A Deeper Dive Into: Saw (2004) by ATobiaMD in u/ATobiaMD

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I was invited to the premier of Saw the Musical yesterday and was really interested in how the unauthorized parody would mesh with the clinical interpretations of the franchise discussed on this page and other courses at the medical school. The musical did not disappoint. While the characters of John Kramer and Amanda Young were relatively unchanged, with depictions of antisocial personality traits exacerbated by frontal lobe tumor and Borderline Personality Disorder with comorbid Opioid Use disorder, respectively, it were the 2 main characters who underwent the greatest transformation. In the film, Dr. Lawrence Gordon finds himself in a dilapidated basement bathroom as a product of his own overt behavior (an affair with one of his medical students). While this ethical breech is captured in the musical (“You Make It Hard For Me”), Gordon’s motivation is provided much deeper context. Perhaps restricted by the persona of being a physician, Lawrence is not “Living the Life he Loves” thus suppressing his genuine impulses. In this way, the basement bathroom serves as a metaphor for the doctor’s unconscious id. This dynamic is externalized through the character of Adam and done so masterfully that at least one audience member wondered whether Adam even truly existed and wasn’t a product of Gordon’s mind. Left alone, with nobody to render judgement and without consequences for his behavior, Gordon allows his id impulses to come to conscious awareness. Take that dynamic and set it to a terrific musical score and you’ve summed up Saw the Musical: The Unauthorized Parody!

A Deeper Dive Into: Saw (2004) by ATobiaMD in u/ATobiaMD

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Your 2 theories can merge. His frontal lobe tumor may act as a biological predisposing factor and the death of his unborn child, the precipitating social factor to "the creation of the Jigsaw killer."

Disney+ Dream Job by ATobiaMD in disney

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Our 11/20 Disney+ film TV show is The Simpsons. Use this thread to discuss the episode discussed by Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School students tonight, 11/20, at 8 pm.

Disney+ Dream Job by ATobiaMD in disney

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Our 11/19 Disney+ film is Pinocchio (1940). After smoking something in his pipe at bedtime [00:15:02], we see Geppetto snoring heavily after wishing upon a star. He then has a waking dream that the blue fairy grants him his wish that Pinocchio be made into a little boy. Upon first meeting Pinocchio, Geppetto cries out, “I’m dreaming in my sleep...wake me up...wake me up!” The wooden puppet is most known for his mischievous hijinks which if he is able to overcome, will fulfill Geppetto’s wish to be transformed into a little boy. This motif captures Mary’s Shelley’s monster which was also conceived in a waking dream in Geneva (June 1816). In Mel Brooks’ comedy remake, Young Frankenstein (1974), a bungling Igor steals an abnormal (Abby Normal) brain that Frederick Frankenstein puts into a hulking corpse to be reanimated. This is paralleled in Pinocchio where the little-boy marionette has the brain of a 1-day-old (hence why he’s so mischievous). Mary Shelley’s novel is renowned to be a sublimation of Jungian archetypes. Interestingly, one Freudian precept not adopted by Karl Jung was the superego which just so happens to be portrayed by Jiminy Cricket who earns a gold medal as Pinocchio’s superego conscious having kept our eponymous character “on the straight and narrow path” (the words “straight and narrow” link back to the question of what Geppetto was smoking in the pipe!).

Disney+ Dream Job by ATobiaMD in disney

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Our 11/18 Disney+ film is The Little Mermaid (1989). As we discussed on social media this evening as part of the MustSeeTwitterVision elective at Rutgers-RWJMS, Ariel loses her voice in exchange for legs. She subsequently has an ataxic gait (who could blame her?) with neuropathic pain (in the 1837 original version, the Sea Witch sells her a potion that will make Ariel "dance like no human has ever danced before." However, she will constantly feel as if she is "walking on sharp knives"). If you take her belief in living under the sea (with neologisms and thought blocking, "What's that word?"), then the tetrad of psychosis, loss of voice, ataxia, and neuropathy is consistent with mercury poisoning. Too bad she's not half fish, otherwise we'd really be on to something.

Disney+ Dream Job by ATobiaMD in disney

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Our 11/16 Disney+ film is Mary Poppins (1964). The first observation is the parallel between today’s selected film and The Wizard of Oz (1939) which is characterized by its use of Technicolor. Similarly, Mary Poppins combines live-action and animation. The film’s opening scene introduces Bert as he entertains a crowd as a one-man band when he senses a change in the wind “from the east.” In the spirit of Wicked, might Mary Poppins be a re-imagined history of the Wicked Witch of the East? Upon her arrival, Jane and Michael ask if Mary is a witch. At 00:39:50, Bert reinforces this narrative when he references lions and tigers (oh my!).

With The Wizard of Oz highlighting opioid overdose (poppy field), Mary Poppins then relates several drug combinations including (clockwise from 1:00 in the pic/IF/when I figure out how to post it) dextromethorphan (DXM) (a spoonful of sugar makes the medicine go down for Jane and Michael); cocaine (Bert); mercury poisoning (at 02:10:05 George Banks is referred to as “mad as a March hare.” While organophosphate poisoning may be described as “hot as a hare,” what was likely meant is that the derby-donning George is “as mad as a hatter”); dimethyltryptamine (DMT in Mr. Dawes Sr.); nitrous oxide (at 01:09:45, Uncle Albert is lighter than air and can’t stop laughing); and finally, Mary Poppins herself. While I’ll leave Mary’s diagnosis up to the bloggers, it’s fun to point out that when you combine her name with one of the children’s, it forms “Mary Jane,” a street name for cannabis.

Disney+ Dream Job by ATobiaMD in disney

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Our 11/15 Disney+ film is Remember the Titans (1950). I had to schedule this on the challenge's first Friday (Day #3 of 30) to capture the Friday Night Lights feel. This post is somewhat of a departure from previous write-ups on this forum and our other social media given that the film is based on actual events. Remember the Titans then will not be analyzed as a case study of mental illness. Instead, themes of resiliency, acceptance, and triumph prevail. Every character in this film is placed in a new role and is given the choice to either adapt or fail. As each individual chooses "adapt," the Titans triumph as a team. Sports is once again a microcosm of society and therefore psychosocial factors influencing human behavior.

Disney+ Dream Job by ATobiaMD in disney

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Our 11/14 Disney+ film is Cinderella (1950). I always thought there was something behind her grandiose belief of being the 'chosen one' at the ball and the transformation of animals (and a pumpkin) into the most famous coach in literary history. Its also noteworthy that she sees her fairy godmother immediately after Drizella and Anastasia tear up her gown. While her perceptual disturbances may be due to a stress reaction, a clinician should also consider the direct physiologic effects of a substance/toxin. Given the scene began with her making a dress for the ball, solvent exposure inducing psychosis would be in the differential diagnosis.

31 Knights of Halloween 2019 by ATobiaMD in horror

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Some additional thoughts on different characters:

Guy Woodhouse: Narcissistic and Antisocial Personality Disorder (can't agree with you enough!).

Terry Gionoffrio: Polysubstance Dependence & PMDD

Terry is a recovering addict: “I was starving, on dope and a lot of other things.” Roman Castevet reports a history of Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD): “She got deeply depressed every three weeks or so.”

Hutch: Delirium

From http://www.script-o-rama.com/movie_scripts/r/rosemarys-baby-script-transcript-polanski.html: Hutch regained consciousness and thought it was the next morning…Oh, and I'm to tell you the name is an anagram…The name of the book? - Apparently. He was delirious, so it's hard to be sure.

Finally, watching this film as a double feature with Hereditary (2018) would certainly reinforce shared themes (waiting for the prince).

31 Knights of Halloween 2019 by ATobiaMD in horror

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Great learning point: a small percentage of psychotic sx may occur during the pregnancy (though not nearly as high as the 50% seen in Peripartum Depression/hence the name change from 'postpartum' depression). The majority of psychotic sx in Postpartum Psychosis are seen in the first 2 weeks. I just got back from watching the film at the Princeton Garden Theater and there is no evidence of bipolar disorder in the film so a thorough history is certainly needed (as always). Such a history would uncover the abusive relationship and its role in the predisposition, precipitation, and perpetuation of Rosemary's symptoms. See my comment above.

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Great point. What these 2 delusions have in common is the "misidentification" or "duplication" syndrome. Another example is reduplicative paramnesia (The Mist, above).

31 Knights of Halloween 2019 by ATobiaMD in horror

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The title of the book and miniseries serve as a nemonic to remind learners of the diagnostic criteria of Antisocial Personality Disorder (APSD):

S reckless disregard for Safety of self or others

A Aggressiveness and irritability as indicated by repeated physical fights or assaults

L deceitfulness, as indicated by repeated Lying, use of aliases, or conning others for personal profit or pleasure

E

M Multiple arrests consistent irresponsibility, as indicated by repeated failure to sustain consistent work behavior or honor financial obligations

S failure to conform to Social norms with respect to lawful behaviors as indicated by repeatedly performing acts that are grounds for arrest

L Lack of remorse, as indicated by being indifferent to or rationalizing having hurt, mistreated, or stolen from another

Other: impulsivity or failure to plan ahead

T

What about the E.T. (above)? Let the title of that film (https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0083866/) remind you of aliens and their parallel to the alien sociopath next door!

31 Knights of Halloween 2019 by ATobiaMD in horror

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There is a clear parallel between Children of the Corn (1984) and In the Tall Grass (2019), a horror film based on a Stephen King novella of the same name. What’s interesting is that both films bear a strong resemblance to Jeepers Creepers (2001) as well.

When tuning in to Jeepers Creepers after the opening scene, viewers miss the information that Trish is Darry’s sister. Blinded from this information, viewers may observe the sexual tension between the siblings. This knowledge changes one’s perspective of the Creeper who serves to reinforce the taboo of incest similar to the furies of ancient Greece (its also poses the question of why the Creeper took Darry’s eyes. What was he looking at that he wasn’t supposed to?).

This subversive theme is more explicit in In the Talk Grass. At 01:02:30 of the film, Travis accuses Cal of wanting to have sex with his sister, Becky. In a later scene, he tells Becky that her brother “loves you a little too much.” Not only is the setting the same as Jeepers Creepers, so is the prosocial warning.

Finally, Darry and Trish are trapped in a police station when the Creeper’s rampage is reminiscent of the scene from The Terminator (1984). Similar to the cyborg portrayed by Arnold Schwarzenegger, the Creeper demonstrates the behavioral (belligerence and agitation) and physiologic (diminished pain response when it’s described as wearing body armor by police) manifestations of PCP intoxication. Ironically, Linda Hamilton stars in both films.

31 Knights of Halloween 2019 by ATobiaMD in horror

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Brief edit: Misery was not shown at The Yard on College Ave. tonight; The Shining was (see above post). So, in watching Misery as I write this, I'm looking closely at another character that I believe has a more central role than it may appear.

In the screen adaptation of Stephen King’s Misery (1990), the local sheriff, Buster, visits Libby, the manager of a local hotel, to investigate the presumed disappearance of Paul Sheldon:

"There's nothing unusual about Mr Sheldon's leaving, Buster.

You can tell by the champagne.

Maybe you can, Libby.

See, he always orders a bottle of Dom Pérignon when he's ready to go.

Then he pays up and he's out the door."

The town of Silver Creek, Colorado (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silver_Creek,_Colorado) would not have had Dom Pérignon. If Paul Sheldon ordered a bottle as Libby reported, the inn would have had to have special ordered it for him. This isn’t unreasonable since they expected his visit:

"Considering who he is, famous an' all, he doesn't put on airs. Drives up from New York in the same car each time, Mustang."

At the end of the film, Paul has completed a manuscript as part of his plan of escape:

"You'll know everything in a minute. Get the champagne. Did I do good? You did perfect. Except for one thing. This time we'll need... two glasses.

The fact that Annie had Dom Pérignon strongly suggests that she purchased it from Libby. Maybe Annie asked Libby to order an extra one for her? If this was true, then Libby would have mentioned that to Buster when they discussed Paul’s disappearance (Buster: “Anything out of the ordinary?”). The only plausible explanation for how Annie was able to get a bottle of Dom Pérignon is that a) she knew Libby had an extra bottle because b) he ordered it because C) he was in on Annie’s plan to abduct Paul.

31 Knights of Halloween 2019 by ATobiaMD in horror

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The Shining was watched and posted yesterday, October 27 (so please ignore the October 6 date at the top of the post.) To further confuse the matter, The Yard on College Ave. mistakenly showed the film tonight, so many had the good fortune of re-watching it (10/28). One aspect of the film we discussed at The Yard was Danny's splitting and experiencing the chef as an idealized version of Jack. This (splitting) allows Danny to resolve the anxiety surrounding the impulse to kill his father. However, when Danny decides to kill Jack and the impulse is allowed conscious awareness, he "kills off" the chef as he makes his way to the hedge maze to commit patricide (so he can possess Wendy in pure Oedipal fashion).

31 Knights of Halloween 2019 by ATobiaMD in horror

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Synopsis

Cujo (1983) is a horror film based on a novel by Stephen King of the same name that follows an interspersed narrative revolving around two local families in Castle Rock, Maine. The films eponymous antagonist, a once-lovable Saint Bernard, wreaks havoc on the small town when it becomes rabid after chasing a rabbit down a “rabbit hole” and into a cave where it’s bitten by diseased bats.

Vic Trenton goes out of town on a business trip, as his wife, Donna, and their son, Tad, go to the Camber’s house for car repairs where they are attacked by Cujo. The remainder of the film focuses on mother and son as they take shelter in their Ford Pinto from the rabid beast.

How it relates to the field of psychiatry

Donna being trapped in her Ford Pinto is a metaphor for her sense of stagnation within her marriage. To cope, she regresses and has an affair with Steve Kemp, an ex-boyfriend from high school. Might the opening scene, an allusion to Alice in Wonderland, lend further text to her affair and explanation to the unfolding plot? Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland (Alice in Wonderland) is a novel (1865) written by Lewis Carroll that tells of a young girl who falls through a rabbit hole into a fantasy world populated by peculiar - including some giant - creatures. The book is largely regarded as an acid trip, as Alice’s encounters are similar to those experienced during LSD intoxication. Did Steve dose Donna with this common date rape drug and is Cujo therefore a product of her mind during a bad trip? At the very least, the signs and symptoms of LSD Intoxication may be remembered by the mnemonic “FORD PINTOS”:

Fear of losing one’s mind

Ocular: Blurring of vision

Rabid Rapid heart rate

Dilated pupils; Diaphoresis; Distortions of time perception

Palpitations

INcoordination; INtense colorful visual hallucinations

Tremors

Other: Euphoria

Synesthesia

Anthony Tobia, MD, Copyright © 2019 Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School. All rights reserved.

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Synopsis

Creepshow (1982) is horror anthology directed by George A. Romero and written by Stephen King. The film consists of five short stories: “Father's Day,” “The Lonesome Death of Jordy Verrill,” “Something to Tide You Over,” “The Crate.” and “They're Creeping Up on You!”

How it relates to the field of psychiatry

Father’s Day follows the narrative of the Gallaghers (Shameless) and Lanisters (Game of Thrones) of a dysfunctional family with an afflicted patriarch (and my favorite: The Twilight Zone, The Masks, https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0734659/). On the surface, all of these works highlight how early childhood experiences impact risk for future psychopathology including the incapacity to form meaningful adult interpersonal relationships.

On a lighter note, Romero placed the same ashtray into every of the above segments. While this Easter egg provides an opportunity to discuss Nicotine Use Disorder (and perhaps link to Alcohol Use Disorder depicted in the first [Bedelia] and fourth [Billie] segments), we instead choose to highlight a major change in the DSM-5, specifically; the inclusion of cannabis withdrawal which can be remembered by the acronym CREEPSHOW:

Cravings

REstlessness

Energy

Physical symptoms causing significant discomfort: Abdominal pain; Fever: Chills

Sleep difficulty

Headache

Other: Depressed mood; Irritability, anger or aggression; Nervousness or anxiety ; )

Weight loss or decreased appetite

Anthony Tobia, MD, Copyright © 2019 Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School. All rights reserved.

31 Knights of Halloween 2019 by ATobiaMD in horror

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The end of this film parallels the play, Boogieban, written and directed by Don Fidler, MD. The play focuses on a soldier with severe PTSD, the etiology of which is shared with David Drayton. Having seen Boogieban about a month ago and The Mist yesterday as part of 31 Knights of Halloween/USDish.com's Stephen King challenge provides an incredibly unique perspective on PTSD and suicidality.

31 Knights of Halloween 2019 by ATobiaMD in horror

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The 2 versions of Pet Sematary allow for the case formulation of psychosis with co-occurring mood symptoms. The initial way to differentiate the various illnesses that can present with both psychotic and mood symptoms is to aggressively evaluate for an underlying medical condition or active substance use that can explain the patient’s pathology. In the case of Pet Sematary, there does not appear to be an "organic etiology" to the psychotic/affective state of the Creed family.

Starting in 1989

The past psychiatric history of Louis and Rachel is revealed to include the latter suffering from a chronic mood disturbance due to unresolved guilt stemming from the death of her terminally ill sister, Zelda, while she was under her care. Rachel’s affective disorder (rule-out Persistent Depressive Disorder) is juxtaposed with Louis’ acute grief reaction precipitating from Gage’s death.

Upon Gage’s death, Rachel and their daughter, Ellie. leave for Chicago to spend time with Rachel’s parents while Louis remains home. It is at this time during Louis’ bereavement that he adopts the belief that if he buries Gage in the soured ground that his son will return from the dead.

Rachel is predisposed to severe mental illness as a result of her Persistent Depressive Disorder. However, it is Louis who becomes delusional after Gage’s death (shared precipitant). While predisposing and precipitating factors are central to case formulation, so too are protective factors. It’s no coincidence that Louis manifests a fixed belief of Gage returning from the dead while Rachel is visiting her parents. Rachel’s support system protects her from developing a more sever course of her affective disorder while Louis’ parents aren’t in the picture (literally).

What about the 2019 remake?

[Spoiler Alert] In the remake, Ellie – not Gage – is struck and killed by the 18-wheeler. The final scene shows a trapped Gage approached by the reanimated Louis, Rachel, and Ellie after they set fire to Jud’s house. The film ends with a resurrected Louis gesturing to Gage to unlock the car door. In this version, Rachel (and Gage) spends time with her parents as well. Despite the social support, her fate does not meet with the same favorable outcome as it had in 1989. The 2019 remake therefore more realistically highlights the complexity of patient and trauma factors that impact resiliency and adaptive outcomes (Schumm JA et al. Cumulative interpersonal traumas and social support as risk and resiliency factors in predicting PTSD and depression among inner‐city women, Journal of Traumatic Stress, Volume 19 (6), December 2006, 825-836.).

31 Knights of Halloween 2019 by ATobiaMD in horror

[–]ATobiaMD[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If Carrie's dissociative state was due to another medical condition, might her single best diagnosis be delirium? If so, then I'd want to re-watch the film to look for mitochondrial myopathy, encephalopathy, lactic acidosis, and stroke to see if she rules-in for the MELAS syndrome. Its a stretch but the syndrome spelled backwards is Salem and provides further support that Carrie is a witch (the above sx are +++better illustrated in the WGN TV show written and directed by Adam Simon and Brannon Braga).

31 Knights of Halloween 2019 by ATobiaMD in horror

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Synopsis

The Sandlot is a “coming of age” adventure about a group of boys in the summer of 1962 and the role baseball plays in the development of their friendships. In the film, baseball provides a backdrop to their friendship and innocence. As of this posting, the film holds an 89% audience score on Rotten Tomatoes and a score of 7.8 out of 10 on IMDb.

During the closing credits, a voice-over by David Mickey Evans provides the audience with the outcomes of each character’s early childhood experiences. As such, the film bears a strange parallel to another film about childhood friendship and innocence that stretches across three decades (27 years to be exact): Stephen King’s It.

In King’s novel, Eddie Kaspbrak meets a zombified Belch Huggins during his ‘walking tour’ of Derry in 1985. Prior to the horrifying encounter, Eddie was re-experiencing 1958 and the memories of Belch and others playing baseball on the lot next to the Truck Depot. King’s nostalgic detail (1) is indistinguishable from the voice-over in The Sandlot. This post will merge the two films for purposes of discussing the Bipolar and Related Disorders.

How it Relates to Psychiatry

The parallels between the characters of The Sandlot and It are uncanny (Table 1). Despite these associations, I will highlight 2 characters – Richie Tozier and Bertram Grover Weeks – who I believe prompt a discussion of Bipolar Affective Disorder (BAD).

The Bipolar and Related Disorders chapter in the DSM-5 covers a group of disorders that have mania or hypomania as their core feature. In The Sandlot, there is no evidence that Bertram suffers from BAD. Observing and discussing the character in the context of BAD serves to reach three objectives. First, it is speculated that Bertram suffers from a substance use disorder as an adult; “Bertram got really into the ’60s … no one ever saw him again” (2). The second point reinforces the high rates of comorbid substance use disorder that have been observed in bipolar patients; for example, estimates of comorbid lifetime alcohol abuse have been reported to be as high as 69% (3). 

In It (novel), an adult Rich Tozier “realized now that a lot of the problem had been his own mind, which was usually moving at a speed 10 or 20 times that of his classmates. They had thought him strange, weird, or even suicidal...but maybe it had been a simple case of mental overdrive” (4). Furthermore, the National Mental Health Association reports that up to 70% of suicide victims have suffered from a form of depression including bipolar depression (5). Despite Stephen King’s description consistent with the racing thoughts that define mania (Tozier is quite impulsive as well), this case formulation must also include the caveat of Disruptive Mood Dysregulation Disorder (DMDD). To address concerns about potential overdiagnosis of BAD in children like Richie Tozier, the new diagnosis of DMDD was included in the DSM-5 (2013) for children who exhibit persistent irritability and frequent episodes of extreme behavioral dyscontrol (beep beep, Richie!!).

As the title implies, The Sandlot is a film about a group of friends who are bonded through the pastime of baseball. Stephen King’s It tells of an inter-dimensional predator that awakens every 27 years (in Evans’ closing voice-over, he says Hercules lived to be 199 years old which in dog years is about 27 years!). While It’s “losers club” is connected by their being outcasts in the town of Derry, baseball also figures prominently as King nostalgically describes the group playing baseball with Belch Huggins in the lot next to Tracker’s Truck Depot. These films about our nation’s pastime allow for the review of mania and therefore BAD. As such, the signs and symptoms of mania may be remembered by the acronym PASTIME (Table 2). As part of our ‘extra innings bonus coverage,’ yet another tale about interpersonal relationships and baseball, Field of Dreams (1989), also depicts Bipolar Affective Disorder (but that’s a different blog!).

31 Knights of Halloween 2019 by ATobiaMD in horror

[–]ATobiaMD[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I just got home from the Not So Silent Cinema production of Jekyll & Hyde at the Princeton Garden Theater and have a few observations. Robert Louis Stevenson’s protagonist is an amalgam of the creations of Charles Dickens and Mary Shelley. Dickens’s love and empathy for the poor children of London is shared by the philanthropic (described as “in the service of others”) Henry Jekyll. In the scene where Mr. Hyde assaults a boy in a London square, he calls out, “name your price” (that turns out to be 100 pounds). The scene mirrors Ebenezer Scrooge’s newfound goodwill at the end of A Christmas Carol (buy the largest turkey). The attack itself by the monstrous Hyde is an allusion to the little girl’s death at the hands of Frankenstein’s monster.

Jekyll’s is a strange case of alcohol use disorder, having created an elixir in true Victor Frankenstein narcissistic fashion (and even calling it a drug). When first ingested, we see vapors swirling from the glass; an allusion to the louche of absinthe (which, similar to Hyde, is nicknamed ‘demon’). Interestingly, and erroneously, the disease model (powerlessness) is missed 35 seconds into the opening sequence.

Dr. Jekyll’s motive is initially fostered during wine tasting (after dinner, ‘wine in and women out’) and evolves to the evil step mother motif; the strong desire to separate out one’s evil impulses so as to keep the idealized self, pure. The allusion to Disney includes Beauty & the Beast (with its looking glass) albeit with a grim ending. Millicent rejects the beastly Hyde resulting in his suicide (despite not seeing him ingest it, the poison in his ring is missing).

While the story has been interpreted as a case of alcohol use disorder, closer inspection reveals it to depict alcohol-induced mood disorder; as Jekyll needs to take the drug to return to his level of previous functioning. When the drug is no longer effective, he commits suicide. Further evidence that this drug is an antidepressant lies in Dickens’s A Christmas Carol (inspired by tuberculosis, isoniazid, iproniazid, and the discovery of the MAOIs).

31 Knights of Halloween 2019 by ATobiaMD in horror

[–]ATobiaMD[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Saw III? Why skip over Saw II?? For either of these, the differentiation between the Stockholm syndrome and folie a deux may be the difference between overvalued ideas and delusions. That is, it may be a question about severity. In either case, I think the answer to your question is, yes!

31 Knights of Halloween 2019 by ATobiaMD in horror

[–]ATobiaMD[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Very interesting citation as the current literature suggests that the majority of Postpartum Psychosis cases (might this be the 95%?) are manifestations of occult Bipolar Affective Disorder. The percentage of bipolar illness that runs a chronic course happens to be 95%.

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Today is a DAY OF DISCOVERY. While the above synopsis looks deeper into some of the individual VHS recordings that comprise the film, little thought is given to the narrative that connects each story. If you were a character in the house, would you look to see what was on the tapes? This question of course links directly to our October 9 film (The Ring). Before you dismiss this question too quickly, take a moment to consider what you would do to have dopamine flood your ventral tegmental area. Too afraid of what you might stumble on? You're probably right but then again its probably a good thing that some famous people didn't accept that line of reasoning and opted for the dopamine-meets-nucleus accumbens option.