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Beautiful Mind The Movie Brought The Reality Term Paper

¶ … 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 and think what John Jr. did as he struggled against the disorder.

The movie also tells us that being exemplary or being on top can take its toll. The rest of us who belong to "normal" levels may admire geniuses, but have no idea how excruciating it actually is to be different. Being different is not necessarily being better or happier, just because the world needs hard and accurate thinkers like John Jr. In order to continue developing and coping with "progress." His being "immensely strange and arrogant" and preference for solving only unsolvable Math problems were his ways of coping with the awesome and awful expectation and self-expectation to do more than others. The heavy weight of expectation led him to deviate and imagine crypto-Communists everywhere, as well as see himself as someone of huge religious significance. Voices all around and telephone calls pounded in his head and pushed him to do more and strain more beyond his mind's limits. He was condemned to achieve and praises or honors did not relieve him. His marriage suffered because his focus was out of it and entirely in pursuit of the ever-heightening expectations not only of his professors, the community, his parents and, but also and most of all,...

By 30, a person's journey is usually defined. At 30, a person has made the most important decisions he will make in his whole lifetime. At 30, he shall have defined the direction to his future. But at 30, John Jr. essentially drained himself, because at an earlier age of 21, he already finished a doctoral thesis, which later won a Nobel, which was his life accomplishment. Nothing else needed to follow, yet the cruel prodding to succeed continued.
Movie watchers will not bother much about the technicalities of movie production but will learn more about how genius and torture from an illness can occur to and in the same mind. Most of those who will see the film may not relate very much with John Jr. because they are not mentally like him: the movie may, indeed, even stigmatize mental illness further. (Quinet) But because it is the true story of a Mathematical genius, viewers will recognize this victim as one of them in the same human family.

It must be remembered, though, that the story happened in the 50s when schizophrenia was still considered a progressive and degenerative as well as incurable mental disorder. (Quinet) That was exactly the dreadful pronouncement of John Jr.'s psychiatrist - that his problem did not have the precise treatment as yet and that he just had to stick to his regimen and hope that his condition would improve with the advancement of science. (Quinet) And according to the movie plot, John Jr. did get well, not in the sense that his disorder disappeared, but that the constant moral and…

Sources used in this document:
Bibliography

Gale Research. Psychosis. Gale Encyclopedia of Medicine, 1999

Gale Group. Psychological Disorder. Gale Encyclopedia of Psychology, 2001

Quinet, Linda and Peter Weiden. A Beautiful Mind. NAMI-NYC Metro, USA
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