Preview

Critical Movie Review Psychology: Girl, Interrupted

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
888 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Critical Movie Review Psychology: Girl, Interrupted
Critical Movie Review “Girl, Interrupted” This movie revolves around a young woman named Susanna in the 1960s who is experiencing mental issues and ends up in a mental institution. Her journey focuses on her relationship with several of the other patients and nurses. At first she doesn’t believe she is ill, and resists her treatment, instead befriending another patient, Lisa, who takes her on many adventures inside and outside of the hospital. Lisa leads her down the wrong path which ends in the death of a former patient. This event leads Susanna down the right path and she dives into focusing on making herself well. The lead characters include Susanna, a young woman with borderline personality disorder. She doesn’t know what she wants to do or where to go in life. She finds herself admitted into a mental institution after taking a bottle of aspirin and drinking a bottle of vodka. Lisa is a “lifer” patient in the ward, and she clearly has some major personality, social and mental issues. It was never clearly spoken what her diagnosis was, however, some of the other girls on the ward mention sociopath, and criminally insane. She has no empathy for others around her unless it benefits her. She is manipulative and conniving. She uses the weakness of the minds in her circle to get what she wants. This intrigues Susanna, who befriends Lisa, to Susanna, she personifies freedom. Another character is Valerie, a black woman, and head nurse of Susannas ward. She doesn’t take any lip, and is a very strong mother figure in the story. Valerie is a single mother, and I believe this adds to her strength with dealing with the girls in the ward. There are several mental disorders depicted in Girl, Interrupted. Susanna has borderline personality disorder. This was portrayed very well, considering the clinical description of the disorder. She feels that time can go backward and forward, she frequently has flashbacks, is generally pessimistic, tends toward the company of men,

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    Billy Murphy Case Summary

    • 975 Words
    • 4 Pages

    ▪Harding is a paranoid schizophrenic. He should be treated with individual therapy, focusing on his wife. He should not be hospitalized and should be on medication. Using the drugs would be a biological perspective in Harding's treatment. ▪Billy has an anxiety disorder. Cognitive behavioral therapy is used along with drug therapy. The cognitive therapists combine training in relaxation skills and learning skills of avoiding tendencies to think the worst. I think this would work well with Billy because after he was caught with Candy and all the other patients were applauding him, he stood up to Nurse Ratched for a moment and was not stuttering. He showed that when he has support he can stand up for himself and has more self esteem. This is the cognitive perspective. ▪Taber is a trouble making Sadist who is not a voluntary patient. Psychoanalysts attempt to bring childhood sexual conflicts into awareness so that they can be resolved. Although Tabor would probably not benefit from this type of treatment since there are not many cases where a psychodynamic perspective on treatment has been successful. ▪Cheswick is a paranoid neurotic who lacks self confidence. A neurotic is a person who constructs an ideal self-concept and wants to become that person. He presents his ideal self concept to society for approval. He is afraid of being his real self, particularly if it is not good enough, as defined by society. Afraid of social rejection, he pretends to…

    • 975 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    This movie is about Aibileen, who is one of many black women in the US South who work and raise the children of the prominent or well to do White Southerners. Aibileen with her best friend Minnie and a bunch of other maids work with an inspiring writer Skeeter to write a book of interviews about what it's like to work for White families from their (The Help's perspective).…

    • 875 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Legally Blonde Analysis

    • 1500 Words
    • 6 Pages

    The film presents a main character that is seemingly complete in her world. But then she is called to an adventure through some problem or challenge, and in this case her challenge is winning back her boyfriend Warner. Others refuse the call for her, but she is encouraged by a mentor who also happens to become her love interest. Outside of her normal element, she overcomes tests and defeats enemies and is triumphant when she reaches her main ordeal. She returns victorious and transformed and sets off to start a new…

    • 1500 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Susanna Kaysen, in her memoir Girl, Interrupted, recounts her eighteen-month stay at a psychiatric hospital in Massachusetts. The events in the book took place in the 1960’s, meaning outside the hospital’s reinforced walls, the world was bustling with racism, social activism, and the Vietnam War. The story is not told as a chronological series of events, but rather as a collection of memories, darting between various periods of Kaysen’s visit. Throughout her stay at the hospital, Kaysen met a variety of women who influenced her life profoundly, including a self-proclaimed sociopath, a girl with a face disfigured by burns, and a meth addict. In Girl, Interrupted, author Susannah Kaysen achieves her purpose of elaborating on the dangers of confusing unconventionality with insanity, through characterization, impressionism, symbolism, and her…

    • 952 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Witnessing Vivian go through this journey alone makes us reflect on our own thoughts and feelings on the subject. To see how little compassion the doctors and staff of the hospital show towards Vivian shows us how easy it is to detach from our work too much. This detachment can cause us to see our patients for much less than they are. We begin to see them as a diagnosis instead of as the unique individual they are. Throughout the film, Vivian is breaking the third wall and explaining the mental and emotional toll this takes on our patients.…

    • 604 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the movie Inside Out from Pixar that we watched in the class period last week we learned how new memories can be created. The movie is successful by showing us how emotions can be driven by certain events and how it can control our state of mind. The film gives us multiple examples to show individuals how the human brain can react to certain things and how it can control their behavior. This also teaches psychology to people who are not aware of how the human brain can work and function.…

    • 192 Words
    • 1 Page
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    A seventeen-year-old girl named Elena is introduced in the story in a panic, lying in a hospital bed while a nurse glowers over her failure to touch the plate of food, which was the only thing the nurse was responsible for mandating. Elena faced her own predicament as she eyed the cold plate of food, her mind filled with disgust as she…

    • 585 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The movie Shutter Island is based in Boston’s Ashecliffe Hospital located on Shutter Island in 1954. It’s about a Federal Marshal named Teddy Daniels and his new partner, Chuck Aule who are sent to Shutter Island to investigate the disappearance of a patient there, Rachel Solando. She had been put in the institution because she drowned her three kids; However Teddy had been pushing for the assignment on the island for personal reasons, but before long he wonders whether he hasn't been brought there as part of a twisted plot by hospital doctors whose radical treatments range from unethical to illegal to downright sinister, or are they? Teddy's investigating skills (dreams he has while awake and asleep, where his dead wife tells him to what do.) soon provide a promising lead, but the hospital refuses him access to records he suspects would break the case wide open, but how does this movie relate to psychology?…

    • 1065 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The movie Girl Interrupted gives a glimpse into the world of the psychiatric hospitals and their patients in the late 1960’s. Each of the characters exhibit symptoms of various psychological problems, while still being personable enough to allow viewers to sympathise with them. At some point in our lives, each of us feels as if we are on the outside of society like Susannah, or tries to manipulate others like Lisa. We do not, however, carry it to the extremes that they do. We are able to maintain control over our lives, and live in relative peace and harmony with those around us. One example from the movie of someone trying too hard to control the things around her is Daisy Randone’s obsessive compulsive disorder. Some examples of this behavior are; her obsession with chicken, her refusal to allow anyone into her room, her addiction to laxatives, and her eventual suicide. Some of the other residents talked about the fact that Daisy always checked in for a short stay around the holidays, and always had a private room. They also suspected that Daisy might be the victim of incest as well.…

    • 599 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The analysis of the movie Donnie Darko will link relation of the film to personalities disorders of a few characters. Donnie Darko is the protagonist of the film. He is an adolescent who is dealing with some emotional issues. These emotional issues cause a psychosis which cause our main character; Donnie, sever hallucinations which make him disassociate with reality. Our film opens with Donnie waking up on a road. After traveling back home to an average family we find out that Donnie is not taking his medication and is perhaps sleep walking.…

    • 909 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The 1993 classic Girl Interrupted, written by Susanna Kaysen, is a series of nonfiction pieces about her 18 months spent in a mental institution in the late 1960s. The pieces are mostly chronological, and in between chapters she shows real files from her stay at the institution (doctors notes, discharge papers, etc.). Throughout the fragmentary novel, Susanna questions her sanity and fights for self realization. James Marigold adapted the memoir into a film in 1999. The movie is loosely based off the novel, at best. The differences between the two are so significant that they are basically two separate works completely.…

    • 714 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The psychiatrist recommended that she be admitted to a mental hospital for women, where she can rest and recover. Another sign of the Borderline Personality Disorder is casual sex. Before she went to the mental hospital Susanna had sex with her professor whom her family knew really well. While at the hospital, she had flashbacks of the whole ordeal, and her professor asking her to have sex with him again. She also had sex with a guy name Toby. She met Toby at a party and they had sex the same night. Than one day when Toby came to visit Susanna at the hospital, they had sex and then she tried to have sex with a guy name John who works at the…

    • 608 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The movie starts with the main character Susanna, who has been diagnosed with Borderline Personality Disorder. The story is based around Susanna’s personal struggles and when she was admitted into a mental hospital. At the hospital,…

    • 469 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Mentally disabled Sam Dawson is a single father fighting to keep custody of his daughter Lucy with the help of his pro-bono lawyer, Rita Harrison.…

    • 480 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Susanna is diagnosed with BPD. BPD, also known as Borderline Personality Disorder is a serious psychiatric illness. BPD is often followed by unstable moods, behavior and relationships. Some people who experience severe BPD can have psychotic episodes. Though most health experts agree that the name “borderline personality disorder” is misleading, a more accurate term does not yet exist. Many people who suffer from BPD may have some of the following…

    • 1152 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays