Study Document
Pages:1 (384 words)
Subject:Arts
Topic:A Beautiful Mind
Document Type:Question Answer
Document:#71019212
Movie About Mental Illness: A Beautiful Mind (2001)
Q1. Who is the character you are focused on? Briefly summarize the plot.
The film A Beautiful Mind (2001) is about the mathematician John Nash, who developed the revolutionary theory of game theory. Nash suffered a schizophrenia breakdown shortly after he conducted his historic work, and eventually recovered later in life to the point he was able to receive the Nobel Prize he was rewarded for his contribution to economics.
Q2. What specific symptoms did the character experience in the movie? What diagnosis would you give them?
Nash, even before he became symptomatic, was eccentric and withdrawn. He began to hallucinate and experience paranoid delusions.
Q3. Nature or Nurture: Was the character’s mental illness a result of biological or environmental influences? Explain.
The film presents schizophrenia as an organic illness. There is no evident trigger event that causes the schizophrenia, which is commensurate with how schizophrenia is understood today, although at the time Nash suffered from schizophrenia, it was often assumed to have a psychological cause.
Q4. Prognosis: Good or bad? Why? (You can get a hint from the “Risk and Prognostic Factors” sections in the DSM. But also consider what you know... Do they display insight? Do they have a good support system? Are they motivated to change? What are the factors that perpetuate the disorder? Etc...
The film presents what actually occurred in reality, namely that Nash spontaneously recovered his sanity with age. It does show that he had a significant support symptom in the form of his wife, who endured a great deal of stress when her husband was suffering the most extreme aspects of his illness.
Q5. Was it a realistic portrayal of mental illness? Did the movie teach you anything you didn't know already about mental illness?
The film’s choice to first portray Nash’s illness as real, as how he experienced it, and then to show that the different characters and visions he were in fact produced by his mind is effective cinematically. But it makes his illness seem more coherent than may be true of real life. The film is instructive in how schizophrenia was treated before it was well-understood by depicting the ways it was interpreted (through a Freudian lens) and treated with ineffective therapies (like insulin shock therapy).
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He also has hallucinations about being followed by a federal agent, in keeping with his academic world where the government seeks on the one hand to employ mathematicians and scientists and on the other hand mistrusts them. Many of the encounters he has in his mind with this agent and others have the aura of a detective movie, showing that Nash is replaying films he has seen and that
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Disorders A Beautiful Mind The subject that will be of focus for this paper will be the case of John Forbes Nash, Jr., the real life man whose life directly inspired the film A Beautiful Mind. (2001) The protagonist is played by actor Russell Crowe. The film is classified as a "biopic," short for a biographical picture/film. Crowe as John is an extremely interesting case from start to finish because of the
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People who do not understand mental illness will see this film in a new light, because it not only shows how Nash reacts to his own illness, but how others, from employers to family and friends react. Some of the reactions indicate fear, some loathing, and some just bewilderment and a sense of unreality and hopelessness. Some of the reactions are also based on some of the stereotypes of
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Beautiful Mind Ron Howard's 2001 film A Beautiful Mind caused as much controversy over its treatment of mental illness as it did over its winning the Academy Award for best picture. Based on Sylvia Nassar's book of the same name, A Beautiful Mind chronicles the life of a Nobel Prize-winning mathematician who suffered from schizophrenia, one of the most little-understood mental diseases. While the film may not have deserved the
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Beautiful Mind The movie brought the reality of schizophrenia closer to personal experience, not only because the film is adapted from the true story of John Forbes Nash, Jr., a Mathematics genius. It is also because the sight-and-sound properties of the cinema have that distinct capability of connecting the audience to the innermost chamber of the characters' personalities and vicariously revealing their frank thoughts and feelings. One could almost feel
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3. Text The house actually becomes a source of personal healing and revelation for Catherine, who is really her father's daughter and much closer to her father both in terms of their mutual mathematical genius and their mental illness. Within the house, Catherine has had formative conversations with her father, including the one about the proof. There are multiple dimensions and levels of interaction here. Catherine has proven herself to be