The document discusses schizophrenia and how it is portrayed in the film A Beautiful Mind. Schizophrenia is a brain disorder characterized by psychosis, hallucinations, and delusions. The film depicts John Nash's struggles with schizophrenia, including both positive symptoms like hallucinations and delusions, as well as negative symptoms like social withdrawal. It shows how Nash was able to overcome schizophrenia through treatment and family support.
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0 ratings0% found this document useful (0 votes)
149 views
Assignment 2
The document discusses schizophrenia and how it is portrayed in the film A Beautiful Mind. Schizophrenia is a brain disorder characterized by psychosis, hallucinations, and delusions. The film depicts John Nash's struggles with schizophrenia, including both positive symptoms like hallucinations and delusions, as well as negative symptoms like social withdrawal. It shows how Nash was able to overcome schizophrenia through treatment and family support.
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 4
Jafin Isac
Psych 205 005
Prof. Craig Cooper A Beautiful Mind Psychosis is a state in which an individual loses connection with reality. Hallucination and/or delusions are the major symptoms of psychosis which will eventually end up as schizophrenia. Schizophrenia is a brain disorder which causes severe impairments in all areas of the brain; that is perception, cognition, emotion, and behavior. According to the World Health Organization Schizophrenia affects approximately 24 million people in the world with more than 50% not receiving the appropriate care (WHO, 2008). 90% of those untreated live in developing countries (WHO, 2008). 2.5 million Americans currently have this disorder. Since schizophrenia is a polygenic disorder, therefore cause is unknown. This onset of symptoms start in young adulthood up until thirty years. The movie A Beautiful Mind, directed by Ron Howard, was rightly nominated for eight Oscars in the 2001 Academy Awards. The movie revolves around life of John Nash who was a paranoid schizophrenic because he experienced severe delusions and hallucinations. It portrays the struggles and symptoms of a schizophrenic and how his selfdetermination along with the love of support of his loved ones helped him overcome schizophrenia. Symptoms of a schizophrenic are grouped into three categories: positive symptoms, negative symptoms, and psychomotor symptoms. The
positive symptoms are added inappropriate behaviors such as hallucinations,
delusions, disorganized speech, inappropriate laughter, neologisms, and clangs. Patients with negative symptoms have lack of appropriate behavior such as being quiet, have anhedonia, have expressionless faces, avoids eye contact, and speaks in toneless voices. And lastly, the psychomotor symptoms includes awkward movements, repeated grimaces, and odd gestures. Sometimes it may lead up to the extreme form called catatonia. The movie starts off in 1947 at Princeton, when Nash is 19 years of age. The first scene where one of the symptoms of schizophrenia is evident is when Nash avoids eye contact with Nelson and Bender in the courtyard of the university. Another instance when he fails to maintain eye contact is when Sol visits Nash at his house. Nash fails to continuously maintain eye contact with people throughout the movie. This action is subset of the blunted and flat effect which is part of the negative symptoms category. When John is conversing with Charles in the beginning of the movie John says My first grade teacher told me that I was born with two helpings of a brain but only had a helping heart. This point to the fact that he was socially withdrawn from a very early stage of his life which pinpoints another negative symptom. John exhibits a poverty of speech at the National Mathematics Conference at Harvard University. In the scene where John is holding his crying baby, he fails to attend to the need of the child and is seemed to have not motivation and energy. These again indicates social withdrawal, as well as loss of volition. Later when Alicia wants to have sex
with John, he refuses, indicating anhedonia. John is exhibiting negative
symptoms in all of the scenarios mentioned above. Now onto scenes where John exhibits positive symptoms. John and Hansen are both are recipients of the distinguished Carnegie Scholarship and were in a state of constant competition up until John gets into Wheelers Lab at MIT. In the beginning of the movie, John displays inappropriate effect when he loses to Hansen in the game of Go. John states the game is flawed instead being a good sport. Later in the movie, when Alicia asks John out to dinner, John replies table for one, Prometheus alone chained to the rock, with the bird circling overhead, you know how it is. This in my opinion exhibits loose association. His hallucinating mind leads to the creation of Charles, Marcee, and Parcher. In my opinion, the reason behind why Charles and Marcee were created was to compensate for the social isolation John was experiencing throughout his life. Part of the isolation was due to the fact that he saw himself intellectually superior to his classmates. Parcher is the second product of Johns imagination. With Parchers arrival, who works for Department of Defense, John enters into a world of mystery, and danger. He has to work for the government which involved deciphering codes, and finding Russian nuclear bombs. With Charles and Marcee, Johns schizophrenia was not on the same level as it is with Parcher. Parchers auditory and visual hallucinations torments and disturbs John. While lecturing a class, John visually hallucinates men outside stalking him and becomes paranoid. This demonstrates paranoid schizophrenia.
However, I was not able to find many examples of psychomotor
symptoms in the movie. One of the psychomotor symptom John exhibits was constantly touching his forehead while having serious conversations, and random and awkward grimaces which made him social outcast to an extent. Students also make fun of Johns awkward gait. And lastly, while holding the crying baby he appears to be in a stupor, completely unware of the environment. All in all, this was a great movie which portrayed the symptoms of schizophrenia brilliantly. Even though the most common type of hallucination is auditory for a schizophrenic, the movie has a lot of visual hallucination. The director, Ron Howard, might have did this on purpose to depict a better picture on the audiences. This movie also gave the audience a peek into the treatment John went through, and how he relapsed on he stopped taking his medicine. It was wonderful to see that John made it through the tough times, and finally won the Nobel Prize in 1994 through the support of his family and friends.