Black Swan isn’t your typical ballet movie where the girl gets the main lead. It is an incredibly macabre tale about the dangers of perfectionism and distorted body image. It also has cases of obsessive-compulsive disorder, dissociative identity disorder, eating disorder, delusional disorder. The main girl Nina, struggles with her dual role as the White Swan and the black swan. She is not as young as the other girls, so she learns how to fake movements that have meaning since she has been dancing for multiple years. Her innocent, child-like personality makes her a perfect white swan; however, she has trouble getting into the character of the white swan’s dark and seductive counterpart. Nina’s life is consumed by her occupation: professional …show more content…
After that Nina starts hallucinating, seeing her face on other dancers and on Lily’s. She starts to struggle and embodies her conflict and attraction onto her understudy Lily. She continues to be plagued by distressing delusions including an imagined sexual encounter with her arch-nemesis Lily. Then she had a vivid hallucination of Leroy and Lily having sex the night of the opening show. The night of the opening show, Nina finds Lily in her dressing room as the Black Swan, where Lily is claiming she wants to take over the performance. They end up having a violent showdown in which Nina ends up stabbing the Black Swan. However, the Black Swan was just an illusion and Nina end up stabbing herself. In her opening night performance, she envisions transforming into the Black Swan where she eventually develops webbed feet, bird-like legs and sprouts feathers and wings and eventually dies from her wounds after the standing ovation from the audience. Overall, this film gave a fine interpretation of someone suffering from obsessive-compulsive disorder, dissociative identity disorder, and eating disorder. It showed a comprehensive range of symptoms for psychosis, especially in the form of hallucinations and delusions. In addition, it had substantive character development. Nina’s feeling of not being perfect drove her over the edge to the point of her
How does rebellion affect the person and their behavior? The book Uglies by Scott Westerfeld is a story that shows how teenagers have to conform to society while others rebel against it. “Finally, Shay said the words Tally had been thinking,‘ I’m going to loose you, aren't I?’ ‘You’re the one who’s running away.’ ” Shay is running away to join a rebellion called the Smokies, who are a group of people who stay in the forest and do not become a pretty, they also try to show how wrong it is to become a pretty and how they want you to believe that everything is perfect and their only job is to have fun.
Watership Down was written by Richard Adams in 1972. The book revolves around two main rabbits Fiver and Hazel. These rabbits escape their own warren with other rabbits and seek a place to set a home. The role of women is set in this book as, birth givers and hole-diggers. The undeveloped role of the does, and the eagerness of the bucks to find them is more understood with the history of the 1970’s.
One of the young girls, Abagail Williams, drinks the blood of a chicken, and is caught by her uncle. To save herself and the other girls from being accused of witchcraft, Abagail begins to accuse innocent people of witchcraft. As hysteria grows in Salam, everyone begins to question their own neighbors. What makes this piece of work so compelling is all the emotions in the writing itself. When watching
The main characters’ fall into madness is reasonable considering the treatment of the people around them. In “The Yellow Wallpaper,” the protagonist faces the fragile treatment of her peers. Her husband, his
“Suddenly, this little woods-girl is horror-stricken to hear a clear whistle not very far away” (Jewett). The stranger, who carries a gun and professes himself to murdering the animals that Sylvia holds dear demands the location of “the white heron” and promises “ten dollars to anybody who could show it” to him (Jewett). Sylvia, who has always lived a humble life, dreams of what riches the ten dollars could buy, but acknowledges the high price paid in love. As the stranger lingers, he gives Sylvia little gifts, ensnaring her in his manipulative trap like one of his birds. Paralyzed with indecision, Sylvia faces a choice between the life that she has come to love and the seductive words and promises of a stranger who would destroy it.
In the book,”The Program.” by Suzanne Young, Young begins with the protagonist,a seventeen year old named Sloane Barstow, who witnesses her classmate, Kendra Phillips, being taken away by a handler during school. Kendra Phillips is terrified and barely hanging on to reality. Two years ago, Sloane's brother, named Brady, committed suicide and six weeks earlier, her friend Lacey was taken by “The Program” as well as her father because she was “sick” In an attempt to manage with the constant monitoring of their reactions to all of this, Sloane, James Murphy, and their friend Miller try to cover their emotions and act normal.
Frustrated by the verdict on both Annan and Gaertner’s cases, Maurine Watkins quit reporting and studied screenwriting at Yale where she wrote a play directly based off of these events. They play quickly grew in popularity, and inspired a silent film, a musical, a 1942 movie titled “Roxie Hart” and eventually, the 2002 musical movie “Chicago”. (Eig) In the classic tale, Roxie Hart must fool the jury into declaring her not guilty after she kills her boyfriend. Due to the fact that it was based off of a true story, the movie has an obvious correlation with historical events.
placed in their rooms and it was all meant to tie into the idea that the name of the island is Soldier Island. While the guests were relaxing in the drawing room after dinner The Voice came on accusing each of the guests of a crime but when they looked to see who was talking, they found nothing but a gramophone playing a record. After this, Mrs. Rogers, the butler’s wife, fainted but Tony Marston was the first to die. The Dr. Armstrong determined the cause of death was asphyxiation from drinking potassium cyanide.
“Ex boyfriends are just like off limits to friends. I mean that’s just like the rule of feminism” (15:15). This famous saying said by Gretchen Wieners from Mean girls is widely known and most of the time ridiculed by people. Mean Girls is a movie that portrays the stereotypical American high school life. The movie has a main focus on the girls of high school, rather then on the boys.
Susanna’s roommate is Georgina, who is in the hospital for having pseudologia fantastica. Lisa starts to take Susanna under her wing and helps her to get to know the ropes. Susanna has sexual interactions with her boyfriend and with one of the orderly at the hospital in the same day, which is seen as promiscuous. Being promiscuous is a sign of her disorder (Mangold,1999). Once Lisa is moved out of the ward Susanna is in, the two of them decide to escape and sell Valium to get money to go to Florida.
Susanna also introduces Georgia, her roommate, Daisy, a seasonal patient, and Cynthia, a patient with serious depression. Lisa Cody shows that even in a hospital girls can still be very cruel. Lisa Cody quickly became friends
Get Out is a horror film released earlier this year in February. The film centers on Chris Washington, a black man, and his white girlfriend, Rose Armitage. Rose invites Chris to a weekend trip to meet her parents. When meeting Chris, Rose’s parents are overly accommodating towards Chris and constantly speak about how much they love President Obama and other African-American people. Chris attributes this as awkward attempts to deal with their interracial relationship.
The first person Susanna meets is Georgina Tuskin. Georgian is diagnosed with pseudologia fanastica and a bit of schizophrenia. Pseudologia fanastica is a big fancy word for compulsive lying disordered. Thought the movie she was always caught up her made up lies. Georgina soon introduces Susanna to Lisa.
She is sitting on her bench when two young children, and boy and a girl, sit near her. She believes that in the play, they are the youthful hero and heroine that change the outcome drastically. She starts to eavesdrop on their conversation, but she ends up finding out the truth about herself and how she is seen by others. The young boy asks the girl, “Why does she come here at all-- who wants her?”
Nina’s delusions and hallucinations that get more severe as the film goes on she has a delusion that another ballerina, Lily, is out of so harm her. Especially after the director makes her Nina’s alternate. She starts to see her face on Lily and others. She has her first psychotic episode after a party. The party had drugs.