Mental Mike wrote:As a sufferor of the disease, myself, I think that all the films about schizophrenia have failed to portray what a psychotic episode is really like, even Clean, Shaven, Spider and a Beautiful Mind...
...this is due to either a lack of understanding of the disease by filmmakers or film is not a developed enough medium to express what is going on in psychosis...
Beautiful Mind is the worst of all...
I think that Clean Shaven was closer... But perhaps more close with some scenes like when he visits his mother...
Or Deneuve's eyes in Repulsion, or De Niro's eyes in Taxi Driver... You don't need to use a bulldozer (aka The Wall) to show what schizophrenia can be...
I think that some scenes in Pickpocket, or in Samouraï can come close to some aspects of schizophrenia because they simply show someone's isolation and suffering... I think that it's impossible to show the "positive" symptoms of Schizophrenia (hallucination, etc...) Beautiful Mind is the worst of all... Often, cineasts fell like they are obliged to use a P.O.V-like perspective to show you what it is to be in the head of someone who is schizophrene... It's interesting with some cineasts like Cronenberg, because they have a very interesting and imaginative world... Bunuel, Gilliam can create a whole universe... visually it's interesting... (look at Brazil, or Tarkovsky "The Mirror"... of course it's not about schizophrenia, but Brazil can be the story of a man living today seeing the world like an imaginary totalitary world (which is not so far from ours

and trying to escape in a world of fantasy; trying to find a place in his mind to escape... but in the end, many thinks that he failed because he's lost in his mind... But did he really fail? Philip K.Dick world is interesting...) And Clean-Shaven is close too I think...
I think Clean Shaven is better than Spider. Because Spider revisiting Naked Lunch's theme (the final scene and the way of the character is the same... he finds his way through his mind and the end of the tunnel is a truth he tried to forgot). Clean Shaven is even more troubling and deranging with the duality theme : with the cop (look how it is pre-TV series The Expert, etc...) because there is a very fascinating feeling of mind-sharing whereas the 2 characters didn't meet. It's something like the trio in Bad Timing, but even more deranging, troubling, and really better done -IMHO. We see 2 different POV: which one is really mad ? How can be the cop "contaminated" ? because he's some kind of profiler ? (the syndrome in Michael Mann's "Manhunter") or just because he's suffering of the same fear and isolation feelings than everybody and that the border of "mental illness" is always closer than we thought...
on the other hand, we are very close to some themes that Cronenberg approches in history of violence : the scenes in the bar, what we can hear on the radio, etc... I think that it's even better in clean-shaven...
Really, it's a fantastic movie.
"Frontal" approches of mental illness "world" are often irritating or could be totally wrong. I think it can be better to choose an alternative way, such as sci-fi movies, etc...
"negative" symptoms (inhibition, guilty, paranoia, fear, etc...) are "easier" to show (of course, you need a good actor such as De Niro or Deneuve and a good director) because those feelings are...well so familiar to the common human-being... we all know what fear is, what isolation can be... it's "only" a matter of degree...
in this perspective, Repulsion, Taxi Driver, Pickpocket, Samouraï, many Cassavetes movies and many others succeed... Of course these movies are not all totally about schizophrenia, but they show - IMHO - the way to mental illness, or the border of illness...