Preview

Forrest Gump

Powerful Essays
Open Document
Open Document
3984 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Forrest Gump
Beatriz Vera Posek

J Med Mov 2 (2006): 80-88

JMM
Insanity and Cinema: Keys to understand a complicated affair
Beatriz Vera Poseck
Psicología Clínica. Universidad Complutense de Madrid (Spain).
Correspondence: Beatriz Vera Poseck. Psicología Clínica. Universidad Complutense de Madrid (Spain). e-mail: beatrizvposeck@yahoo.es

Received 16 July 2006; accepted 24 July 2006

Summary
Psychopathology and mental disturbances have always been prevalent in cinema because they add an element of drama and mystery. Films portraying mentally disturbed characters like Dr. Dippy´s Sanitarium (1906) or Das Kabinett des Dr. Caligari (1919) by Robert Wiener were released only a short time after the Lumière brothers had invented the cinematographer. Since then, there are a large number of films whose plot and intrigue are based on insanity and its manifestations. The list grows steadily every year. This article is a review of some of the mental disturbances that have been portrayed in films. Its main purpose is to establish sensible choices and mistakes that have been committed while attempting to address the bottomless world of madness. Keywords: Mental Disturbances, Prejudice, Dissociative Identity Disorder, Amnesia, Psychopathy, Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder, Mental Retardation, Autism.

Of all the disturbances being listed in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-IV-TR)1 only a few of them have not yet been portrayed in films. Cinema has certainly been fascinated by insanity and its manifestations, and psychiatric disorders have provided film directors and scriptwriters with a stream of material for their scripts, action, and themes. Taking that interest into account, it is necessary to reflect on the vision of mental disturbances that has been transmitted by cinema to the public in general. For most average citizens the only contact they may have with the psychiatric reality is through cinema; hence, films are their one - yet strong -



References: 1.- American Psychiatric Association APA. Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders DSM-IV-TR 4th ed.. Washington, DC.: American Psychiatric Pub, Inc. 2000. 2.- Vera Posek B. Imágenes de la locura. La psicopatología en el cine. Madrid: Calamar Ediciones; 2006. 3.- Treffert DA. Extraordinary People: Understanding Savant Syndrome Omaha: Backinprint.com/iUniverse.com; 2000. 4.-Treffert, D. A. Rain Man, the Movie / Rain Man, Real Life. Wisconsin Medical Society [cited 2005 may 10]. [about 6 p.] Available from: http://www.wisconsinmedicalsociety.org/savant/rainman.cfm 5.- The internet movie database [database on the Internet]. The Crowded Room (2006) [cited 2005 may 10]. Available from: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0411256 88 © Ediciones Universidad de Salamanca

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    The name of the movie I chose to do this assignment on is Fight Club released October 15, 1999. I choose this movie because the main character has several disorders that the text discusses. Ranging from insomnia, dissociative identity disorder (DID), to hallucinations. I believe the main mental illness implied throughout the movie was (DID). He surfed from extreme hallucinations which caused him to see his other personality as a real person, who was actually his best friend named Tyler Durdnt. He was so unaware that he had a disorder he would actually argue and get into fistfights with Tyler. Which turns out he was actually fighting himself.…

    • 471 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Girl Interrupted (1999) is a film depicting a youthful female in the 1960s battling with the instability of her own emotional sickness (Mangold, (n.d.)). With the influence of her parents, Susanna Kayson concedes herself into a psychiatric and is later determined to have Borderline Personality Disorder. Her fight demonstrates that those agonies from a psychiatric disorder may not generally meet the cliché picture depicted by the overall population. Other characters in this film did a fabulous depiction of symptoms of sicknesses, for example, an extreme dietary issue, grandiose fantasies, sociopathic propensities, and bipolar disorder. However, the actual diagnoses are unclear. The film demonstrated the individual disappointment and perplexity required in understanding one's disorder in a period when society needed much knowledge into a psychiatric disorder. This paper goes for examining the character's diagnosis regarding the DSM-IV, discussing about the obvious etiology of the…

    • 1465 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    This interesting movie had many twist and turns that always kept you on the edge of your seat. The…

    • 484 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    When people on the street were asked what they know about schizophrenia, majority answered with negative connotations saying that schizophrenics were, “evil,” or, “unpredictable.” There was a study done that reviewed 41 movies in Hollywood that portrayed a character with schizophrenia. In the majority of these films, most of the characters portrayed…

    • 882 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Forrest Gump

    • 1081 Words
    • 5 Pages

    Hollywood accounting can be every bit as creative as a good movie script. At least, that is what some lawyers and journalists seem to be telling us. According to news reports, the hit movie Forrest Gump, which won “Best Picture of 1994” honors at the Academy Awards, claimed a worldwide theatrical gross of $661 million through May of 1995. That amount excludes videocassette and soundtrack revenues, and it doesn’t include licensing fees of Forrest Gump products such as wristwatches, ping-pong paddles and shrimp cookbooks. Yet, according to Paramount Studios, the film project lost $56 million dollars on a box office gross of $382 million through December, 1994 (see Exhibit 1).…

    • 1081 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Forrest Gump

    • 452 Words
    • 2 Pages

    I has chosen Forrest Gump to read, as am big fan of the Oscar-winning movie adapted from the novel. Actually, when we finished reading 10 chapters of the novel, I found that it was a different story, but the book was still a page-turner.…

    • 452 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Forrest Gump

    • 758 Words
    • 4 Pages

    "Life is like a box of chocolates...You never know what you're going to get" says the main character Forrest in the beginning of the movie. Forrest Gump is the story of a man who overcomes numerous obstacles throughout different stages of his life and always seems to see the brighter side of things in the process. Through the movie’s entirety, outstanding performances from various award winning actors give this film’s involved and interesting plot a sense of realism that is far superior to that of other dramatic movies. Forrest Gump is about a simple man’s journey through complicated times; he has an IQ of 75 at the movie's start and stays pretty much on that level all the way through. His trove of facts increases, but his basic methodology of handling the world never changes. As a boy, with braces on his legs, he peers at life and expects little more than to be heard and acknowledged, and the first person aside from his doting mother to do that with him is his girlfriend.…

    • 758 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Forrest Gump

    • 1114 Words
    • 5 Pages

    In the movie, "Forrest Gump," the plot is developed through the Tom Hanks Character through out the movie. The movie is about the life of a man named Forrest Gump. This movie was a sad, but enticing movie that started off with the main character Forrest Gump sitting on a bench waiting for a bus, and telling his life story to total strangers that are sitting next to him waiting for there bus. Forrest Gump is a slow individual that lived an interesting life. Forrest was not a normal individual, but lived more of a normal life then others in the movie did. He was a happy individual that never let anything, or anyone come in the way of him. There were only two things in life that he loved, Jennie and his mother, then when his child was born, his child. The movie starts off with Forrest sitting on a bench, waiting for his bus while eating chocolates, telling his life story to the individual next to him.…

    • 1114 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Forrest Gump

    • 791 Words
    • 4 Pages

    Forrest Gump was one of Paramount’s biggest hit movies of 1994. In 1995 it was nominated for 13 categories of the Oscar awards and it won six including best picture, best director and best actor awards. One analyst estimated that the film could generate as much as $350 million cash flow for Viacom, Inc., Paramount’ parent company. The film took nine years to make it to the big screen and the script was then thought as unlikely material for a runway hit movie.…

    • 791 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Title

    • 918 Words
    • 4 Pages

    Over the past years more and more movies are made and respectively more and more people are used to watch to them. Although films are a medium for entertainment, they are also a medium to transmit information about any field. Recent years, many movies have been made about psychological disorders. Much research attention has been grown through the past last years on mental illness and media (M. Anderson, 2003). This interest is because the representation of mental illness through movies can have a significant effect on the public (McKeown & Clancy, 1995 as cited in M. Anderson, 2003). The film we are going to talk about is the "Beautiful Mind". This film is a true story and it portrays the life of John Nash, a nobelist mathematician, who had schizophrenia. The story also includes characteristics of a love story, between John Nash (Russel Crow) and his wife Alicia (Jennifer Connelly). The Beautiful Mind has been attacked for presenting myths about schizophrenia (Wilkinson, 2002 & David, 2002), but is it right? The movie A Beautiful Mind provides a realistic view of schizophrenia and we are going to explore this by the symptoms and the treatment of this mental illness. The films in general have a positive effect on the public's perception as they are informed about things that they do not know at all. In some cases this is exactly what makes people to be misinformed. As somebody does not know something about a mental illness, the film makers can present the exact mental illness in the way they want and as a result people who experience…

    • 918 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Forrest Gump

    • 984 Words
    • 4 Pages

    Forrest Gump - The charmed life of Forrest Gump has led him practically everywhere else, from the White House (where Presidents Kennedy, Johnson and Nixon appear to be greeting him amiably) to an Alabama boarding house (where he give pelvis-shaking lessons to a guest, the as-yet-unknown Elvis Presley).…

    • 984 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Forrest Gump

    • 704 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Based on the 1986 novel of the same name by Winston Groom, Forrest Gump is a 1994 American comedy-drama film, starring Tom Hanks, Robin Wright Penn,Gary Sinise, Mykelti Williamson, and Sally Field. It is a story of Forrest Gump’s epicjourney through life meeting historical figures, influencing popular culture, and experiencing first-hand historic events of the late 20th century while being largely unaware of their significance, due to his borderline mental retardation.…

    • 704 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    huya

    • 1392 Words
    • 6 Pages

    This movie is based on a mental hospital/prison, so most of people in it have one kind or another abnormality. Most mental illness patient will hold multiple disorders, like Andrew’s also has persecution mania and proclivity for violence. Andrew is a serious DID (Dissociative Identity Disorder) patient who suffered the war and fratricidal, also with propensity to violence and paranoia. This movie describes the last psychopharmacological treatment, role play treatment, which cued him finally.ukiyuiyfffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffff-…

    • 1392 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Forrest Gump

    • 576 Words
    • 3 Pages

    He was rewarded by three Presidents of the United States, won the Congressional Medal of Honor, and built a multi-million dollar company! Who is this mystery man? The most unlikely hero of all times ,Forrest Gump. Whether, because the thought of his beloved Jenny or his best friend Babba help him to keep on going. Forrest Gump went from underdog to the most unlikely hero in more than one occasion. Forrest, saved Lieutenant Dan from death, kept his promises to Babba, and inspire million when he ran across the nation.…

    • 576 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Forrest Gump

    • 77365 Words
    • 310 Pages

    1 Let me say this: bein a idiot is no box of chocolates. People laugh, lose patience, treat you shabby. Now they says folks sposed to be kind to the afflicted, but let me tell you—it ain’t always that way. Even so, I got no complaints, cause I reckon I done live a pretty interestin life, so to speak. I been a idiot since I was born. My IQ is near 70, which qualifies me, so they say. Probly, tho, I’m closer to bein a imbecile or maybe even a moron, but personally, I’d rather think of mysef as like a halfwit, or somethin—an not no idiot—cause when people think of a idiot, more’n likely they be thinkin of one of them Mongolian idiots–the ones with they eyes too close together what look like Chinamen an drool a lot an play with theyselfs. Now I’m slow—I’ll grant you that, but I’m probly a lot brighter than folks think, cause what goes on in my mind is a sight different than what folks see. For instance, I can think things pretty good, but when I got to try sayin or writin them, it kinda come out like jello or somethin. I’ll show you what I mean. The other day, I’m walkin down the street an this man was out workin in his yard. He’d got hissef a bunch of shrubs to plant an he say to me, “Forrest, you wanna earn some money?” an I says, “Uh-huh,” an so he sets me to movin dirt. Damn near ten or twelve wheelbarrows of dirt, in the heat of the day, truckin it all over creation. When I’m thru he reach in his pocket for a dollar. What I shoulda done was raised Cain about the low wages, but instead, I took the damn dollar an all I could say was “thanks” or somethin dumb-soundin like that, an I went on down the street, waddin an unwaddin that dollar in my hand, feelin like a idiot. You see what I mean? Now I know somethin bout idiots. Probly the only thing I do know bout, but I done read up on em—all the way from that Doy-chee-eveskie guy’s idiot, to King Lear’s…

    • 77365 Words
    • 310 Pages
    Good Essays

Related Topics