mental health movies
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mental health movies
I cleared this post with Dale.
I recently watched the movie Sybil, starring Sally Field, for the first time. I was really fascinated. I'm wondering if anybody here has thoughts on the movie and any recommended movies that are similar to it, which deal with problems of the mind? The only other one I've watched is Girl, Interrupted.
I recently watched the movie Sybil, starring Sally Field, for the first time. I was really fascinated. I'm wondering if anybody here has thoughts on the movie and any recommended movies that are similar to it, which deal with problems of the mind? The only other one I've watched is Girl, Interrupted.
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I remember seeing Sybil on tv a long time ago. Left a pretty good impression on me, I guess, since there aren't too many old tv movies I would be able to remember such distinct images of.
Nowadays I seem to avoid the heavy stuff, except I have watched Away From Her, and have another called A Song For Martin on my Netflix queue. But I think it comes down to my being interested in themes that are very close to me, because I kind of have no choice, whereas I still don't want to immerse myself in hard life themes that I can avoid.
I would rather watch a film on mental health though, than on seamy, gritty--no matter how artistically compelling--violence*. I guess I pick and choose my harsh doses of reality.
*Sweeney Todd does not count. Too over-the-top to be real.
Blood Diamond would count, consequently I have not seen it.
Nowadays I seem to avoid the heavy stuff, except I have watched Away From Her, and have another called A Song For Martin on my Netflix queue. But I think it comes down to my being interested in themes that are very close to me, because I kind of have no choice, whereas I still don't want to immerse myself in hard life themes that I can avoid.
I would rather watch a film on mental health though, than on seamy, gritty--no matter how artistically compelling--violence*. I guess I pick and choose my harsh doses of reality.
*Sweeney Todd does not count. Too over-the-top to be real.
Blood Diamond would count, consequently I have not seen it.
- cowtime
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One Flew Over the Cuckcoo's Nest, while not like Sybil, is a great one, mental illness being only one of the themes.
I remember watching Sybil when it originally aired and being spellbound. (those cat heads were scary too) Within the last year I watched part of it again with my daughter. She couldn't believe that it was based on a real person and that a mother could be so horribly evil to her child. It is an unforgettable film.
I remember watching Sybil when it originally aired and being spellbound. (those cat heads were scary too) Within the last year I watched part of it again with my daughter. She couldn't believe that it was based on a real person and that a mother could be so horribly evil to her child. It is an unforgettable film.
"Let low-country intruder approach a cove
And eyes as gray as icicle fangs measure stranger
For size, honesty, and intent."
John Foster West
And eyes as gray as icicle fangs measure stranger
For size, honesty, and intent."
John Foster West
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I saw "Sybil" many, many moons ago and barely remember it.
Some other movies that come to mind include the already mentioned "A Beautiful Mind," dealing with delusions and hallucinations. More tangential was "K Pax," which is set in a mental hospital, though it is ambiguous whether the main character is mentally ill.
Some more: Jack Nicholson has his famous role in "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest," in which some say the patients are portrayed as more sane than their keepers, and Nicholson's more recent "As Good As It Gets" which is not really about mental illness, but the character does have obsessive-compulsive disorder.
One of the most recent movies is "Canvas," with a schizophrenic main character. I haven't seen it, but it was a big deal for the mental health community. The NY Times review says "Canvas" is sugar coated, but that a more realistic movie would be too painful for most audiences to want to go see. The movie’s title refers both to [character] Mary’s therapeutic painting, which, she explains, quiets the voices inside her head, and to John’s construction of a sailboat in the backyard as a present for her. Emmline might be interested in "Canvas," after her thread about the painter and his self portraits as his mind slipped away into dementia.
With the recent news coverage of certain high profile celebrities, "The Doors," with Val Kilmer as Jim Morrison can give a glimpse into what might be going on.
Some other movies that come to mind include the already mentioned "A Beautiful Mind," dealing with delusions and hallucinations. More tangential was "K Pax," which is set in a mental hospital, though it is ambiguous whether the main character is mentally ill.
Some more: Jack Nicholson has his famous role in "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest," in which some say the patients are portrayed as more sane than their keepers, and Nicholson's more recent "As Good As It Gets" which is not really about mental illness, but the character does have obsessive-compulsive disorder.
One of the most recent movies is "Canvas," with a schizophrenic main character. I haven't seen it, but it was a big deal for the mental health community. The NY Times review says "Canvas" is sugar coated, but that a more realistic movie would be too painful for most audiences to want to go see. The movie’s title refers both to [character] Mary’s therapeutic painting, which, she explains, quiets the voices inside her head, and to John’s construction of a sailboat in the backyard as a present for her. Emmline might be interested in "Canvas," after her thread about the painter and his self portraits as his mind slipped away into dementia.
With the recent news coverage of certain high profile celebrities, "The Doors," with Val Kilmer as Jim Morrison can give a glimpse into what might be going on.
- Walden
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Psycho by Alfred Hitchcock
Have you seen the old version? http://www.archive.org/details/SweeneyToddemmline wrote: *Sweeney Todd does not count. Too over-the-top to be real.
Reasonable person
Walden
Walden
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Sybil's mother was also very mentally sick. Who tore the cat's head off? I couldn't figure that out.cowtime wrote:One Flew Over the Cuckcoo's Nest, while not like Sybil, is a great one, mental illness being only one of the themes.
I remember watching Sybil when it originally aired and being spellbound. (those cat heads were scary too) Within the last year I watched part of it again with my daughter. She couldn't believe that it was based on a real person and that a mother could be so horribly evil to her child. It is an unforgettable film.
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I couldn't tell you how many times that I've read and seen Sybil. It doesn't matter how cut the cat's head off but if I had to guess, it was Sybil's mom. Missy is right the book is better but I also think Sally Field did absolutely brilliant playing that role.
I'm glad mental illness is finally coming out in the open.
I'm glad mental illness is finally coming out in the open.
Rose tint my world. Keep me safe from my trouble and pain.
白飞梦
白飞梦
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I was surprized that the movie lasted as long as it did.
I never was a fan of Sally Field until I watched that movie. She does such an awesome job, it's creepy. I watched a special DVD feature (from 2006, I think) where the filmmakers say that they almost didn't cast Sally Field, as she came in for her interview at lunch time or something like that.
I never was a fan of Sally Field until I watched that movie. She does such an awesome job, it's creepy. I watched a special DVD feature (from 2006, I think) where the filmmakers say that they almost didn't cast Sally Field, as she came in for her interview at lunch time or something like that.
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I remember my mother watching that movie when I was about 6. I was supposed to be in bed, asleep, but I could hear the music from the movie, and it scared the living daylights out of me. So, since I couldn't sleep, I sat at the top of the stairs sobbing, and begging my mother to turn it off. I can remember it like it was yesterday, and I still am unable to watch the movie because of it, despite getting over my fear of scary movies long ago. In other words, I don't sob and beg Mr Izz to turn his intense movies off...this is definitely a good thing, at least in his eyes
Someday, everything is gonna be diff'rent
When I paint my masterpiece.
When I paint my masterpiece.
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At the risk of breaking my own rule about medical posts--and asking that we all avoid giving medical advice on the forums--it might be useful for people to know that there is a tremendous amount of controversy among the mental health professions about multiple personality disorder. There are believers and their are skeptics and there are agnostics. I am in the latter group, leaning toward the skeptic group. Actually, the controversy peaked some years ago.mutepointe wrote:I couldn't tell you how many times that I've read and seen Sybil. It doesn't matter how cut the cat's head off but if I had to guess, it was Sybil's mom. Missy is right the book is better but I also think Sally Field did absolutely brilliant playing that role.
I'm glad mental illness is finally coming out in the open.
Part of the difficulty comes from the Three Faces of Eve, Sybil, and other fictional and semi-fictional pieces that are so much a part of pop culture. This has created a huge suggestibility problem among the most, well, suggestible people. For awhile there, there was a good bit of malingering regarding that diagnosis for people accused of violent crimes. (That seems to have leveled off as we've gotten further out from Sybil and it's spawn.) Also, MPD became a huge component of the Satanic Ritual Abuse hysteria which is now entirely discredited. Adding to the public's confusion, of course, is the lingering confusion of the terms "schizophrenia" and "multiple personality disorder." The former is sadly all too common, but has nothing in common with MPD. In 30 years of involvement as a student and a professional in mental health, half of which was spent in a tertiary care hospital setting, I never met anyone with MPD, nor have any of the colleagues I've worked with closely along the way. (I did speak a few times with a woman who said she had it, as a result of satanic abuse, and she subsequently came to understand that she did not have the disorder at all and it was shaped up in her by a therapist who was all about MPD.
With the exception of some misguided professionals who were highly involved in the SRA/MPD fiasco, I can't tell you how rare it is to hear professionals talk about these alleged cases. I'm open to the idea that this diagnosis exists, is rare, and most likely doesn't resemble the Hollywood versions much at all. But, I doubt even this. I think it is largely a culture-bound (North America) and iatrogenic phenomena.
Not to rain on the Sally Field parade or anything.