I AM NORMAL | Omeleto
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- Опубликовано: 12 апр 2025
- A woman joins a secret experiment.
I AM NORMAL is used with permission from Olia Oparina. Learn more at oliaoparina.com.
Keira is part of an experiment: though she's perfectly fine, she's being sent into a psychiatric ward to test if the doctors and nurses can accurately detect her fake diagnosis. She also has an agenda of her own: she wants to find out what happened to a friend she knew, who was in the same ward and supposedly died by her own hand.
But Keira's time in the ward goes unexpectedly, even after she acts normally. She finds those in charge of her care to be unresponsive to her entreaties and pleas. Instead, they're authoritarian, cold and sometimes cruel. Soon Keira realizes that she may be trapped, with her sanity hanging in the balance.
Written by Anya Bay and directed by Olia Oparina, this absorbing short drama takes its inspiration from the famous Rosenhan experiment. Conducted by Stanford professor Dr. Daniel Rosenhan in 1973, participants in the experiment feigned hallucinations to gain entrance to psychiatric wards but then acted normally afterward. The intent was to test if wards could distinguish a wrongful diagnosis.
Like the timeframe of the real-life experiment, this film takes place in the 1970s, and has the look and feel of rebellious Hollywood cinema of that time, with its muted, faded colors and textured cinematography. The film was shot by cinematographer Halyna Hutchins, who tragically lost her life on the set of the feature film Rust.) The excellent writing fully takes on the premise of the experiment, which has plenty of inherent dramatic charge.
But the emotional tempo and temperature of the film are more exploratory, focused on Keira's interactions with the hospital staff and the tenor of the ward in general. What Keira discovers is a cold, unfeeling place, less interested in treatment, care and therapy and more concerned with achieving compliance from its charges. Patients are forcibly drugged and are otherwise treated disrespectfully. More importantly, we see how patients are dehumanized, reduced to their psychiatric labels and treated deplorably.
The initial dramatic question is when Keira will be discovered as normal. But as the narrative unfolds, actor Nora-Jane Noone's performance slowly reveals how her treatment by the staff and hospital policies ekes away at her sense of self and autonomy. The dramatic question then shifts to the price that Keira will pay for her time in the ward. By the end of the film, we see just how her time in the ward, and its callous cruelty to those it is charged to care for, has affected her.
The Rosenhan study was a landmark experiment that brought issues of wrongful involuntary confinement and psychiatric diagnosis to the fore. But I AM NORMAL draws a compelling, disturbing portrait of what happens when we are defined by a diagnosis, and how it shapes how we are seen and treated. Though the film and experiment took place in the 1970s, we still live in a world where a mental illness can define who we are to an unhealthy extent. The stigma can affect how others see and treat us; it can erase the nuance of who we are. And as Keira learns, it can erase our humanity, leading to depression and helplessness. It makes one wonder if true insanity is found in the cruelty that society doles out to those most vulnerable and in need of care.
my favorite part about the real experiment this is based on is that the real psychiatric patients knew the ones who were faking better than the hospital staff, glad it was in here too
but she wasn't real
@EMILY-xc5ju There was a journalist in the early 20th century who did this same thing.
@@caitthecatNellie Bly.
Maybe the patients should participate in making the diagnosis...
im confused about the ending did the real person who did the rosenhan experiment also become crazy?
She's not the first, nor the last, person to be more screwed up by the mental health "profession" after receiving its "care" than they were before. I liked the film, thank you.
Depends on what kind of quality the care is.. I felt a lot better, almost back to normal..
@@einienj3281 you're the lucky minority, so i'm glad for you.
Treating people for illnesses they don't have will always have consequences.
Thats me. I was way worse after my time in pyschiatric ward.
Involuntary commitment is an atrocity and a crime against humanity. Whoever thinks mental hospitals are healing in any measure should probably commit themselves into one as they're suffering from a really serious delusion.
Rule number one . . . never volunteer to do crazy stuff.
As I was told by someone involuntarily held in a state psych ward in the mid-80s, "The last place you want to act crazy is in here." One of the most profound statements I ever heard.
Say less
You don't always have to volunteer, the CIA did MKUltra trauma based mind control experiments on people without consent and without their knowledge. They also did it to entire cities of people by secretly putting lsd in the water supplies. Im being completely serious.
more like, tell other people what you're doing before doing something thing "dangerous".
Tik tok
As a student nurse, I did 2 placements in psychiatric units. One in patients and 1 outpatients. My first observation was that it was challenging to tell the difference between the staff and the patients. My second observation is that it is scary how quickly reality seems to become distorted.
Sorry what do you mean by distorted
@@Aarashi99 Distorted means... Did u see movie drishyam both parts?! It's like reality is so different from what we see or feel... Cz everyone there is different some r too emotional, some r liars who believes their lies is truth....so it's like it's hard to accept their behaviour when u don't feel the same...if they r too emotional u feel like u r narcissistic... If they r liars u start questioning everyone around you even at home for their words... It's like u see the patient u think they r normal...but when u know the diagnosis u observe it clearly u doubt ur own perception of them before knowing it. So u start doubting whether normal ppl u see you start noticing minor symptoms like the patients and doubt whether they are actually normal or just undiagnosed 😅
@@Aarashi99 When we are living in our regular lives, we are habituated to all aspects of them, so we feel generally safe and secure in our surroundings. If we were "confined" to an unfamiliar location, with people who are acting in an unusual manner to what we are used to, especially if we have no real contact with these people, we may start to feel a little insecure and disoriented, which could begin to have us question our new situation (reality) and our place in it.
I have known oychiatric nurses ,one high up in her profession .She was completely abnormal as were her colleagues that I met all of whom admitted they were all as crazy in their own way as their patients .I guess madness is subjective .
2 places you never volunteer to go … hospital and court..!
U are correct THEY are actually crazy cos they believe in to authority the most dangerous superstition of them all👽👻
Or in a mini submersible sub with your Dad to visit the wreck of the Titanic!
Or cave diving, potholing😅
My assessment: She entered normal, made a new friend who tried to kill herself with a glass shard (similar to her best friend, but we don't know how her best friend committed suicide) and was put in a straight jacket causing the normal woman to have new PTSD. In order to cope with the PTSD, her mind created her new friend who she met at the end, thus a new psychotic condition of over imagination to cope.
The fish in the fishbowl was the perfect metaphor sadly
Truest comment ever written
And the scariest part is now the doc and the facility would have evidence that she actually isn't well and they were right all along and that their practices are totally fine and they passed the experiment 😔
No, her imaginary friend who broke fish bowl is the same girl she spoke with at the end. So anytime she spoke to her ‘friend’ meant she was having an episode. Like when her ‘friend’ chased the car for instance, notice how that was odd. So what you wrote was inaccurate.
@@bastymanguy OHHH 🤯🤯🤯
Very interesting
But I think OP's take can also be true...
I have heard of cases like, this but with children. perfectly normal, but misdiagnosed with mental disabilities and placed in a facility . they slowly became truly disabled from being treated as such in this atmosphere. ☹
Yeah it’s heartbreaking. It’s mainly with kids because their brain chemistry is so “malleable” and constantly changing. That’s why an environment like this is horrible for kids to go to.
I got chills when I seen her talking to herself.
😂😂 glad to know I'm not the only one.
I figured it out before then, so I wasn't surprised
it was kind of obvious when it built up to that situation
Same!
Ikr, exactly
Things are NOT always as they seem from the outside.
Instead of professionally figuring out she was "normal" after all, they assumed she wasn't and she shouldn't be taken seriously. They failed in their duty of care. Prejudice made them abuse her into a condition she didn't even have to begin with, instead of correctly figuring out, diagnosing if at all she wasn't ok and treat her condition.
That place served to manage the mentally ill, not to treat them (a bit like how schools are failing our kids). They didn't do their job because they refused to believe from the beginning that any of those women were worth treating. They were never "human" enough to care for and rehabilitate in the first place.
So of course, they turned an otherwise mentally well person, mentally ill. They made things worse for everyone. There was never going to be any treatment to come out of those institutions, run the way they were. That system threw people away as soon as there was the slightest indication they needed help. They never stood a chance. She "normal" as she was, never stood a chance either.
PREJUDICE!
Interesting story. I didn't there was a real experiment on this subject before. I will look into it.
Ya, and I think the powers that be are doing the same to humanity. They are the cause of mental illness, from despair to a lack of empathy. To be narcissistic is a favorable trait. I could go on and on about it. Evil, mentally sick people want to infect the rest of humanity with their perversions.
I agree with you. Unfortunately from what I've seen things haven't improved much. The main thing now is with modern social engineering and pharmaceuticals it isn't necessary to keep the patients in residence. Housing people is generally not as profitable now.
Damn u wrote a book
Your views are detailed and briliantly described!
This film is based on a real experiment. There were a group of scientists who all went into different hospitals. The plan was to get admitted with claims of hearing voices, nothing else and then the next day say they were ok. Some were held for months before being released. It worked in exposing some huge flaws in the hospitals. It lead to a lot of mental hospitals being shut down, replaced with care in the community. It's a lot harder to be admitted into a mental hospital these days.
i think the workers get so desensitized in there to what they have to deal with that they couldn’t distinguish the difference of true psychosis and pretend diagnosis…not sticking up for them, but maybe a refresher course or something put in place so they won’t become so jaded…it was heart-breaking… :(
A "Refresher course?" Imagine you or a loved one being treated at a time where they are most vulnerable, treated by THESE people, the ones who are "Desensitized" to the suffering of their patients...you want THESE people to simply take a "Refresher" course...in what, HUMANITY?
Yea, i think its very human to instinctivly protect yourself, and build an inpenetrable emotional shield around you. Those that can do that, will keep working in such wards, those that can't, because they are too empathic, will rather sooner than later leave...
I was told by a former psychology teacher that psychologists, doctors have to periodically undergo counselling to reset their minds, otherwise they might end up, as a patient in their own ward. Stands to reason really.
I face palmed hard wen she kept trying to convince them that she's "not insane" , the more people do that .. the more 'crazy' they are seen as .
@@gemstar7286 this was based off the original experiment and I believe either they were told to tell the doctors that they were not crazy or most of them just did that after a couple of days because they genuinely believed saying that would get them out. 😔 we know better now sadly
What a plot twist at the end... gave me goosebumps
So did I. She became mentally ill. For real this time.
Me too
Predictable.
Really great twist..The Dr. and fiancee are seeing things. Brilliant
@@trublu2556 No they're not , that really is the friends invisibility coat
This movie shows how some people can develop a sick mind, when they are around other people who are truly mentally unstable!! 😮 😮
I think it was more due to her constantly being told that she is crazy. The more you're told something you start to believe it weather you realize it or not. It's scary.
It does not work like that...
The unstable ones were the medical professionals. I am wondering how you missed this.
@janinejohnstone468 While my view is in general: I was thinking about the medical professionals as well!! They're the first people who develop their sick minds.
@@ferdinandcastagnera794 Yes.
One of my worst fears is to be wrongly sent to an asylum, once in, no-one believes you. Thanks, very good.
The mental healthcare system has always been flawed. Some patients are locked away for good without given a chance to be properly treated. Others are discharged too soon. There is not enough compassion towards those with issues beyond their control and insurance dictates too much in the decision making process. If things don't change a lot more people will continue to be hurt and suffer.
proper treatment and compassion are not the same thing. emotions cloud judgement and leads to inaccurate diagnosis. its why doctors are unadvised from diagnosing themselves or loved ones
Humans are deeply flawed. Everything we do is flawed and when it comes to health care a lot of what's done is for personal or financial gain above all else.
I've been seeing therapists on and off for 30 years (since I was 11, my parents were very abusive and sick people) and I've only met a couple who didn't have huge egos and some level of a God complex. Even the most well meaning see themselves as *above* others.
I see therapists as useful to a degree but they are just tools in a box and individually only good a a few things and not good, usually, at seeing their own weaknesses.
@@Ocelot923 emotions cloud judgement in attempting to diagnose personal relationships, but compassion is compatible and necessary to be able to understand others' viewpoints. A person with no compassion is a psychopath themselves.
I recommend the short documentary film "Titticutt Follies."
If you're not crazy going in, you're crazy coming out! 🤪
If you're crazy going in, you're still crazy coming out.
College?
I immediately thought "what if this lady isn't real" then she wasn't. Lol. Very nice movie.
Wound up in a psych ward a few years back due to unmanageable panic attacks. Felt like prison. No attempt to address the issue and no ability to get out. Having close family and threatening legal action helped. I still struggle with panic but fear seeking help is tantamount to being thrown back in that prison
Therapy works and this drink it’s gallon of water then Himalayan salt lemon and cayenne . It takes your anxiety almost all the way away for good but it takes a week. Gallon or half everyday for 7 days you can RUclips it. My anxiety is almost completely gone but I have my days when I’m hung over that’s it. That’s very rare
Wow so they tried not to let you out?!
That is truly criminal
Lemon balm.
Demand a thyroid ultrasound and a thyroid uptake. Blood work alone is not a genuine indicator of thyroid form or function.
As someone who has gone to many mental hospitals in todays time just for a reboot. I just needed to isolate and be away from society only ONE doctor of the dozens in two different states and several counties has ever actually listened to me, took me off a bunch of meds I had no business being on and noticed I was misdiagnosed. I still don’t know that man’s name and I want to hug and thank him every day.
I’m classified as Bipolar but I am not I just deal with a lot of PTSD and depression and it manifests the same way. Except bipolar ppl do it for no reason they have a chemical imbalance. PTSD is trauma response
I didn’t know that, I get confused with all the abbreviations so I have no clue what anyone has. Glad you got help though. Good luck.
I dated a psybhiatric nurse for about a year. She said that lots of the patients were simply overstressed and needed to take a break from life, somewhere that they had no responsibilities and were taken care of. A month at a tropical beach resort would have done the same or better!
Thanks for sharing your lived experience. SUPER under-upvoted, b/c this is HELLA real.
I have had the same experience. I was misdiagnosed. I have autism and ptsd from my sibling being murdered. I dont have the money for a lawyer to challenge it.
@@Weemwah AZ we CANT challenge it. I’ve tried and looked into it and talked to so many lawyers and mental health advocates. Honestly I just don’t take the meds. I know they work and help but I don’t need to be on them forever. I got over that hump and have had really good therapy to help identify stress and handle it accordingly. It truly has been a game changer
Sorry you’re going through this. I know how frustrating the system can be when you simply want to get the RIGHT care and they make it seem like you don’t want the care at all.
This was so beautifully done. The actress also captures the character perfectly. I have lot of thoughts on mental health facilities and their socalled care. If you are normal going in, you may come out sixk. Their territory, their rules. Once you are admitted into a facility, they can do to you what they like. Nobody is there to monitor or regulate them. The law exists in theory. Abuse of power also happens. They know your weaknesses and what buttons to push. That said, yes mental health issues do exist and yes they should be treated. But not all issues need the patient admitted. Sedation and medication are chemicals and their side effects can be detrimental. It's heartbreaking and chilling when she is hugging the air and talking to herself at the end.
This reminds me of all those criminals who try to get the insanity defense. As most of them have no idea how much worse that sentence is than actual jail.
If you've ever read the book or watched the movie One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, that is the exactly the point you describe.
Actually many people who do commit crimes Do have legitimate mental health issues of one sort or another. There are many, many problems in our current systems.
If we did more preventative care, it would be better for everyone...
Also this is a period piece, things have evolved, who knows what they're like now tho...
@@HannahTrapeze They are not great. They still focus on income more than patients, and as another commenter said 'find' new diagnoses when a person's insurance runs out on one.
Mental illness does not make one innocent. For that, one must really be a maniac and that requires observations made by the professionals.
@7prudent Strangely enough, having a mental health diagnosis does not coincide with the legal perception of insanity. Its not enough for the defendant to have a long-term, established psychiatric diagnosis of hallucinations or psychosis.
The defense has to prove with the help of psychiatric expertise that the defendant was legally insane DURING the commitment of the crime and did not know right from wrong.
People with very serious mental diseases go to jail very often instead of a psychiatric facility, resulting in over 30% of inmates in the US being placed in prisons, even when they have been formally diagnosed with a mental health issue.
This can't be good: the impact of a normal person taking anti-psychotic & other psychotropic meds for 6+ weeks. I suspect that being taken off of them suddenly upon discharge caused her to hallucinate in the last scene.
Or maybe she started hallucinating since day 5 itself
@@anonymouslearner2454 Could also be her reacting to the strong sedative they injected her with the night before
@@mothmanlives7212 Ohh right! I forgot about that... But still I'm not sure if sedatives can produce an effect like that..
People with mental health problems get ignored like this too today. Stigma is a terrible thing 😢
I love it when the plot is original and intriguing. Thank you Omeleto for giving us more than Netfix and Disney!
🤣🤣🤣🤣🙌🏾🙌🏾🙌🏾
this is basically Nellie Bly's Ten Days in a Madhouse which is based on true events from 1887. she was a journalist who went undercover at an insane asylum on Blackwell's Island because of the questions surrounding the asylum because no one knew what went on there since no one really came back. she was able to expose the asylum and raise mental health awareness for her time from the articles that were eventually published into TDIAMH
@febrieze it actually states this short film is based on the Rosenhan experiment which was conducted in 1973 but with very similar process to nelly blys study. It says it was based on the Rosenhan experiment at the start of the video, come on people, reading aint that hard.
The way the experiment was conducted doesn't make sense. A psychiatric diagnosis is made by a patient's reporting of symptoms. She reported symptoms of schizophrenia and was then diagnosed with schizophrenia. That is exactly the way it is supposed to be done. The doctor was correct when he said “The symptoms she claimed she had referred to the schizophrenia.”
I think the point is that the diagnosis process isn’t thorough enough. To accept a potential patient’s word with no further testing and quickly prescribing them antipsychotic medications is pretty wild.
@endyabayou9968 What further testing? As I said "a psychiatric diagnosis is made by a patient's reporting of symptoms." Did you somehow miss that statement in my comment?
Meh. It's like all the people on social media claiming their ex is a narcissist and they all have trauma and adhd.
@DanielW-m9d Wrong. Those are diagnoses, not symptoms.
@@LucidDreamer54321 Physical tests, blood tests, imaging tests, and full psychological evaluation to rule out any other factors that could be causing the symptoms that a person is claiming to have.
To say it’s ok for the doctor to just go off of the patient’s word is like me going to my doctor and stating that I think I have anemia because I’m tired all the time, and the doctor simply prescribes me medicine rather than conducting other tests to confirm what I’m saying.
I remember reading about this experiment, some of the scientists were kept for months. I don't think any of them developed a mental illness from their experience, that was a good plot twist for this film. I grew up in the 70/80s when mental health was considered shameful. Mental hospitals were portrayed as worse than prisons with movies like One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest. My mum worked as a gardener in our local mental hospital before they were shut down and replaced with care in the community. The stories she told us were scary, one old lady had been admitted as a baby because she was blind.
The history of mental hospitals is shocking (pun intended) with inmates often used for medical experiences. There are reports of hospitals shaving their heads to sell for wigs in the Victorian era, some hospitals opened like zoos so the public could laugh at the loonies.
It's not a perfect system but there has been a lot of progress with how mental health is treated these days.
I had a feeling she would leave with a mental illness, it's not exactly a nice warm environment to be in . And the nurse came across like a witch and the other staff members just wanted to control her , she was in that place for over a month and was injected and treated like she was a danger to herself , they also treated her like a naughty child by not letting her go outside after the fish bowl incident . So that's enough to send anyone crazy.
I'm sorry but the ward in One Flew Over the Cuckoos Nest is a resort compared to jails/prisons.
There is a difference, between normal people without any medical knowledge or past traumatic experiences and medical students that were admitted as part of the experiment.
People with background knowledge can see through the mind games they play - but also look out for themselves and help themselves to dealt with those experiences.
Normal people are just defenseless and have neither a coping mechanism for mistreatment nor any knowledge why those things happen and why some "hospitals" always "find" new diagnoses in the ever growing book to keep the insurance payments coming.
psychiatry is a scam and 'mental health' is still treated completely wrong.
Not really......
WOW! Having worked in healthcare and mental health, I knew about how mental hospitals used to be and knew about the experiment... I followed along knowingly for the whole film, and I think that set me up for not seeing that ending coming.
Yeah nah, we all saw that ending coming. That was the simple prediction.
Having been in a number of mental health facilities in the past 10 years. Most are still as bad as was shown in this short film.
@@robinvsdk Same, I second. Don't see any improvement from the example shown in this film. I will never forget how I was treated like less than human in those places
This happened in real life. A doctor pretended to be a mental patient to get admitted and prove that any person can be "labeled" and "diagnosed" as mentally ill (and then drugged and/or admitted, even forcefully) and that going to different doctors will give different diagnoses (opinions)... but they ended up not letting him out after he came forward to tell them of his experiment and it took him a very, very long time to fight them and get out. (when he harmed NO ONE). He committed no crime (outside of the fraud) and had no trial, but he was held against his will for over a decade (I don't recall how long it was before he was finally released).
@@deucedeuce1572 all of which makes it clear that the "care facilities" care more about money than patients. That they would kidnap people (legal definition of being held against one's will) to protect their income says it all.
I lived it. If you survive it and see the truly ugly truth in society, than you are strong. It took years of hanging on and failing - to divine intervention and sheer will that I’m here today. Stronger in my knowledge and fine alone even surrounded by people. The whole experience wizened me to the world’s ugly ways and I try and maintain peace in that and squeeze joy in the now.
No they don't
Glad that you made it through!!
Take good care!
@user-wh5ir4fo4r Shh we can hear you
Have a contact on the outside to get you out in emergencies. Even an invisible friend.
"One Flew Over the Cukoo's Nest", "Girl, Interrupted"... definitely on par with these! Thank you! ❤
Nora - Jane noone is a phenomenal actress. Especially in The Magdalene Sisters. That plot twist at the end though 😳
Am i correct in thinking the woman running towards the car which pulled away and didn't take her away- was a nod/acknowledgment of the (scene in the) Magdalene movie? Remember she had asked the delivery driver to come and be her get away driver for her escape? And she had gotten out only to watch in horror as he drove away having gotten cold feet.
I knew I recognised her from somewhere! She’s a great actress
My father was schizophrenic. He passed away at age 72 in 2007. The hell he imagined was better than the hell he endured in psych wards.
So sorry to hear that. My brother has the same problem, hard to help unfortunately.
How do you know if that is true? You do not know what he imagined. Both are bad.
Creepy! I was a psych undergrad (this century) we were required to let the grad students practice on us for experience in order for us to graduate…it’s pretty commonplace in universities…a lot of the undergrads were scared of this, most being teenagers who have never received counseling and some who had never even been to a doctor’s appointment without a parent before…it’s outpatient, nothing compared to your professor locking you in a 70’s “asylum” but I wonder if the writer’s interest came from a similar place. 🤔 I love the ending, and makes it more movie-like rather than just laying the story out in another historical doc. 👍 great job!
Huge red flag is hearing the word EXPIREMENT!
Nora-Jane Noone is always great. I wasn't sure it was her - her accent was flawless to my ear.
Love that actress; haven’t seen her since The Descent. This movie reminds me a little bit of the 1956 Fritz Lang film Beyond a Reasonable Doubt. Dana Andrews plays a journalist opposed to the death penalty, who deliberately frames himself for murder so that he can expose the weaknesses of the judicial system. Turns out he really was the murderer …..
You missed "12 feet deep". Another claustrophocic thriller.
Yes it's an old movie, no I might never watch it. Oh but I know the ending anyway now, so no need to anyway.
The actress was also in a film called “The Magdalene Sisters”.
I loved this. I got sucked right in and I now want to learn more about the Rosenhan Experiment. Thank you!
This, the Milgram and Stanford "Prison" Experiments, Kinsey, Tuskegee... there were a bunch of such hideous experiments that scarred many people... but the "doctors" figured, "What the hey, we've got the data, might as well use it and make a few bucks."
Cara signed up for this experiment because she was emotionally involved in the situation with her friend who ended up with self harm in a similar clinic. Cara truly believed that her friend was not mentally ill and ended up there by diagnostic's mistake. When Cara met the girl they played with the fish, she subconsciously saw her dead friend in her. Cara felt that she must "save" a new friend because she didn't save her besty. And at the end we can see her mixed hallucination from the past and the present .
P.S. Cara didn't declare to the researcher that she was emotionally involved, which caused the experimental bias.
No, this is not at all what was depicted. Watch it again.
Watch it again, this time pay closer attention when the "friend" is the only one who takes a cup from the tray rather than being handed one. Notice how no one reacts to her at all, ever. No one ever really acknowledged the friend outside of Cara. Then at the end we see thats because the friend isn't really there, either because she never was and Cara is still having trouble coping with the loss of her friend or because she has been so traumatized by what happened inside. I was in and out of those types of institutions as a teen and it is truly awful. Many of these severe diagnoses like schizophrenia or DID are triggered by/created to cope with severe trauma. It is entirely possible that her treatment inside was traumatic enough to trigger hallucinations, but the way I read it was that the friend in the coat is a projection of Cara's friend that died, which is what caused her to volunteer for the experiment to begin with. Most patients inside will say they feel better or whatever and its almost taken as more confirmation that you're sick. These are truly vile places. I went to HS in a town with one that closed down in the 80s I think in the midwest. Every year the farmers would find bodies in the corn fields surrounding because people would escape and just get lost and die. It was also a place where they did tests on people by injecting them with malaria. In HS it was abandoned and already turning into a suburb. I went back a few years ago and its a VA hospital and the graves of the many many dead inpatients were hidden under overgrowth in a field far from the main hospital.
Manteno State Hospital in Manteno, IL if you're interested.
@Natalia you might need to rewatch it.
Once you're labelled/declared 'mad/crazy' it's almost impossible to convince even professionals otherwise😢
Luckily, I don't think there is a place quite like this around where I am. I have bipolar, and I've been in a psyche ward a few times for having self-harming issues, but it's always been a smaller place and they found me a better medication and released me in a week. I've never experienced one of these places where they just want to keep you and/or are abusive, thankfully.
My ex tried to harm herself in front of me, I just grabbed the knife from her, she's in a better place now: New partner & they had a baby girl a few years back, she seems much happier.
@@hookbeak2321 I'm glad to hear that
In LA they just dump you to Skid Row 😂
I must admit that I actually laughed when I read that there wasn't anything like this in your area. I hope that is true but call me cynical I feel there is.
I'm extremely happy that you are finding good care.
@@barbraharvey9251 Legitimately. Idk if good care would be the term, but not like that.
It makes you wonder if Nancy was real in the first place. I mean, i was confused when she broke that fish glas, and when the warden came in, he completly ignored her... maybe he just focused on Kyra and didn´t see her, but maybe she just wasn´t there...
nancy commited suicide. didn't you notice, she hide and picked the broken glass. keira is devastated of losing a friend. traumatic events can have great impact on mental health.
Yeah i wondered if Nancy was real , but it looks like she must have killed herself with the glass shard . And Keira won't accept that she's died. as it's similar to her friend Nina's death. That's probably why she sees her wearing the same coat aswell , because they both died tragically in the psychiatric hospital.
Nancy had the same orange coat in the end as she did when Cara first saw her, chasing a car.
It depends on what you’d like to agree to. Either she started seeing Nancy at that time or it was after Nancy died for real.
Nancy was hiding in the shower stall when the nurse came in, and the nurse was less inclined to notice Nancy anyway, because she was preoccupied with Kiera.
@@owenstauble6370 Nancy doesn't exist.
They made her crazy.. that is sad.
Thank god that they saved the goldfish... I was relieved to hear that, such a shame to see it flopping on the floor.
That’s lunch.
All human rights are taken away in places like this. The same in old folks homes.
Distinguished actors with a twisted chilling psychological climax. Had me totally fooled but fully engrossed.
Excellent work! Truly had me all the way through very well acted, directed, written and filmed. My only regret is that it wasnt a feature film!
More proof of the power of. Association. You become like those you spend the most time with
When she first meets Nancy after chasing the car it seems that she is walking pass her but then when we pan back to our main character, we see that no one walks pass her😳
En effet, bien vu
This story is a little too close to home. My Italian girlfriend (r.i.p 'L') was in-and-out the local psychiatric ward for a month at a time, she had paranoid schizophrenia. She was given Olanzapine injections at home by a community nurse who visited once a week. The sad side to this at 27 she died supposedly of a heart attack, there was strong legal defence at the inquest, it was left an open verdict. She did drink too much coffee & smoke roll-ups, but I was never convinced this was true.
I had gotten this prescribed as well and it caused me to gain 10kg in one week (which is a common side effect of psycho pharmacys) but it also made my nose bleed once a day. Out of nowhere. I told them it was because of the medicine but they brushed it off and said that it couldn’t be, since there are no records about it causing such a side effect. I did not have nosebleeds regularly like this before so I instited to stop the medication with that and the sudden nosebleeds stopped as well.
I am very sorry that it went this far with your girlfriend and you have my deepest condolence 🖤
@@sprouting.strawberry The nose vessels are extra thin and sensitive; do you think it made all your vessels thin/frail?
@@Medietos hmmm I don't know. I always thought it might have had something to do with my blood pressure. Like it got higher and thus the vessels broke regularly (maybe daily even.)
I’m so sorry for your loss ❤
Nice twist at the end. The mind is a very complex piece of machinery, and only now are people realising just how vulnerable it is.
Very good film. This reminded me of how religon caused my psychosis. I'm still not 100% free I don't think I ever will be.
I always think all humans can relate to powerful craziness in their minds. They just ignore and pretend to be "normal"
Why do you think so?)
@@behindmyblueeyes99 because ... everyone has those feelings of being crazy. We just don't act on them
The ''nomal''is just euphimism for average
At the end as they were walking away I was like 'what did a just watch?' then the end gave me chills.
What a rollercoaster ride of emotions that was
so this girl she created in her mind as a way of coping with her best friend's death. She feels guilt for not being there for her so she tries to help this other woman who is a figment of her imagination (hence why the red coat is a coat her best friend used to have)
You could write a completely different story using this narrative. She actually was mentally ill and being a part of a study was just another part of her delusional world. I have actually seen something very close to this in real life. With a friend who was mentally ill.
I love the twist at the end. That made me happy.
Put a sane person in a crazy house and they WILL go insane ...
This is one of the biggest reasons I don’t ever want to go to a mental hospital. I’ve almost been committed once involuntarily but luckily wasn’t. I’m still not sure why they changed their mind but I’m so glad they did. My biggest fear is being committed and then never being released. Going in kinda messed up and becoming more messed up from what you see when you’re in there. Terrifying movie but very well done. I kinda figured her “friend” wasn’t real after the glass fish bowl broke and only she got a shot to calm her down. Yeah they showed the other girl hiding but I doubt she had much time to hide, nor was it a hiding spot so good that it couldn’t be easily discovered. Still, the ending gave me the chills
I need a movie version of this.
girl interrupted
That was truly terrifying. Very realistic. I felt the dread through the entire thing. I loved it!! Great job!!!
Had a feeling the moment she dropped the bowl and never got caught.
I got sent to the ward once. Within two days the nurses were wondering why I was there.
3:36 he’s right. You’re never “cured” from a mental illness, you just can learn new ways to cope.
the acting in every one of these is absolutely incredible
Yikes! That didn’t go the way I thought it would. Very sad indeed.
If you aren't crazy before you go in you'll be crazy when you leave.
Double-edged sword, films like these make people with mental health issues not want to seek help (should they be aware of their surroundings) same time they show the sort of shadowy part of the mental health "industry"
Wow!!! I did not see that coming. The end gave me big chills....... Amazing work!!! Thank you.
Actually, my husband had a psychotic breakdown. He was severely paranoid and suicidal. The mental hospital he was admitted to was a literal life saver for him. They got him on the right track and then discharged him when he recovered. I am grateful to the hospital
How he doing now x
A dance with the devil may last forever.
kinda freaked me out not a big fan of Mental issues except One Flew over the Cuckoos nest well done this shortie Omeleto comes up with some awesome shorties
Speaking as a person who's been in many mental hospitals. If you aren't nuts already, you will be. There's no other way to cope. You get so many pills and that alone drives you crazy. It was me getting off all meds and being finally allowed to leave that cleared my head. And man oh man I don't ever want to see another mental hospital. My issue was combat related from war....Going crazy is a way of coping with an insane reality. Wars in a good place would never exist. Just that fact alone that we always are at war, is absolutely crazy. So how can anyone be sane in an insane world full of liars!!! You can't, everyone's sick....
It is a common theme in movies and TV to depict hospital conditions that would make any sane person mad. It is hard to see how such conditions would make a mad person sane. I know that there are a lot of issues with the care given to mental patients. But since movies often exaggerate and get creative with reality, I do have to wonder if it's like that in actual hospitals. Either way, we need a better way to handle mental patients.
Nope. They are worse than this film.
Swear To God.
I was hospitalized after I tried to commit suicide once. I was there two days straight & on the third, my family took me out of there.
This film (in the 1970's era) is pretty mild compared to the experience I've got there in just two days in 2005. We all slept in one room with mattresses on the floor guarded by two nurses inside a bulletproof glass cubicle in the middle of it. Women of all ages from mild depression, to post-traumatic disorders & lots of drug addicts with violent behavior were all "sleeping" together in that same room.
Also the same thing when it comes to us taking fast baths in a huge place with no doors or anything for the sake of privacy. You can't imagine the things I saw in just a few minutes. Most of those ladies got physically mutilated bodies, from mastectomies, horrible caesarian procedures, burns, to hematomas, cuts, etc.
Situations like those proofs showed me the reason why these ladies " ended up here". And still, we were all treated like a drove of cows.
Our routine consists of waking up, breakfast, pills, sleep, waking up, lunch, pills, sleep etc...,
while nurses scream and treat you like a pest, no matter if you are in a passive mood, thanks to the excess of the narcotics on each meal you are obliged to take.
And during the afternoon the doctor's consultation is as generic as this film presents.
Unfortunately, the Medical Comunity has no intention to help anyone but them$elve$.
So yeah. it is worse.
Does it mentally or emotionally help me?
Absolutely not.
You have to remember, the more mentally ill there are the more money that comes in. Also, to 'cure' a patient, would result in less money flowing in to the system
@@stregahex Worse than I feared...
@@CristiNeagu Yeah. 😟
@@zaptainkuboom5520 Exactly.
Wow! Well produced and acted. Loved the end.
Recognized Saul Rubinek right at the start. Gave it some gravitas, though you didn't need more.
Excellently written and acted, and the leading lady is gorgeous.
The synopsis of the story is you don't have to be crazy to enter the asylum but you will be by the time you leave. :)
Did being in there give her a condition?
It seems so. Maybe after some time being around mental patients, made her become one herself. Or maybe she already had problems, just never gotten out before.
That is what they imply.
That or the drug cocktail they regularly dosed her with.
It certainly did me during my handful of stays.
WOW, amazing. Well done to the writers, production and actors. An amazing film.
This happened in real life. A doctor faked a mental illness and was admitted after being "diagnosed". Then when he told them of his experiment and to leave, they forcefully kept him there. Took him years to finally get out. (edit: Sorry, I didn't mean the exact same thing, just that the doctor faked a mental health condition to be diagnosed and admitted to prove that mental health doctors have nothing more than opinions... but he ended up becoming a prisoner to the system and it took him a long time to finally get out and money/time/effort and help from colleagues, friends and family).
that outro song made things more scaryy well done
I equate calling someone a Dr of Psychology to calling a 3 year old a Dr of Tying Shoelaces
So the Dr. and the fiancee are seeing things...Great twist..
lol 😂
3:26 The "Mental Disorders" book over the table was an overkill. 🙄
the simple fact that a psychiatric diagnosis can be faked kinda invalidates the whole system in the first place doesn't it?
There's this movie - The Stonehearst Asylum where just the opposite happens(the patients are kept free) . But even that could lead to dangerous conditions for those who have imperative conditions. Hence,I feel "treatments" should be more humane yet with some restrictions.
The ending confirmed that when you enter those places you get out as a real mentally ill patient. Those are not places made to treat people back to mental health but to destroy it once and for all.
This is not the One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest nor the Girl, Interrupted that we grew up with.
Why would he leave her there
it's like shutter island but with less explanations lol
The inmates are running the asylum
Not inmates, but patients. Inmates are prisoners, meaning criminals.
@@cahidijoyoraharjo7833 The doctors, and nurses are the true inmates in this story
60s into it, i immediately sense something much worse is gonna happen... and yes another famous experiment also from Stanford the prison experiment gave me this vibe.
Saw the ending coming from a mile away, but I still enjoyed it. I was drawn in by the main actress and Nancy. Their performances kind of made up for the predictability (for me.)
the shutter island made you think like that i know
I can't help but be reminded of "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest."
I did not expect the ending. That was freaky in the best way
Excellent acting and filming. Very professionnal
I don't know why this one is not that popular on this channel. I've seen not better than this one getting hell of a lot of views.
Keira is reminiscent of Keira Knightley
There is not much I have loved like this piece of brilliance in the recent times!!
Kudos and thank you, to the writer, director and the actors.
🙏💫
Omeleto films are so good, very contemporary film which gave rise to plenty of comments & discussion.
人が壊れていく様が非常にリアルで引き込まれました。
医療においてとても大事な実験だったと思います。