Using Film To Teach Psychology: A Resource of Film Study Guides
Using Film To Teach Psychology: A Resource of Film Study Guides
Overview
This 106-page resource offers instructors tools for using films to enhance their instruction.
Student evaluations consistently indicate that films help them learn the topics, provide an
alternative to traditional lectures, and give them a different point of view. However,
students also say they do not like to view films if they do not understand the relevancy of
the film to the course material. This resource gives teachers of psychology additional tools
for using film, such as tested study guides, sample syllabi, student papers, references, and
Internet resources. The film study guides contained in this resource have been used in a
variety of psychology classes, and may be applicable to a variety of other courses.
Outline of Contents
Introduction
How to Use the Study Guides
List of Study Guides by Topic and Film/s
References
Filmography
Sample Syllabi
Sample Paper
___________________________________
Author contact information: Elizabeth M. Nelson, Ph.D., Christian Brothers University, Department of Psychology, 650 East Parkway South,
Memphis, TN 38104 (enelson@[Link])
Copyright 2006 by Elizabeth M. Nelson. All rights reserved. You may reproduce multiple copies of this material for your own personal use,
including use in your classes and/or sharing with individual colleagues as long as the authors name and institution and the Office of Teaching
Resources in Psychology heading or other identifying information appear on the copied document. No other permission is implied or granted
to print, copy reproduce, or distribute additional copies of this material. Anyone who wishes to produce copies for purposes other than those
specified above must obtain the permission of the author.
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Introduction
Student evaluations consistently indicate that films help them learn the topics, provide an
alternative to constant lecturing, give them a different point of view. However, students also say
they do not like to view films if they do not understand the relevancy of the film to the course
material. Showing a film to a class or having students watch the film on their own is only a
prerequisite to using film as an instructional tool.
This resource gives teachers additional tools for using film (tested study guides, syllabi, student
papers, references, and internet resources). The film study guides in this booklet have been used
in a variety of psychology classes (e.g., Psychology and Media, Cognitive Psychology,
Psychopathology, Dynamics of Gender, Personality). The study guides may be applicable to a
variety of other psychology courses (e.g., General Psychology, History and Systems, Learning,
Human Sexuality). In fact, the fun in using film lies in the creativity of the instructor to incorporate
film in a meaningful way in his or her instruction.
The booklet is arranged by topic (in bold at right, top corner of each study guide) in alphabetical
order. The name of the film is printed in bold and aligned left for each study guide. I have used all
of these study guides at least once in a class. The choice of topic and film for each topic is based
on how I have used the film in the past. I have included syllabi from my classes to give you an idea
of how I incorporate film in class. One film, Dead Man Walking, I have used in two different classes.
Therefore, there are two different study guides for this film. I encourage you to use and modify
these study guides to fit any topic you see relevant to the film.
Most of the films require outside reading. I have included a reference page for all required readings.
In addition to completing the study guides, students are required to complete other assignments,
such as papers. I have included one student paper at the end of this booklet.
If you are unfamiliar with the films, you can look the film up in my filmography, which is arranged
alphabetically by film title. I purchase the films I use in class. This allows me to show, watch, and
review the films as often as I want without having to rent or check out the film each time. I have the
library purchase the more expensive films that are available through vendors such as Films for the
Humanities.
Topic Film/s
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Documentary Paradise Lost
Expressionism/Film Noir Jose Chungs from Outer Space
Double Indemnity
Anasazi
Fear The Shining
Carrie
The Thaw
Copycat
Film Making The Art of Illusion
Visions of Light
Reservoir Dogs
Homosexuality The Celluloid Closet
The Birdcage
Humor Ed Wood, and Plan 9 from Outer Space
Law Dead Man Walking (version 1)
Dead Man Walking (version 2)
Nuts
Dancer in the Dark
The Thin Blue Line
In Cold Blood
I Want to Live
The Green Mile
Learning Sophies Choice
Media Media Impact
Metaphysics Cause and Effect
The Measure of a Man
Motivation To Sir, With Love, and Dangerous Minds
Obsessive-Compulsive Personality
Gorillas in the Mist
Perspective A Matter of Perspective
Hair
Problem Solving Cast Away
Psychopathology Rainman
Equus
Awakenings
Snake Pit
Sybil
The Three Faces of Eve
Prince of Tides
The Dream Team
Psycho
Religion Jesus Christ Superstar
Reminiscence Fried Green Tomatoes
Suspicion John Carpenters The Thing, and The Thing from
another World
Women Dolores Claiborne
Thelma and Louise
Waiting to Exhale
Up the Sandbox
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The Searchers
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Study Guides by Topic and Film
Aging
Grumpy Old Men
1. Describe and discuss the following media images of the elderly in the movie Grumpy Old
Men:
a. elderly as villains
o no more poverty
o war between the generations
o support pyramid
o not doing their share
b. elderly as desperately poor
c. elderly as comical, stubborn, eccentric or foolish
d. elderly as sexless
e. elderly as sick and near death
f. elderly as ugly
g. elderly as childlikeinfantilization
o moods and personality of children
o dress and appearance of children
o physical problems of children
o childrens parties
o childrens activities
o playthings of children
2. Describe ways the movie attacks ageismlook for the following, for example:
o is the diversity of the elderly addressed?
o is the positive accentuated rather than the negative?
o is the aging about living or about suffering and dying?
o is the movie targeted for the elderly, minus 15 years?
o are the elderly characters put on a diet?
o sense of humor?
o are the elderly sexless?
o does the movie look at the future of the characters or does it focus on life coming
to a close?
3. Are there gender differences in the movies treatment of aging? That is to say, is aging
portrayed differently for the male characters than for the female characters? Explain.
4. What makes the movie funny? Or is it not funny, and why? Are older people being made
fun of through stereotypes of older people or are we laughing at something else? Explain.
5. What expectations would people having coming in to see this movie for the first time? Does
this movie fulfill those expectations? Explain. How would we gauge the audience response
to the movie as they watched it?
6. How is the title of this movie important? What are the connotations? Is it ageist? Explain.
7. Discuss the following factors in understanding the effects of this movie on the older viewer
vs. the younger viewer:
o socialization experience of the individual
o predispositions the individual brings to the movie situation
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o context of the message
o physical environment of the movie
o emotional environment of the movie
o geographic environment of the movie
o credibility of the source
o one or two-sided argument
Essay: What would you change about the movie (plot, characters, dialogue, scenery, etc.) to
make it absolutely free of any ageism yet keep it a funny movie that older adults would want to
watch. Keep in mind that you are the producer of the movie out to make big bucks, especially
from those aging baby boomers that you dont want to offend.
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Anti-Social Personality Disorder
A Clockwork Orange
1. Based on our class discussion of what is anti-social personality disorder describe any
characteristics Alex has of anti-social personality disorder.
3. Jowett (1989) claims movies can be a shaper of ideas. Discuss that idea in terms of A
Clockwork Orange.
4. Jowett also claims movies can be a reflector of ideas. He states that we can see social and
cultural tensions reflected in movies. Discuss this idea in terms of A Clockwork Orange.
Keep in mind that the movie was made in 1971 in Great Britain, whereas the book was
written in 1917.
5. Half of this movie deals with the use of behavior modification. Diagram the operant and
classical conditioning used to modify Alexs behavior. Be sure to specify the stimuli and
responses. Terms you will want to use are operant, positive reinforcement, negative
reinforcement, unconditional stimulus, conditional stimulus, unconditional response,
conditional response.
6. Do you identify with any of the characters? What kind of person might be able to identify
with the characters?
7. How might culture influence the reception of the moviefor example, American vs. British?
8. Which of Alexs behaviors were modified and why? What were the resultsboth immediate
and delayed?
9. Give examples in the movie of the following (you are not limited to the behavior modification
method):
o positive reinforcement
o time out
o extinction
o punishment
o negative reinforcement (escape)
o avoidance
10. Discuss the ethics of the use of behavior modification in this situationtry to discuss both
the pros and cons of the use of this technique.
11. Relate the gangs in the movie to the information in the article you read about gangs (and to
anything else you know about gangs).
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Anti-Social Personality Disorder
Silence of the Lambs
2. How does the fact that Lector is a psychiatrist affect his characterhis personality and
behavior? Why is his being a psychiatrist important to the story?
3. We see flashes of Agent Starlings memory. What is she remembering and why?
5. Describe Buffalo Bills psychological problemsas we see them and as Hannibal Lector
describes them. How would you diagnose Buffalo Bill?
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Archetypes
Batman Returns
1. Discuss the archetypes found in the movie:
o anima
o animus
o mandala
o hero
o shadow
o transformation
o trickster
o spiritual father
o great mother
2. Discuss the symbolism of the bat, the cat and the bird, or penguin (a bird that cannot fly).
3. What do the characters have in common with each other? With us?
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Archetypes
Alien
1. From the review of Aliens 3 (McAlister, retrieved 2002) discuss the following in relation to
Alien:
o uncanny alien bug mother
o monster
o Ripley as powerful female hero doing her Rambo number
o the greedy machinations of the company
o the company wants to capture the monster and use it as a biological warfare
weapon
o Alien as a feminist cult film
o rampant misogyny
o the visual milieu of the film is grim
2. Use your study guide from the #1 interview Bill Moyers with Joseph Campbell (Hero) to
discuss Ripley as the mythological (or archetypal) hero.
3. Use your study guide from the #2 interview Bill Moyers with Joseph Campbell (Meaning of
Myth) to discuss the mythology of Alien.
4. Use your study guide from the #3 interview Bill Moyers with Joseph Campbell (The First
Storytellers) to discuss Alien as an example of woman is life, man is the servant of life.
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different forms) goes an intense imaginative interest in the varying roles of ideals,
and of the importance for the individual life of what was most vividly represented
in the ship. Do we see this theme in Alien? Explain.
o I (Joseph Conrad) had (a) vision of a twilight country with its high shadowy sierra
and its misty camps for mute witnesses of events flowing from the passions of
men short-sighted in good and evil. Apply this statement about Nostromo to
Alien.
8. Using the study guide for Art of Illusion comment (in detail) on the use of special effects in
Alien.
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Archetypes
The Power of Myth
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6. What if the Lords Prayer began Our Mother, who are in heaven?
7. How do we learn to live spiritually?
8. What is the relationship between inner and outer space?
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Archetypes
The Good Son
1. Describe the archetypes found in the movie. The following is a list of archetypes we
discussed in class. You may not find all of these in the movie:
o Shadow
o Anima
o Animus
o Great Mother
o Spiritual Father
o Hero
o Trickster
o Mandala
o Transformation
5. Is this a good film? What criteria did you use to make your decision? What would you
change to make it a better film?
7. How do you feel about the end of the movie? Now, try explaining your feelings in terms of
archetypes.
Essay: Could we call the idea of the good son an archetype (a shared, inherited, universal
idea)? Describe what this archetype could be. How is this archetype manifested in this film? In
what other books, movies, stories, etc. Have we seen this archetype? Explain how the
archetype of the good son makes the good son from this movie frightening. Relate the good
son to other archetypes we discussed in class. Discuss the dynamic of the good son with the
great mother. How is this dynamic manifested in this and other films? Cite examples and
discuss situations like the one in this film that actually happen. Archetypes help us to recognize
and react to similar situations. So, how do parents deal with children that dont fit the archetype
of being a child? How do parents deal with themselves when they dont fit the archetype for
being a parent? If, as Jung said, we are born with inherited tendencies (archetypes) then why
arent all sons good sons and all mothers great mothers?
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Archetypes
Star Wars
2. What was Jungs purpose in studying the African and Native American tribes?
6. Describe the different types and trace the development of special effects in The Art of
Illusion.
7. Star Wars: Identify and explain the role of the following archetypes in the film (use specific
examples):
o Shadow
o Mandala
o Great Mother
o Transformation
o Hero
o Spiritual Father
o Trickster
8. What are the psychological and cognitive effects on the audience of using clearly identifiable
archetypes in this film?
10. Describe the special effects and comment on how they add to or distract from the plot.
13. Comment on the voice-over James Earl Jones did for Darth Vader. Did he sustain the
character?
14. James Earl Jones says he like to play vulnerable charactersis Darth Vader vulnerable?
Explain with examples. Does vulnerability fit the shadow archetype? Explain.
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Essay: Explain the enduring appeal of Star Wars in terms of archetypes, symbolism, myths,
subtext(s) and special effects. Be sure to use specific examples from the film.
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Diversity
Thats Black Entertainment
3. Describe the actions and characteristics of early 20th century Black Film characters.
4. What were the contributions of Bessie Smith, Langston Hughes and Booker T.
Washington to the film industry?
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Diversity
Star Trek Deep Space Nine: The Emissary
Use Making it so: African-Americans of Star Trek (Russ, 1998) as a springboard for discussing
The Emissary.
1. Nichelle Nichols, Original Star Trek (1966), LT. Uhura, Finding a black actor portraying
anything but a criminal or a bum was a difficult task indeed. And a woman in a position of
authority? Forget about it.
o Im not blind--I looked around and everybody was white except for George and
me.
3. Come quick! Theres a black lady on television--and she aint no maid!Whoopi Goldberg,
Star Trek Next Generation (1990), Guinan.
4. Read the testimonials of Uhura (Nichelle Nichols role) as role model, inspiration and
motivation.
5. Read about the first interracial kiss on television. Platos Stepchildren Star Trek (1968).
6. From Avery Brooks, Deep Space Nine (1998), Captain Sisko, in a role that both embodies
and transcends so many of contemporary societies prejudices, challenges and ambiguities.
o Black people would actually exist in the future.
o he is able to challenge contemporary perceptions about the issues of races,
gender and community through the role of Sisko.
o the people complete the thought. That is the power.
o If we presume to think that in the future only white male people will remain in
charge of running the world, then the world faces a dismal future. (If youve seen
Deep Impact, think of Morgan Freemans role.)
o Landscape of thought.
7. Mae Jamison, Deep Space Nine Second Chances (1993), transporter technician (NASA
first black female astronaut):
o Sometimes images are very important.
o [A] lot of our views of society...are extremely influenced by media because
people spend so much time intimately involved with them. (See Lucas, 1996,
article in the Commercial Appeal about science fiction.)
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Diversity
Divide the class into four groups and give each of the groups one of the following perspectives:
Age 50+ from an urban environment; age 50+ from a rural environment; age 18 to 30 from an
urban environment; age 18 to 30 from a rural environment. Give the class the following
instructions:
To the best of your abilities, take the perspective of your assigned age group and living
environment (at the time of the film). Watch the film from that perspective. After the film,
discuss the following points with your group. Your group will present its views to the class. You
will have one hour to prepare. I would like a 15-minute presentation.
2. What aspects of the theories of interracial unions (Foeman & Nance, 1999) did you see
portrayed in the film? Which theories do you agree with?
3. Which stages of interracial relationship development (Foeman & Nance, 1999) did you
see portrayed in the film? What is your opinion of this portrayal?
7. Do you feel made-for-television movies (like Mr. And Mrs. Loving-made for Showtime)
differ from films that have their first showing in a theater? If so, how?
8. What have the filmmakers done in Mr. And Mrs. Loving to create intimacy in a story
covering a wide chronological span?
9. Should made-for-TV movies, like Mr. and Mrs. Loving, tackle controversial subjects?
Why or why not? Was miscegenation a suitable subject for a made-for-TV movie? Why
or why not?
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Documentary
Paradise Lost
2. What points does the film make and how does it make them?
3. What do you know about this case? How does it differ from what you find out in this film?
6. How does living in the area affect your viewing of the film?
7. A documentary sets up the expectation that this is the truth. How does this film create
this expectation?
8. As educated viewers, what things in the film tell us that the filmmakers are presenting
certain aspects of the truth?
10. What meanings do you give the title of the film: Paradise Lost?
11. Find information to update us on the case (HBO did a sequel to this documentary:
Paradise lost 2: Revelations, Berlinger & Sinofsky, 1999).
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Expressionism/Film Noir
1. One theme from this episode is the power and importance of words. Document examples
that support this theme. Be sure to look at names, names that change, names that stay
the same, titles, repetition of words and phrases, unusual language, lack of language,
play on words, examples of things characters have written, oxymorons.
2. Another theme from this episode is the search for meaning in other human beings. We
are alone in ourselves. This is a theme recognized in existentialism. Give examples that
support this theme.
3. What expectations does the first scene set up for us? What other scenes set up
expectations in the audience? How does the episode play against the audiences
expectations? What is the purpose of playing against our expectations?
4. The scene of Rocky in the cherry picker is reminiscent of an earlier X-Files episode
where cherry pickers, and the people in them, are ominous images. This is an example
of intertextuality. The Jose Chung episode is full of intertextuality. Find some examples
(other X-Files episodes, X-Files fandom, Twin Peaks, UFO culture, other television
fandom, Fox network specials, Close Encounters of the Third Kind, etc).
6. What are the predominant colors in the episode? Why? Give examples of the use of
these colors in the episode.
7. The special effects supervisor has said that the character of Lord Kimboat ishomage to
Ray Harryhausen. Who is this? How is the character an homage to him?
10. How does the episode use flashback? What is the effect? Why use flashback here?
11. How does the episode use backlighting? What is the effect? Why use backlighting here?
12. There is a lack of editing at scene changes or abrupt visual scene changes with smooth
dialogue. What is the effect on the audience? Why affect the audience this way?
13. Describe the mise en scene of the hypnosis and interview scenes. What do you
discover? Why do this?
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14. Why cast Jesse Ventura (at that time known as a stage wrestler) and Alex Trebeck
(Jeopardy host) as Men in Black?
15. How does the episode remind us that Jesse Ventura is a wrestler?
16. Point out the examples of slapstick in the episode? Why include slapstick?
17. The episode parodies the sexual tension between Mulder and Scully. Give examples of
this.
18. In most film the actors do not look directly at the camera. Why? In this episode, describe
scenes where an actor looks directly at the camera. Why?
19. How is Scullys argument that the autopsy video had been edited to make the
camerapersons point a commentary on film in general?
20. Describe the nerd/cameraman character. Pay special attention to what he says, how he
behaves, what he looks like, how Jose Chung portrays him, what is missing. Why is he in
the episode?
21. We could say that the nerd character is alienated. Give examples. Describe the play
on words (alienated) with this character.
22. Look at the reflections in the diner scene. What do you see? Why are we meant to see
it? What does it mean?
23. Describe the use of shadows. In film noir, shadows create suspense. Is this effect in this
episode?
24. Another trademark of the X-Files is the layering of conspiracy. Describe examples of the
layers of conspiracy in this episode.
25. Throughout the X-Files, smoking is a sign of conspiracy. Give examples from this
episode.
26. Find examples of irony, especially based on the dialogue in contrast to the visual image.
Only in film could you have this kind of irony.
27. There is really no closure to the episode. This is a trademark of the X-Files. What is the
effect of lack of closure in this episode? Jose Chung tries to give it closure in his book. Is
he successful? How do you feel about his ending?
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Expressionism/Film Noir
Double Indemnity
Give specific examples from the movie of the following characteristics of film noir.
1. Stylistic confusions
4. Posing of the family as the absent center that destabilizes relationships and sexual
identities
5. Woman as mysterious
7. Woman as manipulative
10. Mystery about where the woman belongs and where she has come from
11. Womans lack of ease within domestic environment emphasized by prison connotations,
off-center framing, restless camera movement, acerbic dialogue
14. Woman poses a threat and danger because she lacks sexual innocence
18. Womanliness as a mask behind which man suspects some hidden danger
19. The puzzle of the femme fatales motivation is almost always unsolved at the end
20. Film noir director provides moral punishment for the womans abuse of male trust
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21. Routine authority of masculinity is challenged by men being duped by women and by the
latent homosexuality of films such as Gilda and Double Indemnity
24. Voice is authoritative and earns respect because of its willingness to admit mistakes
26. Feminine discourse as intuitive, emotional and of the body and non-verbal sphere
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Expressionism/Film Noir
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Fear
The Shining
1. Describe the psychic skills that you see in the movie. Why are they important to the movie?
Or are they important? Do the characters use their psychic consciousness to fulfill some
need the logical consciousness cannot fulfill? Explain.
2. Be aware of your emotions and physiological reactions during the movie. Take notes on
them. How do your cognitive processes play a role (e.g., expectations, beliefs)?
3. How do you know you are afraid? How do you know its not some other emotion, like sexual
arousal for example? Use the theories of emotion to help you answer this question.
4. Compare the movie version of the woman in the bathtub to the written version. How are
they different? The same? Which is better? Why?
5. How does Stephen King use the natural to scare you in this movie?
6. Do you identify with any of the characters? Which ones? Why or why not? Does this add to
or detract from the fear?
Stanley Kubricks film of The Shining[is] such a yawn. Nobody in the movie has a past.
Theres no sense of the Torrances as a family. When bad things begin to happen, you
dont much care because you dont know the people. Its the difference between a car
smash a hundred miles away and the same thing right outside your house (King, 1997).
9. Are these characters acting out a scenario that we all know in our own nightmares? Explain.
10. Explain how the movie scares (or tries to scare, whichever is the case) you. Does the movie
scare you the way Stephen King would like to scare you?
11. King speaks of a hierarchy of emotions in a horror tale: Terror on top, then horror and on the
bottom revulsion. Talk about this hierarchy in terms of The Shining (Underwood & Miller,
1988).
12. What enduring image(s) in the movie do you walk away with? Are they frightening? Or?
13. Does King touch on any ordinary fear that you have in this story?
14. Examine the relationship between horror and humor in the movie? Is there any? Explain.
15. There have been people who have talked about subtexts in The Shining. What subtexts do
you find?
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16. How does this movie confirm your normative values?
17. Comment on Kings critique of Kubricks movie (Underwood & Miller, 1988).
Whats basically wrong with Kubricks version of The Shining is that its a film by a man who
thinks too much and feels too little; and thats why for all its virtuoso effects, it never gets you
by the throat and hangs on the way real horror should.
18. Comment on Kings statement: Of course [The Shining] is a ghost story, because Jack
Torrance himself is a haunted house.
19. King said that he thought Kubrick wanted to hurt the audience for The Shining. Comment on
that.
20. King says the scene where Wendy discovers Jacks manuscript is a wasted moment
wasted in the sense that it isnt scary. Comment on that.
21. If you were from another country and this movie was your only information about the USA,
what image would you have of this country? Would it be close/far from the truth? Explain.
22. What movie-made images come from this movie? (i.e. images that people recognize as
coming from this movie).
23. What would you like to see in the future of movie-making? Anything goesmovie content,
movie presentation, theater designanything.
Essay: Closely examine what you are afraid of. Compare and contrast these fears with the
fear in The Shining. Be specific and include ideas on how and why the movie frightens you.
Use the questions above to guide you.
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Fear
Carrie
All quotations come from Stephen King: Art of Darkness (Winter, 1986).
1. Describe the psychic skills that you see in the movie. Why are they important to the movie?
Or are they important? Do the characters use their psychic consciousness to fulfill some
need the logical consciousness cannot fulfill? Explain.
2. Be aware of your emotions and physiological reactions during the movie. Take notes on
them. How do your cognitive processes play a role (e.g. expectations, beliefs)?
3. How do you know you are afraid? How do you know its not some other emotion, like sexual
arousal for example? Use the theories of emotion to help you answer this question.
4. Compare and contrast the notion of childhood and the nature of evil in Carrie and The Good
Son. Relate your ideas to the following:
Popular entertainment finds it convenient to stereotype children. Misguided sentiment often
sees children portrayed in a wholly innocentand mindlesssense. In the realm of horror,
fiction. . .is the inversion of innocence, rendering children into agents of darkness for no
reason other than exploitation (p. 31).
5. How does Stephen King use the natural to scare you in this movie?
6. Do you identify with any of the characters? Which ones? Why or why not? Does this add to
or detract from the fear?
7. . . . evil lies not in Carrie White but in her tormentorsand, more important, in the traps of
society and religious mania in which her tormentors are confined (p. 31). Do you agree or
disagree with this statement? Why?
9. Are these characters acting out a scenario that we all know in our own nightmares? Explain.
10. Explain how the movie scares (or tries to scare, whichever is the case) you. Does the movie
scare you the way Stephen King would like to scare you?
11. King speaks of a hierarchy of emotions in a horror tale: Terror on top, then horror and on the
bottom revulsion. Talk about this hierarchy in terms of Carrie.
12. What enduring image(s) in the movie do you walk away with? Are they frightening? Or?
13. Does King touch on any ordinary fear that you have in this story?
14. Examine the relationship between horror and humor in the movie? Is there any? Explain.
15. There have been people who have talked about subtexts in Carrie. What subtexts do you
find?
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16. How does this movie confirm your normative values?
17. Find examples in the movie of the intense visual imagery of Brian De Palmas motion picture
adaptation of the novel (p. 31).
18. Describe the archetypal teenager and what is meant by that (p. 32). Do you agree that
Carrie is the archetypal teenager? Why?
19. We will discuss in more detail the images of women in movies when we study Dolores
Claiborne. As an introduction to that issue, discuss the pervasive feminist element in the
movie (pp. 32-33).
20. Compare and contrast the film ending with the novel ending (p. 34).
21. If you were from another country and this movie was your only information about the USA,
what image would you have of this country? Would it be close/far from the truth? Explain.
22. What movie-made images come from this movie? (i.e. images that people recognize as
coming from this movie).
Essay: Closely examine what you are afraid of. Compare and contrast these fears with the
fear in Carrie. Be specific and include ideas on how and why the movie frightens you (or failed
to frighten you). How does examining your fear affect your fear. Use the questions above to
guide you.
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Fear
1. Describe the allegory of Fear in this episode:. Describe the allegory of Fear in this
episode:. Describe the allegory of Fear in this episode:
o What are the origins of fear?
o What effects does fear have on our bodies?
o What is the purpose of fear?
o How do we deal with fear? What happens to fear?
o What happens to us if we are always afraid?
o What common fears are depicted?
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. Describe the personification of fear. How would you personify fear?. Describe the
personification of fear. How would you personify fear?
Fear
Copy Cat
1. Take note of the following film techniques: cuts, point of view, camera angles, lenses,
sound, visual effects (e.g., slow motion), lighting, color, composition.
2. How is the serial killer described and portrayed? Compare and contrast with what you know
about sociopaths.
3. Describe the symptoms of agoraphobia as they are portrayed in the film. Are they realistic
why or why not? Note the cognitive, psychophysiological and behavioral symptoms.
6. Comment on the following quote from the agoraphobia case study (Harris, 1991) you read as
it applies to this film: the key feature in overcoming entrenched patterns of avoidance is
exposure to those very same target situations that elicit the symptoms.
7. How is the agoraphobic fear different from normal fear as it is described in The Thaw?
8. How is the agoraphobic fear similar to the fear experienced by the cryogenically frozen
people in The Thaw?
9. In The Thaw we are told that fear knows you and is violent. Describe those qualities of fear
in Copycat.
12. Comment on the behavior of the audiencecite specific behaviors and specific scenes.
13. How do you think the behavior of the other people in the theater affects how you feel about a
film?
14. Describe the humorous/lightheartedness aspect of the film. Why is it there? Relate it to
fear.
16. How has Hitchcocks shower scene in Psycho influenced our perception of other shower
scenes?
17. How does the film explain the etiology of anti-social personality disorder? How does the
31
films theory fit with actual psychological theory?
18. What various fears that the audience might hold are described in Copycat? Compare with
the common fears depicted in The Thaw.
19. Compare how Dr. Hudson (Copycat) and Captain Janeway (The Thaw) deal with fear.
20. Lt. Monihan looks really tough (This is the first time Ive seen you cry). Yet she has her own
fear. What is it and how does she deal with it?
Essay: Using your study guide, reading and class discussions as your guide, in your essay
discuss the message about fear that the filmmaker is trying to communicate in both The Thaw
and Copycat.
32
Film Making
7. Describe pyrotechniques.
33
Film Making
Visions of Light
2. What happens to film with the introduction of sound (besides being able to hear it!)?
4. How does the cameraperson interact with actors during the studio era?
7. What are some special qualities of black and white (versus color) film?
12. What is the New York style (versus the Hollywood style) of film?
34
Film Making
Reservoir Dogs
3. Describe some of the most noticeable camera shots and the effects of each.
5. What is the effect of the first scene after the credits? How is the effect accomplished?
6. Comment on the use of the following in the film: long shots, close ups, dolly shots,
framing, flashbacks, panning, slow motion.
7. Quentin Tarantino has been accused or racism in his films. Based on Reservoir Dogs,
what do you think and why?
8. Why are so many verbal obscenities used? What is the effect on the audience?
11. How might the fact that Quentin Tarantinos mother took him to see Carnal Knowledge
when he was 8 and Deliverance when he was 9 affect his filmmaking?
12. Reservoir Dogs is Quentin Tarantinos first film as director and screenwriter, as well as
actor (1992). As his first film, what sort of review would you give it?
13. The title Reservoir Dogs came from a French film, Au Revoir Les Enfants, that Tarantino
could not pronounce, saying instead Reservoir film when he worked in a video store. This
was added to a Sam Peckinpah film from 1971, Straw Dogs. What do you think of
choosing to name a film in this way?
15. Tarantino grew up in the seventies. What influence do the seventies have on this film?
Give examples.
16. What do you see sitting on end in the warehouse that might be considered unusual?
17. What is Mr. Blonde sitting on when Nice Guy Eddie arrives at the warehouse?
18. From the opening diner scene, what action foreshadows Mr. Orange as the informer?
19. Indicate the scenes and specific references in Reservoir Dogs where these thematic
elements (repeated in later Tarantino films) show up:
35
a. Bear Claw (also in Natural Born Killers--NBK)
b. Blood-covered interior of 1974 Chevy Nova (also in Pulp Fiction--PF)
c. Camera angle from inside car trunk (also in PF and From Dusk Till Dawn--
FDTD)
d. Charles Bronson (also in True Romance--TR)
e. Chesterfield cigarettes (also in TR)
f. County prison (also in PF)
g. Comic book superheroes (also in TR and Crimson Tide--CT)
h. Contemplative mirror auto-conversations (also TR and PF)
i. Critically wounded/ill character being driven to get help (also PF)
j. Diners (also NBK and PF)
k. Fruit Brute cereal (also PF)
l. Madonna (also PF)
m. McDonalds (also PF)
n. Mexican standoff (also TR, NBK and PF)
o. Mobile phone conversations (also TR and PF)
p. Pam Grier (also PF and Jackie Brown)
q. Sodomy in prison (also TR and PF)
r. Torture of bound victim (also TR, PF and FDTD)
s. Tough, bald crime boss (also RD and PF)
t. Waiters/Waitresses, quality of (also PF)
u. Washing blood off (also PF)
v. Zippo lighters (also TR, NBK, PF and FDTD)
20. How do the above thematic elements add meaning to Reservoir Dogs?
21. Indicate the scenes and specific references in Reservoir Dogs where the following
pieces of dialogue (repeated in later Tarantino films) show up:
a. Diddled-eyed Joe to a damned-if-I-know (also in TR)
b. Joe_______ (also in TR: Joe Cocaine, Joe Fuckin Hollywood)
c. Okay ramblers, lets get rambling (also FDTD)
d. Supercool (also in NBK and PF)
22. How does the above dialogue add meaning to Reservoir Dogs?
36
Homosexuality
2. How have these images made homosexuals feel and think about themselves?
8. How was British film different from American film in its treatment of homosexuality?
11. What is the result of film freely using the terms faggot and queer?
12. What seems to be the difference (and why) in audience perceptions of male Vs female
homosexuality?
37
Homosexuality
The Birdcage
38
Humor
Ed Wood refers to the movie; Ed Wood refers to the director. Be sure to use specific examples
in answering the following. Have students watch Vision of Light [film] prior to these films.
1. Comment on the expectations set up by the title sequences in Ed Wood and in Plan 9.
5. Using Ed Wood as an example, explain how directors are artists, organizers and politicians.
6. Describe the cinematography of Ed Wood (by Tim Burton). Compare with the
cinematography of Plan 9 from Outer Space (by Ed Wood).
Essay: Why is Ed Wood considered the worst director (Medved, 1980)? Why is Plan 9 from
Outer Space considered the worst movie? Use discussions, chapters read, study guides, videos
and films from the entire semester to help you with the essay.
39
Law
3. Is the film biased or does it represent several perspectives on the issue of the death penalty?
Is it propaganda? Explain and give examples of how the film presents the death penalty.
4. The movie is based on the real experiences of Sister Helen Prejean. Religion, therefore,
plays a role in the film. Describe with examples the religious aspects of the filminclude
ideas of acknowledgment of sin and forgiveness. What is the films attitude towards
organized religion? Give examples.
5. According to the law was the death penalty properly imposed in the case of Matthew
Poncelet?
7. Describe film techniques and how/why they were used (their effects).
10. Compare the editing techniques of both Dead Man Walking and Nuts [film]. What effects do
they bring to each film?
12. Describe the process of lethal injectionhow does the movie present the actual process
(neutral, with specific emotions, both)?
13. With whom do you identify the most in the film? Why?
14. Animals do not rape and murderwhy are these strictly human behaviors?
40
Law
1. Look closely at the actor playing the prison priest. Where have you seen him before
during class? Why use this actor?
2. In this film, what is the attitude regarding the death penalty? Explain how you know this.
5. What issues regarding the death penalty does the film address? How?
8. What does Helens family think and feel about her involvement with Matt?
10. What is life like for the victims families? How and why do the families attitudes toward
Matthews death differ? Look at page 40 in Williams (1998) and apply the points made on
this page regarding just revenge to the attitudes of the victims families.
11. Comment on the actions, words, and attitudes of the crowds around the prison during the
executions.
14. Relate this sentence from page 43 of Williams(1998) to this movie: Slowly but inexorably
we have distanced ourselves from the reality of the death penalty. We now kill efficiently
and, above all, impersonally.
41
Law
Nuts
2. Competency hearing: Describe the two criteria of the defendants mental condition as it
pertains to Nuts.
4. Describe film techniques and how/why they were used (their effects).
8. Do you agree with the judges decision and his comments? Why or why not?
9. What expectations does the title Nuts set for the film?
11. Describe with examples the films attitude toward the profession of psychology.
Essay: How film portrays psychology and the law: Dead Man Walking [film] and Nuts
In this essay, I want you to compare and contrast the way the filmmakers portray psychology and
the law. Use the study guide and the following information to help you write the essay:
o Note similarities in editing.
o Notice that there are actors directing and directors acting.
o Note the client/representative relationships
o How does the film deal with the lawlaws that protect the individual and society.
o How would you describe the crimes in each movie? How do you feel about the
criminals? Why? What do the filmmakers do to elicit these feelings?
o What issues are addressed as to the role of psychology in the law?
o How should psychology professionals be involved in competency hearings and
the death penalty/murder trials?
42
Law
2000 Cannes Film Festival: Best Picture and Best Female Performance for Lead Actress (Bjork)
[Link]
[Link]
1. How (film techniques) and when (what scenes) is the movie like a Dogma 95 film?
2. How (film techniques) and when (what scenes) is the movie like a Hollywood film?
8. Would you be able to treat the theme (s) as a pure Dogma 95 film? If yes, how? If no, why
not?
9. What is the purpose of using both the Dogma 95 style and the Hollywood style, especially
from one of the founders of Dogma 95 (Lars von Trier)?
10. Why cast Bjork, Catherine Deneuve, and David Morse in their roles?
11. The shooting is a pivotal scene. Dogma 95 does not allow for scenes of death, yet how is the
scene still like a Dogma 95 film?
12. What happens in the shooting scene to make it pivotal (look up this word to make sure you
know what it means)?
15. What feelings does the film elicit in the audience? How and why?
16. Joel Grey plays Aldrich Novi. Look up Joel Grey and summarize his career. Why cast Joel
Grey in his part?
43
Law
1. How is the film relating the information? Is it factual? Is there one side being told? What
emotions are you feeling? Why? How does the film evoke emotion?
5. Relate the information presented in this film to other information you have had from
class:
o other films
o readings
o lectures
o speakers
7. What is the films message about the criminal justice system (does it have a message?)
9. Generally, what is a message? Who sends messages; who receives messages; what
is/are the purpose(s) of the message?
12. When you present your program at the end of the semester, you will be sending a
message. Describe to me what you want that message to be. What factors will affect its
delivery?
44
Law
2. How are we supposed to feel about Perry and Dick? Does this change during the course
of the movie?
4. How does the film bring all the players together from the very beginning and keep them
connected throughout the film? What does this suggest?
7. What issues regarding the death penalty does the film address?
8. Put the date of the movie in the death penalty time line. How does this affect the
message of the film?
9. Truman Capote (represented by the reporter, Bill Jenson) was a known homosexual.
How does his sexual orientation affect his telling of this story?
10. What role does religion play in the movie and how is it related to the films message
regarding the death penalty?
11. The film contains amazing cinematography, especially the use of light. Describe and
discuss how the use of light substantiates the films message.
13. One of the investigators asks, Why did Cain kill Abel. Why bring up the story of Cain
and Abel? What happened to Cain in the Bible? Relate this line, in context of the entire
film, to the discussion of Cain and Abel on pp. 27, 30, & 36 of Williams (1998).
14. What does the film suggest as an explanation for the Clutter murders (i.e., why did Perry
kill? Why did Dick kill?)?
15. Compare Dick and Perry to fictional murderers (e.g. Hannibal Lector).
16. From page 26 of Williams (1998): Until a catharsis has been effected through trial,
through the finding of guilt and then punishment, the community is anxious, fearful,
apprehensive, and above all, contaminated . . . execution forces the community to
assume forever the burden of moral certainty. Relate this quote to the film.
17. Describe the execution. Is it realistic? Comment on the depiction of the hanging in regard
to the description found on pages 31 and 44 of Williams (1998).
45
Law
I Want to Live
1. Place the films events (early 1950s) in the context of the history of the death penalty in
the U.S.A.
2. Mann act: forbade, under heavy penalties, the transportation of women from one state to
another for immoral purposes. Describe in your own words what is happening in the
scene where this act is invoked.
3. The film portrays Barbara Graham as what kind of woman? How does it do this?
5. What are the attitudes of the public in the film? How do you know?
8. What is the films depiction of the criminal justice system in the early 1950s?
10. The film is based on stories written by Ed Montgomery, a Pulitzer-prize winner in 1951 for
his stories about tax fraud and the IRS. How does this fact affect the message of the
film?
12. Describe in detail the execution beginning with the death watch.
14. Compare the movies portrayal of Barbara Grahams case with that given to you in class
(from <[Link]
46
Law
1. Where have we seen this actor before (the one who plays the elderly Paul)? Why would
the director choose this actor over all others?
2. Track your emotions, how and why the film makes you feel these emotions.
3. What are the prominent colors in the film? Why? What do they represent?
6. What are the purposes of the TV scene in the nursing home? Comment on the choices
of programs.
8. What part does the historic period play in the films story?
11. Describe the films commentary on the criminal justice system in the U.S.A.
14. Describe and comment on how the guards conduct electrocutions. Without detailing
procedures, describe their demeanor and attitudes toward the procedures and inmates.
15. Compare the executions with the description on pages 18 and 43 in Williams.
16. Where else have we seen a religious charm given to an inmate? Why do we see it again
in this film?
17. How are the ideas of life, death, justice, punishment, fairness, God, judgment,
redemption, treated in the film?
18. How does the paranormal work in the film? Why s it used? Could the movie work without
the use of the paranormal? Explain.
19. What is the films perspective on the meaning of the death penalty versus life without
parole (think metaphorically)?
20. John Coffeys story is allegorical. Explain the allegory. Pay attention to names (e.g., Del
is short for what?), physical descriptions, events, things said).
47
21. He kill them with they love. Thats how it is every day all over the world. What does this
mean and why is it repeated?
48
Learning
Sophies Choice
1. Dollard and Miller (1950) see personality in terms of habits: a habit is a stimulus-
response link established by learning. Identify the habits that the main characters have
in the film. Establish the stimulus-response links.
2. The habit is driven by drive reduction. Drive: any strong stimulus that impels the person
to action and whose reduction is reinforcing. Identify the drives (internal, external,
primary, secondary that impel the actions of the main characters.
6. Dollard and Miller were interested in how people deal with conflict:
o approach-approach (two choices are desirable)
o approach-avoidance (one choice leads to both a desirable and undesirable
consequence)
o avoidance-avoidance (two choices are undesirable).
Explain Sophies choice. Which kind of conflict did she have to deal with?
7. Dollard and Miller concluded that people can deal with conflict by indecision or escape.
Describe how the main characters deal with their conflicts. Discuss the indecision and/or
escape.
49
Media
Media Impact
7. Discuss the relationship between fantasy, reality, film, and dramatic license.
11. How and why does TV affect understanding of life and society?
50
Metaphysics
Answer these questions as they pertain to the general population, but support your answers with
what you have read (The Metaphysics of Star Trek, Hanley, 1997) and seen in this video.
4. Does your answer to question 3 jive with your answer to question 2? Explain.
5. What is personality?
51
Metaphysics
2. How does our language in referring to others affect our perceptions and attitudes about
others? How is our own self-concept affected by the way others refer to us? (Think about
Data being referred to as it or about having his name mispronounced.)
3. Either in history or at the present time, in any culture, what are some parallels to the idea of
disassembling Data?
4. What is important about the idea of property? Relate to Amistad (Spielberg, 1997) if youve
seen it.
7. How do (or have) cultures used the idea of disposable creatures and property?
8. Are we machines?
10. Is it possible to create a race? What function does race play in society?
12. Is discovering new life a possibility, a goal, and a directive for us?
52
Motivation
1. Using Maslows hierarchy, indicate with examples from both films the needs that motivate
the students.
2. Give examples from both films of how the teachers are aware that Maslows needs have
to be met for learning to occuralso show examples where the students needs have not
been considered.
3. Describe how each teacher motivates his/her students in the film. Describe ways in
which he/she fails to motivate.
4. What personality characteristics does each teacher have that allows him/her to be a
motivating teacher.
5. Describe how these schools are typical of schools today in this country or other countries
and how they are atypical.
6. What similarities do you discover in the students of the 60s in England and the students
of the 90s in the US? What differences?
7. What similarities do you discover in the male teacher of the 60s in England and the
female teacher of the 90s in the US? What differences?
8. In both films take note of the use of film techniques and describe their effects.
10. What sort of music is chosen for each film? Discuss the filmmakers choice. How do the
lyrics fit in with the film makers message?
11. What motivates each teacher originally to apply for the teaching job? Why and how do
their original motivations change? From your experience, do you feel this is portrayed
realistically? Why or why not?
12. Why is the opening of Dangerous Minds filmed in black and white? What effect does this
have?
14. Comment on the message behind the titles of each movie. How does the title set the
mood for the audience?
15. Comment on the overall similarities and dissimilarities between the two films.
Essay: Using examples from both films, tell me what these two films communicate about
being an effective teacher. Be sure to include in your discussion how being a motivational
53
teacher has changed and stayed the same over the past 30 years. How might culture affect
the qualities necessary for being an effective teacher. According to these films, how do we
measure effectiveness? Scan the papers or the TV news and relate the films to educational
issues we are facing today. After you tell me what the messages are that the films are trying
to communicate, describe what the film makers have done in the films in order to
communicate those messages. Finally, give me your opinion (supported with examples) as
to whether or not the films succeeded in communicating with the audience.
54
Obsessive-Compulsive Personality
2. Based on these criteria and the definition from DSM-IV that at least four of these criteria
must be present to make a diagnosis of OCPD, would you diagnose Diane as having this
personality disorder? Explain.
3. Describe any situations where people have become annoyed by Dianes obsessive
behavior.
5. The DSM-IV states that a person who is OCPD shows excessive deference to an
authority they respect and excessive resistance to authority they do not respect. What
authority does Diane respect and what authority does she not respect? How does this
affect her behavior?
7. Why would you not diagnose Diane with obsessive-compulsive disorder (remember,
obsessive-compulsive disorder is an anxiety disorder; it is not the same as the
personality disorder described above).
55
Perspective
2. Notice the scene early in the episode where Commander Riker (beard, mustache, first
officer accused of murder) is framed. Discuss the double meaning of the word framed
in the context of the episode.
3. Describe the different perspectives of the events on the space station as they are
recreated by each witness. Why are they so different? Whose perspective describes the
events as they really occurred? Who is lying?
4. What does this episode tell the audience about perspective? Apply this message to the
real worldmaybe to a situation youve been in. In what situations would this message
be important?
56
Perspective
Hair
5. What events of the 60s does the film reflect on? Is it an accurate reflection? Use
Cantor (1969) reading to help you with this question.
8. Part of the potential power of the musical is its appeal to the senses of sight and sound.
Describe the most powerful images and songswhy did you choose these?
Essay: Interview someone who lived in the late 60s (must have been at least 18 at the time).
Find out how old they were and what they were doing (e.g. working, going to school, fighting
the Vietnam war, emigrating to Canada). Get their perspective on that time period. Come up
with a set of questions to ask before the interview. Using the information from the interview,
the study guide and the readings, compare and contrast the perspectives of the late 60s in
America. Explain the differences and similarities in perspectives.
57
Problem Solving
Cast Away
2. What are the special demands on the actor in this film? Does Tom Hanks succeed?
Explain.
3. Give examples of how from the very beginning of the film we know that Chuck is a
problem solver.
8. Describe the importance of time in the film and the use of irony.
9. What meanings does the title Cast Away have in relation to the movie?
11. What kind of problems is Chuck unable to solve? How does he deal with his inability?
13. What does it take to solve a problem? Give examples form the film.
14. How does impatience affect problem solving? Give examples from the film.
15. What is the first thing chuck says to Wilson? Why is this significant?
18. Give examples from the film of Chuck meeting (or failing to meet) his needs (as based on
Maslows hierarchy of needs).
21. Comment on the following (from one of the film makers): Surviving is easy, living is
difficult. Give examples from the film.
22. Comment also on this from one of the filmmakers: the film is about mysteries to be lived
and not just problems to be solved. Give examples from the film.
58
23. Play with the name Chuck and relate it to the film.
59
Psychopathology
Rain Man
1. Where was Raymond living before his brother Charlie got him? What kind of place was it?
2. If a psychologist comes from a social perspective, what explanation might he/she give for
Raymonds autism? What evidence would he/she have from the movie?
3. What things make up Raymonds routine? How does Raymond react to departures from
his routine? How do these reactions affect Raymonds ability to interact with his
environment and with people?
9. How would you describe Raymonds speech (e.g. when he converses with Charlie)?
12. What does Raymond do which might support a theory of the person with autisms
deficiency in the stimuli filtering process in attention?
13. What does Raymond do which might support a theory of the person with autisms
oversensitive hearing?
14. What does the country doctors evaluation reveal about Raymonds mathematical ability?
15. According to the country doctor, how does Raymond compare with other people with
autism?
16. Describe aspects of Raymonds routine. How does this routine affect Raymond and
Charlie?
17. Raymond has trouble with humor. Why, in your opinion, might a person with autism have
trouble with humor?
60
21. How does Charlie use Raymonds savant abilities to his advantage?
22. Describe situations when Raymond doesnt like to be touched. When can he tolerate it?
What do you think makes the difference?
23. In your opinion, why does Charlie send Raymond back to Wallbrook?
61
Psychopathology
Equus
1. Describe the placebo effect in the movie. How does the doctor use it? How does the
patient respond?
2. Describe and comment on how the doctor explores the boys psyche. You may want to
use the therapeutic contract described in class as a guide.
3. What is the mystery in this psychiatric detective story (from the video sleeve)? How is it
resolved and what is concluded?
4. How is the passionate spirit of the life force (from video sleeve) manifested?
6. What are the doctors feelings towards the boy? How do these feelings affect his
therapy? His view of himself as a psychologist?
8. Does the doctor understand the boys unique frame of reference and psychological
needs? Explain.
10. Are the boys parents also the doctors clients? Explain.
11. Is the doctor suffering from burnoutor is it more, or nothing at all? Explain.
12. Is this an intellectually challenging movie? Was it a burden to watch? Was it too
difficult? Did it deal with unpopular themes? Explain.
Essay: Describe and comment on the exploration of the boys psyche; the confrontation of
life force and civilization; and focus on the role of and effect on the psychologist.
62
Psychopathology
Awakenings
3. In Lennys, Lucys and the other similar cases, how do their symptoms compare with
those of people with schizophrenia?
4. Describe Dr. Sayers will theory in regard to his patients reactions to the ball. Relate
this to the will of some people with schizophrenia.
5. What various stimuli make these patients react? (i.e., what reaches them?)
6. Why might these patients have been diagnosed as suffering from atypical
schizophrenia?
7. Unlike the case of schizophrenia, we know what caused these patients disorder. What
was it?
8. The older doctor says these patients arent thinking, the virus didnt spare their higher
faculties. Dr. Sayer asks how he knows that. The older doctor replies, Because the
alternative is unthinkable. What does he mean by that? What effect did this point of
view have on these patients diagnosis and treatment? Can you relate this to
schizophrenia or mental illness in general?
9. Why does it bother Dr. Sayer that Lucy was drawn to the window rather than to the
drinking fountain? Can you relate this to Maslow?
11. Dr. Sayer uses an unusual technique to assess his patients. What is it?
13. Why does the poem, The Panther, have special significance for Lenny?
15. Dr. Sayer parallels Parkinsons and his patients disorder. Describe this.
16. The dopamine circuit is affected in opposite ways in Parkinsons and schizophrenia.
Phenothiazines taken for a long period produce Parkinson-like symptoms in the person
with schizophrenia. Knowing this and knowing the effect on phenothiazine on the
dompamine circuit, explain why you think L-Dopa awakes Dr. Sayers patients.
17. What are the various psychological reactions the patients have to their awakenings?
63
18. What Parkinson-like symptoms does Lenny exhibit when he develops tolerance to L-
Dopa?
19. One doctor describes Lenny as being paranoid. How does Dr. Sayer explain this?
Describe this in terms of labeling theory.
20. What ethical questions are raised in this movie regarding treatment? What is your
opinion?
21. What is the second awakening Dr. Sayer refers to at the end of the movie? What does
this suggest about the treatment of mental patients?
64
Psychopathology
Snake Pit
1. Describe the behaviors associated with psychopathology in the film. What definition of
abnormality do you believe might have been used here?
65
Psychopathology
Sybil
5. Sybil has tunnel vision. What kind of disorder is that? (Hint: Theres no physiological
reason for the tunnel vision.)
10. What childhood experience does Sybils personality, Peggy, relive in the hotel room in
Harlem? How old is Peggy?
14. Does Vicky think she and the others are separate people from Sybil?
22. Why do Sybils hands go numb? (What is the name for this disorder?)
66
24. What technique does Dr. Wilbur use to bring out Sybils personalities?
27. Might Sybil have had a predisposition (diatheses) for psychopathology? Why? What
might have been a predisposition for her dissociation?
29. Describe how Sybils attempted suicide is handled by Dr. Wilbur and Richard.
30. Why does Sybil claim she was faking the multiple personalities?
31. What does Dr. Wilbur find out from Sybils old doctor?
33. What does Sybils mom do to her to spoil her love of music?
34. How does the movie depict the fusion of the personalities?
67
Psychopathology
5. Describe possible stressors that could be triggers for Eves different personalities.
8. Why does Dr. Luther believe Eve is not losing her mind?
12. What are the results of the first hypnosis we witness? Would you say Eve is easily
hypnotizable?
15. Describe Janes amnesia. How does Dr. Luther try to revive Eves childhood memory?
16. What is Eves childhood memory that was the cause of her dissociated personality?
17. Compare the Hollywood version with the actual case study (Thigpen, 1957).
18. What happened to Janes memory after the traumatic memory was revealed?
68
Psychopathology
Prince of Tides
1. Describe how Tom and Savannah deal with their pain and how this causes them
problems.
2. Insight therapy tries to help people discover the true reasons they behave, feel and think
as they do. Describe this process of discovery in the movie.
3. Insight therapy uncovers the causes of their distress-both historical and current. Discuss
the historical and current causes of the characters distress in the movie.
5. In your opinion, does the psychiatrist, Dr. Lowenstein, have the three core qualities Carl
Rogers feels a therapist should have (genuineness, unconditional positive regard,
accurate empathic understanding)?
10. If you have read Pat Conroys novel (1986), what similarities and differences do you see
between the novel and movie? Comment on the effects of these differencese.g., did
you find one more enjoyable or more insightful than the other? Even if you have not read
Conroys novel, what is your opinion on making movies from novels?
11. If you have seen this movie at the theater and or at home on a VCR, were there any
differences watching it on video in a classroom setting? If yes, describe those
differences and comment on the effects of those differencese.g., were you able to
lose yourself more easily in one situation than in the other?
69
Psychopathology
1. What is a delusion? Describe the delusions and their function for the four main
characters.
2. What is catatonia? Who shows symptoms of catatonia in the film? What are these
symptoms?
5. What is paranoia? Who is diagnosed as paranoid in the film? What paranoid behaviors
does he exhibit?
9. Cite references in the film to the use of Thorazine and amitriptyline. What are the
benefits and risks of using these drugs?
11. We have seen that music can be used to relate to the person with autism and with
Alzheimers disease. From this film, can music be beneficial in treating schizophrenia?
Explain with examples.
70
Psychopathology
Psycho
3. Alfred Hitchcocks daughter has a small part--what role does she play?
6. A boys best friend is his mother--what makes this statement odd? This is an example
of foreshadowing--why?
7. Find out who Janet Leighs daughter is. What roles related to Janets has her daughter
had?
10. Detail the use and symbolism of eyes in the film. Why eyes?
13. What animal does Norman look and act like? Give examples. Why this animal
(significance for the film)? How is the image of this animal repeated in the film? Why?
14. Play with the names Marion, Norman, Bates, Crane, and Chambers. What other words
do they sound like or share meanings with? How do these words/names relate to the
film?
15. Hitchcock shot other movies of the same era in color. Why shoot Psycho in black and
white?
16. Old habits die hard is repeated. What meanings does the phrase have in the film?
17. Why the unusual shot of Norman looking at the registration with Arbogost?
18. What does the woman say in the hardware store? How does it relate to Marions death
and Hitchcocks portrayal of her death?
71
Religion
The story of Christs crucifixion in this film is told from Judas perspective. Give examples of this
perspective.
1. Give examples of moods that are created in the audience. Explain how the film creates
the mood (give specific examples).
2. The film was shot entirely in Israel. What is your opinion of using this location (support
with examples)?
3. Give your opinion as to the anachronistic choices the filmmaker made (be specific).
4. Find the Biblical texts (John or Luke for example) and compare with the lyrics.
5. Discuss why you agree or disagree with the reasons for this film receiving the Golden
Turkey Award (Medved, 1980).
6. Use the study guide from Joseph Campbells Hero to comment on Christ as the
archetypal hero. Use examples from the film.
7. Read Matzke and compare with the film depiction of the crucifixion.
72
Reminiscence
2. How does this movie fit into what Jowett (1989) calls the encyclopedia of American culture?
How does the movie color our perception of American history?
5. Do you feel that in this movie reminiscence is seen as a sign of depression, bitterness or
anger, senility or memory problems? Explain with examples.
6. Do you feel that in this movie reminiscence is portrayed as a process to gain serenity and
wisdom? Explain with examples.
7. It has been said that telling stories about ones life is a natural and interesting part of life for
both the teller and the listener. Is this true for the teller in this movie? Who are the listeners?
Is the storytelling natural and interesting for the listeners? How do you know? In real life
who would be listening?
8. In this movie, do you see the purpose of the reminiscing as being any of the following? (You
can see any or all) Give specific examples please:
o Affirmation of the continuity of ones identity
o Coping with current stresses
o Maintenance of self-esteem
9. How does the story revealed by the reminiscer in this movie help to dispel the myth that all
elderly people are alike?
10. Describe how reminiscence, also called life review, was used to assess the lives of both
young and old in this movie.
11. Give examples of how the reminiscence process illustrated that older people have a vivid
imagination and memory for the past.
13. Give specific examples of any of these positive results from reminiscing that you see in this
movie:
o Right old wrongs
o Make up with enemies
o Accept ones own mortality
o Develop a sense of serenity
o Feel pride in ones accomplishments
o Gain a feeling of having done ones best
73
15. Were people always supportive and attentive of the reminiscer in this movie? Give
examples.
16. Chubon (1980) described how the reminiscence process was beneficial to her patients and
how she used novels to facilitate reminiscing. Describe how you could use movies the way
Chubon used novelsto enhance life review. Use examples of specific movies that you
think would be helpful.
74
Suspicion
1. Based on viewing the original (The Thing from Another World) and the remake (John
Carpenters The Thing), answer the following question: Do many of the films that we see in
the theater or on video demonstrate an ever-increasing desire to see action, violence, sex,
etc.? Do you think such films cause or contribute to social problems, such as crime and
domestic violence?
2. Which film sequences in both versions do you recall? Why do you recall them?
3. According to Stephen King (Underwood & Miller, 1988), the horror genre exists on three
levels (each one a bit cruder than the one before): terror (the finest emotion), horror,
revulsion (gag instinct). Describe scenes from the two films that appeal to terror, horror and
revulsion.
4. Are any of the scenes excessively revolting? Why did the filmmaker use these scenes?
What was the effect?
5. Using examples from both movies, describe what you believe to be the subtexts in each
movie (e.g., do you agree that the original movie is about science vs. the army
(McCarthyism) and John Carpenters version is about our fear of canceror do you have
your own ideas?) (Be sure to relate visual images, dialogue and music to find the
relationships.)
6. Comment on the aesthetics of each film: color, sound, camera angles, etc.
7. How did the film makers use various techniques to influence your emotions?
8. Did the directors of these movies shoot any scenes that lulled your attention in order to
shock you later (involuntary attention)?
9. Describe any scenes you find yourself paying attention to (voluntary attention).
10. Remark on any variation of intensity or size, novelty and contrast, or techniques and
comment on why you think it was done.
11. Are the filmmakers successful in keeping the film moving? How or how not?
12. How would your mindset (age, culture, gender, etc.) affect how you viewed each of these
films?
13. How would your past experience affect how you viewed each of these films?
14. Read the introduction to John Campbells Who Goes There? Which version of The Thing
comes closest to John Campbells (Wynorsky, 1980)?
15. React to this quote from Things to Come: Despite the possibilities for unintentional comedy,
The Thing (1951) is nicely underplayed, with superior acting and directing. The monster
75
itself is kept in the shadows most of the time, allowing the viewer to imagine the worst for
himself. The Arctic setting only heightens the tension, as man must fight alien and inhospitable
climate alike (Menville & Reginald, 1977).
16. Using Schrecker (1997) as a source, comment on the filmmakers (both versions) message
concerning social conformity. Give examples.
17. Schrecker also talks about the movies that were never made. What movies do you think
will never be made? Why?
18. Discuss ethnocentricity (considering ones own culture superior to other cultures) in both
films and relate to McCarthyism.
20. Women are included in the cast of the 1951 version but not the 1982 version. Why might
this be? (Describe the roles the women play in the film.)
21. Describe similarities and differences between the two movies (based on the same story).
22. Science fiction can be easily dated and then become silly to future audiences. Give
examples of how both versions are dated.
Essay: Describe the subtext of suspicion in both films. Be specific as to the exact nature of the
subtext of the suspicion in each film (e.g., communism of the 50s). How does suspicion
develop? How do people react to suspicion? Generalize the nature of suspicion to other areas
than those presented in these films. Be sure to give specific examples to support your points
and describe film techniques that create suspicion for the audience.
76
Women
Dolores Claiborne
1. Use the diagram (Wood, 1999, p. 342) from class to help you understand and describe the
cycle of abuse in the film. How is the cycle broken?
2. Comment on this quotation from Wood in terms of the film: media images carry to
extremes long-standing cultural views of masculinity as aggressive and femininity as
passive (p. 314).
3. Does Joe serve as an example of physical aggression associated with traditional views of
masculinity and a self-definition based on control, domination, and power (Wood, 1999, p.
225)? Explain with specific examples.
Ambitious, independent women [are] lonely, embittered spinsters who are counterparts
to good women (pp. 306-307).
. . .the witch, bitch, whore or nonwoman, who is represented as hard, cold, aggressive
all of the things a good woman is not supposed to be (p. 306)
Just as consistent with cultural views of gender are depictions of women as sex objects
who are usually young, thin, beautiful, passive, dependent, and often incompetent and
dumb (p. 303).
9. If a woman fails to look good and please, her man might leave (Wood, 1999, p.312) Explain
the irony of this statement in terms of the film.
11. Do you agree that sometimes being a bitch is all a woman has to hang onto? Would
women in general agree with this? Men? How does the film support this statement?
13. Discuss the dialogueespecially the east coast accent and expressions that some of the
77
actors/actresses had to tackle. Was it done believably?
14. Did you identify with any of the characters? Why/why not?
15. Comment on the actors/actresses ability to make you believe they were the character they
were portraying.
16. Did the setting, costumes, makeup help to create the right atmosphere (give examples)?
Essay: Each of us is different. Weve seen that in Carrie and Equus. We see it again in Dolores
Claiborne. It is not the aim of feminism to negate the differences between people. Rather, we
should learn to understand our differences and treat people fairly in light of these differences.
Show with specific examples how Dolores Claiborne comments on the human condition
specifically our differences and how we are treated because of our differences. Be sure to look
at all of the relationships between people. How do the differences between people either strain
or strengthen relationships? Dont forget to tie in the idea of differences to the cycle of domestic
abuse and incest. Compare and contrast the theme of individual differences in Dolores
Claiborne, Carrie, and Equus. Is there a common message? Discuss other movies (or other
forms of media) where the message about individual differences is, well, different. Finally,
conclude with your opinion as to whether the movies, in general, have been fair in their portrayal
of men and women as individuals (be sure to cite specific examples). Did Dolores Claiborne
honestly and sincerely portray men and women as the individuals they really are? If yes, cite
examples. If not, what should have been portrayed differently?
78
Women
Please note: You may have to interview your classmates to answer some of these questions.
2. Discuss audience identification with the charactersboth similarity and wishful identification.
4. What biological responses did you or your classmates experience as the audience in
reaction to specific scenes in the movie?
5. You can view this movie as a gender-reversed world (Steinem, 1994). The technique of
reversal can produce empathy and detect bias by making similar statements about the other
gender.
a. What statements about men and women are being reversed?
b. Does this reversal produce empathy?
c. Does this reversal detect gender bias?
d. What are other effects of this reversal?
6. Jacques Lacan (Jowett, 1989, III) explains the essential maleness perspective of movies. In
your opinion, what is this perspective and how is this perspective used in this movie?
Use the following paradigms to analyze the personalities of Thelma and Louise:
a. Freudian symbolism.
b. Jungian archetypes.
c. Rogers ideas about organismic valuing process, incongruency, self and ideal
self.
d. Maslows needs hierarchy.
e. Karen Horneys basic anxiety, 10 neurotic needs, feminine psychology, penis
envy, basic evil.
f. Adlers striving for superiority, organ inadequacy, and masculine protest.
79
Women
Waiting to Exhale
8. Which relationships in the film work and which dont and why in both cases? Apply to what
you learned in class.
9. Explain the dynamics of the business meeting at which Robin and Michael were present.
11. How does Robin feel at the party her date took her to and why?
12. Notice the love theme from Romeo and Juliet playing during the balcony scene with Troy and
Robin. Compare Shakespeares scene with this films.
13. Are you a bad girl? What does the film say about bad girls and good girls and the double
standard?
14. Comment on the womens clothingis it realistic or male fantasy? (Stan, 1995)
15. Black men are presented as lazy and unable to handle authority, as lecherous, and/or as
unlawful, while Black females are portrayed as domineering or as sex objects (Wood, 1999,
p. 302). Relate this quote to the film.
16. Some media analysts believe that if more women had positions of authority at executive
levels, media would offer more positive portrayals of women (Wood, 1999, p. 302).
Knowing that a woman wrote the novel (Terry McMillan) and a woman produced the film
(Deborah Schindler) relate the quote to this film.
17. Relate the film to following four themes presented by Wood (1999):
o Womens dependence/mens independence;
o Mens authority/womens incompetence;
o Women as primary caregivers/men as breadwinners;
o Women as victims and sex objects/men as aggressors.
18. Relate the following quote from Wood (1999) to the film: I wouldnt say this around anyone,
80
but personally Id be glad if the media let up a little on us guys. I watch those guys in films
and on TV, and I just feel inadequate. I mean, Im healthy and I look okay, and Ill probably
make a decent salary when I graduate. But I am no stud; I cant beat up three guys at once,
women dont fall dead at my feet; I doubt Ill make a million bucks; and I dont have muscles
that ripple. Every time I go to a film, I leave feeling like a wimp. How can any of us guys
measure up to whats on the screen? (p. 310)
19. How does the film comment on the superwoman image (Wood, 1999, p. 193)?
20. Are these women successful on terms other than masculine ones?
81
Women
Up the Sandbox
2. Stereotypical portrayal of women: sex objects who are usually young, thin, beautiful,
passive, dependent and often incompetent and dumb (p. 303). What is the films comment
on this stereotypical portrayal? Give examples.
3. The point is not that having babies or committing to relationships is wrong: Rather, it is that
media virtually require this of women in order to present them positively. Media define a very
narrow range for womanhood (p. 309). Give examples that support this statement as a
theme of the film.
4. Media pathologize the bodies of men and especially women, prompting us to consider
normal physical qualities and functions as abnormal and requiring corrective measures (p.
319). What examples can you find in the film that recognize this effect of the media?
5. Many women and men now perceive normal monthly changes (menstruation) as abnormal
and as making women unfit for positions of leadership and authority (p. 322). What film
scene exemplifies this perception?
From The First Storytellers (The Power of Myth, Joseph Campbell) [Film]:
1. How does Margaret use personal myth to deal with transitions in her life? Give examples.
3. What is the invisible plane supporting the visible plane in the film? Give examples.
4. Discuss the films depiction (with examples) of women as vehicles of nature, woman is
life, men as vehicles of society, and man as servant of life.
5. Look for and detail similar scenes in the film as found in The First Storytellers. Why are
these scenes chosen for Up the Sandbox?
6. Campbell tells us that how you address a person affects how we think and act toward that
person. Give examples of this in the film.
7. Given that this film was made in 1972 as a reflection of and on society, if it were made today,
how would it be/not be different?
82
Women
The Searchers
Please answer these questions in relation to your reading and to watching The Searchers.
4. Discuss the following terms: melting pot, salad bowl, separate but equal.
8. Define trope.
10. Discuss the relationship between female subjugation within the family and ownership of
private property.
15. Describe and discuss the Western film representation of racial difference and the threat of
miscegenation.
16. What is the proper and lawful use of the land as typically depicted in Western films?
17. What is the role of language in culture (in the context of Westerns)?
18. Discuss the following quote from Representing Women : The American landscape has
traditionally had strong associations with the female body ( , 109).
20. Describe and discuss the meaning of the typical Western ending.
83
o Reify
o Hegemony
o Promulgate
o Anachronistic
o Quintessential
o Patriarch
84
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88
Batman defends Gotham City from a corrupt businessman, the Penguin, and Catwoman.
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99 minutes; R; crime/thriller/action
Crooks argue about what went wrong with a jewelry heist.
Searchers, The [Film]. Ford, J. (Director), & Nugent, F. S. (Screenwriter). (1956) (Available from
Warner Studios)
Cast: John Wayne, Jeffrey Hunter, Vera Miles, Ward Bond, Natalie Wood
120 minutes; unrated; western
The movie looks at the motives of a Civil War veteran searching for his niece who was
captured by Indians.
Silence of the lambs [Film]. Saxon, E. (Producer), Demme, J. (Director), & Tally, T.
(Screenwriter). (1990) (Available from StrongHeart/Demme Productons)
Snake pit [Film]. Litvak, A., & Bassler, R. (Producers). (1948) (Available from 20th Century
Fox)
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Cast: Olivia de Havilland, Mark Stevens, Leo Genn, Celeste Holm
108 minutes; unrated; drama
A woman cannot remember how she became a patient in an insane asylum.
Star wars [Film]. Kurtz, G. (Producer), & Lucas, G. (Director, Screenwriter). (1995) (Available
from LucasFilm)
Cast: Mark Hamill, Harrison Ford, Carrie Fisher, Peter Cushing, Alec Guinness
121 minutes; PG; science fiction
Luke Skywalker saves Princess Leia from Darth Vadar.
Sybil [Television Film]. Babbin, J. (Producer), Petrie, D. (Director), & Stern, S. (Telewriter).
(1976) (Available from Lorimar)
Cast: Albert Ammons, Eubie Blake, Clarence Brooks, Cab Calloway, Nat King Cole
60 minutes; unrated; documentary
Documents black films from 1929 to 1957.
Thaw, The [television series episode]. Menosky, J. (Telewriter), & Rush, M. (Director). In W.
Neuss (Producer), Star trek voyager, (1996) (Available from United Paramount Network)
Thelma & Louise [Film]. Scott, R. (Producer, Director) & Khouri, C. (Screenwriter). (1991)
(Available from Public Media Video)
Thin blue line, The.[Film] Lipson, M. (Producer), & Morris, E. (Director). (1988) (Available from
Miramax films)
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Cast: Randall Adams
101 minutes; unrated; documentary
After a police officer is killed, a drifter is arrested, convicted and sentenced to life in prison.
This film led to the freedom of an innocent man.
Thing from another world, The [Film]. Hawks, H. (Producer), Nyby, C. (Director), & Lederer, C.
(Screenwriter). (1951) (Available from Turner Home Entertainment)
To sir, with love [Film]. Clavell, J. (Producer/ Director/ Screenwriter). (1966) (Available from
Columbia Pictures)
Up the sandbox [Film]. Winkler, I., Chartoff, R. (Producers), Kershner, I. (Director) & Zindel, P.
(Screenwriter). (1972) (Available from Warner Communications Company)
Visions of light [Film]. Samuels, S. (Producer/Director). (1994) (Available from Fox Video)
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Wisdom of the dream, The (volume 2, inheritance of dreams) [Film]. Segaller, S.
(Producer/Director). (1989) (Available from Public Media Video)
Cast: Sarah Dunant (Narrator), Max von Sydow (Voice of C.G. Jung)
159 minutes; unrated; biography
Introduces Carl Jungs concepts of dreams and the unconscious, with a focus on his
conception of archetypes.
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Sample Syllabi
SYLLABUS #1
Psychology in the Cinema
Required text
Objectives
To help students:
1. develop criteria for aesthetic awareness, so that they may analyze and evaluate film
2. understand how to form perceptive relationships with mass media
3. increase their perceptive skills and to perceive the language of film
4. investigate the nature of film as a distinctive art form and to relate and compare it to the
other arts
5. gain insight, understanding, and aesthetic enjoyment through film
6. recognize their own psychological and emotional responses to film
7. learn how to verbalize the experience of seeing and hearing the medium of film
8. explore topics in psychology as they are presented in film.
Class Requirements
1. Attendance
2. Take home essays written after each film.
3. Final essay exam
1. Horror/suspense/fear/serial killers/agoraphobia
o The Thaw
o Copycat
2. Teachers/motivation/qualities that are effective
o To Sir, With Love
o Dangerous Minds
3. Propaganda/remakes
o The Thing--two versions
1. Perspective/History--reflection of society/Freedom and its price/Individuality
/musicals
o Hair
2. Special effects/abduction syndrome/Jungs archetypes/shaper of society
(science)/message in science fiction/animation
o X-Files
o Star Wars
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6. Death penalty/drama
o Dead Man Walking
7. Insanity plea
o Nuts
8. Directors/comedy-humor/cinematography
o Ed Wood
o Plan 9 From Outer Space
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SYLLABUS #2
Honors Fantasy, Reality and Media
Required Texts
Delasara, J. (2000) PopLit, PopCult and The X-Files: A Critical Exploration. McFarland &
Company
Wahl, O. F. (1997) Media Madness: Public Images of Mental Illness. Rutgers University
Press
Objective
The objective of the course is to familiarize students with how the media creates reality. The
medium places itself between reality and fantasy (the media portrayal). Therefore, the
students must understand the media portrayals, the process of reification and the reality. We
will use Delasaras book on the X-files as a springboard for understanding and discussing
popular culture which grows from any given medium.
Class Requirements
1. Two papers
2. Activities
3. Final Project
This course will investigate the media construction of reality. We will examine two media
representations: 1) mental Illness, 2) couples. The course includes an optional service-learning
component.
Paper Topics
1. Mental Illness: Watch a movie where a mental illness is a central focus. Consult
sources such as the DSM-IV and information from the NIMH ([Link]
that deal with this mental illness. Write a paper that describes and critiques the movies
portrayal of this particular mental illness. Be sure to use information from Media
Madness in your paper.
2. Couples: How do gender identity issues raised by movie, television, music, music
videos and other media (see Wexman, p. 179) in the United States today relate to
conventions of romance and marriage in the U.S.? Use specific examples from movies,
television, music, etc. Compare and contrast with the points made by Wexman.
Requirements: You must arrange to volunteer at a facility that deals in some way with the issues
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of the mentally ill, couples or a related media topic. You will work a minimum of one to two hours
per week, for eight to ten weeks during the semester. You must give to me in writing by the date
announced the following information:
the volunteer site with address
your supervisors name and phone number
the number of hours/week you have agreed to work
the start and end date of your service
the specific responsibilities you will have
2. Empirical Study
3. Web Page
Requirements: You will create a web page that deals with mental illness issues, including
stigma. The web page must include information on mental illness and media depictions of
mental illness. You must also include related links. A one-page description of the web page is
due on the date announced.
Activities
1. Expressionistic video, painting or photo montage (due after we finish the Delasara text
specific date to be announced).
2. Mental health poster professionally (e.g. Kinkos) printed in poster size (due after we
finish the Wahl textspecific date to be announced).
3. Barbie diorama depicting media image of couples. Due after we finish the Wexman
textspecific date to be announced.
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SYLLABUS #3
Honors Capital Punishment
Required Texts
Morris, D. (2000) Forgiving the Dead Man Walking : Only One Woman Can Tell the
Entire Story. Zondervan.
Objective
Students will study and debate issues surrounding capital punishment. For example, Is the
death penalty an effective punishment; Is the death penalty just; Is the death penalty applied
unfairly.
Class Requirements
1. Reading summaries
2. Film study guides
3. Program participation
Structure of the course: Students will examine existing research on the death penalty in the
areas of sociology, psychology and criminal justice. Students will view critically films (including
popular films) about capital punishment (such as Execution at Midnight, Dead Man Walking, and
the award-winning documentary, The Thin Blue Line). The class will read and think critically
about Sister Helen Prejeans view of death row inmates in Dead Man Walking as well as a
victims personal account in Forgiving the Dead Man Walking.
Films
Execution at Midnight
Executioners
Dead Man Walking
The Green Mile
The Thin Blue Line
In Cold Blood
I Want to Live
The class will develop and present to the campus a 1-hour program on capital punishment. The
success of the program depends on each student. Many roles need to be filled (e.g. scriptwriter,
director). Requirements for the program are as follows:
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Sample Paper
Maureen OBrien
As black as pitch, Heathers, a twisted comedy of high school horrors, is a work of genuine
courage. Veronica (Winona Ryder) is an apprentice member of the ultimate clique at Westerburg
High School in Sherwood, Ohio. The three most popular girls, all named Heather, have let her join
their group. Veronica is at first pleased to be accepted by this bunch of Swatch dogs and Diet Coke
heads. Still, she is ready for a sinister avenging force in her life who turns out to be J.D. (played by
Veronica realizes that Heather One (Kim Walker) has become so autocratic and believes she
must be stopped. One morning, when the Heather is sure to be hung-over, Veronica intends to
wake her up with a concoction of milk and orange juice which is sure to make her vomit. J.D.
proposes liquid drain-opener instead, saying, Im a no-rust-buildup man, myself. When Heather
One crashes through the glass coffee table, the shocked and seemingly innocent J.D. coaxes
Needless to say, the plot does not end there. J.D. becomes more deadly, Veronica more
guilt-ridden, while high school suicide becomes the hot topic in Sherwood, Ohio, and the coolest
thing going at Westerburg High. My teen angst bullshit has a body count, Veronica moans, as she
begins to realize that shes the one who has to be stopped, along with her thrilling but psycho
boyfriend.
Freud and Fromm, two of the psychoanalytic theorist we have studied in class, would have a
heyday with the characters and events in this movie. Freud would probably have described the
character of J.D. as possessing a death instinct. That is Freuds idea that people have an inherent
drive for destruction and death. In his book, New Introductory Lectures on Psychoanalysis, Freud
says:
If it is true that. . .life once proceeded out of inorganic matter, then according to our
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presumption, an instinct must have arisen which sought to do away with life once more and to
re-establish the inorganic state. If we recognize in this instinct the self-destructiveness of our
instinct which cannot fail to be present in every vital process (1933, p. 107).
J.D. exemplifies Freuds statement when he asserts his belief that death is the answer to societys
problem of stereotyping. This is apparent when he says, Look, lets face it, alright? The only place
different social types can genuinely get along with each other is in heaven.
J.D. is very destructive and aggressive in his actions. For example, on his first day of school,
when the jocks, Kurt and Ram, approach him he pulls out a real gun and fires it at them, even
though he used blanks. Concerning this topic, Freud says in his book, Civilization and its
Discontents, that:
The existence of this inclination to aggression, which we can detect in ourselves and
justly assume to be present in others, is the factor which disturbs our relations with
our neighbor. . .In consequence of this primary mutual hostility of human beings,
Another extension of Freuds death instinct, in which J.D. characterizes, is stated in his book,
of narcissistic enjoyment, owing to its presenting the ego with a fulfillment of the
latters old wishes for omnipotence. The instinct of destruction, moderated and
tamed, and, as it were, inhibited in its aim, must, when it is directed towards objects,
provide the ego with the satisfaction of its vital needs and with control over nature
(1961, p. 68).
This is portrayed by J.D. when he says, Chaos is great?. . .Face it, our way is the way, I mean we
scare people into not being assholes, Our burning bodies will be the ultimate protest to a society
that degrades us. . . and, When our school blows up tomorrow, its gonna be the kind of thing to
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infect a generation. All of these statements made by J.D. reflect his belief that he has the
Another significant piece of information Freud may have included had he seen Heathers is
that J.D. was much like his father. The two were always taking the others perspective in their
conversations and it became apparent that J.D.s father employed the use of bombs to persuade
people to listen to him, just as J.D. did. Freud may have said that J.D. was identifying with his
father, which is a stage of the Oedipus complex known as defensive identification. According to
Freud, this is the process by which the child comes to identify with the same-sex parent. The fact
that J.D. seems to accept his fathers extreme methods (not to mention the fact that his father killed
his mother in one of his explosions) makes this point even more solid.
The psychoanalytic theorist, Erich Fromm, would have analyzed J.D. in a different manner.
He would probably have labeled J.D. as a necrophilous character. According to Fromm, necrophilia
in the characterological sense can be described as the passionate attraction to all that is dead,
decayed, putrid, sickly; it is the passion to transform that which is alive into something unalive; to
destroy for the sake of destruction; the exclusive interest in all that is purely mechanical. It is the
passion to tear apart living structures (1973, p. 332). The ultimate example of this displayed by
J.D. is when he attempts to blow up the entire high school in order to make it look like a suicide pact.
He tries to explain his actions to Veronica and says, People are going to look at the ashes of
Westerburg and say, Now theres a school that self-destructed not because society didnt care, but
because the school was society. This statement, along with J.D.s actions, also represents another
manifestation of the necrophilous character in that he concludes that the only way to solve a
problem or a conflict is by force and violence; that force is the first and the last solution for
everything; and that the necrophilous persons answer to lifes problems is always destruction
(Fromm, 1973, p. 337-38). This is certainly illustrated by J.D. throughout the entire film.
In his book, The Anatomy of Human Destructiveness, Fromm discusses the necrophilous
characters color preferences. He states that the necrophilous person generally has a predilection
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for dark, light-absorbing colors, such as black or brown, and a dislike for bright, radiant colors.
He goes on to say that one can observe this preference in the way they dress (1973, p. 339).
Both J.D. and Veronica wear dark and often dreary colored clothes throughout the entire movie.
J.D. is always wearing a black or gray or coat and Veronica prefers to wear black, gray, or a dark
shade of blue. The fact that all of the Heathers wear bright colors is significant as well, seeing as
the necrophilous person dislike bright colors and J.D. and Veronica have an affection for offing the
Heathers.
One interesting fact found in Fromms book, The Anatomy of Human Destructiveness, is that
because a necrophilous person has an affinity for bad odors, he is often given the appearance of
being a sniffer (1973, p. 340). One may notice at various times throughout the movie that J.D.
often appears to have a disgusted look on his face, as though he were smelling something rotten.
This is an interesting little tidbit one might not think to take notice of.
It would be a mistake not to look at the other students of Westerburg High in terms of
Fromms character types. The geek squad, as one Heather (Duke, played by Shannen Doherty)
stated so eloquently, could be considered members of the receptive character types. Those are
people who are passive and dependent. An example of how this portrayed in the movie is when a
student at one of the tables spits out his milk and says, Heather Number One just looked right at
me. He is obviously not a dominant person. Veronicas childhood friend, Betty Finn, could be
another example of the receptive character. She allows herself to be manipulated by Veronicas
The jocks of the school, represented by Kurt and Ram, could be labeled as exploitative
characters. Fromm describes this person as one who takes from others by force or by dishonesty.
J.D. described the two perfectly when he said, All Kurt and Ram had to offer was date rape and
AIDS jokes. Im sure that characters such as those two are often found in todays high school
setting. Unfortunately, another common character type found amount the youth of today is that of
the marketing character. These were perfectly represented in the movie by the rich snobs who
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flaunted their wealth in order to maintain an image of a flawless personality, constantly putting
As one can see, the whole movie has an enormous amount of symbolism in its characters,
props, and circumstances. The writer, Daniel Waters, does an excellent job of displaying how
terrible this rule by social popularity is and how it makes the other students perceive themselves as
miserable failures. I am sure that Freud and Fromm, the two psychoanalysts whose theories I
focused on, would have enjoyed this movie. They may have even been able to use some of the
References
DiNova, D. (Producer), & Lehmann, M. (Director). (1988). Heathers [Film]. New World Pictures.
Freud, S. (1961). Civilization and its discontent. New York: W.W. Norton & Company.
Freud, S. (1933). New Introductory Lectures on Psychoanalysis. New York: W.W. Norton &
Company.
Fromm, E. (1973). The Anatomy of Human Destructiveness. New York: Holt, Rinehart, and
Winston.
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