Which is probably why I actually own it on video....You've got to admit though, it is possibly the most gleefully stupid movie ever made.



Moderators: sgt.null, dANdeLION
Which is probably why I actually own it on video....You've got to admit though, it is possibly the most gleefully stupid movie ever made.
Who was it that played Lucy (as in Lucy in the Sky)?Cameraman Jenn wrote:"Sargeant Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band", the one starring the Beegees and Peter Frampton with George Burns and Steve Martin and Alice Cooper and Aerosmith. OH, I think I was supposed to put that in worst movies ever....![]()
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*shudder*Sunbaneglasses wrote:Tommy is pretty damn strange.
Yes. Judd Nelson and Bill Paxton.SleeplessOne wrote:Is the Dark Backward the one where the guy has an extra arm growing outta his back ? pretty odd ...
There is a scene where one inmate is being force fed that you won't soon forget. If anyone wants to inflict some emotional trauma on themselves I've heard the film can be found online on several file sharing websites. But be warned, you won't soon forget this. One of the posters on the IMDB forum had an excellent comment regarding the film:Frederick Wiseman's "Titicut Follies" was filmed in 1966 at the State Hospital for the Criminally Insane at Bridgewater, Mass. It was shown at the 1967 New York Film Festival, had two limited runs in New York and -- aside from a few screenings before film societies -- has had no other distribution. This is its first commercial booking outside New York.
It is not hard to understand why this is the case. "Titicut Follies" is one of the most despairing documentaries I have ever seen; more immediate than fiction because these people are real; more savage than satire because it seems to be neutral.
We are literally taken into a madhouse. Inmates of varying degrees of mental illness are treated with the same casual inhumanity. There is an old man named Jim who is constantly taunted by the guards, whose uniforms are disturbingly similar to a policeman's. While he is being shaved with fast, painful strokes by the barber, the guards needle him: "Why's your room so filthy, Jim? What's that you said, Jim?" They are bullies who have their victim pinned and helpless.
When Jim is returned to his room, It is an absolutely empty cell. And Jim is naked. It appears that the inmates are deprived of clothing much of the time because that is cheaper and makes security easier. It is not explained how naked confinement in a barren cell cures mental Illness and indeed this hospital seems to come from the Middle Ages.
Massachusetts legislators have tried for two years to suppress Wiseman's film. They say it invades the privacy of the inmates, and perhaps they have a point. It is hard to imagine more humiliating and pathetic scenes, and perhaps they should not be shown for profit or offered to the public.
But perhaps they should, even though "Titicut Follies" will dismay and disgust many of those who see it. Few of us have the slightest idea of conditions in the nation's mental prison-hospitals.
The film is not of high technical quality. It was shot with available sound and light under difficult conditions. But its message penetrates all the same. One "paranoid" patient, told he has shown no improvement, argues that the prison is making him worse, not better. This sounds like the simple truth, and the film leaves us with the impression that institutions like Bridgewater are causing mental illness, not curing it.
love fredrick wisman!!Brinn wrote:I don't know if this would qualify as it's a documentary but I don't think you can get much more disturbing than "Titicut Follies". I saw it for an Abnormal Psych course in college (Univ. of Mass.)...
When someone asks me "What's the best documentary you've ever seen?" I find myself in a quandary. The best documentary I've ever seen is Titicut Follies, but for the life of me I couldn't recommend it. That's because this stark portrayal of the "treatment" of the insane at a Massachusetts state asylum is terrifyingly, horribly disturbing. The documentary reflects the horror of its subject matter. Once seen, it is unforgettable. I find it difficult to take responsibility for exposing another person to this film. And that is probably the highest compliment I can pay it.
Wow! That's an amazing little piece of writing. Very well done and extremely interesting. You seem to know more about the film than my Psych prof. did. Where did you get a chance to see the film?Lucimay wrote:a paper i wrote on it
i'm a weirdo, huh.
thanks!!Brinn wrote:Wow! That's an amazing little piece of writing. Very well done and extremely interesting. You seem to know more about the film than my Psych prof. did. Where did you get a chance to see the film?Lucimay wrote:a paper i wrote on it
i'm a weirdo, huh.