YouTube/Amazon Prime
  • The public turns against her for an ill-advised affair with the married Paul Langevin. YouTube/Amazon Prime
  • Judgmental much? YouTube/Amazon Prime
  • A resolute Marie Curie in Stockholm to receive her second Nobel Prize. YouTube/Amazon Prime
  • Women in the audience lead a standing ovation. YouTube/Amazon Prime
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