DISQUS

The Film Talk: Mental Illness and the Movies

  • Catherine Grant · 2 months ago
    Thanks for recommending the Glenn Close article. Thought I'd flag up a related blog post of links to discussions about/studies of 'Psychiatry, Psychoanalysis, and Psychology at the Cinema' (http://filmstudiesforfree.blogspot.com/2009/09/...). Have fun in Nshville!
  • The_Baron · 2 months ago
    Hey, dudes. Searched the most recent posts and didn't see a mention of Paranormal Activity. Is there a chance there will be a review for this movie?
  • Jett Loe · 2 months ago
    We'll see what we can do :)
  • Phil · 2 months ago
    Not sure if this is the type of mental illness you had in mind, but I have heard "Away From Her" is a touching story dealing with Alzheimer's (one which I have found myself unable to watch due to personal experience w/ the disease).

    If you are referring more to "psychosis" in movies, how about "The Fisher King"? Some people cringe just at the mere mention of Robin Williams, but I thought the movie handled the story compassionately.

    I'll throw one controversial one out there: "Psycho". While it could be argued that Norman Bates is the same murderous monster that Close argues against, but Hitchcock does not end his movie with the "villain" meeting his horrific come-uppance so the audience can applaud at his demise, but last seen in a hospital, presumably to get help/treatment (though sequels blow that up by exploiting the Bates' franchise created by the movie's popularity - not Hitchcock's fault, however).
  • kiley · 2 months ago
    not that this has all that much to do with the post, but if you like 'one flew over the cukoo's nest' (and i DO) dont' read the book. please. i beg you. It will change the movie for you and not in a good way...not in a good way at all.

    but to further explore the question put before us - movies can make u sick. Especially if you're emotionally immersed and invested in what's happening before you. They can affect ur mood and seeing open displays of 'mental instability' can send u reeling in that direction. But i suppose they can 'heal' too, which is why I think it's good to keep a few back up movies to 'cleanse the mental palate' or act as a chaser after you watch the ones that are...'unstable'...like Quills...sheesh...
  • birgittaf · 2 months ago
    Hi. I think "A beautiful mind (2001) about Nobel prize-winner John Nash, who suffered from schizophrenia gives a rather good picture of how the symptoms start. In the beginning you think that everything is actually happening to him, then you get to sense his doubts, his ambivalence...Of course some facts are altered, but you see a loveable, suffering, annoying, complicated genious of a man, struggling with his life as we all do.
  • OneLittleBird · 2 months ago
    hey dr

    i dunno if i ever passed this on, but i've meant to on several occasions over the years - the poor testing and subsequent rewriting of, 'Fatal Attraction' Glenn Close mentions is recounted in some detail (in the context of a feminist critique) in Susan Faludi's book, Backlash. makes for disturbing reading.
    the test preview reactions (as i recall) exposed not simply the overt misogynist exploitation of mental illness but of the audience wanting the nuclear family to remain firmly intact and Michael Douglas's character to be, to all intents and purposes, exonerated for his infidelity.
    it makes for disturbing reading as she tracks the script changes. absolutely backs up Close's comments. and then some.

    and something i didn't know, that a google search just offered,

    "One powerful section of Backlash is devoted to the movie Fatal Attraction, which Faludi says both represented and reinforced backlash resentments and fears about women. Faludi paints director Adrian Lyne as a sexist bully who badgered and humiliated actresses, and went to great lengths to transform the originally feminist script for Fatal Attraction into a fable in which the uppity single woman is violently suppressed. In Lyne's most recent movie, Indecent Proposal, he takes a passing shot at Faludi - the camera zooms in on a copy of Backlash in the hands of a blonde and apparently air-headed secretary. In the next scene the secretary is shown vamping in front of the movie's hero. So much for feminist enlightenment."
    (http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1295/is_...)

    there was an comment piece by Eliabeth Wurtzel in the Guardian earlier this year on the theme of female stalkers in film,
    http://www.guardian.co.uk/film/2009/may/29/fema...

    hope you're enjoying Nashville

    1LB
  • garethhiggins75 · 2 months ago
    Thanks for the comment one little bird - that's fascinating stuff. I suppose one of the upsides is that the 'backlash' today would be far more mainstreamed if a film such as 'FA' were to be made again on the same terms.

    Nashville is great - am in Bongo East for a bit before heading down to TFT central for a screening.