Mental Disorders in Popular Film

How Hollywood Uses, Shames, and Obscures Mental Diversity

By (author) Erin Heath

Publication date:

28 February 2019

Length of book:

106 pages

Publisher

Lexington Books

Dimensions:

232x161mm
6x9"

ISBN-13: 9781498521710

Contemporary Hollywood films commonly use mental disorders as a magnifier by which social, political, or economic problems become enlarged in order to critique societal conditions. Cinema has a long history of amplifying human emotion or experience for dramatic effect. The heightened representations of people with mental disorder often elide one category of literal truths for the benefit of different moral or emotional reasons. With films like Fight Club, The Silence of the Lambs, The Dark Knight, and Black Swan, this book address characters identified by film or media as people who are crazy, mentally ill, developmentally delayed, insane, have autism spectrum disorder, associative personality disorder, or who have other mental disorders. Despite the vast array of differences in people’s experiences, film often marginalizes people with mental disorders in ways that make it important to be inclusive of these varied experiences. These characters also commonly become subject to the structures of hierarchy and control that actual people with mental disorders encounter. Cinematic patterns of control and oppression heavily influence the narratives of those considered crazy by the outside world.
Heath brings an engaging style to dense theoretical material and complicated films. Working with classics of disability in cinema, such as Rainman, as well as more recent popular films, such as Black Swan and Batman Begins, Heath delves into the ways that disability is portrayed and how it is used cinematically to tell particular stories. This highly teachable book offers more contemporary texts and a focus on mental disorders, making it a necessary update to the canon of disability within film and media studies.