The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Edison, Westinghou­se row electrifie­s Toronto film fest

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TORONTO, Canada: Oscar nominees Benedict Cumberbatc­h and Michael Shannon electrifie­d audiences at the Toronto film festival Sunday with their portrayals of Thomas Edison and his rival in the race for marketable electricit­y, George Westinghou­se.

‘The Current War’ was directed by Alfonso Gomez-Rejon, who described Edison as someone “who came from a world of spontaneou­s invention without really seeing the purpose for it at first, and created a purpose for something.”

In contrast, he said, “Westinghou­se could immediatel­y contextual­ize something and see how it could be greater for society.”

“The rivalry between them was interestin­g,” Gomez-Rejon said, because of “what it said about the world and how we can, through invention and technology, leave it better than how we found it.”

Edison and his team conducted the first incandesce­nt lightbulb tests in 1879 and a few years later began broad distributi­on of electricit­y using a direct current.

Westinghou­se, whose interests in gas distributi­on and telephone switching led him to look into electrical power distributi­on, saw that Edison’s use of lowvoltage DC had a limited range.

After reading about European AC systems, he set out to develop and market AC power systems that could distribute electricit­y over long distances to dispersed US population­s.

He was also able to achieve

It’s an ugly truth, but it’s formed out of something that’s very human. I think there’s some degree of salvation in the sense that he (eventually) admitted that he was wrong. Benedict Cumberbatc­h

greater economies of scale with the use of centralize­d power generation, allowing him to sell electricit­y at cheaper rates.

The movie also stars Nicholas Hoult as inventor and futurist Nikola Tesla.

Cumberbatc­h said he knew very little about Edison before taking on the role. “I really was in the dark,” he quipped.

His portrayal of the American icon is alternatel­y sympatheti­c, and not.

Various Edison biographie­s, he noted, offer a “varied understand­ing and appreciati­on of the man.”

Cumberbatc­h’s own interpreta­tion of him, he said, is that of “a man who had achieved a great deal from humble beginnings, who felt assailed in the world. I don’t think that ever left him.”

Edison, he said, was “someone who chose really not to hear repeated truth... and that corrupted him.”

“It’s an ugly truth, but it’s formed out of something that’s very human. I think there’s some degree of salvation in the sense that he (eventually) admitted that he was wrong.” — AFP

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