by PenultimateManStanding » Mon 16 Jul 2007, 20:09:10
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Ludi', '
')PMS, see that's what I mean about the illusions being "dangerous." If they made him paranoid if he listened to them, then they were clearly dangerous. But if they had been for instance happy dancing fairies, they might not have been dangerous and there may have been no need to ignore them.
The movie was
very loosely based on the real John Nash and Ron Howard admitted as much. For instance, he was actually a non-functional schizophrenic for 30 years. The last 18 of those years without anti-psychotic medicine. The movie shows him learning to cope while his son was a baby, when he was in fact a raving lunatic for all of his son's youth and early adulthood. The manner in which the movie portrayed his illness had two very sweet hallucinated companions, not unlike your "happy dancing fairies." Plus, Crowe played him as kind of an endearing nerd who dressed funny, but the real Nash was arrogant and rude with a hot Central American wife. The audience has sympathy for Crowe-as-Nash, but the real Nash wouldn't have appealed to many. His only real appeal was intellectual where he truly did shine. I imagine his illness was very ugly from what I've read, so it's not really pertinent to discuss genuine mental illness from this Hollywood perspective. The real mystery of John Nash is how he just got better for no known reason at the age of 60, with no treatment. He got his mind and soul back which probably never would have happened if he had kept taking medicine. Having said all that, it is still a great movie and definitely worth watching. (plus, if you watch it carefully, you'll see that they put in hints of all these things while carefully preserving the crafted Hollywood version that audiences can accept, just leaving out the essence and some of the unpalatable aspects in all their sordid truth. Ron Howard wanted to do a movie about mental illness because he saw a traumatic thing happen on the set of
The Andy Griffith Show when he was a boy-actor playing Opie)