Neurocinema When Film Meets Neurology

August 16, 2017 | Author: jp | Category: Neurology, Public Health, Health Care, Health Sciences, Wellness
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Descripción: Film directors recognize that neurologic disease impacts mind and motility and often use it in a plot or de...

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NeurociNema

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NeurociNema When Film meets neurology

eelco F. m. Wijdicks

Boca Raton London New York

CRC Press is an imprint of the Taylor & Francis Group, an informa business

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CRC Press Taylor & Francis Group 6000 Broken Sound Parkway NW, Suite 300 Boca Raton, FL 33487-2742 © 2015 by Taylor & Francis Group, LLC CRC Press is an imprint of Taylor & Francis Group, an Informa business No claim to original U.S. Government works Version Date: 20140729 International Standard Book Number-13: 978-1-4822-4287-4 (eBook - PDF) This book contains information obtained from authentic and highly regarded sources. While all reasonable efforts have been made to publish reliable data and information, neither the author[s] nor the publisher can accept any legal responsibility or liability for any errors or omissions that may be made. The publishers wish to make clear that any views or opinions expressed in this book by individual editors, authors or contributors are personal to them and do not necessarily reflect the views/opinions of the publishers. The information or guidance contained in this book is intended for use by medical, scientific or health-care professionals and is provided strictly as a supplement to the medical or other professional’s own judgement, their knowledge of the patient’s medical history, relevant manufacturer’s instructions and the appropriate best practice guidelines. Because of the rapid advances in medical science, any information or advice on dosages, procedures or diagnoses should be independently verified. The reader is strongly urge to consult the relevant national drug formulary and the drug companies’ printed instructions, and their websites, before administering any of the drugs recommended in this book. This book does not indicate whether a particular treatment is appropriate or suitable for a particular individual. Ultimately it is the sole responsibility of the medical professional to make his or her own professional judgements, so as to advise and treat patients appropriately. The authors and publishers have also attempted to trace the copyright holders of all material reproduced in this publication and apologize to copyright holders if permission to publish in this form has not been obtained. If any copyright material has not been acknowledged please write and let us know so we may rectify in any future reprint. Except as permitted under U.S. Copyright Law, no part of this book may be reprinted, reproduced, transmitted, or utilized in any form by any electronic, mechanical, or other means, now known or hereafter invented, including photocopying, microfilming, and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system, without written permission from the publishers. For permission to photocopy or use material electronically from this work, please access www.copyright.com (http://www.copyright.com/) or contact the Copyright Clearance Center, Inc. (CCC), 222 Rosewood Drive, Danvers, MA 01923, 978-750-8400. CCC is a not-for-profit organization that provides licenses and registration for a variety of users. For organizations that have been granted a photocopy license by the CCC, a separate system of payment has been arranged. Trademark Notice: Product or corporate names may be trademarks or registered trademarks, and are used only for identification and explanation without intent to infringe. Visit the Taylor & Francis Web site at http://www.taylorandfrancis.com and the CRC Press Web site at http://www.crcpress.com

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Contents Preface, xi Acknowledgments, xv Neurofilm Collection, xvii Chapter 1 



  Medicine in Film

1

PORTRAYAL OF HOSPITALS

4

PORTRAYAL OF PHYSICIANS

5

PORTRAYAL OF DISEASES

8

CONCLUSION 9

Chapter 2 



  The Neurologist in Film

11

A FOUNDER OF NEUROLOGY IN FILM

14

MODERN NEUROLOGISTS IN FILM

18

CONCLUSION 22

Chapter 3 



  Neurologic Disorders in Film

25

INTRODUCING MAIN THEMES

27

COMA IN FILM

28

TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY IN FILM

39

STROKE IN FILM

43

LOCKED-IN SYNDROME IN FILM

49

BRAIN TUMOR IN FILM

53

MENINGITIS IN FILM

58 vii

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viii   ◾    Contents

ENCEPHALITIS LETHARGICA IN FILM

63

SPINAL CORD INJURY IN FILM

68

POLIOMYELITIS IN FILM

74

MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS IN FILM

83

MOTOR NEURON DISEASE IN FILM

87

LEPROSY IN FILM

91

AMNESIA IN FILM

94

HEADACHE IN FILM

101

SLEEP DISORDERS IN FILM

104

SEIZURES IN FILM

109

CEREBRAL PALSY IN FILM

113

AUTISM SPECTRUM DISORDERS IN FILM

119

TOURETTE SYNDROME IN FILM

124

DEMENTIA IN FILM

127

PARKINSON’S DISEASE IN FILM

134

NEUROGENETICS IN FILM

138

Chapter 4 



  Neuroethics in Film

147

INTRODUCING MAIN THEMES

149

PHYSICIAN-ASSISTED SUICIDE IN FILM

150

SELF-DETERMINATION IN FILM

156

WITHDRAWAL OF SUPPORT IN FILM

161

FAMILY CONFLICTS ON LEVEL OF CARE IN FILM

165

BRAIN DEATH AND ORGAN DONATION IN FILM

169

INSTITUTIONALIZING IN FILM

174

EXPERIMENTATION IN FILM

180

COMPASSION FAILURE IN FILM

183

Chapter 5 



  Neurologic Disorders in Documentary Film 189

INTRODUCTION OF MAIN THEMES

191

DEMENTIA IN DOCUMENTARY FILM

193

HUNTINGTON DISEASE IN DOCUMENTARY FILM

200

Contents   ◾    ix

MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS IN DOCUMENTARY

205

MOTOR NEURON DISEASE IN DOCUMENTARY FILM

210

APHASIA AFTER STROKE IN DOCUMENTARY FILM

217

POLIOMYELITIS IN DOCUMENTARY FILM

223

TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY IN FILM

228

REHABILITATION IN FILM

234

Chapter 6 



  Neurofollies in Film

239

INTRODUCING MAIN THEMES

241

ENTER THE MIND

242

PSYCHIC AFTER COMA

243

TOTAL AMNESIA

245

ENHANCING BRAIN FUNCTION

246

INTELLECTUAL DISABILITY TO GENIUS

247

SUPERINTELLIGENCE 248 VIOLENT SEIZURES

249

COMPUTER-ASSISTED NEURONAL ACTIVITY

251

MIND CONTROL

252

BRAIN PRESERVATION

253

A FINAL WORD

254

Chapter 7 



  Epilogue: The Neurology of Cinema

257

NEUROCINEMA AND ACTORS

260

THE BOOK AND WHAT IT MEANS

262

HOW TO WATCH AND READ A NEURO FILM

263

CONCLUSION 265 APPENDIX: NEUROFILMOGRAPHY267

Preface Coma, stroke, seizures, and spinal cord injury are conditions that appeal to screenwriters, and as we will find out, there are several feature films where neurologic disease unfurls as a plot element. Film directors know that neurologic disease impacts both mind and motility. Equally important, these films say as much about the consequences as they say about the disorder. My central curiosity was to find out how these films are done. It should be interesting to deconstruct the neurologic representation in film. There are obvious questions to ask: How are neurologic disorders shown, and how accurately are they depicted? How is the practice of the neurologist represented? How do documentaries handle the seriousness of these disorders? Do films have educational value for neurology residents, and can the topic bring about a useful discussion? This book is organized by the main neurologic conditions after selecting over 100 films. I divided the material into chapters that include d ­ iscussions on neurologic disorders (Chapter 3), moral and ethical quandaries in major neurologic illnesses (Chapter 4), neurology as a subject of a documentary (Chapter 5), and what I call neurofollies (silly neurology), as frequently used in science fiction (Chapter 6). Neurologic disorders in film are not so easy to find, and even titles such as Coma, Brain, Dementia 13, and Vertigo are about different themes. The films were found after using a variety of library and Internet resources, but the filmography mostly came from a personal file I have kept over the years. The selection criteria were broad and inclusive, but the films chosen had to have well-defined scenes showing the acting out of a neurologic disorder and its consequences. I also included documentary films, recognizing that documentaries are not free of bias. Sometimes they are what they are—overdramatizing and close to fiction. xi

xii   ◾    Preface

Films that only tangentially mentioned neurologic signs and symptoms (e.g., “cause I get such a headache right through my skull—Bong Bong” [Harry and Tonto, 1974], spell from presumed toxin [Safe, 1997]) were not considered. Excluding these films was generally simple. TV series such as Grey’s Anatomy, House MD, and ER have inserted neurologic disorders in their stories, and the nature of films and series made for TV is changing and now often closely approximating feature films. However, in order to maintain focus, films made for TV and TV series were also excluded, unless they involved a crucial topic that I felt was important. Finally, I have shied away from bottom feeder horror and slasher films because, I suppose, when it pertains to brains and gore, there is nothing we can learn here, and it is a dead end. I recognize that this book inescapably remains a personal selection of films and topics, and it cannot be an exhaustive resource without the full availability of all distributed films (World cinema is thus underrepresented). All the films mentioned in this book should be available on DVD, YouTube, or media video stream sites (e.g., Netflix, Hulu, and Amazon). The main premise of this book is to discuss a film (or two) that represents the salient aspects of a specific neurologic disorder and its impact. (Spoiler alert: Because many of these reviews have details about the films, they probably should be read after the film is seen.) These films should be seen fully and not just for one clip. Plots are summarized, key scenes are analyzed, some shots are parsed, and the discussions may illuminate what underlies the screenwriters’ intentions. The selected film is then compared with other films that are worth watching, even if they contain only a single pertinent scene. To provide further context, each chapter has background information aimed mostly at physicians, but accessible for the nonmedical reader as well. The purpose of these essays is to elaborate on what is shown, but it is up to the reader/viewer to be fascinated, amused, or appalled by the film. Each chapter has text boxes containing dialogue lines that were chosen to draw the reader into the film and to highlight the themes. These conversational exchanges also accentuate the brilliant art of one-liner writing. What more can be done with this information? I decided to judge these films but avoided a fail/pass decision, rating them instead on an ordinal scale. The traditional tools used by the neurologist are the reflex hammer (to test tendon and superficial reflexes) and a pin (to test sensation). The film’s accuracy is thus qualified using a rating scale from one to four

Preface   ◾    xiii

reflex hammers. Folly and absurdity are qualified using a rating scale from one to three pinpricks because these films are painful to watch. Rating a film with four reflex hammers required an unquestionably accurate neurologic representation. Rating a film with two or three reflex hammers required the presence of a teachable scene or some other interesting aspect. One reflex hammer indicated a serious misrepresentation. The pinpricks indicated—in a handful of unredeemable silly films—a representation that was really bad to even worse. Screenwriters and directors may deviate from reality in order to produce a certain effect. Thus neurology may give way to the story, and such an approach may be permitted in the name of poetic license. At best it is just entertainment, and there may even be situations—walking out of the theater—where the physician (or neurologist) in the party may have to clarify what just happened. At worst, a departure from the truth may result in misperceptions by the general public. Some films are serious and comical at the same time, making it difficult to filter out problems with portrayal. This book, of course, has no formal film analysis and interpretation of its narrative structure because I lack the credentials to judge the artistry of filmmaking. I recognize the need for film directors to dramatize, the need to create a gripping and watchable film while skewing some of the reality, even after obtaining advice from medical professionals. I recognize that any art criticism is arbitrary and arguably pretentious. Some may say that such close scrutiny is not needed (“Hey, it’s only a movie”), but gross misrepresentation of serious neurologic disease does no good to the lay public. The best filmmakers not only entertain, but also come face to face with the subject matter. This may leave the reader wondering, where does the “neurocinema critic” come in? Neurologists might anticipate being troubled by the portrayal, but there are a considerable number of films that are accurate representations of acute or chronic neurologic disease. Neurologic disease can be devastating, and many of us will be stirred by the images placed before us within the context of some mordant dramas. I think many of these films are mandatory viewing, not only for specialists in the neurosciences, but for everyone else as well. Some documentaries are nearly impossible to watch, and some fiction films are comical, but all provide something to talk about. For me, seeing a film is a fantastic experience. I am often asked, “Have you seen…?” or told, “You should see…!” and thus it is only natural to combine my profession with an interest of mine and to write about neurologic

xiv   ◾    Preface

representation in film. I noticed early on that many films used acute neurology in their screenplays, and that fits my subspecialty. I wanted to put together a series of important fiction films and documentaries that I think few of the readers have seen or even heard about. I hope the reader finds this collection of film critiques—­summarized by the rubric Neurocinema—informative and educational, serious and amusing, and that it will lead to watching or rewatching these celebrated films. It was a great pleasure to write about them.

Acknowledgments Seeing neurology through film requires close observation and recognition of proper representations. This could only have been done with the help, criticism, and suggestions of colleagues with expertise other than mine. Many people have shared their knowledge with me. I would like to thank Joseph Duffy, Christopher Boes, Michael Silber, Eric Ahlskog, Bradley Boeve, Orhun Kantarci, Jerry Kaplan, Amulya NageswaraRao, Erik St. Louis, Anne Moessner, Ashley Sporer, and Jeffrey Ward. I thank Dr. Masashi Okubo for translating Japanese films and Dr. Girish Banwari for pointing out relevant films in Hindi cinema. Michel Toledano—neurologist and filmmaker—taught me much about Cinema with a capital C. Several filmmakers have been very helpful in providing material. I  thank Scott Kirschenbaum, Richard Ledes, Vincent Straggas, and Banker White. It is a nearly impossible struggle to obtain permission for the use of movie posters and stills. The following distributors, however, have kindly provided posters for the films discussed: Ferndale Films/Hell’s Kitchen, Ltd.; El Deseo S.A.; Les Films du Losange; Music Box Films; and eOne Publicity. Permission has also been obtained from several other sources and is acknowledged in the figure captions. Portions of some vignettes have been published as reviews in Neurology Today. I thank Kay Ellis, Neurology Today editor, and Steven Goodrich, senior editor of The Lancet Neurology, both of whom have been very supportive and encouraging with each of these reviews. I sincerely thank Lori Lynn Reinstrom for providing all the secretarial and editorial assistance these projects needed. She has been creative and even suggested films I should look into. I am especially grateful to the Section of Scientific Publications copy editors at Mayo Clinic for carefully reading the entire text (Alissa Baumgartner, John Hedlund, Angie Herron, and Ann Ihrke). I thank Jim Rownd for help in xv

xvi   ◾    Acknowledgments

creating the beautiful cover and theater marquees. The production team (Amy Rodriguez) at CRC Press/Taylor & Francis has ably assisted me in improving the structure of the book and prose. I thank Lance Wobus, my editor at CRC Press/Taylor & Francis, for his encouragement and valuable commentary. I dedicate this book to my wife and children—we see and talk movies all the time.

Neurofilm Collection Neurologic Disorders Topic

Discussed Films

Coma

Reversal of Fortune, Talk to Her, The Dreamlife of Angels, Firelight, Good Bye Lenin!, Hard to Kill Regarding Henry, The Lookout, Trauma, Post Concussion Amour, A Simple Life, Legends of the Fall, Flawless The Diving Bell and the Butterfly Dark Victory, Declaration of War, Turkish Delight, Crisis The Courageous Dr. Christian, In Enemy Hands, Barbara Awakenings The Intouchables, The Other Side of the Mountain, The Men, Born on the Fourth of July, Coming Home, The Waterdance Sister Kenny, The Sessions, Leave Her to Heaven, The Five Pennies Go Now, Hilary and Jackie Tuesdays with Morrie, The Theory of Flight, Hugo Pool The Motorcycle Diaries, City of Joy Memento, The Music Never Stopped, The Vow Pi, White Heat, Gods and Monsters, That Beautiful Somewhere Side Effects, High and Dizzy, Viridiana, The Machinist, My Own Private Idaho A Matter of Life and Death, Frankie and Johnny, Drugstore Cowboy, First Do No Harm, The Aura

Traumatic head injury Stroke Locked-in syndrome Brain tumor Meningitis Encephalitis lethargica Spinal cord injury Poliomyelitis Multiple sclerosis Motor neuron disease Leprosy Amnesia Headache Sleep disorders Seizures

(Continued)

xvii

xviii   ◾    Neurofilm Collection Neurologic Disorders (Continued) Topic

Discussed Films Gaby, A True Story, My Left Foot, Door to Door Fly Away, Adam, Rain Man, Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close Niagara, Niagara, The Tic Code, Deuce Bigelow, Matchstick Men Iris, A Song for Martin, Away from Her, The Notebook, Memories of Tomorrow A Late Quartet, Love & Other Drugs Lorenzo’s Oil, The Cake Eaters, Extraordinary Measures, The Madness of King George

Cerebral palsy Autism spectrum disorders Tourette’s syndrome Dementia Parkinson’s disease Neurogenetics

Neuroethics Topic Physician-assisted suicide Self-determination Withdrawal of support from brain injury Family conflicts on care Brain death and organ donation Institutionalizing Experimentation Compassion fatigue

Discussed Films You Don’t Know Jack Whose Life Is It Anyway? The Sea Inside, An Act of Murder, Million Dollar Baby The Descendants, Steel Magnolias Critical Care All About My Mother, 21 Grams The Savages, Fred Won’t Move Out Extreme Measures The Death of Mr. Lazarescu

Neurodocumentaries Topic Alzheimer’s disease Huntington’s disease Multiple sclerosis Motor neuron disease Aphasia after stroke Poliomyelitis Traumatic brain injury Rehabilitation

Discussed Films You’re Looking at Me Like I Live Here and I Don’t, The Genius of Marian, The Forgetting, Extreme Love Do You Really Want To Know? When I Walk So Much So Fast, Living with Lew, I Am Breathing After Words, Picturing Aphasia, Aphasia A Paralyzing Fear, Martha in Lattimore The Crash Reel Coma

Neurofilm Collection   ◾    xix Neurofollies Topic Enter the mind Psychic after coma Total amnesia Enhancing brain function Intellectual disability to genius Superintelligence Violent seizures Computer-assisted neuronal activity Mind control Brain preservation

Discussed Films The Cell The Dead Zone 50 First Dates Limitless Charly Phenomenon The Terminal Man Brain Waves Donovan’s Brain The Brain That Wouldn’t Die

Chapter

1

Medicine in Film

You know the secret of being a good doctor, don’t you?… You act like one. The Good Doctor (2011) In film and in reality, illness is often unexpected and accidental. Using serious illness as a plot device brings melodrama to the narrative arc. Filmmakers often perceive medicine as health interrupted by illness ­followed by disability or death, and this topic is an endless source of ideas and fictional inventions. Screenwriters have inserted life-threatening ­disorders—often suddenly diagnosed terminal cancer and more recently AIDS—into the story because they are unnerving to the audience and ­create tension in the narrative. Doctors often appear when the leading character in the film becomes sick, and over many years their portrayal has evolved from the general family doctor to medical specialists, parallel with subspecialization of medicine as a whole. The medical specialties that screenwriters prefer the most are surgeons, psychiatrists, and pediatricians. Themes may be specific to the type of specialty, and of course, we have all seen the heroic lifesaving surgeon. Filmmakers are very good at creating panicky epidemics. Dystopian viral outbreaks such as the avian flu have attracted filmmakers. Each of these films can be easily liable to the charge that it is nothing but scary mainstream movie entertainment. Medicine is also a topic of comedy, making fun of medical decisions and physicians. There is also a surplus of psychiatric disorders, mostly involving neuroses and addictions. There 3

4   ◾    Neurocinema: When Film Meets Neurology

are numerous screwball comedies involving psychiatrists. Yet, in the end, medical diseases are rarely depicted in the major films (only three in Roger Ebert’s book The Great Movies, comprising 300 reviews, and no entries in the magazine Sight and Sound’s Top 50 poll). Medicine in film has been researched well, and the reader is referred to several texts, listed at the end of this chapter. For physicians, the representation of medicine—­­particularly in films of import—is always interesting, commonly fascinating, and sometimes laughable. Here we glimpse into the cinematic portrayal of hospitals, doctors, and diseases as a lead-in to the main topic of this book.

PORTRAYAL OF HOSPITALS The depiction of medicine often starts outside the hospital and in ambulance runs (Bringing Out the Dead [1999]). Most of the time ambulances are presented as being in a state of chaos, with physicians questioning who is in charge. And of course we have the emergency department, where patients are rushed in with yelling and screaming staff and often a bloody mess. Because medical illness often involves trauma or a gunshot wound, we may get to see the operating room and the intensive care area. For dramatic purposes and to create further tension, a surgeon may be seen rushing out of the operating room to tell distressing news to family members (Miami Vice [2006]). In the recent film Fruitvale Station (2013), a surgeon enters the waiting room and tells an anxiously waiting family, “He did not make it.” Intensive care units (ICUs) or surgical trauma units usually show the actor after polytrauma—packed in and in traction. Most remarkable is that sometimes the sound of the patient’s heartbeat is heard—as it is in the operating room—becoming fast when the patient is in distress. (Note that ICUs do have alarms, but no audible heartbeat can be heard from the equipment used.) The ventilator shown in the ICU often looks similar to the one used in the operating room (bellows included). Medical institutions are not always depicted accurately. Veterans Affairs (VA) hospitals are commonly shown, usually in the war-film genre. VA hospitals are either appalling places (Coming Home [1978], Born on the Fourth of July [1989]) or places where bureaucracy leads to nothing but frustration (Article 99 [1992]). The most shocking institution is the psychiatric hospital. In 1975, the movie One Flew over the Cuckoo’s Nest cemented a dramatic negative depiction of the psychiatrist and psychiatric nursing staff, and

Medicine in Film   ◾    5  

Shutter Island (2003) was a film noir, with the criminally insane in shackles. Hospital drama continues to interest filmmakers, and atrocious treatment predominates.

PORTRAYAL OF PHYSICIANS Films released in the 1930s and 1940s showed physicians as fine country doctors who were simple and compassionate, inserting their lives into the tragedies of patients. Over time, the portrayal dramatically changed, with film also introducing major medical ethical issues such as mercy killing and abortion. Many directors have used physicians in film—most of them male, attractive, and witty, although the sympathetic portrayal of the character varies depending on the needs of the script. When the doctor enters the scene, he is usually meticulously dressed in a crisp white coat. In the United States, the Doctor Kildare TV and movie series became a classic in the depiction of physicians, nurses, and administrators, showing a virtually perfect world of medicine. The series included Dr. Kildare’s Crisis (1940) and Dr. Kildare’s Wedding Day (1941) with the classic line of dialogue, “Doctors doctor for 24 hours a day. The rest of the time he can’t be a husband.” A world where physicians could not combine their profession with marriage was portrayed, and full commitment to the profession was necessary. There were very few female doctors in early feature films (e.g., The Girl in White [1952]). Female doctors appear in numerous later films, often to show some gentle flirtation or even marriage (Erika Marozsan in Feast of Love [2007]). There were many other problematic portrayals of the medical profession. One of the most notorious is The Interns (1962), where a group of young doctors is moving into practice. The nursing staff is told, “Never talk to the interns. They are all sex maniacs.” The portrayal of doctors has evolved from the dedicated solo general practitioner to a character study of the arrogant, intimidating hotshot surgeon. In Doc Hollywood (1991), Michael J. Fox stated, “Beverly Hills, plastic surgery, the most beautiful women in the world. What do these three things have in common? Answer: Me in one week.” Gynecologists occasionally appear, even as the main actor in one movie—Richard Gere in Robert Altman’s Dr. T and the Women (2000). Gynecologists are also involved with birth traumas. Rosemary’s Baby (1968) is the major representation of hysterical pregnancy, rape fantasies,

6   ◾    Neurocinema: When Film Meets Neurology

and other absurdities such as germinating a devil child. All of this has one theme, which is to shock and create a troubling feeling for the moviegoer. Because there are many films portraying people with psychiatric disorders, the portrayal of psychiatrists has been well analyzed. They have been categorized as competent and caring (Dr. Bergen, played by Judd Hirsch in Ordinary People [1980]), neurotic and comical (Richard Dreyfuss as Dr. Marvin in What About Bob? [1991]), and evil experimenters (Dr. Hannibal Lecter, played by Anthony Hopkins in Silence of the Lambs [1991]). The social and professional status of physicians is high, and their offices are typically shown as being large, with large cluttered desks. There are quite a few surgeons who drive sports cars and live in lush country homes. Some films discuss the salaries of specialists, most notably in Crisis (1950), where the neurosurgeon (played by Cary Grant) says “My fee? I usually charge 10% of the patient’s income.” In Drunken Angel (1948), the physician says to his patient, “I warn you, my fees are very high—I always overcharge people who eat and drink too much.” But there are more peculiarities. Some films emphasize addictions by physicians, or physicians practicing while intoxicated, such as the general surgeon (Alec Baldwin) in Malice (1993) and the heart surgeon (Kirk Harris) stealing drugs from the hospital to trade for cocaine in Intoxicating (2003). Screenwriters have toiled carefully over portrayals of specialists, and a summary of their specialty characterizations is shown in Table 1.1. Nurses in film were in a role of servitude for many decades. Often in the nurse–physician relationship, the nurse played a lesser role and endured harassment and verbal abuse. Nurses were typically in awe of the doctors, because “they always know best.” Doctors were also seen as major marriage material and incited jealousy among the nurses. The relationship of physicians and nursing staff is also often confrontational. In Critical Care (1979), there is an important dialogue where the nurse questions whether the care of a patient in a persistent vegetative state needs continuation. The physician answers, “It’s important that we say that we did everything,” to which the nurse replies, “That’s doctorspeak for ‘we put this patient through hell before he died.’” Exploitive relationships are common in the movies, and loss of physician boundaries is sometimes used as a plot device. In virtually every film involving doctors, there is a barrier between patient and doctor—only to

Medicine in Film   ◾    7   TABLE 1.1  Characterization of Medical Specialties in Film Anesthesia

Surgery

Intensive care

Family medicine Dermatology Neurology Neurosurgery

Psychiatry

“Anesthesia is the easiest thing in the world until something goes wrong. It’s 99 percent boredom and 1 percent scaredshitless panic.” (Coma [1978]) “A surgeon’s job is to cut—get in, fix it, and get out.” (The Doctor [1991]) “You do not think much of surgeons. Not as much as they think of themselves.” (The Interns [1962]) “Jesus brought Lazarus back from the dead, but he did it only once. People were amazed we did it every day.” (Critical Care [1997]) “I am just a small-town doctor who pushes aspirin to the elderly.” (Eve’s Bayou [1997]) “The patient never gets better and never gets sick.” (Young Dr. Kildare [1938]) “Those damn neurologists, they think they can run the world.” (EDtv [1999]) “It is like Russian roulette. In one hand you have a revolver called treatment and the other side a revolver called no treatment.” (The English Surgeon [2007]) “Evaluate, medicate, vacate.” (12 Monkeys [1995])

be broken later—or the physician seeks a relationship with a family member (Diane Keaton in Something’s Gotta Give [2003] and Keri Russell in Waitress [2007]). Critical Care (Chapter 4) is also one of many examples of movies in which doctors go overboard. This time, the daughter of a patient develops a sexual relationship with the attending physician (“You are the first doctor I’ve met who seems human”). Medical biographic films (biopics) have rarely been made, and most of these have involved researchers, such as The Story of Louis Pasteur (1936) (vaccinations), Dr. Ehrlich’s Magic Bullet (1940) (ether discovery), The White Angel (1936) (heroic nurses, in this case Florence Nightingale), and Sister Kenny (1946) (treatment of poliomyelitis; see Chapter 3). There are some more recent biopics, but they involve the psychiatry greats Freud and Jung in A Dangerous Method (2011) and the sexual researcher Alfred Kinsey in Kinsey (2004).

8   ◾    Neurocinema: When Film Meets Neurology

PORTRAYAL OF DISEASES Cinematic diseases run a similar course to reality, but the mortality rates are higher (Love Story [1970], Terms of Endearment [1983]). Cardiopulmonary resuscitation has been shown in a number of films (Bringing Out the Dead [1999]) and as expected the intervention has spectacularly good outcomes, even after the physician has pronounced the patient dead (The Girl in White [1950]). Cinema has dealt with diseases in multifarious ways, but rarely have such films become classics. Kurosawa’s Ikiru (1952) deals with a man with inoperable gastric cancer and is an example of a film that addresses disease as its main theme. A full discussion of major medical diseases is outside the scope of this book, but Table 1.2 shows some of the more recognizable films. Doctors may also get sick (The Doctor [1991]), and directors often shape this into a life-changing event, which it often is. Directors often find their topics for a screenplay where medicine interfaces with other disciplines, such as ethics and psychology. There has been substantial analysis of film by bioethicists, psychologists, and sociologists, and many themes can be detected. For instance, there are multiple explanations for Dr. Isak Borg’s character in Ingmar Bergman’s Wild Strawberries (1960). The themes of pity and regret, guilt, family dysfunctionality, religious doubt, fear of failing exams, and fear of death have all been considered by film critics. Dr. Borg is an emeritus professor of bacteriology, soon to be awarded TABLE 1.2  Characterization of Medical Diseases in Film Disorder Cancer HIV Alcoholism Viral epidemic Myocardial infarction Neurofibromatosis/Proteus syndrome Bipolar disorder, schizophrenia

Film Examples Ikiru (1952) Cries and Whispers (1972) The Barbarian Invasions (2003) Philadelphia (1993) Dallas Buyers Club (2013) Leaving Las Vegas (1995) Crazy Heart (2009) Outbreak (1995) Contagion (2011) Something’s Gotta Give (2003) Elephant Man (1980) Under the Skin (2013) Mr. Jones (1993) A Beautiful Mind (2001)

Medicine in Film   ◾    9  

Jubeldoctor [50-year anniversary of doctoral thesis], and he reminisces about his life. Because Bergman had such a good understanding of psychoanalysis, one could argue that psychologists and psychiatrists should watch and analyze his movies—and perhaps nothing else.

CONCLUSION Medicine in film can be approached and studied from many angles. We can break it up as depictions of disorders, specialists, medical institutions, and medical biographies. Many films are provocative (often involving psychiatric depictions), doctors are not always the good supporters of patients, and there is a good dose of grandiosity in surgeons. Physicians with a onetrack mind who are not fazed by alternative explanations are a common theme. The bedside manner is ridiculed often by depicting patronizing and domineering behavior, but there are examples of kindness and compassion, too. The audience may cynically say that such characterizations are no different from the world we are living in. Most screenwriters are not physicians, and they usually do not adapt a screenplay from a book written by a physician. Exceptions are the Scottish writer A.J. Cronin, whose books spanned a number of films in Indian cinema, and of course, Michael Crichton and Oliver Sacks. Films may in some way reflect how screenwriters and directors see physicians, and it is not a pretty picture. The next chapter shows us how neurologists fare.

Further Reading Alexander M, Pavlov A, Lenahan P. Cinemeducation: A comprehensive guide to using film in medical education. London: Radcliffe Publishing, 2005. Colt H, Quadrelli S, Friedman L. The picture of health: Medical ethics and the movies. New York: Oxford University Press USA, 2011. Dans PE. Doctors in the movies: Boil the water and just say aah. Lansing, MI: Medi-Ed Press, 2000. Gabbard K, Gabbard GO. Psychiatry and the cinema. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1987. Glasser B. Medicinema: Doctors in film. London: Radcliffe Publishing, 2010. Harper G, Moor A. Signs of life: Medicine in cinema. London: Wallflower Press, 2005. Robinson DJ. Reel psychiatry: Movie portrayals of psychiatric conditions. Port Huron, MI: Rapid Psychler Press, 2003. Shapshay S. Bioethics at the movies. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2009.

Chapter

2

The Neurologist in Film

Well, we called for a neurologist a half hour ago. State of Play (2009) What did the neurologist say?… He does not know. Regarding Henry (1991) Medicine is specialized, and expertise is divided over multiple areas. Physicians have a good idea what these fields entail. For everyone else, the question is: What is a neurologist? The American Academy of Neurology (AAN) defines a neurologist as “a medical doctor with specialized training in diagnosing, treating and managing disorders of the brain and nervous system.” According to the AAN website, the disorders that neurologists treat are Alzheimer’s disease and other dementias, brain injury and concussion, brain tumors, epilepsy, migraine and other headaches, multiple sclerosis, myasthenia gravis, peripheral neuropathy, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, Parkinson’s disease and other movement disorders, sleep disorders, spinal cord injury, and stroke. Many neurologists have been trained in a subspecialty, and acute disorders are often seen by neurointensivists, vascular neurologists, and epileptologists. We do not know how much information screenwriters have available when ­neurologic disorders are considered. Similarly, moviegoers—when they see n ­ eurologists and neurologic disease on the screen—may be largely incognizant of this part of medicine. 13

14   ◾    Neurocinema: When Film Meets Neurology

So let us start with neurologists and see how they come across in ­cinema. Not surprisingly, neurologists were previously usually shown in a subsidiary role, not as protagonists. It may be that little is known of neurologists, and partly because this specialty is comparatively young. The same may apply to neurosurgeons—a specialty that came even later. It could also be because neurologic diagnoses and examinations do not move a narrative forward. It could also be the result of “neurophobia”— neurology is just too mysterious (an attitude shared by some medical students). Or it could simply be because screenwriters prefer surgeons, psychiatrists, and family doctors, or they may just keep the specialty of the doctor unknown. Oddly enough, when the canon of films involving medical issues is examined, there are quite a few cinematic depictions of neurologists— but it is not a pretty picture. When neurologists appear on the screen, they usually run the full spectrum of caricatures and clichés. So before immersing ourselves in the discussion of cinematic depictions of a wide variety of neurologic disorders, it would be good to look at the cinematic traits of the neurologist. As we will see, neurologists are generally not depicted as go-getters; rather, they seem to move quite slowly and deliberately.

A FOUNDER OF NEUROLOGY IN FILM Clinical neurology knows many founders. In the United Kingdom, Thomas Willis (1621–1675) coined the term neurology in his book Cerebri Anatome, followed by John Hughlings Jackson (1835–1911), who added many ideas to what would become a neurologic approach. In the United States, the development of the field came later and was modeled after French and British neurology, with the first role models being William Hammond (1828–1900), who wrote the first American textbook of ­neurology, A Treatise on Diseases of the Nervous System, and Silas Weir Mitchell (1829–1914). Many American neurologists also briefly trained in London at the National Hospital for the Paralysed and Epileptic in Queen Square. Neurologists often had a psychiatry practice, and because of this link with psychiatry and particularly with hysteria, this caught the attention of at least one filmmaker. One feature film, Augustine (2012), directed by Alice Winocour, is devoted fully to a neurologist who was arguably the most influential of all—Dr. Jean-Martin Charcot (1825–1893), chair of Clinique des Maladies du Système Nerveux at La Salpêtrière (Figure 2.1).

The Neurologist in Film   ◾    15  

He was widely consulted, and his ideas were universally accepted and never questioned—at least not in France at the time. Although Charcot’s contributions to neurology are legendary (two eponyms, description of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and multiple sclerosis), his studies of female hysteria cemented his international fame. For Charcot, the ­neurologist, hystérie was a névrose functionelle and not psychiatry, and for a long time he was convinced there was a structural basis for the symptoms. Charcot was well known for his well-attended (a)

FIGURE 2.1  (a) Entrance of l’hôpital de la Salpêtrière in Paris.

16   ◾    Neurocinema: When Film Meets Neurology (b)

FIGURE 2.1 (Continued)  (b) Jean-Martin Charcot.

clinical demonstrations showing the effects of touching—usually by his assistants—of certain skin areas that could induce an hysterical attack. Charcot’s treatment of young afflicted women (and also men) included hypnosis and, most memorably, the compresseur ovarien (an abdominal vice with a knob applying pressure to the ovary); and both could stop the spells. Charcot, his school, and the hysterical attacks have been described in numerous books, but most writers have taken significant artistic license. In Augustine, Charcot is played by the great actor Vincent Lindon and is surrounded by admiring neurologists, further increasing his standing. The neurologist Bourneville (who discovered the disorder tuberous sclerosis) is in here, but he has no significant dialogue. Charcot and his patient Augustine are the main focus of the film. The manifestations of la grande hystérie are played by Soko (French actress Stéphanie Sokolinski), and we get quite a show. There is loud applause by all the attending neurologists after each hysterical attack. The movie shows hypnosis with a tuning fork and the patient following a small mirror that results in a spell (Figure 2.2).

The Neurologist in Film   ◾    17   (a)

(b)

FIGURE 2.2  (a) Vincent Lindon as Charcot and Soko as Augustine in Augustine.

Note the functional arm posture. (b) Charcot trying to hypnotize Augustine. (Photos provided by courtesy of Music Box Films: Charcot © Dharamsala Photo. J.C. Lother Charcot and Augustine: © Dharamsala Photo.)

The hysterical attacks are well done and very real, with a typical arc en cercle (arching body backwards). Augustine also shows important aspects of the neurologic examination in a patient with so-called functional (not explained by disease) symptoms and is of interest because examination of the “functional” patient is quite

18   ◾    Neurocinema: When Film Meets Neurology

common for neurologists. It shows the exact symmetric loss of sensation (dramatically indicated in this film with a big red pencil by Charcot), patches of hypo- and hypersensitivity, loss of smell in one nostril only, different types of color blindness in each eye, and a forcefully closed eye due to unilateral blepharospasm, called here “the hysterical wink.” Augustine also displays a hysterical contracture. The movie also suggests that Charcot was sexually attracted to Augustine and that this attraction at some point would overwhelm him. Augustine is based on a real patient of Charcot, but that is where the comparison ends, and the film becomes nothing but a psycho-erotic thriller. The film may be a distorted, overblown view on a chauvinist doctor’s behavior. La Salpêtrière was a public women’s hospital, and the physicians were all male, but even if Charcot’s behavior was authoritarian, one cannot conclude misogyny. (A similar suggestion of erotic transference was made in John Huston’s film Freud [1962], where Sigmund Freud massages the back of the completely undressed patient Dora—one of his famous case histories.) Augustine is a must-see for neurologists. After all, how often do we get to see one of the pioneers of neurology on-screen? It is possible that in future period films, the neurologist’s link to psychiatry could potentially typecast these early giants in the field.

MODERN NEUROLOGISTS IN FILM Portrayals have included the aloof neuroscientist studying a rare neurologic disease (Bill Murray in The Royal Tenenbaums [2001]), the discompassionate curmudgeon (Patrick Chesnais in The Diving Bell and the Butterfly [2007]), and the glib unethical researcher (Gene Hackman in Extreme Measures [1996]). The neurologist Oliver Sacks served as a model in two major feature films. In Awakenings (1990), Oliver Sacks is Dr. Sayer, played by Robin Williams. His character is the bearded, spectacled, coy neurologist discovering a cure for encephalitis lethargica. (According to Oliver Sacks—and after Robin Williams spent some time with him—the actor started to look like his identical twin brother with the same mannerisms.) In The Royal Tenenbaums, the much nerdier Raleigh St. Clair (played by Bill Murray) is not only modeled after Oliver Sacks, but a parody of his work (which usually contains highly unusual neurologic cases) is also featured. In The Royal Tenenbaums, Dr. St. Clair writes a book entitled The Peculiar

The Neurologist in Film   ◾    19  

Neurodegenerative Inhabitants of the Kazawa Atoll and is seen studying a rare disorder of amnesia, dyslexia, and color blindness combined with a highly acute sense of hearing—a preposterous combination of clinical signs. Apart from these Sacks-like satires, in most other films, the neurologist is like any physician, but sympathetic depictions are few and far between. After reviewing many films, I found there is enough information to discuss the portrayal of communication skills, diagnostic competence, and even the neurologic examination. Here are some tidbits to illustrate that. First, how does the neurologist relay information? In Declaration of War (2011), the parents of a child afflicted with a brainstem tumor are approached by a pediatric neurologist who, to say the least, is not overflowing with compassion. She barges into the room with her entourage, looks at the child, tells the parents the child needs a CT scan, leaves, and has an assistant explain the details. Later, her inexplicable medical jargon and pompous attitude totally confuse the distraught parents. The neurologist in Good Bye, Lenin! (2003) explains coma after resuscitation and leaves the family with the uncertainty of the patient ever awakening again. When the patient awakens after being comatose for eight months, they are again told that outcome still may be problematic. The neurologist in Iris (2001), after Iris completes a word-naming test, tells her that her dementia is implacable. After Iris asks what he means, he says it’s inexorable. She tells him that it won’t win, and he counters, “It will win.” The neurologist in A Song for Martin (2001) suggests to the patient with Alzheimer’s and his spouse that it is best not to use medication but to use mental gymnastics and love. In the film Go Now (1995), the neurologist of a patient with suspected multiple sclerosis shuffles papers while eating a sandwich and cannot find test results. He says, “No results here…bit of a cock up.” He then suggests that the patient return to the office in a month stating, “I am on holiday.” In Garden State (2004), the neurologist Dr. Cohen sees the protagonist for brief, intense, split-second headaches. (The scene shows a room filled with diplomas and achievements extending to the ceiling.) “Mr. Andrew Largeman, there is absolutely nothing wrong with you…just kidding… How would I know that? What can I do for you today?” From these depictions of communication with families we can only conclude that the neurologist is often authoritarian, aloof, unrealistic, or without compassion.

20   ◾    Neurocinema: When Film Meets Neurology

However, there is some good out there, too. In The Dreamlife of Angels (1998), the neurologist played by Jean-Michel Lemayeux explains coma quite well to a visiting friend. “She is unconscious, she can’t communicate. She can’t talk or move. She won’t answer you. We are watching for any sign of her waking or of an improvement.” He asks the friend to watch for changes in her condition, and he provides compassionate support. A more recent neurologist, in The Descendants (2012), discusses catastrophic brain injury well. “She will never be the way she was, Matt. We know that now. She may last several days to weeks”. Second, how is the competence of the neurologist portrayed? The ­neurologist’s competency is questioned by the patient or the family in some films (Go Now [1995] and Memories of Tomorrow [2006]), most notably in the film A Late Quartet (2012), where the neurologist suggests a diagnosis of Parkinson’s disease on the basis of a few simple tests. In Memories of Tomorrow (2007), the neurologist is young and seemingly inexperienced. When the neurologist tells the patient (Ken Watanabe) he has early Alzheimer’s disease, the patient asks him how many years he has been practicing and laughs out loud at the neurologist when he hears it is only 10 years. The neurologist in this film is all business, prim and proper, and in a neat uncluttered office. After the second visit, the patient is told the positron emission tomography (PET) scan is diagnostic for Alzheimer’s disease. The patient runs out of the office to a ledge on the roof of the hospital to commit suicide. The neurologist convinces him not to jump and to “have hope.” In The Savages (2007), Mr. Savage (Philip Bosco), disoriented and ­agitated, is restrained in the hospital, while his children, Jon and Wendy (played by Laura Linney and the late Philip Seymour Hoffman) are deciding how to put him in a nursing home. The neurologist calls his condition vascular dementia, but because he sees no stroke (CT scan is shown), he believes that with his disinhibition, aggression, and masked facies and blank stare, it is more likely Parkinson’s disease. When the children ask him what to expect, he tells them he will likely die from cardiac c­ omplications. Soon they are seen reading books on the basics of dementia and Parkinson’s disease and the real diagnosis is never revealed to the flustered children. In Lorenzo’s Oil (1991), the young boy Lorenzo is seen by a pediatric neurologist who finds nothing wrong. “The EEG is normal, skull x-ray is normal, CT is normal. I do not know what to tell you. This boy is neurologically intact.” When the parents suggest some parasitic infection, the neurologist looks surprised and skeptical. Another pediatric neurologist

The Neurologist in Film   ◾    21  

suggests that “it could be any one of a dozen things,” and admits him for tests. (The scene shows a hearing test with tuning fork, pupil reflex, electroencephalography [EEG], and CT scan, all with a dramatic opera soundtrack.) Finally, the diagnosis is revealed by Professor Nikolais— played by Peter Ustinov with bow tie and all—sitting behind a grand desk in a grand office. These examples illustrate that when the cinematic depiction of the neurologist’s competency is concerned, there is a constant uncertainty about the diagnosis and rarely transparency for family members. Neurologists sound rather vague and discombobulated. How is the neurologic examination portrayed in film? The neurologic examination shown is fragmented, out of order, and bizarre. This is to be expected. As moviegoers know, a physical examination in film often consists of a doctor arriving with a large bag, listening to the patient, and stating with great certainty what is wrong or, equally often, that no one has to be concerned. However, this is different with the neurologic examination, which has always been elusive for nonneurologists and thus screenwriters. Not so much the tendon reflexes—reflex hammers are ubiquitously used by doctors in film—but it is the abnormal mental examination that has filmmakers thinking, and most of what we see in film is strange. It appears that some elements of the examination have been used by directors, without a full understanding of what these elements test and what they mean. Physicians and neurologists will be amused. A few examples follow. In Crisis (1950), Cary Grant plays Dr. Ferguson, a neurosurgeon (Chapter 3). He asks his patient to stretch out his arms, and his left arm (holding a cigarette) starts to drift downward followed by a loud cry, cramp, head turn, and unconsciousness for several seconds. He then performs a funduscopic examination (“There is great pressure.”) and finds a visual-field defect. In Reversal of Fortune (2005), Sunny von Bülow (played by Glenn Close) is found in a diabetic coma and is examined by a nervous neurologist in the emergency department who calls for an EEG (and not a CT scan) after performing a funduscopy. In The Men (1950), a sensory examination is shown. Marlon Brando, as Bud, is a paraplegic who is tested by Dr. Brock. A safety pin is touched to the skin with the dull and sharp sides, and the doctor even simulates a touch without actually touching the skin in an effort to determine if the patient is guessing.

22   ◾    Neurocinema: When Film Meets Neurology

The most interesting depiction of a full neurologic examination (and neurologist behavior in an acute setting) is in The Death of Mr. Lazarescu (2005). The examination, however, is a bit all over the place. The film is about Mr. Lazarescu (Chapter 4), who has been complaining of headache and abdominal pain the entire day but is not cared for. After being sent out of a crowded emergency room, he arrives in another hospital, and one of the staff notes an asymmetry in his response. She calls the neurologist—Dr. Dragos Popescu (played by Adrian Titieni). When he enters the emergency room, he does not introduce himself and asks for the patient’s name. He sits down at the bedside and immediately has him repeat an impossibly complex phrase (“Thirty-three storks on the roof of Mr. Kogalniceaunu.”). He then follows with testing of forehead sensation followed by testing of eye tracking, testing of pupil reflexes to light, finger-to-nose testing (it shows the patient misses on the right), testing of finger strength by asking to squeeze, testing for drift (there is a mild drift on the right), testing leg strength by having him bend his knees (he has a subtle weakness), and asking him to walk. The medic warns him that he cannot walk, but the doctor ignores her completely, and the patient nearly falls to the ground. The doctor then proceeds with tendon reflexes (he taps with a reflex hammer on the muscle rather than the tendon). Then he goes back to testing of speech and shows him his wristwatch and asks him what it is. With a wrong answer, he concludes there is a subdural hematoma, and he tells the nurse, whom he flirts with (rubbing her shoulders and calling her mi amor), that it is urgent. He tells the patient he has a blood clot on the brain but also not to worry because the operation is simple and like surgery for appendicitis. Surely for neurologists, this depiction of a neurologic examination is not only taking a few liberties but is outright farcical.

CONCLUSION Reviewing these films is a stark reminder that there is a stereotype of a neurologist who appears as the intellectual, aloof neuroscientist and head-scratcher (bow tie included)—not much different from his counterpart, the psychiatrist. This is understandable because both specialties have similar roots. The character study of one of the founders of neurology, Jean-Martin Charcot, is very much worth watching as a period

The Neurologist in Film   ◾    23  

piece and for parts of the neurologic examination of the patient with imagined neurologic illness, but of course the story is wrong. In films depicting the modern neurologist, the scenes—when seen together—may even illustrate another motif. Diagnostic skills are way off, and often there is uncertainty about what is going on. In several films, the neurologist is denigrating. Do these films help us to understand the neurologist any better? Of course they do not. In film, it is hard to feel a kinship toward them, and almost never does a fiction film provide a useful insight into our current practice. Nonmedical viewers will continue to ask what a neurologist really “does.” We, as neurologists, will have to wait for a better depiction of our field with its many subspecialties and its many disorders that require timely recognition and complex management, even if there is no curative treatment. These disorders and their portrayal in cinema—right or wrong—are the focus of the next few chapters.

Chapter

3

Neurologic Disorders in Film

There is no point in going on living. That is how it is. I know it can only get worse. Why would I inflict this on us, on you and me? Amour (2012)

INTRODUCING MAIN THEMES The next three chapters are the core of the book, and we start with reviewing the major fiction films that portray neurologic disease. When specifically asked, physicians—and certainly neurologists—will likely think that the portrayal in film of neurologic disorders is inaccurate, perhaps even absurd. By its very nature, theatrical portrayal is always in some way contrived, and embellishment of a new neurologic handicap might be expected in the art form we are discussing here. Indeed, there is some exaggeration, but this chapter will show that the portrayal of the major syndromes and clinical signs can approach reality quite closely, and it often is deeply affecting. Many films (i.e., directors and screenwriters) have earned their renown for a good reason. So how do actors render neurologic disease? What is the impact neurologic disease has on relationships, work, even creativity? How does the drama before us articulate the seriousness and the vicissitudes of some neurologic disorders? 27

28   ◾    Neurocinema: When Film Meets Neurology

The main themes in Neurocinema are sudden confrontation with a major neurologic illness, disability from chronic neurologic disease, and inability to lead a normal life anymore. Acute neurologic conditions produce sudden plot twists and are thus frequently used in screenplays. Some filmmakers use a variety of cinematic techniques to show confusion (having the camera turning 360 degrees around a person), seizures (loud shrieking sounds), and visual disturbances (zooming in and out and blurring of the camera lens), but none approaches the personal experience of being struck by a neurologic disorder. Neurologic disease can be seen in three scenarios. The first and most visible one is a film based on or inspired by a true story. These films come naturally because the story is often well researched and has originated from a personal memoir. Examples are Reversal of Fortune, The Sea Inside, Lorenzo’s Oil, My Left Foot, Iris, and more recently, The Intouchables. All these films have distinct qualities, and the neurologic disorder is a vital thread, but it still needs a great actor to do it right. Beyond those examples are several more underappreciated and less frequently seen films that are chiefly concerned with one specific topic that drives the plot, for example, A Late Quartet, Side Effects, and The Tic Code. Finally, there is a category where neurology is fleetingly mentioned in one or two scenes, maybe briefly as part of the story, but not as part of the main plot. Some have notable moments, and examples of films in this category include Steel Magnolias, The Dreamlife of Angels, The Lookout, Barbara, and Drugstore Cowboy. No explanation is necessary in comedies, but they are mentioned here if they address a very strange depiction. (The real follies are presented in Chapter 6.) Hopefully, each of these essays offers enough grist for further discussion.

COMA IN FILM Reversal of Fortune (1990); starring Jeremy Irons, Glenn Close, and Ron Silver; directed by Barbet Schroeder, written by Nicholas Kazan; Golden Globe for best actor (Jeremy Irons); distributed by Warner Brothers.

Neurologic Disorders in Film   ◾    29  

Rating One reflex hammer – incorrect depictions

Two reflex hammers – some error in depiction but of interest

Three reflex hammers – parts can be used for teaching

Four reflex hammers – mandatory viewing

Talk to Her (Hable con Ella) (2002); starring Javier Cámara, Darío Grandinetti, Leonor Watling, Geraldine Chaplin, and Rosario Flores; written and directed by Pedro Almodóvar; Academy Award for best original screenplay, Golden Globe Award for best foreign language film, and BAFTA Award for best film not in English language and for best original screenplay; distributed by Sony Pictures.

Rating One reflex hammer – incorrect depictions

Two reflex hammers – some error in depiction but of interest

Three reflex hammers – parts can be used for teaching

Four reflex hammers – mandatory viewing

30   ◾    Neurocinema: When Film Meets Neurology

Criticism and Context These films are about coma, most simply defined as a state in which the patient is unaware of his surroundings, does not awaken in response to a strong stimulus or pinch, and does not speak or open eyes. When the arms move, the responses are withdrawal or reflexive and not purposeful. The use of coma and prolonged coma (persistent vegetative state) in the movies seems ubiquitous, but there is still a comparatively small number in feature films. Reversal of Fortune is the true story of Sunny and Claus von Bülow, her “comas,” and how her condition and Claus’ murder charge played out in the courts. Sunny von Bülow (Glenn Close) has several bouts of diabetic coma, and she does not awaken from the third one. She is found lying in the bathroom with her husband (Jeremy Irons) acting uninterested because he expects her to wake up (she did it twice before). “Please call an ambulance,” is spoken matter-of-factly, without any sense of urgency. Sunny ends up in the emergency room and is examined (Chapter 2), but she remains in a vegetative state. She is shown lying immobile with eyes closed, a tracheostomy, and accurate positioning of her arms and wrists to mimic contractures. For dramatic effect, the mise-en-scène is a single hospital bed set in dazzling blue, adding to the loneliness and devastation. In real life, Sunny von Bülow died nearly 28 years later, remaining all the while in a persistent vegetative state attended by private nurses on the Upper East Side of New York. Quotable Lines of Dialogue Reversal of Fortune Sunny von Bülow

I never woke from this coma, and I never will—I am in what doctors call a persistent vegetative state—a vegetable. According to medical experts, I could stay like this for a very long time—brain dead—body better than ever.

The film shows each of these hypoglycemic comas well. (Glenn Close narrates and recounts each of these comas—“first coma,” “second coma.”) There is even a mention of bradycardia and hypothermia, so common in these types of comas. Claus von Bülow instructs the maid to “get something warm, a blanket or anything you can find.” However, she would not awaken despite superb medical care (“all this activity was pointless”). The

Neurologic Disorders in Film   ◾    31  

sensational trial—guilty twice, acquitted eventually—of Claus von Bülow (Jeremy Irons) is the major part of the movie. There is an implication in the film that earlier episodes of diabetic hypoglycemic coma in Sunny von Bülow involved the use of needles containing barbiturates and valium as well as insulin. This film presents a very accurate portrayal of diabetic coma, and edited clips can be used for teaching. This is an uncomfortable reality when there is long-lasting hypoglycemia and the patient does not awaken from irreversible brain injury. Talk to Her involves two male–female relationships, with both female characters in persistent vegetative state (PVS). The management of and recovery from PVS is pivotal in this film. The title of the film refers to talking to a patient in PVS. Major topics are discussed in this film, and all are incorrectly depicted. Cinematically, the film is considered by many film critics a career highlight for Almodóvar, known for high melodrama, operatics, and vivid colors, but neurologically it is problematic. Early in the movie, we are introduced to one of the patients (4 years in PVS) showing no contractures, perfectly toned and tanned body, eyes closed, mouth slightly open, with a hint of a smile. I named this cinematic portrayal the “Sleeping Beauty phenomenon” (Figure 3.1). Quotable Lines of Dialogue Talk to Her Friends of patients to each other Physician

Why are you so sure she does not hear you? Because her brain is turned off. Is there hope? No. I repeat, scientifically no, but if you choose to believe, go ahead.

Screenwriters should be told by neurologists that patients in a vegetative state lack awareness, have no purposeful behavior, and have marked muscle bulk loss, severe contractures despite the best rehabilitation efforts, high risk of decubital ulcers, sepsis, and major medical complications. To be fair, this film nonetheless shows the meticulous care given to the patients, with clean sheets being provided as well as a tracheostomy and gastrostomy. (For neurology purists, the tracheostomy is usually removed shortly after successful weaning.) Foot splints to help in avoiding contractures are shown as well as the application of eye drops. In the film, one of the PVS patients becomes pregnant, and the male nurse is convicted of rape. This introduces another new, complex medical

32   ◾    Neurocinema: When Film Meets Neurology

(a)

(b)

(c) FIGURE 3.1  (a) Actors in Talk to Her. (Used with permission of El Deseo Da

S.L.U photo; Miguel Bracho.) (b) Note features of “Sleeping Beauty phenomenon.” (c) Two patients with tracheostomies.

Neurologic Disorders in Film   ◾    33  

problem that is inaccurate. Pregnancy in PVS patients is physiologically not likely. Most stop menstrual cycles, and even in patients who are pregnant and become vegetative, fetal loss is substantial. In this movie, for dramatic purposes, the pregnancy is brought to term and the woman delivers a stillborn baby. A PVS is diagnosed when the patient has a severe—often devastating—brain injury with no awakening since onset. Gradually, the patient starts opening eyes (“eye open” coma), and sleep–wake cycles start. Patients may grimace, but there is no sign of awareness of self or what is happening at the bedside (no response to family members, no response to nursing staff or physicians). The patient just breathes, may yawn or clench the jaw, and may have some startle head movements ­(particularly to loud sounds), but is mute except for occasional sounds. The patient has “vegetative” symptoms, meaning an intact autonomic nervous system (blood pressure, heart rate, and respiratory function fluctuate). The facial features change dramatically, and the patient becomes unrecognizable to family members if they visit weeks later. (A perfect cinematic example is in The Descendents [2011], covered in Chapter 4.) Contractures occur; decubital wounds are unavoidable and may need treatment. Patients are very vulnerable to infections. There is no evidence of suffering. Recovery is not expected after a year in this situation (mostly when injury is due to prior cardiac arrest, traumatic brain injury, or both). Some films suggest reading to the patient in prolonged coma (Rocky II, 1979), even suggesting it could reduce the time in coma (Uptown Girls, 2003), but this is not based on fact. In the movies, some coma patients in film may shed tears. In reality, many patients in a PVS shed tears spontaneously and it is neither a sign of awareness nor a sign that improvement is possible. Shedding tears has been used most dramatically and misleadingly in The Past (2013). Although the physician forcefully argues it is not an accepted stimulus, the husband of a comatose woman tries to elicit a reaction using her perfumes (he claims that smell is the last of the senses to disappear). After he sprinkles himself with perfume, he leans over the patient and she sheds a tear, which he does not see, standing at the opposite side of the bed. She does not squeeze his hand when asked. (In an interview, the director explained that his intention was to show a subtle response that is often not recognized, and because it is not recognized a decision may be made to withdraw support.) The use of perfume is notable here, because it has been used in (unproven) coma stimulation programs.

34   ◾    Neurocinema: When Film Meets Neurology

Similarly of interest is The Dreamlife of Angels (1998) which also depicts a comatose patient with contractures, tracheostomy, and gastrostomy remarkably well. Several patients are shown with contractures and nurses using gastrostomy for feeding. It also shows attempts by nurses to record eye tracking and fixating on an object by the comatose patient— often a first sign of improvement. In Firelight (1997) , a reasonably good representation is given with eyes open, coma, and contractures, but again the facial features continue to be unaffected in this movie portrayal, and the patient has a doll-like appearance. Prognosis is a common theme in films showing PVS, and screenwriters have used terms such as “the garden” (nursing home) and “vegetable” (PVS). In Blind Horizon (2003), the physician prognosticates: “50% total recovery, 35% partial, and 15% you plant him in the ground and watch him grow.” The most recent film on coma is Dormant Beauty, 2012, loosely based on the famous PVS case in Italy (Eluana Englaro). The film unfortunately does not provide any insights into this cause célèbre. We have studied the use of coma by screenwriters in great detail. Movies on coma were reviewed for cause and situation of coma, demographics of actor in coma, physician communication of coma, awakening from coma, and the role of the neurologist. Some representative films are shown in Table 3.1. Because there is violence in R-rated movies, coma was typically caused by motor vehicle accidents, gunshot wounds, and other violent causes. Most actors were in their 30s to 40s. A review of 30 movies with coma portrayal showed awakening in 60%, including time in coma up to 10 years. Successful rehabilitation after many years of coma was also shown, mostly with full physical and cognitive recovery. After awakening, murderous revenge was common, as seen in Lying in Wait (2001), A Man Apart (2003), Face/Off (1997), and Hard to Kill (1990). Awakening was often seen after a bizarre trigger (smoke, mosquito bite, sudden bright sunlight). In While You Were Sleeping (1995), the actor awakens during a New Year’s Eve party after having been “comatose” for most of the film. Most gratuitous is a scene in Good Bye Lenin! (2003) , where a comatose mother awakens after 8 months on a ventilator when her son enters the room, flirts with the nurse, and kisses her. Inexplicably, his mother is immediately lucid upon awakening. Other awakenings have showed a confused patient fighting with nursing staff or pulling out intravenous

R

R

R

PG

R

R

NR

R

R

R

PG-13

R

R

R

PG-13

The Dead Zone

Hard To Kill

Short Cuts

While You Were Sleeping

Face/Off

Firelight

Winterschläfer (Winter Sleepers)

Seven Hours to Judgment

The Safety of Objects

28 Days Later

Swim Fan

Kill Bill: Vol. 1

Blind Horizon

A Man Apart

Paparazzi

1983

1990

1993

1995

1997

1997

1997

1998

2001

2002

2002

2003

2003

2003

2004

Paul Abascal

Gary Gray

Michael Haussman

Quentin Tarantino

John Polson

Danny Boyle

Rose Troche

Beau Bridges

Tom Tykwer

William Nicholson

John Woo

Jon Turteltaub

Robert Altman

Bruce Malmuth

David Cronenberg

Sylvester Stallone

Director

Revenge

Revenge

Coma causes amnesia

Revenge

Attempted murder

Changed world; escaped killer virus

End-of-life decision

Revenge

Loss, grief

End-of-life decisions; murder to be with another woman

Revenge

Love; loving family

Loving family

Revenge

Psychic

Love motivation

Plot

Uncredited

Vin Diesel

Val Kilmer

Uma Thurman

Monroe Mann

Gillian Murphy

Uncredited

Uncredited

Uncredited

Uncredited

Nicolas Cage

Peter Gallagher

Lane Cassidy

Steven Segal

Christopher Walken

Talia Shire

Actor Portraying Coma

Note: MVA: motor vehicle accident; GSW: gunshot wound; PG: parental guidance; NR: not rated, R: restricted

PG

Rated

Rocky II

Title

1979

Year

TABLE 3.1  Examples of Coma in Fiction Film

MVA

Violence

GSW

GSW

MVA

MVA

MVA

Violence

MVA

Accident

Violence

Accident

MVA

GSW

MVA

Hemorrhage in pregnancy

Cause

Neurologic Disorders in Film   ◾    35  

36   ◾    Neurocinema: When Film Meets Neurology

lines, as if awakening from a nightmare. Awakenings have also included suddenly sitting upright in bed (Kill Bill: Vol. 1); sudden awakenings with stepping out of bed, pulling out catheters, and walking out of the hospital (28 Days Later); and sudden increase in pulse rate before awakening (While You Were Sleeping [1995], Face/Off [1997]). True to its title, in Hard to Kill (1990), Steven Segal has been in coma for many years and has grown a sizable beard. During the “awakening scene,” he relives the violent assault to him and his family just before he opens his eyes. His heartbeat is up; he grunts from anger, then opens his eyes and looks stunned. One must to conclude from these observations that screenwriters markedly deviate from current accepted knowledge. More importantly, we were interested to learn how this was perceived by the audience. We proceeded to use 22 key scenes from 17 movies to show a group representing the lay public. These 72 viewers were asked to use statements to rate for accuracy, such as: “I think this is how comatose patients look.” “I think the awakening shown after being in a coma for a long time can happen this way.” “After awakening from being in a coma for a long period of time, you may be able to do this.” “I believe what has been said is correct.” “If my family member would be in the same situation, it is possible that I would remember what happened in the scene and allow it to influence any decisions that I would make.” The survey results are shown in Figure 3.2. Viewers were unable to identify important inaccuracies in one-third of the selected scenes, and one-third of the viewers expressed that these scenes could influence decisions if they would be in a similar situation. This result suggests that movies may have a considerable impact on the public’s perception of coma (although twothirds did not think any of it was accurate). Similar findings were seen with a small sample of non-neurology residents, but not with neurology residents, who could identify all inaccuracies (unpublished observations by Wijdicks).

Neurologic Disorders in Film   ◾    37  

(a) FIGURE 3.2  Key scenes and accuracy ratings of viewers with no medical e­ xpertise.

38   ◾    Neurocinema: When Film Meets Neurology

(b) FIGURE 3.2 (Continued) 

A Final Word Several well-known feature films include an actor in coma and show actors as a “sleeping beauty.” Trivializing coma to a sleeplike state is totally inaccurate and potentially problematic. These films also show awakening, but never accurately, and the scenes as written are highly improbable. Awakening is gradual and slow and not infrequently as if awakening from a nightmare. Seldom do directors and screenwriters use information in a meaningful way or correctly convey the major consequences of coma and rehabilitation. Prolonged comatose states in the movies are misrepresented. We found that the general viewer is capable of identifying these inaccuracies, but a substantial minority is fooled by such depictions. Do screenwriters have a responsibility to be cautious? I think so.

Neurologic Disorders in Film   ◾    39  

Further Reading Bernat JL. Chronic disorders of consciousness. Lancet 2006;367:1181–92. Monti MM, Vanhaudenhuyse A, Coleman MR, et al. Willful modulation of brain activity in disorders of consciousness. N Engl J Med 2010;362:579–89. Mosberg WH, Jr. Trauma, television, movies, and misinformation. Neurosurgery 1981;8:756–58. Wijdicks EFM. The bare essentials: Coma. Practical Neurology 2010;10:51–60. Wijdicks EFM. The Comatose Patient. 2nd ed. New York: Oxford University Press, 2014. Wijdicks EFM, Cranford RE. Clinical diagnosis of prolonged states of impaired consciousness in adults. Mayo Clin Proc 2005;80:1037–46. Wijdicks EFM, Wijdicks CA. The portrayal of coma in contemporary motion pictures. Neurology 2006;66:1300–3.

TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY IN FILM Regarding Henry (1991); starring Harrison Ford, Annette Bening, and Bill Nunn; directed by Mike Nichols, written by Jeffrey Abrams; distributed by Paramount Pictures.

Rating One reflex hammer – incorrect depictions

Two reflex hammers – some error in depiction but of interest

Three reflex hammers – parts can be used for teaching

Four reflex hammers – mandatory viewing

The Lookout (1991); starring Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Jeff Daniels, and Matthew Goode; written and directed by Scott Frank; best first feature at Independent Spirit Awards; distributed by Miramax Films.

40   ◾    Neurocinema: When Film Meets Neurology

Rating One reflex hammer – incorrect depictions

Two reflex hammers – some error in depiction but of interest

Three reflex hammers – parts can be used for teaching

Four reflex hammers – mandatory viewing

Criticism and Context Regarding Henry is considered one of the most recognizable movies about the long-term effects of severe traumatic brain injury (TBI). This movie is about a callous, arrogant attorney who gets shot in the head while getting cigarettes late at night. He is resuscitated from blood loss, causing additional anoxic injury. (The movie surprisingly suggests that he could do well if it only had been a gunshot to the right side of the brain.) In several scenes we see him, following a neurosurgical procedure, remaining comatose for some time. There is uncertainty about his prognosis. Then he suddenly opens his eyes but does not fixate and remains mute. Quotable Lines of Dialogue Regarding Henry Physician

Colleague attorney

Mrs. Turner, your husband is incredibly lucky. The bullet wound to the head caused minimal damage. See, it hit the right frontal lobe. That’s the only part of the brain that has redundant systems. I mean, if you’re going to get shot in the head, that’s the way to do it. … and went off the side of the road. The doctor says forget it, no change. Three months later he beat me in tennis, swear to God, you never know … you never know.

The film shows the long, painful rehabilitation and recovery from traumatic brain injury well. (“It is going to be a long, tough rehabilitation.” “The brain is very mysterious.” “In some ways he is starting from scratch here.”) After he seems to be improving and returns home, the film shows him

Neurologic Disorders in Film   ◾    41  

markedly changed. In one scene, Henry is wandering the street buying a hot dog (he does not know what “’kraut” is), answering a phone in a random phone booth, watching an X-rated movie, and buying a puppy—all in one afternoon. Regarding Henry is, of course, about redemption—learning to start anew, being a better person with a blank slate after prolonged coma. Initially, the personality changes after such an injury that are depicted here are very real. Frontal lobe injuries result in major problems in mood (the flat mimicry of Harrison Ford is generally accurate), difficulty understanding complete conversations, and loss of verbal fluency. Henry also shows impulsivity and disinhibition so common after these types of injuries. However, the “clean slate,” and even more, the change to a lovable person in this film is far less likely because most patients remain easily irritable or their prior personality flaws become accentuated. These types of brain injuries do not make a person a better being; the person is changed forever and must cope with major attentional deficits and emotional lability. Another notable film—at least for a couple of opening scenes—is The Lookout. This film has some interesting things to say about the long-term consequences of TBI. Chris (Joseph Gordon-Levitt) is injured in a motor vehicle accident (MVA), and we see him later explaining his difficulty with “sequencing”—putting things he does during the day in order. He cannot remember names. He writes down exactly how his day is planned and who he meets, and then follows this routine. He meets his female case manager, and there are some sexual innuendos. (“Did you have these thoughts before head injury?”) There are yellow notes everywhere, multiple notebooks, and drawers with names for clothing. He also unhinged quickly and has a “frontal” behavior. He shares a room with a jokester blind man (Jeff Daniels), who he can turn to if he forgets how to open a can. The movie turns into a caper involving a bank heist, and there is little further explanation of his behavior. One of the reasons the screenwriter wrote this character is that Chris seems subdued and thus oblivious to his surroundings. The Lookout is a generally accurate representation of the “forgetfulness” of patients with moderate TBI. The inability to organize the day (“sequencing”) does occur, and using Post-it notes on telephones as a reminder to call someone is a credible behavior. Many patients work with compensatory strategies, and cognitive rehabilitation may improve the executive aspects of attention and everyday functioning. Memory strategy training has also been developed, and includes notebooks to compensate for deficits. Electronic memory aids using reminder messages often meet needs.

42   ◾    Neurocinema: When Film Meets Neurology

Trauma (2003) also concentrates on “recovery” from an MVA. Colin Firth is briefly comatose but awakens. He has full flashbacks of the entire accident when looking at pictures of his wife (who died in the accident), feels people are looking at him, startles easily, and hallucinates. The psychologist or psychiatrist (not credited) explains these episodes. (“It is not uncommon especially when you are tired… that it [the brain] translates sounds or sights into images of that.”) He visits old friends, who tell him, “Get on with your life.” The film shows a posttraumatic stress disorder well, but soon it becomes clear that the film belongs more in the horror genre. The most recent film on traumatic brain injury can probably be ignored. Post Concussion (1999) is a comedy about a person with a concussion who is unable to go back to work and has a lot of headaches. He is tested for personality and recall. He has a virtually impossible line to repeat: “Though they had bad disguises, it was their inscrutable style that allowed them to escape the dogged policemen.” Then he is blindfolded and performs a round-hole test. The narrator comments that “the medical profession does not understand the psychological ones.” After these tests, he is declared unfit for work. There are black-and-white inserts in which a scientist pokes in a cow’s brain to explain a concussion and personality disorders. There is little substance in this film; testing of brain-injured patients is ridiculed, and there is much to object to—and it is not funny, either. A Final Word No shortage of trauma and gunshots in the entertainment industry—no poetic realism here. In the early days of Hollywood, the depiction of head injury had already started in Westerns, with scenes showing bar fights and people getting hit on the head by a poker (or a chair or a bar stool). Head injury is common in the movies, but it is remarkable that the effects of traumatic head injury are rarely shown. There are some good teachable scenes in these films, but also questionable ones. Readers of this book who are looking for accuracy are better off viewing The Crash Reel (2013), discussed in detail in Chapter 5. Further Reading Azouvi P, Vallat-Azouvi C, Belmont A. Cognitive deficits after traumatic coma. Prog Brain Res 2009;177:89–110.

Neurologic Disorders in Film   ◾    43   Cicerone KD, Langenbahn DM, Braden C, et al. Evidence-based cognitive rehabilitation: Updated review of the literature from 2003 through 2008. Arch Phys Med Rehabil 2011;92:519–30. Fleminger S. Long-term psychiatric disorders after traumatic brain injury. Eur J Anaesthesiol Suppl 2008;42:123–30. Lewis FD, Horn GJ. Traumatic brain injury: Analysis of functional deficits and posthospital rehabilitation outcomes. J Spec Oper Med 2013;13:56–61. Powell LE, Glang A, Ettel D. Systematic assessment and instruction of assistive technology for cognition (ATC) following brain injury: An introduction. Perspectives on Neurophysiology and Neurogenic Speech and Language Disorders 2013;23:59–68. Stuss DT. Traumatic brain injury: Relation to executive dysfunction and the frontal lobes. Curr Opin Neurol 2011;24:584–89. Warriner EM, Velikonja D. Psychiatric disturbances after traumatic brain injury: Neurobehavioral and personality changes. Curr Psychiatry Rep 2006;8:73–80.

STROKE IN FILM Amour (2012); starring Jean-Louis Trintignant, Emmanuelle Riva, and Isabelle Huppert; written and directed by Michael Haneke; received Palme d’Or Award at Cannes Film Festival, César Award for best film, Academy Award for best foreign language film, among many US and international nominations; distributed by Artificial Eye and Sony Pictures Classics.

Rating One reflex hammer – incorrect depictions

Two reflex hammers – some error in depiction but of interest

Three reflex hammers – parts can be used for teaching

Four reflex hammers – mandatory viewing

44   ◾    Neurocinema: When Film Meets Neurology

A Simple Life (2012); starring Andy Lau, Deanie Ip, and Fuli Wang; directed by Ann Hui, written by Susan Chan; Volpi Cup for best actress at Venice Film Festival, among other Asian film festival awards; distributed by Distribution Workshop.

Rating One reflex hammer – incorrect depictions

Two reflex hammers – some error in depiction but of interest

Three reflex hammers – parts can be used for teaching

Four reflex hammers – mandatory viewing

Criticism and Context Amour is a brilliantly directed film by Michael Haneke about the life-­changing effects of a stroke in the nearest and dearest. Amour is one great lovely touch and changes one’s outlook on the topic. Amour is a character study of two highly cultivated octogenarian piano teachers, Anne (Emmanuelle Riva) and Georges (Jean-Louis Trintignant), and their daughter Eva (Isabelle Huppert), played phenomenally by three icons of French cinema. The film is quiet, staged as classic theater, and filled with emotional dialogue mixed with Schubert’s impromptus. Haneke, a luminary of cinema, is known for films that show life as it is. Many of us can identify with his characters. Haneke forces us to not only watch the scenes, but also to witness the events and feel the heaviness of being in compromising situations. Arguably, he does this without manipulating the audience. The idea for the Amour screenplay came from Haneke’s personal experience helplessly w ­ atching an elderly family member deteriorate from frailty and commit suicide. Anne suddenly develops neurologic symptoms, is devastated by a stroke, and deteriorates. Georges is now faced with the care of his wife. Initially, this

Neurologic Disorders in Film   ◾    45  

seems not too much of a chore, but soon things change as the care becomes increasingly complex. Amour offers some clues on Anne’s condition, but there is little to allow a detailed neurologic assessment. In an indelible scene, the sudden speech arrest and frozen stare—with no recollection—is dramatic (Figure 3.3) and closest to what appears to be a complex partial seizure. She subsequently has difficulty pouring tea using her right hand. A major blockage in her carotid artery is found, followed by vascular surgery (endarterectomy), and she is left with profound right-sided weakness but no speech impediment. She is wheelchair bound. Before surgery they have been told she could have a 5% chance of complications; but apparently she does not belong to the supposedly 95% risk-free surgical group. There is no doctor–patient conversation about the complication, which seems to be treated as a matter of fact and just bad luck—a classic Haneke theme. Quotable Lines of Dialogue Amour Georges

Eva Georges

What can I say? The carotid artery was blocked. They did an ultrasound scan, two in fact, and they said they had to operate on her. She was confused and scared.… They said the risk was very low and that if they didn’t operate, she’d be certain to have a serious stroke. And what do they say now? Just that it didn’t go well. It’s one of the 5% that go wrong.

Soon after this surgery, Anne develops another, far more devastating stroke. This should give pause to any neurologist. Stroke specialists—assuming the first presentation was a stroke and not a seizure or an unclear spell with asymptomatic carotid disease—may certainly come away with some reservations if (at least in this film) the result is much worse than before and quickly leads to another stroke. Carotid endarterectomy has been performed in octogenarians, and vascular surgeons have reported no increase in postoperative mortality or stroke when compared with “younger” patients. Carotid endarterectomy may be justified knowing the average life span of a woman of 85 years is still about 5 years; and thus there might be the, albeit unproven, potential for benefit. All of this may not terribly relevant to the main plotline of the movie, but it could prompt discussion about medical and surgical decisions in the vulnerable very old. Coercion into questionable surgery after a questionable event with eventually poor results could easily be another frightening theme for Haneke.

46   ◾    Neurocinema: When Film Meets Neurology

FIGURE 3.3  Film poster of Amour showing the key scene of Anne’s sudden stare

associated with speech arrest. (Used with permission of El Deseo Da S.L.U photo; Miguel Bracho.)

Emmanuelle Riva is unsurpassed as playing a stroke victim, and there is truly no better representation on film. Georges, played just as convincingly by Jean-Louis Trintignant, nurtures her to the best of his ability, though he is hampered by his own frailty. He provides for all transfers, performs passive range of motion, and even provides melodic intonation therapy. There is some humor in this part of the film, and it is very touching to see both Anne and Georges try to make the best of the situation. Together they look at photos from earlier times, eliciting Anne’s response, “It is beautiful…this long life.” But now they seem imprisoned in their Paris apartment. The only contact with the outside world is a concerned neighbor (and a pigeon). Professional support at this stage would have been expected, but Georges has little except for a biweekly visit with a family doctor, who tells Georges that admission to the hospital after the second stroke would have little use and staying home would spare her all these tests. Also, Anne told him clearly that she would never want to be hospitalized again. She rejects any form of sympathy and gets visually irritated when the topic comes up. Georges displays repressed

Neurologic Disorders in Film   ◾    47  

pain, and by the time his exhaustion becomes visible, he fires a private nurse. He tells his alienated daughter, “None of this deserves to be shown.” A major element of the film is the loneliness but also the desire to be left alone, even if assistance is offered. This might be one of the main lingering themes for neurologists to consider: How do we organize care for stroke patients after they are dismissed from the hospital, and can we help and improve their dignity? Do we appreciate the spouse’s ordeal and offer assistance? Amour is not specifically about how society deals with the problems or infirmities of the elderly, but the film could still start that discussion. All of this cannot be waved away as if it could only happen in France (or Europe), because it can happen anywhere, and to anyone. In a very dramatic way, the film shows the familiar, yet often unrecognized, problems of denial and burnout in a caregiver. At the end of life, the ultimate sign of love may be to provide relief of pain and suffering, which the movie shockingly portrays after Anne has signaled refusal of fluids and frequently cries out in pain. Is this the crime of passion of advanced age? Amour shows us the cruel change in a loving relationship brought about by illness. The realization that genuine, deeply rooted love for each other is the only thing we have and that it may be suddenly taken away for no good reason, just at random and unannounced, is painful to watch. It also sheds a harsh light on the major problems with the home care of a neurologically disabled patient; I cringed each time Anne with her swallowing difficulties was given water and coughed. The lack of adequate neuropalliation is very apparent and a warning. Amour is an unforgettable work of art. A similar theme has recently been explored in the film A Simple Life, this time in Hong Kong. Ah Tao (played by Deanie Ip) suffers a nondominant hemispheric stroke. She suddenly develops a left-sided hemiparesis and dysarthria, portrayed very well. Her “master” (as she calls him), Roger (Andy Lau), is not allowed to care for her, and she wants to go to a nursing home. Her main motivation is that she knows a second stroke is coming and that this is the end of it. She refuses to be cared for and prefers a drab nursing home. Roger now feels responsible for her well-being (Ah Tao worked 60  years for his family), and his normal daily routine changes, visiting her frequently and just trying not to neglect her. Ah Tao tries to hold on to her dignity. The film has been somewhat overshadowed by the grandeur of Amour, but this work is equally important in depicting a new reality after a major stroke. There is full recovery, and the film does emphasize changing relationships and compassion, but it does not provide

48   ◾    Neurocinema: When Film Meets Neurology

any more insight in management of a stroke. The title refers to a simple life, and that is what is shown. Stroke has been rarely depicted in film. Equally memorable (discussed in the next section) is The Diving Bell and the Butterfly (2007), which is an extreme manifestation of what appears to be an acute clot in the basilar artery. Some films—Legends of the Fall (1994) and Flawless (1999) — explore stroke, but they do not deal with the human toll on relationships. Moreover, these two films show stroke portrayed in a curious way by world-class actors. Robert De Niro plays a character with marked dysarthria and crooked smile in Flawless (1999) and Anthony Hopkins plays a character who suffers a stroke in Legends of the Fall (1994). Hopkins contorts his face to one side, moans and groans, but is able to write full words on a chalkboard hanging on his neck. He is also able, in the climactic shootout scene, to kill everyone using his paralyzed side. Run & Jump 2014 depicts bilateral frontal lobe infarcts and is chosen by the director to depict behavior problems. How the family copes with this condition is insufficiently developed. Conor (Edward MacLiam) is more sullen than parkinsonian, more hesitant than aphasic, and more childish than inappropriate, but then again how do you play such an extremely rare and far more serious condition? In these films, other than showing a turn for the worse, dealing with adversity, and suddenly being hit by a major handicap, there is no further insight or explanation about stroke in the screenplay. A Final Word Observing the rapid neurologic decline of a loved one is unfathomable. These films focus on one major aspect of humanity—the desire to engage in and maintain loving relationships when such an ordeal strikes. When you see Amour, I am sure it will force you to ask these questions: Are we doing enough to prevent this isolation in couples? How might we better help them accept the reality? What are the consequences of certain medical care choices? Amour and A Simple Life do not answer these questions—they do not have to do that—but they will have the viewers think about it - for quite some time. Further Reading Cecil R, Thompson K, Parahoo K, McCaughan E. Towards an understanding of the lives of families affected by stroke: A qualitative study of home carers. J Adv Nurs 2013;69:1761–70.

Neurologic Disorders in Film   ◾    49   Greenwood N, Mackenzie A, Cloud GC, Wilson N. Informal primary carers of stroke survivors living at home—Challenges, satisfactions and coping: A systematic review of qualitative studies. Disabil Rehabil 2009;31:337–51. Langhorne P, Bernhardt J, Kwakkel G. Stroke rehabilitation. Lancet 2011;377: 1693–1702. Ski C, O’Connell B. Stroke: The increasing complexity of carer needs. J Neurosci Nurs 2007;39:172–79.

LOCKED-IN SYNDROME IN FILM The Diving Bell and the Butterfly (Le scaphandre et le papillon) (2007); starring Mathieu Amalric, Emmanuelle Seigner, Marie-Josée Croze, Anne Consigny, and Max von Sydow; directed by Julian Schnabel, written by Ronald Harwood; best director award at the Cannes Film Festival, Golden Globe Award for best foreign language film, César Awards for best actor and best editing; distributed by Pathé and Miramax Films.

Rating One reflex hammer – incorrect depictions

Two reflex hammers – some error in depiction but of interest

Three reflex hammers – parts can be used for teaching

Four reflex hammers – mandatory viewing

Criticism and Context The Diving Bell and the Butterfly is based on an autobiography “written” (blinked) by Jean-Dominique Bauby (Le scaphandre et le papillon). Bauby, as played by Mathieu Amalric, was editor-in-chief of the fashion magazine Elle when he had a stroke at the age of 43 years. The cause is unknown but, in this age group, most likely was a vertebral artery dissection with basilar artery occlusion (or, less likely, a pontine hemorrhage

50   ◾    Neurocinema: When Film Meets Neurology

from an arteriovenous malformation). The locked-in syndrome makes it impossible for the patient to move, and only eye movement (eyelid blinking and up and down eye movements) is possible. There is no effective swallowing, and patients initially need assistance with ventilation. Vision, hearing, and feeling are all preserved. Here the mind is truly locked in a nonfunctioning body. The director, Julian Schnabel, appropriately decided to make the movie in French. In an interview with Charlie Rose, Schnabel explained that he made the movie after his father died, as a self-help device to help himself deal with his own inevitable death. The film is accurate and unique in showing Jean-Dominique as what he would have seen in this condition. On the screen, Jean-Dominique’s visual field is shown through the lens of the camera. Blinking is imitated by having the cinematographer move objects in front of the camera. His thoughts are the main narrative in the film. The camera shows double vision, difficulty focusing, and a constricted keyhole visual field, which would be quite correct if—in the setting of a basilar artery occlusion—the posterior occipital fields were involved. It also mostly shows his limitation of eye movements, although the camera does move vertically and horizontally and scans the room. (In locked-in syndrome, only vertical eye movements are possible, which then would produce double vision.) Nonetheless, it remains highly speculative what patients see in the acute phase. The rehabilitation and extreme effort of a speech therapist to communicate with him are notable and mostly correct. Standard orientation questions are asked (“Are we in Paris?” “Does wood float?”). In patients with locked-in syndrome, establishing communication is, however, far more difficult in the early poststroke phase, although later computer-assisted communication can be very effective. It clearly shows an important technique of communicating, starting with the alphabet, using the most commonly used letters (all attempts start with the letter E). Jean-Dominique was able to dictate a full work (Figure 3.4) but died soon after its publication. Jean-Dominique felt like he was living in a diving bell and could use his memory and imagination to go to past worlds (thus the butterfly feeling). “My cocoon becomes less oppressive and my mind takes flight like a butterfly.” The movie includes a forceful scene when he dictates, “I want to die,” creating a negative, overly dramatized reaction to the speech therapist; but according to the real transcriber, this was never mentioned (nor was

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she present during his demise, in contrast to what was shown in the film). Bauby’s case is unique, and his book has given us insight into the condition. Quotable Lines of Dialogue The Diving Bell and the Butterfly Dr. Lepage (neurologist) Dr. Lepage

Bauby Speech therapist

It won’t comfort you to know that your condition is extremely rare.… We simply do not know the cause.… I’m afraid it’s just one of those things. You’ve had what we call a cerebrovascular accident. It’s put your brain stem out of action. The brain stem is an essential component of our internal computer. In the past, we would have said you’d had a massive stroke. You would very probably have died. But now we have such improved resuscitation techniques that we’re able to prolong life. I do want to die. I really do. That makes me very angry. There are people who love you and care for you. I’m a complete stranger and yet I care for you. And you’re alive. So, don’t say you want to die. It’s offensive. It’s… it’s obscene.

One of the most existential fears is being trapped in one’s own body and being misdiagnosed as comatose. In 1844, Alexandre Dumas described such a state in the fictional character of Monsieur Noirtier, who was in this condition for more than 6 years and was described as a “corpse with living eyes.” Ironically, as an aside, Jean-Dominique noted in his book that he wanted to write a book based on Dumas’s The Count of Monte Cristo before this ordeal. Improved communication and meticulous care may lead to some prolongation of survival and even acceptable quality of life. However, a far more insightful book is by historian Tony Judt, The Memory Chalet, where he describes his decline from ALS (amyotrophic lateral sclerosis) and becoming locked in. His book is, in his own words, “nostalgic recollections of happier days.” His description of his affliction is “… and there I lie; trussed, myopic and motionless like a modern-day mummy alone in my corporeal prison accompanied for the rest of the night only by my thoughts.” The locked-in syndrome is a major deafferentation syndrome sparing hearing, vertical eye movement, blinking sensation, and pain perception.

52   ◾    Neurocinema: When Film Meets Neurology

FIGURE 3.4  First edition of Bauby’s book. Bauby blinked more than 200,000 times

to produce this 137-page book describing his desolate state before he died. (Used with permission of Robert Laffont.)

It has been rarely transient, but patients with so-called locked-in syndrome plus syndrome (some arm preservation) can improve fairly dramatically over time. The film correctly identifies improvement of oropharyngeal function as a potential prelude to recovery of speech. Paralysis remains virtually always profound, as is the imbalance, creating major rehabilitation difficulties. A Final Word The Diving Bell and the Butterfly is one of the iconic films in this Neurocinema collection and should be required viewing for any

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physician. There are lessons to be learned about how to best communicate with patients, the power of communicating with respiratory therapists, and the tremendous challenge of rehabilitation. Late recovery has not been reported, but patients may remain cognitively intact for years. Some improvement may occur, such as movement of fingers, which allows better signaling. A large proportion of patients die from pulmonary complications—and it seems Bauby’s fate as well—but some have survived for many decades. Studies have suggested that some patients may have reasonably acceptable days despite being trapped in an immobilized body, but only if best care and compassion can be provided for a prolonged time. Maximal compensatory auditory and visual stimulation are required to compensate for the loss of other senses. With a feat of great willpower. Further Reading Burki T. In the blink of an eye. The Lancet Neurology 2008;7:127. De Massari D, Ruf CA, Furdea A, et al. Brain communication in the locked-in state. Brain 2013;136:1989–2000. Goldberg C, Topp S, Hopkins C. The locked-in syndrome: Posterior stroke in the ED. Am J Emerg Med 2013;31:1294 e1291–93. Mathiasen H. Mind over body: The diving bell and the butterfly. Am J Med 2008;121:829. Ohry A. The locked-in syndrome and related states. Paraplegia 1990;28:73–75. Phipps E. A view from the inside: The diving bell and the butterfly. J Head Trauma Rehabil 1999;14:89–90. Snoeys L, Vanhoof G, Manders E. Living with locked-in syndrome: An explorative study on health care situation, communication and quality of life. Disabil Rehabil 2013;35:713–18.

BRAIN TUMOR IN FILM Dark Victory (1939); starring Bette Davis, George Brent, Humphrey Bogart, Geraldine Fitzgerald, and Ronald Reagan; directed by Edmund Goulding, written by Casey Robinson, based on the play by George Brewer Jr. and Bertram Bloch; multiple nominations, including best director at the Academy Awards, but no wins; distributed by Warner Brothers.

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Rating One reflex hammer – incorrect depictions

Two reflex hammers – some error in depiction but of interest

Three reflex hammers – parts can be used for teaching

Four reflex hammers – mandatory viewing

Declaration of War (La Guerre est déclarée) (2011); starring Valérie Donzelli, Jérémie Elkaïm, César Desseix, and Gabriel Elkaïm; directed by Valérie Donzelli, written by Valérie Donzelli and Jérémie Elkaïm; distributed by IFC Films.

Rating One reflex hammer – incorrect depictions

Two reflex hammers – some error in depiction but of interest

Three reflex hammers – parts can be used for teaching

Four reflex hammers – mandatory viewing

Criticism and Context Two key films—dramatically different in approach and accuracy—deserve detailed discussion.

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Dark Victory is a farce when it comes to neurologic manifestations of a brain tumor. The protagonist gets headaches after some sort of aggravation, develops sudden double vision, and falls off a horse but still refuses to see a doctor. (“He will say it is a hangover and I am smoking too many cigarettes.”) She then notices burns on her right hand. She sees a neurosurgeon, and he asks, “Does the light bother you? How did you play at bridge?” He then proceeds with summarizing her problem: “Progressive headache for months, vision is cut in half just as if someone is shutting folding doors, that queer feeling in your right arm—you cannot laugh that off.… Your memory is shot to pieces. You cannot concentrate.” The neurologic exam is shown. “Please squeeze my hand.” He tests reflexes (normal) and sensory testing (alternating the use of a piece of silk and a rough cloth). After this exam, he consults three other physicians and tells her to proceed with surgery for brain tumor. When he discovers that the tumor is malignant, he still tells her that there will be “complete surgical recovery.” Quotable Lines of Dialogue Dark Victory Neurosurgeon Patient Neurosurgeon Friend Neurosurgeon

Technically it is called glioma. Sounds like a plant. Yes, it is like a plant—a parasitic one. How will it come? Peacefully, God’s last small mercy.

Dark Victory, which I suspect is known by few neurologists as a major motion picture on the presentation of a brain tumor, is bold because it addresses the dilemma of how to discuss the diagnosis. Clinical presentation of a malignant brain tumor can be nondistinctive. It is usually of recent onset over days rather than months and may be a change in pattern in a patient with prior headaches. Nausea and vomiting are common (but rarely seen in film). Seizures are presenting symptoms in up to 40% of patients and are often focal rather than generalized. Personality changes are also common. After surgery, she demonstrates good walking (even demonstrates walking backwards and tests her own reflexes). When her brain tumor recurs, it presents as diminished vision (“getting dark,” hence the title), becoming blind. It all happens within minutes. She says goodbye to her dogs, unsteadily climbs the stairs, goes to bed, and dies peacefully. Dark

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Victory contains scenes giving misleading information and highly unusual clinical presentation. Nothing can even be attributed to the zeitgeist of the times. A much better film is the autobiographical Declaration of War. The directors and their child play the lead roles. It was even filmed in the same hospital where they had this similar experience. The film is, ­therefore— albeit somewhat fictionalized—reasonably precise, certainly when it comes to the medical and neurologic aspects. Romeo and Juliette are their fictional names, and their child (Adam) does not seem to thrive at the age of 3 and then has difficulty walking and vomits. A facial asymmetry is noticed. This leads to multiple physician contacts, but they use largely ambiguous language that confuses everybody. The parental stress is enormous, and the contact with physicians is rough and distanced. At one point, Romeo says to Juliette, “No outsmarting the doctors, no idiotic theories, no Internet.” Quotable Lines of Dialogue Declaration of War Parents Are there possible aftereffects? Neurosurgeon There must not be any. Parents But if there are? Neurosurgeon There will be no aftereffects. (Puts hands on mother’s shoulder.) Get some rest. Don’t count eggs in the hen’s ass. Sleep well. See you tomorrow.

The movie is about how this experience could change parents of a very sick child. It is a must-see film for pediatric neurologists and residents. There are family frictions, strangers who have an opinion, irritations in the hospital, extreme financial burden (even in “free healthcare Europe”) and their marriage does not end well. The narrator says, “They stopped working for 2 years. They separated, got back together several times, and then separated for good. Each started a new life.” The end shows a final visit with their (this time) compassionate neurosurgeon; and, when seen 5 years later, the child is cured. The war is won. The film is useful because of several neurologic aspects. First, the presentation that “something might be wrong” and the delay to come to a final diagnosis in a young child are not uncommon. In children less than 2 years old, behavioral changes, seizures, vomiting, and head tilt are common (and nonspecific). Not infrequently, only one-third of the children

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are diagnosed within one month of onset of presentation due to a doctor’s delay but also parental delay. The film does inappropriately show the neurologist vacillating on outcome with a general pessimistic outlook. Concerning, however, is the presentation of a tumor diagnosed as “rhabdoid.” It will not be apparent to most viewers and even general neurologists, but atypical teratoid rhabdoid tumors are very aggressive, with high mortality in the first year. It would be very unusual to survive disease free from this diagnosis. (A “10%” survival is mentioned here and even that may be too optimistic.) Ifosfamide carboplatin and etoposide (ICE) treatment is mentioned (a common approach in Europe, and different in the United States, where methotrexate and high-dose chemotherapy and stem cell rescue is considered). Some other lesser-known films deserve mention. In the Dutch movie Turkish Delight (1973) , one of the most accomplished works of Paul Verhoeven, the protagonist, Olga (Monique van de Ven), is diagnosed with a brain tumor after she loses concentration at her work (bottles fall off the conveyor belt). She is then found unresponsive, and in the next scene, crying in the middle of a pneumoencephalogram procedure. She displays infantile and aggressive behavior. A nurse runs in to give her sedative drugs. (“Bad, bad Missus. What are we? Wild and naughty.”) In a deeply sad ending she dies the next morning. Again, there is a misrepresentation here of wild psychotic behavior in a patient with a newly diagnosed brain tumor. A scene showing (now obsolete) pneumoencephalography is one of the most memorable shocking moments in this film. Another film that portrays brain tumor in detail is Crisis (1950) . In Crisis, the Hopkins neurosurgeon Dr. Ferguson (Cary Grant) is asked to see the dictator Raoul Farrago, who is presenting with a left temporal lobe meningioma. He needs surgery, but the outcome is uncertain. (“Can he live without surgery? Not much chance. Can he live after surgery? I do not know.”) Dr. Ferguson is advised to leave the country and not get involved, and is even advised to kill him in surgery. (“When you have the president with his head open…one little slip of the knife…then who will know?”) He proceeds with surgery and seems to recover well, but the dictator dies from postoperative hemorrhaging after he defends himself against a revolt. Brain tumor, and finding a cure, is a theme in Aronofsky’s The Fountain (2006), but it does not present much detail on diagnosis or management,

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and it is purely fantastical. Phenomenon (1996) is about a brain tumor causing new powers instead of deficits and is discussed separately in Chapter 6. A Final Word The diagnosis of a malignant brain tumor—little time to live—is a major theme in a considerable number of films. Coping with childhood tumors has rarely been depicted successfully in the movies. The surgery, chemotherapy, and physician interaction are all depicted very well in Declaration of War. This film is the best representation of brain tumor in children in film, and has a happy ending. Dark Victory is a classic but not because of its neurological representation. Withholding important medical information, or worse, sharing medical details (and prognosis) with others and not the patient should be vexing for many physicians, and these are perhaps the most stunning aspects of Dark Victory. Further Reading Crawford J. Childhood brain tumors. Pediatr Rev 2013;34:63–78. Dobrovoljac M, Hengartner H, Boltshauser E, Grotzer MA. Delay in the diagnosis of paediatric brain tumours. Eur J Pediatr 2002;161:663–67. Epelman S. The adolescent and young adult with cancer: State of the art—Brain tumor. Curr Oncol Rep 2013;15:308–16. Huttner A. Overview of primary brain tumors: Pathologic classification, epidemiology, molecular biology, and prognostic markers. Hematol Oncol Clin North Am 2012;26:715–32. Omuro A, DeAngelis LM. Glioblastoma and other malignant gliomas: A clinical review. JAMA 2013;310:1842–50.

MENINGITIS IN FILM The Courageous Dr. Christian (1940); starring Jean Hersholt, Dorothy Lovett, and Robert Baldwin; directed by Bernard Vorhaus, written by Ring Lardner Jr. and Ian McLellan Hunter; distributed by Stephens-Lang Productions.

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Rating One reflex hammer – incorrect depictions

Two reflex hammers – some error in depiction but of interest

Three reflex hammers – parts can be used for teaching

Four reflex hammers – mandatory viewing

In Enemy Hands (2004); starring William Macy, Til Schweiger, and Thomas Kretschmann; directed by Tony Giglio; distributed by Lions Gate Entertainment.

Rating One reflex hammer – incorrect depictions

Two reflex hammers – some error in depiction but of interest

Three reflex hammers – parts can be used for teaching

Four reflex hammers – mandatory viewing

Criticism and Context It may be surprising that so few films deal with meningitis, and only with outbreaks. The main difficulty for screenwriters, I suppose, is that

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meningitis is just one illness and one person, and it is definitively more sweeping when it affects and kills many and does so rapidly. Such outbreaks (usually a virus of some kind) occasionally appear as Hollywood themes. The ultimate medical disaster movie about a prevalent virus is Contagion (2011), directed by Steven Soderbergh. The fictional virus MEV-1 is a mix of bat and pig virus (“somewhere the wrong bat met up with the wrong pig”) and is modeled after the Nipah virus outbreak of April 1999 in Malaysia, when 265 cases of febrile encephalitis were reported. The initial symptoms are headache and dizziness followed by respiratory symptoms, seizures, and rapid-onset coma. Contagion does not show specific neurologic manifestations or neurologic involvement except for one terminal seizure. Ian Lipkin, epidemiologist and Professor of Neurology at Columbia University was consulted and devised the imaginary virus and built a clinical scenario of such an epidemic. The film asks the important questions of how the public health organizations would respond in such a disaster scenario and how quickly vaccines would be developed. The spread of the virus shown in Contagion is very similar to the H1N1 virus epidemic that infected people in more than 40 countries. The film correctly points out that in future epidemics there will be massive challenges to the rapid manufacture of vaccines. Infectious outbreak was on display in the summer blockbuster zombie movie World War Z (2013). In this movie, parasite manipulation of the collective behavior of ants—a concept rooted in actual science and ant behavior—is used to induce host discrimination in the zombies. The “manipulated” zombies then selectively choose to infect only healthy hosts but refrain from infecting the terminally ill. Brad Pitt’s own infection with Ebola virus protects him. Within the context of the story, this raises the preposterous prospect of protecting people by infecting them with some deadly but curable disease until the zombie epidemic abates. Another virus (simian virus ALZ-113) is used to exterminate the world’s population with very few survivors (Dawn of the Planet of the Apes, 2014). Apart from the otherworldliness of the above-mentioned films, there are two interesting movies on meningitis outbreaks. The Courageous Dr. Christian is one of several movies made about the character Dr. Christian in the late 1930s and early 1940s. Dr. Christian is an eminent country doctor played by the Danish actor Jean Hersholt. It is rumored that the actor’s demeanor as a kind and knowledgeable doctor resulted in mail sent to him by viewers asking for advice.

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This movie, set at the end of the Depression, has as its major theme an epidemic of meningitis. The meningitis epidemic outbreak apparently starts in “Squatter Town,” a section of town with poor sanitation. The people—the poor and the needy—are a constant concern (“people living around the bend”), and the city board decides to remove them. It finally comes to a major confrontation between Dr. Christian and the police. Quotable Lines of Dialogue The Courageous Dr. Christian Dr. Christian Chief, there is a child in here with spinal meningitis. Chief That does not sound serious to me, doctor.… It is just a stall. Dr. Christian It is a highly contagious disease with high mortality rate. A single case may rapidly spread over the whole district. Mayor This meningitis is just a kid disease, isn’t it? Dr. Christian Hardly, it hits all ages and classes.

The film shows a child who is sensitive to light and sound and who cries easily (Mother: “Don’t be such a crybaby”), but Dr. Christian (stroking his chin while looking serious) thinks the child may have meningitis. He performs a lumbar puncture, and the film shows him finding the characteristic inflammatory polynucleated cells under the microscope. The mayor asks if it is only the “squatters,” but Dr. Christian—irritated by the lack of compassion for the poor—tells him the infection may also get to the town administrators. Dr. Christian orders everybody to be inoculated, and he creates makeshift hospitals. Newspaper headlines are shown. “Crisis Looms. Disease Getting Beyond Control.” Multiple people on gurneys are shown, but there soon is a break with no new cases, a decline in the number of cases, and improvement in the condition of patients. Most likely, the outbreak in The Courageous Dr. Christian represented meningococcal meningitis, as major American cities in the early 1900s were hit by these epidemics. (The meningococcus bacterium was identified in 1905 by Simon Flexner.) The film accurately mentions treatment with sulfa drugs and the use of serotherapy (administration of meningococcal horse antiserum). Epidemic meningitis was a major concern in the United States, particularly in a country mobilized for war. The first randomized trial involved nearly 14,000 men of the US Army basic training centers, and the polysaccharide vaccine proved to be safe, with a 90% reduction in cases.

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Throughout the world, meningococcal meningitis remains a formidable problem (0.5 cases per 100,000 in the United States, but 10–1,000 per 100,000 in Africa). Meningitis epidemics caused by meningococcal disease are seen in one-third to two-thirds of infected persons, with sepsis in 30% of the cases resulting in hypotension and intravascular coagulation (causing petechiae and purpura). The disorder—if survived—leads to major disability, including hearing loss, seizures, and spasticity. These outbreaks may lead to rapid demise of large numbers of children, and recent outbreaks in the Western world are still observed. Every outbreak is met with alarm, and therefore such a response is accurately depicted in this film. Another film with meningitis as a plot driver is In Enemy Hands. The film is primarily a story involving a US Navy submarine in World War II. The movie names, for the first time, the diagnosis meningococcal meningitis. One of the crew members starts coughing, then detects a rash, and starts vomiting later. The medic—although not sure—suggests meningococcal meningitis, but due to patient refusal is unable to quarantine the man, who soon dies. The boat gets torpedoed by the Germans, and they abandon ship only to be rescued by the German crew. There the US captain has the same symptoms but decides not to tell. “Keep it between you and me. I do not want to startle the crew.” Soon eight members fall ill. One of the crew members recognizes the rash because his sister had it and died in 7 days. Soon the whole boat is coughing, but the outbreak gets little further attention or is worked out. Nonetheless, the environment where the epidemic emerges is well chosen. Many of these epidemics occurred in military barracks and college dorms, and vaccination is now mandatory. Two films show a scene with a missed diagnosis of meningitis. In The Men (1950), one of the traumatic spine injury patients develops fever. It shows testing for neck stiffness, a lumbar puncture, and the surgeon in charge going bonkers after the patient dies. The movie Barbara (2012) also shows a missed diagnosis of meningitis. Barbara (played by Nina Hoss) is a physician sent to a small sea town in north East Germany close to the Baltic Sea. A girl is admitted, confused and belligerent. The physician prepares for a sedative because she apparently had been admitted many times with fake diseases. (It is later revealed that she is in a hard-labor camp and tries to escape using fake medical illness as an excuse.) Barbara discovers neck stiffness and proceeds with a lumbar puncture. Apparently the girl had hidden in the woods in an attempt to escape, and tick-borne

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meningoencephalitis is diagnosed. It realistically shows that meningoencephalitis can present with behavior problems and requires vigilance. The patient recovers after she is treated with “serum.” This is a quite timely scene, particularly because tick-borne encephalitis is prevalent in Eastern Europe and Russia and in the summer. Most cases at the time were seen in Germany, and the areas formerly known as Czechoslovakia and the USSR. The incubation time is a median 8 days after a tick bite. The mentioned “serum treatment” is unexplained because there is no specific treatment for tick-borne encephalitis, only prevention by active immunization. A Final Word Infections of the central nervous system are only of interest to filmmakers when an epidemic with panic and alarm is involved. Rapid death is more often shown than coma or seizures. Sporadically, a case of meningitis is introduced, but only to show that the disorder is not recognized or not diagnosed by physicians. Some scenes (Barbara, 2012) can be lifted for educational purposes because the representation is accurate (for example, showing neurologic examination for neck stiffness). Further Reading Artenstein AW, LaForce FM. Critical episodes in the understanding and control of epidemic meningococcal meningitis. Vaccine 2012;30:4701–7. Bernstein R. Science on set. Cell 2013;154:949–50. Flexner S, Jobling JW. Serum treatment of epidemic cerebro-spinal meningitis. J Exp Med 1908;10:141–203. Halperin SA, Bettinger JA, Greenwood B, et al. The changing and dynamic epidemiology of meningococcal disease. Vaccine 2012;30 Suppl 2:B26–36. Lindquist L, Vapalahti O. Tick-borne encephalitis. Lancet 2008;371:1861–71. Lipkin WI. The real threat of Contagion. The New York Times. September 11, 2011. Shah S. Viral disaster movie. Lancet 2011;378:1211. Stephens DS, Greenwood B, Brandtzaeg P. Epidemic meningitis, meningococcaemia, and Neisseria meningitidis. Lancet 2007;369:2196–2210.

ENCEPHALITIS LETHARGICA IN FILM Awakenings (1990); starring Robert De Niro and Robin Williams; directed by Penny Marshall, written by Steven Zaillian; nominated for multiple Academy Awards but won best actor (Robert De Niro) at the New York Film Critics Circle Awards; distributed by Columbia Pictures.

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Rating One reflex hammer – incorrect depictions

Two reflex hammers – some error in depiction but of interest

Three reflex hammers – parts can be used for teaching

Four reflex hammers – mandatory viewing

Criticism and Context Encephalitis lethargica debuted in Vienna in the winter of 1916–1917. Constantin von Economo, to whom identification of the disorder is credited, described cases that were seen in a psychiatry ward. The infection became intermittently pandemic through 1918 throughout Europe and the United States. The cause (presumably a virus) has never been identified, and such an outbreak—as an epidemic of this proportion—has not returned. There is a misunderstanding that this disorder was caused by the major influenza epidemic, also known as the Spanish flu, during the final year of the Great War (1918). In his paper (Figure 3.5), von Economo suggested that the responsible lesion was a sleep-promoting area in the hypothalamus, and indeed sleep could be induced in animal studies later after lesioning these areas. Awakenings is centered upon Leonard Lowe (Robert De Niro), who is afflicted with encephalitis lethargica and then has a miraculous improvement, but only temporarily. Robin Williams plays Oliver Sacks as Dr Sayer with all the mannerisms and aloofness of a befuzzled neuroscientist (Chapter 2). The patients are all in a frozen, immobile (catatonic) state, but Dr. Sayer—much to the surprise of the staff—shows they can catch a ball, catch a dropping pen, and respond to music. After Leonard improves dramatically, all of the other patients improve immediately on L-dopa, turning a sedate institution into a lively place. This over-the-top presentation has been criticized, but the portrayal of parkinsonism is quite correct, including the later dystonic movements.

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(a)

(b) FIGURE 3.5  (a) Title page of the article on encephalitis lethargica by Constantin

von Economo. (b) Drawing showing the widespread lesions not only in the midbrain and thalamus, which produces the “lethargica,” but also in other parts of the brain.

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What is currently known about the disorder is that patients with encephalitis lethargica—after a flu-like illness—develop, marked sleepiness, ocular movement disturbances, and fever. Abnormal posturing (dystonia) was not initially part of the manifestation, and stupor (hence the word lethargic) was most prominent and persistent. Some patients could become immediately alert; others had more cyclic responsiveness, with sleep during the day and wakefulness during the night. According to earlier descriptions, paralysis of eye muscles was very common, but very often, other cranial nerves were involved. Oropharyngeal dysfunction could lead to early demise. This combination of upper cranial nerve involvement and stupor now, in retrospect, would fit well with an upper brainstem lesion and, indeed, the mesencephalon showed necrosis and perivascular lymphocytic infiltrate. In some patients, the hypothalamus was involved. Many of these patients either developed a catatonic state or recovered with narcolepsy. The parkinsonian manifestations occurred often after a period of time, even years after the infection, but more than 50% of the survivors developed parkinsonian symptoms in 5 years and 80% in 10 years. Oculogyric crisis was a common manifestation. No treatment was available for these excessively sleeping patients. Oliver Sacks remembers he originally planned a 3-month double-blind clinical trial of L-dopa in institutionalized patients with parkinsonism and stupor from encephalitis lethargica; this was prompted by earlier work on the use of aromatic amino acids in improving parkinsonism. Nine cases improved greatly. That became the basis of the main manuscript, which was initially rejected by several medical and neurologic journals, but was published in 1972 in The Listener under the title “The Great Awakening.” Later, with 11 more case histories, the book Awakenings was published, which was the inspiration of this movie. Oliver Sacks described his observations in Awakenings as follows: “These ‘extinct volcanoes’ erupted into life.… occurring before us was a cataclysm of almost geological proportions, the explosive ‘awakening,’ the ‘quickening,’ of eighty or more patients who had long been regarded, and regarded themselves, as effectively dead.” Quotable Lines of Dialogue Awakenings Leonard’s mother Dr. Sayer

I do not understand it. He was never any trouble before. He was good, quiet and obedient. Because he was catatonic, Mrs. Lowe.

Neurologic Disorders in Film   ◾    67   Awakenings (continued) Dr. Sayer, in conversation with Dr. Ingham

What must it be like to be them? What are they thinking? They are not. The virus didn’t spare the higher faculties. We know that for a fact? Yes because the alternative would be unthinkable.

According to Vilensky’s extensive review of the subject, encephalitis lethargica was significantly overdiagnosed despite being distinct enough to be recognized. Awakenings focuses on postencephalitis Parkinson’s disease, but the syndrome as described by von Economo could present as meningitis, predominant ophthalmoparesis (oculomotor and abducens), and increasing somnolence to deep stupor. It is fascinating that still new cases of encephalitis lethargica are diagnosed, and some have described children with basal ganglia encephalitis. N-methyl-d-aspartate antibodies were found in 10 of 20 patients with encephalitis lethargica, which would suggest it may be an autoimmune encephalitis and, more importantly, that it may respond to immunotherapy. Many of these patients (young females) have dystonic movements involving face and arms. A Final Word Awakenings is often the first movie that comes to mind when neurologic portrayal in the movies is discussed. It is sometimes even used—­ mistakenly—in lectures on coma. The movie may, however, imply that “comatose patients,” after 20 years, could awaken with a simple drug administration. Not everyone was pleased with this film, and the seemingly haphazard administration of L-dopa—as depicted in the film with secretly doubling the dose despite the serious side effects—led two bioethicists to use this as an example of an unethical drug trial, in particular in a disabled vulnerable population. This is unfair not only because one cannot use current standards for clinical trials for a study done 40 years ago, but also because the original study was carefully performed. The overlap with the Spanish influenza epidemic has always been intriguing, and some cases of influenza may have been misdiagnosed as encephalitis lethargica. When postencephalitic parkinsonism appeared,

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it presented with a catatonia (frozen in a certain position). Facial expressions disappeared, and very often upward involuntary eye movements (oculogyric crises) occurred. Rigidity was common, but tremor—as is typical in Parkinson’s disease—was not. The number of patients who developed postencephalitic Parkinson’s disease was small, albeit there were hundreds of descriptions. This episode was a significant period in the history of neurology, and sufficient proof of concept has been established. Further Reading Dale RC, Church AJ, Surtees RA, et al. Encephalitis lethargica syndrome: 20 new cases and evidence of basal ganglia autoimmunity. Brain 2004;127:21–33. Dale RC, Irani SR, Brilot F, et al. N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor antibodies in pediatric dyskinetic encephalitis lethargica. Ann Neurol 2009;66:704–9. Holt WL, Jr. Epidemic encephalitis: A follow-up study of 266 cases. Archives of Neurology & Psychiatry 1937;38:1135–44. Sacks OW. Awakenings. London: Picador, 1982. Sacks OW. The origin of Awakenings. Br Med J (Clin Res Ed) 1983;287:1968–69. Sacks OW, Kohl M, Schwartz W, Messeloff C. Side-effects of L-dopa in postencephalic parkinsonism. Lancet 1970;1:1006. Vilensky J. Encephalitis lethargica: During and after the epidemic. New York: Oxford University Press, 2011. von Economo C. Encephalitis lethargica. Wiener Klinische Wochenschrift 1917;30:581–85. Wolitz R, Grady C. Use of experimental therapies. In: The Picture of Health: Medical Ethics and the Movies. Colt H, Quadrelli S, Friedman L (eds.). New York: Oxford University Press, 2011.

SPINAL CORD INJURY IN FILM The Intouchables (2011); starring François Cluzet, Omar Sy, and Anne Le Ny; written and directed by Olivier Nakache and Éric Toledano; César Award for best actor (Omar Sy) as well as many other major US and international nominations; distributed by Gaumont Film Company.

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Rating One reflex hammer – incorrect depictions

Two reflex hammers – some error in depiction but of interest

Three reflex hammers – parts can be used for teaching

Four reflex hammers – mandatory viewing

Criticism and Context Acute traumatic spinal cord injury immediately and disastrously changes a person’s life. When it occurs, it is most common in young active males (in their late teens and twenties), mostly from car crashes, and in some, as a result of hazardous winter sports, after a flash of foolishness such as diving off a rock into shallow water (The Sea Inside, Chapter 4), the use of trampolines, and as a result of violence or extreme circumstances such as war. The lauded film—and unprecedented European box-office hit—The Intouchables (based on a true story) describes in great detail the physical care and emotional challenges of a well-to-do aristocrat, Philippe (François Cluzet), with acute high cervical cord injury after a paragliding crash. Paragliding was his favorite form of recreation because he felt grandiose and was on top of the world (“he felt he could pee on the world”). Philippe—a man of means—has a plethora of caregivers. Omar Sy plays the Senegalese Driss, who incidentally has a criminal record and spent 6 months in jail for robbery. Philippe decides to hire Driss in part because Driss doesn’t show him any pity and because the other caregivers are humorless and boring. The film suggests that the wealthy may have a better deal when it comes to such a dramatic handicap, and it all seems quite droll. Nonetheless, the film provides some unique insights and is very well researched. In

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showing the burdens of a quadriplegic person, no film before has provided such detail for the audience. Driss is portrayed here as an ignoramus laughing about major pieces of art and music. He is most satisfied when he hears the motor of a Philippe’s Maserati roar and when he can dance to his own favorite music. The film is about two fully dependent persons—one on full medical support, the other on government money. In a key conversation, Philippe says, “You don’t mind living off others’ backs?” and Driss pointedly answers, “No, how about you?” A bothersome scene is when Driss discovers Philippe does not feel the hot silver teapot and then pours a little more of potentially scalding tea on his legs until another caregiver interrupts. Another notable scene is the “hyperventilation” attacks as a result of “phantom pain.” There is also one episode that suggests painful cramping due to spasticity. This results in Driss taking him out in the early Paris hours, where he explains his problems with control of these excruciating attacks. During another attack, Driss decides to give him a joint, and the film clearly suggests that marijuana might be a therapeutic option. They seemed to have a great time using marijuana. This is problematic territory, particularly as addiction is more common in patients with severe spinal cord injury and chronic pain. Quotable Lines of Dialogue The Intouchables Philippe

The medication has its limits.… Doctors call them phantom pains. I feel like a frozen steak tossed onto a red-hot griddle. I feel nothing but suffer anyway.

The film admirably brings out the major problem of pain management in patients with acute spinal cord injury. Pain after a spinal cord injury is a dull musculoskeletal joint ache or dull abdominal pain, but the most pain is the one generated centrally. Allodynia is common (pain with simple touch), but so is hyperalgesia. Spontaneous sharp, shooting, unrelenting pain often described by the patient as a feeling of hot stabbing knives may occur and may be resistant to medication. Surgical approaches (dorsal root entry zone lesioning, or cordomyelotomy) are often insufficient, and there are varying results with transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation. The film discusses manual fecal removal, and Driss’s refusal. (“I don’t go for this sick stuff.”) The film appropriately discusses bowel dysfunction

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because most reflex activity below the level of spinal cord injury is lost. Defecation in patients with cervical cord lesions requires the diaphragmatic contraction because the abdominal muscles required for straining are lost. Constipation is common, with some incontinence. Manual evacuation and digital stimulation in combination with mini-enemas is commonly used, and some patients with chronic obstruction may need a colostomy. Problems with sexuality are also prominently mentioned in this film, and sex through erogenic zones is discussed. Psychogenic arousal requires thoracolumbar spinal cord function and thus is absent. In spinal cord injury, males may have reflex erections but no orgasms or ejaculation. Patients often discover that nipples, earlobes, or inner thighs evoke genital awareness, and men can experience orgasms despite absent erections. The film hints at mortality, and the protagonist mentions his shortened life expectancy. It correctly implies that cervical injury at 50 years will have a mortality of 30% in 20 years (threefold higher than a healthy person). Complications are directly related to immobilization and associated with infections such as urosepsis, respiratory failure, pulmonary embolus, and increasing risks of renal stones and pressure sores, but there is also the uncomfortable issue of suicides. Philippe has a scar from a tracheostomy, which is accurate considering the level of cord injury he has suffered. The phrenic nerve, which innervates the diaphragm, originates from the C4 spinal segment, with some contributions from C3 and C5. Patients with a C3/C4 lesion—as in Philippe—will likely be ventilator dependent; and equally so, patients with a C5 lesion are far more likely to be liberated successfully. The abdominal component to breathing—mostly coughing up—is lost due to absent tone in paralyzed muscles. Many of these patients visibly use their accessory (sternocleidomastoid and scalene) muscles to assist in respiration. Philippe’s breathing in the film does not seem to be compromised at all. Often only short sentences can be spoken with deep inhalations in between and use of accessory muscles. For the filmmaker, it must have been too much of an additional downer to show all that. The Intouchables is a complex film on the challenges of being paralyzed from the neck down and an important addition to the collection of Neurocinema. The credits of The Intouchables say that 5% of the profits from the film was donated to the Association Simon de Cyrène in Paris, whose purpose is to create shared living spaces for disabled adults and friends. Something really good came out of this financial blockbuster movie.

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Another major film, based on the true story of skier Jill Kinmont, is The Other Side of the Mountain (1975) starring Marilyn Hassett and Beau Bridges, which correctly depicts the challenges of living with a cervical spine injury. The confrontation of the physician with parents is telling. (“All we can do is hope.” “Hope that she will walk?” “No, hope that she will live.”) She remains wheelchair bound, and the movie focuses on toughness and doing away with self-pity and an “anything can be overcome” theme. (Parenthetically, the film shows her best friend, crippled by polio, chastising her not to be so self-centered and to try to find a way to live with this handicap.) She becomes a successful teacher, but not after being confronted with prejudice. (“People think that when your toes are numb your brain is numb.” “Paraplegics are unacceptable as teachers in this country.”) Even in this prim and proper tearjerker, making love and having no feeling is discussed. (“You want more than me; you get tired of it.”) Paraplegia is a far more common topic in cinema than quadriplegia, and there are numerous actors playing paraplegics. A major distinction should be made between amputees and paraplegics. Amputees are better rehabilitated, and often a transition to better lives is shown in the movies after wearing prostheses (recall Gary Sinise as Lieutenant Dan in Forrest Gump [1994] and, more recently, Marion Cotillard as Stephanie in Rust and Bone [2012]). Acute paraplegia in film often involves coping and not coping. Most films simply show the rejection by others and the threat of isolation, but a few provide fresh insight into the changed circumstances of the patient with paraplegia. Quotable Lines of Dialogue The Men Doctor Mother Doctor Doctor

In almost every case, the word “walk” must be forgotten. It no longer exists. My boy is only 19. But with proper care he may live to be 90. The legs are gone now. The head has to take over.

The most important film in this regard is The Men (1950) , which mostly handles how couples can adjust to their lives. It is Marlon Brando’s debut playing an introvert-depressed paraplegic. The film was shot in Birmingham Veterans Administration Hospital in Van Nuys, California (close to Hollywood), and included a cast of actual patients. A key scene comes early in the movie when the crass prima donna, Dr. Brock, explains

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(in the hospital’s chapel) to spouses of affected veterans that this is a lasting injury. Living with a paraplegic is an overarching theme in this film. It also daringly—noting the year it was filmed—approaches not only the topic of sexuality (“I am not a man; I cannot make a woman happy.”) but also fertility (“It is not very probable but in the realm of possibility.”). Even Bud’s in-laws weigh in (“Is it so wrong for us to want a grandchild?”). Bud marries but returns to the hospital after a spat. Several times, during stressful moments, he jerks his right leg to—reasonably correct—imitate spasms. Many legendary filmmakers have used paraplegia in war casualties to point out—in their view—deficiencies in care of the disabled. One perspective is in Born on the Fourth of July (1989) , an indictment of the Veterans Affairs (VA) hospitals—this time the Bronx Veterans Hospital—with ­horrendous display of medical care of T7 paraplegic Ron Kovic, played by Tom Cruise. The representation of the VA hospital is a dirty, unorganized cesspool with rats crawling under the beds. Cynicism is rampant when, in the morning, the nurse calls, “Everybody rise and shine.” When Ron asks a doctor if he will be able to have children, he answers resolutely, “No, but we have a very good psychologist here.” Massive decubitus is seen, and patients seem to be lined up for “group defecation.” Ron is allowed to walk with crutches without help in a show of alpha male behavior, but falls and fractures his leg. The care at home is frustrating, and acceptance is nonexistent. Ron Kovic is left alone with poor skin and bladder care and lack of any compassion. Similar situations of life after war-related Vietnam spinal cord injury are found in Coming Home (1978) . The film also shows a deplorable hospital with paraplegics in the Vietnam war era. There is urine spilling over after a run-in with Sally (Jane Fonda). Thorazine is used to calm Luke (Jon Voight) when he is aggressively swinging a cane and yelling at the healthcare workers about the poor care he gets. These movies are focused on the consequences of the Vietnam War and suggest deplorable healthcare in VA hospitals and are less about care of the paraplegic. Quotable Lines of Dialogue Coming Home Luke to Sally

People look at me, but they see something else; and they do not see who I am. Do you know when I dream, I dream I do not have a chair in my dream?

Another notable film is The Waterdance (1992) by the paraplegic director Neal Jimenez. The film is virtually fully set in a VA hospital for

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spine injury and shows the anger and frustration of going through the rehabilitation process. The title is based on a dream of one of the paraplegics where he imagines he has to dance on water or otherwise will drown. The film is largely focused on prolonged rehabilitation but also focuses on the loss of sexuality and the struggles with that adjustment. The screenwriter here is fascinated by sexuality in the paraplegic. The screenplay often strongly leans toward vulgarity. But it is not all Hollywood, as a comparable theme, sex and paralysis, is seen in Lars von Trier’s Breaking the Waves (1996) . In this film, Jan (Stellan Skarsgard) is quadriplegic resulting from an accident on a rig. The film accurately shows the secondary complications of acute spinal cord injury and has graphic scenes of a craniotomy and cervical stabilization. The film is, however, not so much about the injury, and has other complex themes (being good, sacrifice, and faith). The recovery is miraculous and essential to the story. A Final Word The films scrutinized here provide a good representation of the emotional duress of paraplegics, but some films use the isolation and major handicap of a paraplegic as a device to—objectionably—evoke pity and devastation. Many disabled people are poor, and undoubtedly wars have increased traumatic paraplegia. Is quality of life after a paralysis all a matter of support and access to care? I cannot tell, but cinema has placed a great emphasis on the major societal issues in patients with acute spinal cord injury. Further Reading Bryce TN, Biering-Sorensen F, Finnerup NB, et al. International spinal cord injury pain classification: Part I. Background and description. Spinal Cord 2012;50:413–17. Devivo MJ Epidemiology of traumatic spinal cord injury: trends and future implications. Spinal Cord 2012;50:365–72. Hess MJ, Hough S. Impact of spinal cord injury on sexuality: Broad-based ­clinical practice intervention and practical application. J Spinal Cord Med 2012;35:211–18. Mayo Clinic. Guide to living with a spinal cord injury. New York: Demos Health, 2009. Selzer ME. Spinal cord injury. Sydney, Australia: ReadHowYouWant, 2012.

POLIOMYELITIS IN FILM Sister Kenny (1946); starring Rosalind Russell, Alexander Knox, Philip Merivale, and John Litel; directed by Dudley Nichols, screenplay by Dudley Nichols, Alexander Knox, and Mary McCarthy; Golden Globe Award for best actress; distributed by RKO Radio Pictures.

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Rating One reflex hammer – incorrect depictions

Two reflex hammers – some error in depiction but of interest

Three reflex hammers – parts can be used for teaching

Four reflex hammers – mandatory viewing

The Sessions (2012); starring John Hawkes, Helen Hunt, and William Macy; written and directed by Ben Lewin; Special Jury Prize for ensemble acting at the 2012 Sundance Film Festival, and John Hawkes and Helen Hunt received the Independent Spirit Award for best male lead and best supporting female; distributed by Fox Searchlight Pictures.

Rating One reflex hammer – incorrect depictions

Two reflex hammers – some error in depiction but of interest

Three reflex hammers – parts can be used for teaching

Four reflex hammers – mandatory viewing

76   ◾    Neurocinema: When Film Meets Neurology

Criticism and Context Although poliomyelitis is very rare today and most neurologists see the sequelae after many decades have past, this was not the case in the beginning of the twentieth century. Here we discuss two key films, separated by half a century. An impressive but overly dramatized biopic is Sister Kenny, directed by Dudley Nichols and played by Oscar-nominated Rosalind Russell. The film shows her taking the nurse’s oath—“With loyalty will I endeavor to aid the physician in his work.” (At the time the term sister had been used to indicate nurse, but in reality Sister Kenny had no formal nursing training.) Several confrontational scenes occur in the movie; for example, when Sister Kenny questions the orthopedic surgeon, Dr. Brack (Philip Merivale), regarding his treatment. According to Dr. Brack, “The only thing that offers any hope is prompt and complete immobilization” and “Stick to nursing and don’t meddle with orthopedic medicine.” The movie suggests that all cases treated by Sister Kenny recovered, that the overwhelming majority treated by orthopedic surgeons were crippled, and that most orthopedic surgeons wanted nothing to do with her methods. The film is more about a major nurse–­physician conflict than about Kenny’s treatment methods and efficacy (or lack thereof). In this film, it is clearly suggested that patients would get cured if only her methods were used and if only physicians were more accepting and not so arrogant. Quotable Lines of Dialogue Sister Kenny Kenny to Dr. Brack Kenny to Dr. Brack

I do not think you are ignorant, only pigheaded. I get improvements even with your failures. If you need any more braces, steel corsets, or other instruments of medieval torture, I can send them to you. I have taken plenty off your patients.

The film is largely set in Australia, but in the second half of the film Sister Kenny moves to the United States, where she feels she is getting the runaround and is brushed off. In the final scene she demonstrates her method to orthopedic surgeons, but the film ends not that well when she is told that a US committee also does not support her methods. The film ends with her

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sitting defeated in a chair. She lights up when children (recovered patients) sing happy birthday to her. (Reportedly, Sister Kenny did not like the ending of the film and it is easy to see why.) So what really happened with Sister Kenny? Although poliomyelitis is a neurologic disease, it became orthopedic surgeons’ territory during the fin de siècle. Restoration of function and transplantation of tendons was commonplace, and that explains their interest. Neurologists would see patients often to confirm the diagnosis but actual care was with rehabilitation physicians, and, when severe respiratory failure occurred, with anesthesiologists. Care seems to have been established until Sister Kenny appeared. Elizabeth Kenny (Figure 3.6), has been accused of showing fanciful optimism. She came to the United States in 1940 and wrote a major text, And They Shall Walk, in 1943. A Queensland commission concluded that the management of wrapping stiffened limbs in hot woolen sheets and “reeducating” the underused muscles by exercising and avoidance of orthopedic splints was no more beneficial than orthodox treatment. Physicians hypothesized that paralyzed muscles could be affected by stretch and that it could reduce deformities. Massage was avoided due to extreme tenderness, but also the use of splints (steel frames) and plaster casts, even if needed to keep the legs in good position. Treatment involved warmth and heat lamps. Therapy for polio was mostly hydrotherapy, massage, and controlled exercises. Electrotherapy was popular in France, but nothing was proven. The five principles of Kenny’s treatment were maintenance of a bright mental outlook, maintenance of “impulse,” hydrotherapy (including alternating hot and cold douches), maintenance of circulation, and avoidance of generally accepted methods of immobilization. She did not believe polio affected the nerves but pointed to the muscles that were in spasm and this could be relieved with hot packs and hot blankets. (What she meant by these “spasms,” however, remained unresolved, and when a dozen patients and over 3,000 muscle groups were examined by neurologists, none of these “spasms” were found.) The treatment, with all its controversies, became politicized, in particular after the 1952 epidemic a decade later. Kenny established the Sister Kenny Institute in Minneapolis (now Courage Kenny Rehabilitation Institute) after it appeared that her method remarkably improved outcome in polio patients. Kenny said, when questioned, “Let my record speak.” She wrote a book in 1943 with the supportive orthopedic surgeon J.F. Pohl, The Kenny Concept of Infantile Paralysis and its Treatment.

78   ◾    Neurocinema: When Film Meets Neurology (a)

(b)

FIGURE 3.6  (a) Scene from Sister Kenny showing a confrontational scene with

Dr. Brack over a patient’s treatment. (Used with permission of Getty Images.) (b) Elisabeth (Sister) Kenny. (Used with permission of Minnesota Historical Society.)

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Although Sister Kenny could be abrasive, there are several personal accounts (according to neurologist Donald Mulder, “Sister Kenny was a feisty person who, one observer noted, would continue to fight long after one agreed with her”). There are other accounts that she had moments when she was down in the dumps and she was finding it hard to cope with the large waves of negative publicity. No question Sister Kenny improved care with early mobilization, possibly avoiding unnecessary reconstructive surgeries and a generally far more optimistic approach. Kenny’s emphasis on alienation of a paralyzed limb is a real phenomenon and the phenomenon is not only seen in polio but in any long-term immobilized limb. The Sessions is directed by a childhood polio survivor and is based on a true story. Mark O’Brien died in 1999 after being confined to an iron lung following childhood poliomyelitis. He recalls getting weak and coming out of a coma while encased in an iron lung. (Bulbar poliomyelitis often involves the ascending reticular formation and may lead to coma from hypercapnia.) His parents were told the life expectancy of polio survivors was poor. (“They took me home and gave me a life—gave up theirs.”) He was the topic of an Oscar-winning short documentary by Jessica Yu in 1996, Breathing Lessons: The Life and Work of Mark O’Brien. (The documentary is a necessary supplement to this film and demands viewing.) Mark O’Brien attended the UC Berkeley Graduate School of Journalism in Berkeley, California, and became a poet and journalist. In 1997, he cofounded Lemonade Factory, a press that publishes work by people who have disabilities. His books include the memoir How I Became a Human Being: A Disabled Man’s Quest for Independence (2003) and the poetry collections The Man in the Iron Lung (1997) and Breathing (1998). Sessions is structured around an article he wrote, “On Seeing a Sex Surrogate,” and handles the topic of sex and disability discreetly. The film shows the devastating effects of living in an iron lung (he was able to get out of the device for about 3–4 hours per day and slept in it) and living supine for most of the time. He is able to use a portable respirator that allows him to go outside. Respiratory involvement usually affected 10% of the cases, but in some instances it involved up to one-third of the afflicted adults. Patients with severe poliomyelitis often develop sleep apnea, with breathing stopping at the onset of sleep; and in some, the automatic respiratory control during wakefulness may disappear. John Hawkes plays Mark O’Brien and imitates his voice using short sentences, but not the staccato speech so typical of neuromuscular

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respiratory failure (catching a breath in between a few words). His body is appropriately skinny (patients may weigh no more than 60 kilograms), and he appropriately imitates the often-seen severe spinal deformities, such as kyphoscoliosis, that often worsen the respiratory problems over time. The movie also shows the severe pain with movements of limbs in severe contracture. Quotable Lines of Dialogue The Sessions Mark O’Brien

This most excellent canopy, the air, look you, Presses down upon me At fifteen pounds per square inch, A dense, heavy, blue-glowing ocean, Supporting the weight of condors That swim its churning currents. All I get is a thin stream of it, A finger’s width of the rope that ties me to life As I labor like a stevedore to keep the connection. (Start of the film and excerpted from a poem by Mark O’Brien)

Poliomyelitis has appeared in several screenplays in the past but has disappeared with the near-disappearance of the disorder. One of the first films to deal with the burdens of poliomyelitis is the cold-blooded noir Leave Her to Heaven (1945) , about Ellen (Gene Tierney) and Richard Harland (Cornel Wilde). Ellen and Richard are newlyweds, and Richard’s brother Danny (Darryl Hickman) is recovering from poliomyelitis in the well-known rehabilitation center, the Warm Springs Foundation in Georgia. Danny is a Hollywood feel-good example of a happy-go-lucky (see what I can do with crutches!) optimist who can soon leave the rehabilitation center. Ellen is glad to comply with his care, but after his physician suggests to her that he can return home, she gets visibly upset with the idea of having to take him home (“after all, he is a cripple”). His presence puts a wedge in the relationship of the married couple. He seems to recover and is able to move his legs and do swimming exercises. The film is a thriller, and the femme fatale Ellen watches him drown in an iconic scene, where she fakes a rescue attempt after he has

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drowned. Interestingly, nowhere in the script is poliomyelitis specifically mentioned; it is only implied. Polio is used to great effect in The Five Pennies (1959). Danny Kaye plays the band leader, and at the end of the film his daughter is affected. We see her in a few scenes in an iron long, recovering in a hospital bed through rehabilitation to eventually walking with a cane and dancing again with her father. The director knew what the audience wanted to see—full recovery of poliomyelitis against all odds and physician prediction. (This clinical course is not very likely.) It also shows Sister Kenny’s hot compresses and Danny Kaye goofing off to try to raise his daughter’s spirits. He puts blankets on her legs (“the most delicious thing your mother cooked since we’re in this house…blanket a la mode”), buys her a puppy, and so forth, but the film is not about poliomyelitis. What can be said about poliomyelitis to better understand the portrayal? Poliomyelitis is a viral infection by an enterovirus that in the overwhelming proportion of cases causes a nondistinctive viral illness, and in some a devastating paralysis from involvement of the anterior horn of the spinal cord. When the brainstem becomes involved, patients have difficulty clearing secretions from oropharyngeal weakness, and respiration becomes compromised. Many of these patients in the past had back stiffness and severe pain from hypertonicity. Many patients developed intercostal paralysis and severe weakness of the diaphragm, an early paralytic stage of anterior poliomyelitis. In many, the accessory muscles and the diaphragm were able to create sufficient respiratory movements. In the course of a few days, the paralyzed intercostal muscles improved, and the patient went on to almost complete recovery. Respiratory support involved the infamous “iron lung.” This machine incorporated electrically driven blowers and created inspiration with negative pressures and expiration with positive pressure (Figure  3.7). Within the chamber—sealing the patient at the neck—a negative pressure caused the abdomen and thorax to expand with air flowing in. A cycle is produced by returning to atmospheric pressure. Patients in the iron lung have their chest expanded every 4 seconds. Many patients have been able to be liberated from the device or transitioned to a cuirass ventilator. During the major epidemics the iron lung was seen as a temporary lifesaving machine, but later it became clear that weaning was not possible and respiratory support would now have a permanent impact on the quality of the patient’s existence (Chapter 5).

82   ◾    Neurocinema: When Film Meets Neurology

FIGURE 3.7  Iron lung. (Used with permission of Mayo Historical Unit and

Archives.)

A Final Word Film deals with poliomyelitis in different ways—the burden of “a cripple,” the arrogant orthopedic surgeons not accepting a nursing approach, a life in an iron lung, and in general living with a paralyzed body. The spectrum covered cannot be more all-encompassing and is of more than just historical interest. It acknowledges the importance that poliomyelitis epidemics played in people’s lives, in medical history, and in the history of critical care medicine. Poliomyelitis still has not been eradicated. (For further discussion on poliomyelitis, see Chapter 5.) Further Reading Commission RoQ. Treatment of infantile paralysis by Sister Kenny’s method. Br Med J (Clin Res Ed) 1938;1:350. Drinker P, McKhann CF. The use of a new apparatus for the prolonged administration of artificial respiration: I. A fatal case of poliomyelitis. JAMA 1929;92:1658–60. Kendall FP. Sister Elizabeth Kenny revisited. Arch Phys Med Rehabil 1998;79:361–65.

Neurologic Disorders in Film   ◾    83   Oshinsky DM. Polio: An American story. 2nd ed. New York: Oxford University Press, 2006. Rogers N. Polio wars: Sister Kenny and the golden age of American medicine. New York: Oxford University Press, 2013.

MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS IN FILM Go Now (1995); starring Robert Carlyle, Juliet Aubrey, and James Nesbitt; directed by Michael Winterbottom, written by Jimmy McGovern and Paul Henry Powell; BAFTA Award for best editing; distributed by Gramercy Pictures.

Rating One reflex hammer – incorrect depictions

Two reflex hammers – some error in depiction but of interest

Three reflex hammers – parts can be used for teaching

Four reflex hammers – mandatory viewing

Hilary and Jackie (1998); starring Emily Watson, Rachel Griffiths, James Frain, and David Morrissey; directed by Anand Tucker, written by Frank Cottrell Boyce; Academy Award for best actress (Emily Watson) and for best supporting actress (Rachel Griffith), BAFTA Award for best British film; distributed by Channel 4 Films.

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Rating One reflex hammer – incorrect depictions

Two reflex hammers – some error in depiction but of interest

Three reflex hammers – parts can be used for teaching

Four reflex hammers – mandatory viewing

Criticism and Context Two major films, both by UK directors (Michael Winterbottom and Anand Tucker), have placed multiple sclerosis (MS) prominently in their films. Go Now was originally a television film but had theatrical release in both the United Kingdom and United States. It follows Nick (Robert Carlyle) and Karen (Juliet Aubrey) and their struggle with progressive MS. Nick, a working-class Glaswegian, develops a useless hand followed by numbness, ataxic-spastic gait, and eventually double vision. The ophthalmologist refuses to tell the diagnosis, afraid it will lead to more stress. The neurologist procrastinates and adds to the long waiting time. Quotable Lines of Dialogue Go Now Karen Ophthalmologist Karen Ophthalmologist Karen Ophthalmologist Karen Ophthalmologist Karen Ophthalmologist

All those questions you are asking him. He has got MS? Not necessarily. It is a possibility. Why the hell did you not tell him? Do you know anything about MS? A bit. The symptoms can come and go. Sometimes they disappear altogether. If he’s got it, he has the right to know. It is stress related. Telling him might induce an attack. What are you going to do? Nothing; but if you want to tell him, you should do so.

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Go Now is a film that shines light on the frustrations of diagnosis of MS and coping with the handicap. The film plays in a time where the diagnosis was more difficult to make due to lack of wide availability of magnetic resonance (MR) imaging and perhaps also due to cautious physicians who would not commit to definitive conclusions. The first sign of Nick’s MS is numbness, resulting in a sledgehammer falling down a shaft. Soon he has blurred vision, leading to an extensive ophthalmologic evaluation with visual field testing. “You won’t make the dart team,” his girlfriend Karen (Juliet Aubrey) jokingly remarks. The ophthalmologist calls it a “trapped nerve and overcompensating,” resulting in a new eyeglass prescription. These symptoms worry Karen, and she goes to the library and finds out that these signs could mean MS. Another meeting follows, and the film shows a conversation with the ophthalmologist, where he suggests withholding the diagnosis. Such reluctance has been predicated on the uncertainty of predicting the course of MS. The scene reflects what might have been the practice in the United Kingdom (and elsewhere in the 1960s) but not in current office practices. Neurologists tell patients the diagnosis when there is a reasonable certainty of MS and on the basis of actual evidence. In the ensuing scenes, Nick has great difficulty to move his foot and is unable to stop his car from crashing. Next he is walking in the hospital with a spastic gait but without any information. (“There is something wrong with me. They are testing for AIDS.”) He leaves the hospital, and much to his surprise, discovers that his girlfriend has an MS self-help book. This leads to a confrontation and finally acceptance. Nick’s MS progresses with incontinence and impotence but has a “happy ending” while they are dancing at their wedding to the Moody Blues’ song, “Go Now.” The film has some banalities, but there are many good reasons to see it. The themes chosen in this film are creditable. Another important film, Hilary and Jackie, is based on the late Jacqueline du Pré, her family, and her relationship with her sister. (The film is closely based on Piers and Hilary du Pré’s memoir entitled A Genius in the Family.) Jacqueline du Pré married Daniel Barenboim, and both became prominent musicians. It was one of the first films dealing with how a progressive neurologic disease could impact a musician’s career (see also the section on Parkinson’s disease). The film is mostly about the two sisters’ close relationship, and her diagnosis of MS does not emerge until 90 ­minutes into the film. No discussion with a physician is seen. Complaining of cold hands is one of the first premonitory signs presented

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here, but there is otherwise an accurate portrayal of rapid, progressive MS. Jackie (Emily Watson) starts with having a bow fall out of her hand followed by tremor, incontinence, and an inability to get out of a chair after performing a concert; then her hearing disappears, canes appear, she cannot roll over in bed, and she ends up in a wheelchair. This all plays out in the last 20 minutes of the film, likely to achieve grand effect. Most prominently displayed by Jackie are her emotional mood swings and her euphoric outlook. These affective states are well known in MS, even since Charcot’s original description. Uncontrollable laughing and crying, however, is not shown. Jackie is a happy-go-lucky person, although that is often not indicative of the true mood she is in. The film shows spastic ataxia and dystonic (tremor) posturing, all consistent with primary progressive MS. In the early stages, there is a brief mention of “pills” to allow her to play her instrument, but no specific treatment is mentioned. Quotable Lines of Dialogue Hilary and Jackie Jackie Jackie

I have got a fatal illness, but you must not worry. I got it very mildly. I am so relieved it is only MS. I know it is serious, but I thought I was going mad.

Hilary and Jackie is based on medical reports and witness reports. A recent study of MS portrayal in the movies by Karenberg concluded adequate portrayal, but this review also included horror and TV movies. Visual symptoms are underrepresented. Sensational contextualization was absent in most films. A very different and strange film is Dreamland (2006), which shows a young woman with MS and “killer spasms.” She uses bee stings and she touches electrical wires to improve her condition. The films that use MS in their plots, unfortunately, use it to show a major disabling disease ending in major handicap and ignore the much more common unpredictable and benign nature. Treatments are rarely mentioned, if ever. A Final Word The worldwide prevalence of MS is approximately 2 million individuals. Many patients are asymptomatic. A third of patients will be without major symptoms at 10 years and 20% at 20 years. It is likely that progression of MS nowadays is influenced by new therapeutic approaches in the acute and chronic phases. Both Go Now and Hilary and Jackie show a

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rapid p ­ rogressive—likely primary progressive—MS (see documentary in Chapter 5). Both films may lead to public misconceptions that MS rapidly leads to use of a wheelchair and fatality. Further Reading Confavreux C, Vukusic S. Age at disability milestones in multiple sclerosis. Brain 2006;129:595–605. Corona T, Poser C, Du Pré J. Talent and disease. Neurologia 2004;19:85. Finger S. A happy state of mind: A history of mild elation, denial of disability, optimism, and laughing in multiple sclerosis. Arch Neurol 1998;55:241–50. Kalincik T, Vivek V, Jokubaitis V, et al. Sex as a determinant of relapse incidence and progressive course of multiple sclerosis. Brain 2013;12:3609–17. Karenberg A. Multiple sclerosis on-screen: From disaster to coping. Mult Scler 2008;14:530–40. Weiner HL, Stankiewicz JM, eds. Multiple sclerosis: Diagnosis and therapy. 2nd ed. New York: Wiley-Blackwell, 2012.

MOTOR NEURON DISEASE IN FILM Tuesdays with Morrie (1999); starring Jack Lemmon and Hank Azaria; directed by Mick Jackson, written by Thomas Rickman, based on a novel by Mitch Albom; distributed by Carlton America, Harpo Productions.

Rating One reflex hammer – incorrect depictions

Two reflex hammers – some error in depiction but of interest

Three reflex hammers – parts can be used for teaching

Four reflex hammers – mandatory viewing

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The Theory of Flight (1998); Helena Bonham Carter, Kenneth Branagh, and Gemma Jones; directed by Paul Greengrass, written by Richard Hawkins; distributed by First Line Features.

Rating One reflex hammer – incorrect depictions

Two reflex hammers – some error in depiction but of interest

Three reflex hammers – parts can be used for teaching

Four reflex hammers – mandatory viewing

Hugo Pool (1997); starring Alicia Milano, Patrick Dempsey, and Robert Downey Jr.; directed by Robert Downey Sr.; distributed by Northern Arts Entertainment.

Rating One reflex hammer – incorrect depictions

Two reflex hammers – some error in depiction but of interest

Three reflex hammers – parts can be used for teaching

Four reflex hammers – mandatory viewing

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Criticism and Context Motor neuron disease is not a topic readily chosen by screenwriters, and when it is used, it seems to fall into the general categories of “severe disability” and “dying from an untreatable disorder.” There are very few fiction films to consider, and the best-known movie Tuesdays with Morrie is based on Mitch Albom’s tremendously popular best-selling novel about Morrie Schwartz, who died of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). The film is about one of Morrie’s students, Mitch Albom, who travels every week from Detroit to Boston to meet with him. The film’s main theme is for Mitch to come to the realization that a fatal illness can be unnecessarily prolonged. Morrie decides that he will not proceed with a tracheostomy and mechanical ventilation when he reaches the inevitable progression to severe swallowing difficulties. The film is about acceptance. (“Don’t treat me. I’m already dead.”) It is about what matters in life more than about the disorder of ALS. In Albom’s book, it is clear that Morrie never spoke about his illness or his own coping with becoming disabled. The film shows the young seeing the life experiences of the old and dying. Both the film and the book may be characterized by some as a touchy-feely story about the gradual decline of a virtuous man and “love conquers all,” but does not provide insight into the specific tortuous decline of ALS. Overall, the main criticisms of the book involved its simplicity, and that also applies to this movie. Two other films have specifically used motor neuron disease (and ALS), and both actors seem to be modeled after Stephen Hawking, the British physicist diagnosed with motor neuron disease at the age of 21 (he is now 71 years old). His diagnosis, a variant of ALS, may better fit with a progressive muscular atrophy or primary lateral sclerosis. His posture, with a lateral head deviation, is used by both actors. In The Theory of Flight (1998), Jane (Helena Bonham Carter) is a disabled woman with a “rare form of motor neuron disease.” The film is mostly about how she can lose her virginity. She communicates with a voice box and seems to closely imitate Stephen Hawking’s appearance. She lifts one of her shoulders to her head, creating a similar look, and speaks with poor articulation and lack of mimicry. In Hugo Pool, Patrick Dempsey plays Floyd. He is in a wheelchair and also has a voice box. In the film, it becomes clear that he wants everyone to know that ALS is not contagious and that his lovemaking is not fully affected.

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Quotable Lines of Dialogue Hugo Pool Minerva

Floyd Hugo Floyd

My daughter says you got this thing, ALS. What does it do to you? It attacks the nerves and then they die. The only part that does not get destroyed is the brain. I got a twitch in my right arm. That is what happens before I lose it. You are going to beat it. I like the way you think.

His role is central in the movie—in a wheelchair, not moving, not speaking (only a whisper), being spoon-fed and drinking through a straw. His head is constantly tilted to one side, also likely mimicking Stephen Hawking’s posture. Predictably, in one of the final scenes he has sexual intercourse with Hugo (Alyssa Milano) and soon thereafter passes away. Both films have little to say about motor neuron disease and are about living with a major disability and—how can it not be in classic entertainment—about sex in a markedly disabled person. A Final Word All three films represent ALS poorly—in an end stage but with major inconsistencies, unable to speak but still able to safely eat. There are no redeeming qualities in any of these films. Serious viewers should turn to the documentaries (discussed in Chapter 5), which are a stunning antidote to the ridiculousness of these portrayals. Further Reading Belsh JM. Diagnostic challenges in ALS. Neurology 1999;53:S26–30; discussion S35–36. Francis K, Bach JR, DeLisa JA. Evaluation and rehabilitation of patients with adult motor neuron disease. Arch Phys Med Rehabil 1999;80:951–63. Gordon PH, Cheng B, Katz IB, Mitsumoto H, Rowland LP. Clinical features that distinguish PLS, upper motor neuron-dominant ALS, and typical ALS. Neurology 2009;72:1948–52. Winter RO, Birnberg BA. Tuesdays with Morrie versus Stephen Hawking: Living or dying with ALS. Fam Med 2003;35:629–31.

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LEPROSY IN FILM The Motorcycle Diaries (2004); starring Gael Garcia Bernal and Rodrigo de la Serna; directed by Walter Salles, written by Jose Rivera; BAFTA Award for best film not in English language, among other awards; distributed by Focus Features.

Rating One reflex hammer – incorrect depictions

Two reflex hammers – some error in depiction but of interest

Three reflex hammers – parts can be used for teaching

Four reflex hammers – mandatory viewing

Criticism and Context The Motorcycle Diaries is based on a memoir of Ernesto Guevara, who went on a journey from Argentina through Chile, Peru, Colombia, and Venezuela, which included the San Pablo leper colony. The leper colony is a key element in the film. His friend Alberto Granado, who had already worked in a leprosy hospital in Cordoba, Argentina, was the one who initiated the trip. Ernesto Guevara de la Serna (later known as Che Guevara) was an Argentine medical student who dropped out of medical school to join Alberto on this defining trip. The film has little to say about his later political activism. Here it concentrates on his confrontation with the leprosarium, where approximately 600, mostly Peruvian, patients were under the care of missionaries. The island is separated by the Amazon river (the medical staff lives on the other side of the river). When Ernesto crosses the river, a physician asks him to

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wear gloves, but he refuses, and when he visits the colony, he shakes hands, to the surprise of a patient. (“Doctor, haven’t you explained the rules?”) Most of the patients with leprosy live there after having been fired from their jobs, and now they raise farm animals. The film shows real patients affected by leprosy, their major mutilations and nodular skin lesions resulting from granulomatous disease. In the three weeks that Ernesto and Alberto stay in this leprosarium, they attend to wound care and convince Sylvia (“a rebellious patient”) to proceed with surgery to save her arm. The visit ends with a historically accurate farewell scene by Ernesto when he swims across the Amazon River. The film correctly depicts the concentration of leprosy in leprosariums, often on islands. These leprosariums stigmatized patients but provided accurate management of the disease, often under the guidance of missionaries. Quotable Lines of Dialogue The Motorcycle Diaries Doctor I suggest you wear these gloves although leprosy is not contagious under treatment. The nuns are quite insistent on this point. Ernesto If it’s not contagious, then it is just symbolic. Doctor Yes, but I’m telling you so you don’t make any mortal enemies. Don’t say I did not warn you.

Leprosy is a granulomatous infection of both nerves and skin caused by Mycobacterium leprae. It is still a significant health problem, and the World Health Assembly continues with measures to eliminate leprosy throughout the world. A significant improvement occurred after initiation of multidrug therapy following many centuries of dapsone treatment. Leprosy is typically diagnosed as hypopigmented or reddish patches with loss of sensation, markedly thickened peripheral nerves, followed by nerve injury and weakness and documentation of acid-fast bacilli on skin smears or biopsy material. Nerve damage involves the peripheral nerve trunks and more specifically on a radial cutaneous nerve, medial nerve, postural tibial nerve, and the lateral popliteal nerve. Enlargement of these nerves may cause pain but eventually also produces hypesthesia and hyperhidrosis, which results in infections and ulceration. Treatment is rifampicin, clofazimine, and dapsone. There is uncertainty about transmission, and it has been known for many years that proximity to leprosy patients increases the risk. However, bacteria do not enter intact skin and they are not spread through touch.

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The film clearly identifies the presence of missionaries and their role in treating leprosy. In the beginning of the last century, there were thousands of European missionaries serving in many parts of the country with their objective not only to serve lepers, but also to engage in evangelization. Often the biblical base of their mission was based on New Testament passages that include miracles performed on lepers who came to Jesus asking for cleansing and casting out demons. This is also clearly reflected in The Motorcycle Diaries, when Mother Superior refuses food to Ernesto and Alberto because they did not attend Holy Mass. However, the importance of missionary work in treatment of those affected by leprosy cannot be overstated. City of Joy (1992) , with Patrick Swayze, shows slums in Calcutta, India, with actual patients with leprosy, and the noninfectious origin is again emphasized. (“I have it, but my daughter does not.”) There is one remarkable line by one of the doctors saying that these people are simple and not educated, and they will never accept lepers in their midst. (City of Joy Aid is actually a humanitarian organization in Calcutta, and the network of clinics, schools, rehabilitation centers, and hospital boats bring relief to the most needy.) In The Hawaiians (1970), there is a very brief scene showing crippled lepers separated on an island who are pushed away by the lead actor (Charlton Heston) in the film, but without much further insight into the disorder. The lepers look like zombies. A Final Word Leprosy is a major neurologic disease and has been mentioned in several films. The Motorcycle Diaries, where an actual leper colony is used, is the best example. Leprosy is not eradicated outside the Western world, with a prevalence of more than 1 per 10,000 in Asia, Africa, and South America. The World Health Organization has found major concentrations of leprosy in India, Brazil, Burma, Madagascar, and Nepal. There has been an increase over the last decade, possibly explained by improved case finding. Further Reading Britton WJ, Lockwood DN. Leprosy. Lancet 2004;363:1209–19. Foss NT, Motta AC. Leprosy, a neglected disease that causes a wide variety of clinical conditions in tropical countries. Mem Inst Oswaldo Cruz 2012;107 Suppl 1:28–33.

94   ◾    Neurocinema: When Film Meets Neurology Kipp RS. The evangelical uses of leprosy. Soc Sci Med 1994;39:165–78. Rodrigues LC, Lockwood D. Leprosy now: Epidemiology, progress, challenges, and research gaps. Lancet Infect Dis 2011;11:464–70. Williams DL, Gillis TP. Drug-resistant leprosy: Monitoring and current status. Lepr Rev 2012;83:269–81. World Health Organization. Global strategy for further reducing the leprosy burden and sustaining leprosy control activities (2006–2010): Operational guidelines. 2006. http://www1.paho.org/English/AD/DPC/CD/lep-globalstrat-06-op-gl.htm (accessed April 8, 2014).

AMNESIA IN FILM Memento (2000); starring Guy Pearce, Carrie-Anne Moss, and Joe Pantoliano; directed by Christopher Nolan; distributed by Summit Entertainment.

Rating One reflex hammer – incorrect depictions

Two reflex hammers – some error in depiction but of interest

Three reflex hammers – parts can be used for teaching

Four reflex hammers – mandatory viewing

The Music Never Stopped (2011); starring Lou Taylor Pucci, J.K. Simmons, and Julia Ormond; directed by Jim Kohlberg, written by Gwyn Lurie and Gary Marks; distributed by Essential Pictures.

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Rating One reflex hammer – incorrect depictions

Two reflex hammers – some error in depiction but of interest

Three reflex hammers – parts can be used for teaching

Four reflex hammers – mandatory viewing

The Vow (2012); starring Rachel McAdams, Channing Tatum, Sam Neill, and Jessica Lange; directed by Michael Sucsy, written by Abby Kohn, Marc Silverstein, and Jason Katims; distributed by Screen Gems.

Rating One reflex hammer – incorrect depictions

Two reflex hammers – some error in depiction but of interest

Three reflex hammers – parts can be used for teaching

Four reflex hammers – mandatory viewing

Criticism and Context Memory difficulties have attracted screenwriters, and one can immediately imagine why: Wouldn’t it be entertaining if the leading character

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cannot remember what he or she has done? Many films have used this plot device, but three films stand out. Antegrade amnesia (being unable to memorize events) is often used. This should be differentiated from dissociative amnesia, where patients are aware they have lost their memories. Unplanned travel and unknown personal identity are seen in psychiatric fugues and are a result of a traumatic stressful event. Such travel is often also accompanied by psychological inability to recall the past. (Travis, in Paris, Texas [1984] by Wim Wenders, is a good example.) Memento is focused on Lenny Shelby (Guy Pierce). Lenny has lost all ability to remember. “I can’t make new memories. Everything just fades.” The film is told in reverse order, is fragmented, and reflects the true condition. The film is also very dense, and many fans of this film who have scrutinized and combed through the scenes multiple times are still asking questions. Quotable Lines of Dialogue Memento Leonard

I have to believe in a world outside my own mind. I have to believe that my actions still have meaning, even if I can’t remember them. I have to believe that when my eyes are closed, the world’s still there. Do I believe the world’s still there? Is it still out there? Yeah. We all need mirrors to remind ourselves who we are. I am no different.

In short, Lenny kills one of the intruders who has raped and killed his wife. He gets hit on the head, causing anterograde amnesia. Lenny makes Polaroids of places and written notes. His body has tattoos with clues to the killer of his wife. The movie also shows a different plot line (in black and white), where Leonard is introduced as an insurance investigator. He is investigating a man with anterograde amnesia but is accused of “faking it.” Proof of that is that he is unable to be conditioned. It is correctly posited here that, although he cannot make memories, he still should be able to develop conditioning for situations that could harm him. In order to see if he is ­“ faking it,” his wife tries an experiment and asks him to give her insulin injections (which he does all the time). She secretly turns back the clock in the room so it seems no time has passed, asks it again and again until she becomes comatose (and never recovers). The film’s dramatic

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proof that his condition is real and not fake is essentially correct, and in reality this type of situation could theoretically happen in persons with such memory loss. The Music Never Stopped is based on an actual patient reported by Oliver Sacks in his essay “The Last Hippie” from his book An Anthropologist on Mars: Seven Paradoxical Tales (1995). The patient described by neurologist Oliver Sacks was Gabriel Sawyer, who had a large meningioma extending into the diencephalon that was destroying optic chiasm as well as the frontal and temporal lobes. Gabriel was told by his swami that he was “an illuminate” and was becoming a saint. This interpretation delayed surgery. After surgery Gabriel had marked difficulty remembering events from the 1960s and nothing after 1970. He could play the guitar but he was unable to generate any immediate memories. He displayed frontal syndrome in the form of “wisecracking.” There was also increased word play. (“Lunch is here, it is time to cheer.”) He tried to learn Braille but was unable to and could not grasp the reason for it. (“Why am I here with blind people?”) Oliver Sacks met one of the Grateful Dead band members and took Gabriel to a concert (who did light up and said he “had the time of my life”), but he did forget about it the next day. According to Sacks, Gabriel recognized all the songs but not those written after 1970; he recognized the style, though, thinking that it could be something the Grateful Dead might write some day. The film shows him in the hospital with an advanced brain tumor and loss of sight. The parents’ conversation with the neurosurgeon, which is notable and comical, and he explains that the tumor is benign, but that he may be left with a major deficit after surgery. (The neurosurgeon [played by Scott Adsit]) points to the thalamus and incorrectly calls it the forebrain. When Gabriel’s father asks, “So the tumor is in this area?” the neurosurgeon responds, irritated, “No, Mr. Sawyer, that is the tumor.” Next we see the neurosurgeon examining Gabriel after surgery, and he asks him to count from 1 to 10, to which Gabriel answers, “Count me out.” The film shows him in a skilled nursing facility where he plays “La Marseillaise” on trumpet and asks others what song it is. The film then dramatically shows that during music therapy, Gabriel suddenly transforms from a frozen (abulic and catatonic) state to being animated and alive. (According to Oliver Sacks, his patient could not engage in a

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social conversation, but music elicited strong memories of lyrics and emotions.) Although he has marked anterograde amnesia, he could remember all the songs of the 1960s and 1970s. When he sees a girl in the cafeteria who is named Cecilia, he sings Simon and Garfunkel’s song Cecilia (“Oh, Cecilia, you’re breaking my heart”) every time he sees her. The movie mostly coalescences into a renewed connection between father and estranged son through the music of the Grateful Dead, Bob Dylan, Crosby, Stills, and Nash, and other rock stars from the “flower power” era. The movie touches on the mystery of music and emotions. It has been known that songs or musical pieces become encoded or hardwired in the brain and can be retrieved similarly as with familiar faces. Such an experience may be different in a musician, but this oddity of profound amnesia—a catatonic state but “awakening” when favorite songs are heard—is a major interest of Oliver Sacks (see also Chapter 5). The film may prompt a discussion on music and the brain. For many of us, it remains a poorly understood field. A more recent film that involves an improbable amnesia is The Vow (2012). A traumatic head injury leaves Paige (Rachel McAdams) comatose. The film shows her still looking stunning with a few scratches and perfectly coiffed. After her surgery, we are told she is “kept” comatose using sedation. She awakens with a selective memory loss of the past 5 years, and she does not recognize her husband, Leo (Channing Tatum) but does recognize her parents. When she meets her siblings, she recognizes them (“everyone looks older”) and also friends from high school. The rest of the plot shows her gradually becoming aware of some prior relationships, but not all of them. There is a notable scene with her neurosurgeon (or neurologist), who looks at pupil reflexes and asks her about her memory and if she wants to regain her memory. The doctor warns Paige that she does not have to be afraid she would remember the accident (“Mercifully, that is rarely the case”) and advises her to try to get her memory back. “I only did one psych rotation so this may be terrible advice, but I think you should try to fill the holes.” Two types of amnesia occur after traumatic head injury. Anterograde amnesia is typically impaired new learning and forgetting. Retrograde amnesia is deficits in memory storage or retrieval. Psychogenic amnesia is not restricted to a single event (usually hours before the event), but involves a large part of the past. (It often affects young people.)

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This memory deficit may last for years. These patients are unable to recall information before the onset of the event, but anterograde memory is intact. Many may have sudden loss of the ability to read or write or use the telephone. In a critical review, Baxendale concluded that the movies have the amnesic syndromes wrong. Her major findings are: (1) films do not distinguish between amnesia from a psychiatric illness or underlying neurologic cause; (2) retrograde amnesia exists despite intact capacity for new learning; (3) a second head injury can cure amnesia from a first head injury; (4) memories are temporarily inaccessible, not lost. Memento is a correct example of amnesia, and the closest resemblance is of a real patient, Henry Molaison (also known as H.M.), who developed anterograde memory impairment after epilepsy surgery. (Although many critics have made a link between the film and his case history, the clinical course for H.M. was not known to the screenwriter, and the film was not inspired by his medical history.) Henry Molaison (Figure 3.8) was treated for intractable seizures with removal of both medial temporal lobes that included important structures such as the hippocampus (space orientation and backing up of memory) and amygdala (also memory consolidation and human emotions). He was left with permanent amnesia, and his neuropsychologic profile was recently summarized in Suzanne Corkin’s book, aptly titled Permanent Present Tense. Each time he met someone, it was for the first time. The abundant research found that he could not hold on to thoughts for more than 20 seconds. His motor tasks (things he learned in the past) were intact, so he could do routine things such as cleaning the house or fixing a meal. According to Corkin’s work, when asked, “What do you try to remember?” he replied, “Well, that I don’t know cause I do not remember what I tried.” (His sense of humor remained intact.) According to Corkin’s interpretation, Henry proved for the first time that a discrete medial temporal lobe region converts short-term memories into lasting memories. Distinctions between several forms of memory can now be made. These are episodic memory (remembrance of unique events), semantic memory (remembering facts), declarative memory (learning with awareness), and procedural memory (learning without awareness such as motor skills). All were defective in Henry except learning of motor skills. Skills that depended on visual perception and motor abilities could be taught to Henry. He also remembered childhood events.

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(a)

Bilateral medial temporal lobectomy Amygdala

Hippocampus

FIGURE 3.8  (a) Henry Molaison. (Used with permission from The Wylie Agency

LLC.) (b) The major structures involved with memory are shown in the figure, and the full temporal lobe was removed.

Some other films deserve mention. The Hindi film Ghajini (2008) is considered a remake of Memento that caused some controversy when Christopher Nolan was not credited. The most extreme form of global amnesia is the movie Groundhog Day (1990), where recall of the previous day is absent and is combined with global amnesia of everyone else in the movie. More silliness is apparent in the otherwise tremendously entertaining film Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind (2004), where memory is erased with new technology. Another example, 50 First Dates (2004), is discussed in Chapter 6.

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A Final Word Screenwriters are very interested in loss of memory, but there is little accuracy. Very few films show the frequent presentation of memory difficulties; some things are remembered and others are not. Two key films on amnesia involve dramatic cases—one based on a real patient—and this increases the entertainment value. Understanding memory deficits remains a difficult area for neurologists and neuropsychologists, and very few illuminating cases have been examined. Further Reading Bartsch T, Butler C. Transient amnesic syndromes. Nat Rev Neurol 2013;9:86–97. Baxendale S. Memories aren’t made of this: Amnesia at the movies. BMJ 2004;329:1480–83. Corkin S. Permanent present tense: The unforgettable life of the amnesic patient, H.M. London: Allen Lane, 2013. Marshman LA, Jakabek D, Hennessy M, Quirk F, Guazzo EP. Post-traumatic amnesia. J Clin Neurosci 2013;20:1475–81.

HEADACHE IN FILM Pi (π) (1998); starring Sean Gullette, Mark Margolis, Ben Shenkman, and Samia Shoaib; written and directed by Darren Aronofsky; distributed by Artisan Entertainment.

Rating One reflex hammer – incorrect depictions

Two reflex hammers – some error in depiction but of interest

Three reflex hammers – parts can be used for teaching

Four reflex hammers – mandatory viewing

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Criticism and Context As a dramatized depiction, the film Pi (π) shows cluster headache well and had an enduring effect on the audience. Although headache does not play any role in advancing the plot, it is part of the struggle of a mathematician to find order in numbers. His assumptions are that mathematics is a language of nature, and that everything can be represented and understood through numbers. If numbers are graphed, certain patterns emerge. Max Cohen, played by Sean Gullette, often discusses the nature of mathematics with Sol Robeson, played by Mark Margolis. Max is interested in finding a pattern in the stock market but also comes in contact with Lenny Meyer, played by Ben Shenkman. He is interested in the number 216 that represents the letters of the name of God that will open the doors to the Messianic Age. His headaches may be linked to having that number in his head. The film suggests that his headaches started at the age of 6 years when he was staring at the sun and became “blind.” His headaches are repetitive. The film shows, in rapid succession, crosscuts of him popping pills, screeching sounds, hallucinations of moving doors with locks which open up to a bright light. This scene specifically mentions his medications, and he uses promazine and sumatriptan followed by dihydroergotamine mesylate by subcutaneous injection. Multiple attacks are shown, including banging his head against a mirror to relieve the pain and he injects dihydroergotamine into the skin of his skull. Notable here is the large (staple gun–like) injector that must be a deliberate choice by the director to add drama. The film shockingly ends with drilling a burr hole during a severe headache attack. The film represents cluster headache reasonably well. It shows pain on one side, on the same side as lacrimation, but it does not show ptosis or periorbital edema for an understandable reason. It shows the repetitive nature of the pain. Most patients with cluster headaches have their attacks in the third or fifth decade. The triggers of these headaches are typically wine, nocturnal sleep with daytime naps, and strong odors such as perfume or paint. All of these triggers are shown in this film. The first treatment of cluster headache is oxygen, but as mentioned in the movie, sumatriptan by subcutaneous injection can abort attack in most patients. The obsession and paranoia, as well as hallucinations, should be considered unusual in cluster headaches. Headache specialists I talked to felt that Pi is a great movie and a teaching example of cluster headache, with its obsessional restlessness and its excruciating pain, and is one of the top films in portrayal of headache.

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Many other movies use headache as an affliction associated with deranged characters and major personality disorders. Another key movie is White Heat (1949) , in which James Cagney plays the not suffer fools gladly Cody. According to film critic David Thomson, this noir film fits well into the postwar zeitgeist when screenwriters were interested in the maddening effects of shell shock and other war atrocities. Cody has two major headache attacks. It is told that he initially made up fake headaches to get his mother’s attention, but then the headaches become real. His headache starts abruptly, and he falls to the floor grabbing his head. It lasts for about a minute and then subsides when his mother massages his neck. He needs some time to recover, and his mother says, “Do not let them see you like that.” Once in jail, he has a second similar attack and again gets an occipital massage. The headache of Cody here is linked to violent and homicidal behavior, and two psychiatrists tell him to go to a mental institution to take care of his headache. He is put in a straitjacket following a major outburst in jail after he hears that his mother has died. We also learn that his father and brother were in an insane asylum. The headache depiction is reasonably certain to be a cluster headache, quickly subsiding with some postictal deterioration. The link to criminal behavior is notable but wrong. Another interesting film depicting migraine is Gods and Monsters (1998) , where the protagonist has a severe unilateral headache, nearly collapses, grabs his head, and next is found lying in a chair. His caretaker runs to him with a large assortment of pills, and he asks for luminal. A consulted physician (perhaps a neurologist) calls it “stroke” or “electrical activity,” but he does not know how to deal with the “killing” headaches. The film That Beautiful Somewhere (2006) shows one of the leading actress (Jane McGregor) with severe migraine. We see her groping for her head and moving around, crying out in pain and also trying a drill on her temporal lobe (identical to in Pi, but with no trephination). She walks around in the movie mostly wearing dark-colored glasses. Quotable Lines of Dialogue White Heat Cody That Beautiful Somewhere Catherine

[Headache] is like a red-hot buzz saw inside my head. Pain makes you do things, makes you submit and pray for anything to stop it.

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A thunderclap headache is depicted in Hannah Arendt (2012). Her ­ usband Heinrich Blucher (Axel Milberg) suddenly collapses after a severe h orbital headache. It is suggested that he has “a brain aneurysm.” She visits him in the hospital and tells him, “I spoke to the doctor. He said you only have a fifty percent chance,” to which he answers, “Don’t forget the other fifty percent.” He is seen in a few scenes later without any deficits, calling it “a slight collapse.” The characteristics of headaches in film have been reviewed by Vargas, and it is found that most actors playing headache sufferers were men with characters between the ages of 18 and 49, nearly half of them died from violent attacks, including suicide. A  large number of headaches in the movies do have an underlying cause, with about one-third being the result of a tumor or foreign body or toxic exposure. A Final Word Headache is common in the movies, but mostly it is only very briefly mentioned and rarely (except for Pi) advances the narrative. It is briefly mentioned with brain tumors or incidentally used, and its function in the plot is often not exactly clear. For screenwriters it may be simply that bad and shady characters should have torturous headaches. Migraine, despite its common occurrence, does not seem to interest screenwriters and its ­common benign nature is not dramatic enough. Further Reading Ashkenazi A, Schwedt T. Cluster headache—Acute and prophylactic therapy. Headache 2011;51:272–86. Nesbitt AD, Goadsby PJ. Cluster headache. BMJ 2012;344:e2407. Pietrobon D, Moskowitz MA. Pathophysiology of migraine. Annu Rev Physiol 2013;75:365–91. Thomson D. Moments that made the movies. New York: Thames and Hudson, 2013. Vargas BB, Henry KA, Boylan LS. Characteristics of headache in motion pictures: Demographics and outcomes of headache sufferers in film. American Headache Society 49th Annual Scientific Meeting. Chicago, IL, 2007.

SLEEP DISORDERS IN FILM Side Effects (2013); starring Rooney Mara, Jude Law, Catherine Zeta-Jones, and Channing Tatum; directed by Steven Soderbergh, written by Scott Z. Burns; distributed by Open Roads Films.

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Rating One reflex hammer – incorrect depictions

Two reflex hammers – some error in depiction but of interest

Three reflex hammers – parts can be used for teaching

Four reflex hammers – mandatory viewing

Criticism and Context Sleep disorders is an interesting chapter in neurologic portrayal in the movies. One should not be surprised to find the common use of dreams and night terrors, and directors have used some specific disorders. Sleepwalking, or somnambulism, is occasionally portrayed in film and often with an erotic undertone. Sleepwalking is most comically displayed in Hal Roach’s High and Dizzy (1920) . Harold Lloyd as “the boy” watches Mildred Davis as “the girl” sleepwalking on a building’s ledge. (The origin of this absurd sleepwalking posture—outstretched arm(s), eyes closed, and sometimes marching like walking—is not known, but it has made its way into many art forms.) He saves her from falling and places her on a bed. She caresses his face but is startled after she discovers having him in her bedroom. Bunuel’s Viridiana (1961) , banned by the Spanish government due to obscenity and blasphemy, has Viridiana (a nun) dressed in a nightgown sleepwalk, showing off her legs. She is terribly embarrassed that her uncle did not wake her up (he suggests it is dangerous). Sleepwalking is prominently on display in a newer film, Side Effects (2013). Side Effects also has an associated website (www.tryablixa.com) that is eerily similar to a real advertisement until Jude Law shows up as the psychiatrist, Dr. Jonathan Banks. He asks questions about signs of depression. If all three questions are answered “yes,” he is very concerned and suggests Ablixa. If all three questions are answered “no,” he still recommends a referral to a psychiatrist. It seems hard to “escape” a psychiatrist, let alone “Ablixa” (a fictitious antidepressant).

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The drug Ablixa, in the main character, causes violent sleepwalking. Emily Taylor (Rooney Mara) is hopelessly depressed, possibly set off by her husband, who has recently been released from prison after serving 4 years for insider trading. Emily tries to get her life back together but fails with the first social encounter. Next she purposely drives her car into the wall of a parking garage, and hospitalization leads to therapy sessions with Dr. Jonathan Banks (Jude Law). He starts prescribing multiple antidepressants, and eventually, when all else fails—and after another attempt to throw herself under a train—treats her with Ablixa. The drug causes sleepwalking while at the same time furnishes her with a cure. Stopping the medication, despite the seemingly innocent act of brief sleepwalking, is not an option she will consider. After the murder, a brief court drama ensues, but rather than presenting the difficulties with proving the relationship of violent behavior with sleepwalking, this segment ends quickly. It is mentioned that consciousness provides a context for our actions, and that awareness does not exist when you sleep. The film does not mention video-EEG-polysomnographic assessment and its potential value in court. The case quickly goes to a plea bargain, case closed. Dr. Banks’s psychiatry practice suffers; his marriage almost falls apart; and he is grilled in a deposition asking about his workload and whether he can handle it. His colleague psychiatrists threaten to ostracize him for losing patients. The film has other not-so-subtle themes and shows psychiatrists talking about medication options (the try-this-in-your-patient-because-it-workedwell-in-mine argument) and cavalierly prescribing for family members. (He gives his wife a beta blocker, and she suggests that there are advantages of having a husband who can provide medication.) Even Dr. Banks’s decision to come to the United States is used to imply that patients in the United Kingdom who take medication are sick, while those who take medication in the United States are getting better. It further caricaturizes a ­lavish lifestyle of specialists, among other unsympathetic portrayals. The film claims that violent behaviors during sleep can be caused by antidepressants, an exceedingly uncommon side effect. Violent behaviors during sleep are well known and may have dramatic implications, including homicide, nonfatal assaults, but also sexual misconduct. Sleepwalking is usually benign in children, but in adults it can become quite harmful, with not only destruction of property, but also serious injury to bed partners or others. Sexsomnia is a form of parasomnia characterized by atypical and often violent or injuring sexual behavior during sleep. The

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American Academy of Sleep Medicine has clear criteria for somnambulism that include persistence of sleep or impaired judgment during ambulation and a disturbance that is not better explained by other disorders, drug use, or substance-use disorder. A recent textbook of sleep medicine mentions that sleep specialists are increasingly asked to evaluate potential court cases where violent behavior might be the result of a sleep disorder. Connecting violence with an underlying sleep disorder is far more difficult, though the literature suggest some criteria such as: (1) previous episodes and documented sleep disorder, (2) arousal stimulus, (3) no attempt to escape, (4) horror of and amnesia for the event, and (5) precipitating factors such as recent sleep deprivation and newly introduced medication. In Side Effects, neurologists may see a sense of truthfulness, and the bland emotion of such an act is very well portrayed. This film is a good example of how psychiatry and neurology may intersect and how sleepwalkingassociated murder is linked with real astonishment in the perpetrator. Rooney Mara plays a very convincing sleepwalker. Sleepwalking shows her putting on music and setting a table (a common occurrence in real-life situations) and waking up her husband. She walks and acts like an automaton. Her eyes-open blank look while performing some detailed task is well depicted. In the key scene, she ends up committing a murder (not a spoiler here, as the crime is already implied in the first minute of the film and prominently present in the trailer). This sets off the film’s narrative, but Side Effects is one of those films in which nobody is what they seem. Side Effects, therefore, brings to the forefront an interesting and disturbing phenomenon. That in itself makes the film worth watching, but in the end, Side Effects is a thriller—with greed and conceit as a leading motif. Quotable Lines of Dialogue Side Effects Attorney Dr. Banks

Attorney Dr. Banks

What you’re saying is that to have intent you must also have consciousness. Consciousness provides a context or meaning for our actions. If that part of you does not exist, then basically we are functioning much like an insect where you just respond instinctively without a thought what your actions mean. That part “provides meaning to action”…does that exist when we are asleep? No.

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Sleepwalking is only one aspect of the depiction of sleep disorders in film. Dreams and nightmares are omnipresent in cinema. Dreams are often effectively used to create a certain mood, to add a surprising twist, or to unveil a suppressed memory. Even wild awakening from a terrifying dream and finding that the reality is similar is used with much effect in Take Shelter (2011). The most phantasmagorical depiction of dreams is in Inception (2010), showing a dream within a dream—within a dream. Nightmares have been effectively used in the classics of cinema and include most memorably the dream sequence featuring Dali-designed psychoanalytic symbols in Spellbound (1945). Particularly gripping for physicians is the unsettling nightmarish examination of Professor Isak Borg in the Ingmar Bergman-directed Wild Strawberries (1957). Herein, in one of his frequent dreams, he has to redo a bacteriology exam but cannot see what is under the microscope and not only fails, but is graded as incompetent—a grade that ends his medicine studies. Other common sleep disorders depicted in film are narcolepsy and insomnia. Insomnia is characteristically defined as difficulty initiating sleep and inability to have restorative sleep and, as a result, may increase the risk of daytime accidents and a later risk of depressive illness. The twilight state with lack of sleep has been used repeatedly but with little insight on why it can occur and what its consequences are. Insomnia (2002) uses lack of sleep and exhaustion as a result of perpetual daylight in Alaska as a plot device. The Machinist (2004) takes the problems with insomnia even further and is more absurd. The main character in this film (played by Christian Bale) is almost moribundly skinny from lack of sleep (a full year!). Lack of sleep is also causing paranoid behavior. Narcolepsy and narcoleptic hallucinations are well depicted in My Own Private Idaho (1991) . In this movie, River Phoenix plays a gay street hustler with multiple cataleptic attacks. Here the narcoleptic attacks are triggered by anything that reminds him of his mother and his abandonment as a child. Most hallucinations here are vivid prior childhood memories, presented as old Super-8 films. Most narcoleptic hallucinations are simple acoustic (sound or melody) or simple visual (objects or circles). Hallucination of a person may occur, too, and in this film it is often the face of his mother. These hallucinations are then followed by eyelid quivering and prolonged unconsciousness. In reality, cataplectic attacks are brief but may last for 30 minutes; therefore, the prolonged attacks in this film are incorrectly represented. Here, they seem to be a combination

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of long cataleptic attacks in combination with signs of sleep paralysis. In other situations, narcoleptic patients may notice that while falling asleep or coming out of sleep they are unable to move, speak, or open their eyes; but this lasts no more than a few minutes. The International Classification of Sleep Disorders includes two forms: narcolepsy with cataplexy and narcolepsy without cataplexy. Finally, cataplexy is shown in an exaggerated manner in the film Deuce Bigelow (1999), with an actress dropping to the ground like a stone in contrast to the actual typical slow loss of muscle tone. Quotable Lines of Dialogue My Own Private Idaho Friends

I am surprised he can even exist like this on narcolepsy. He is not dead. He is just passed out, and it is a condition.

A Final Word Normally, sleep should provide rest, and when we have a dream it does not make much sense but, alas, not in the movies. For screenwriters, there is a good reason to use dream sequences and sleep disorders because they love the ethereal dream, particularly night terrors, and because they are a good storytelling device. Sleepwalking is now correctly on display—although in its most severe and rare form. Further Reading Kryger MH, Roth T, Dement WC. Principles and Practice of Sleep Medicine. Philadelphia: Saunders, 2010. Siclari F, Khatami R, Urbaniok F, et al. Violence in sleep. Brain 2010;133:3494–3509. Sutcliffe JG, de Lecea L. Not asleep, not quite awake. Nat Med 2004;10:673–74. Zadra A, Desautels A, Petit D, Montplaisir J. Somnambulism: Clinical aspects and pathophysiological hypotheses. Lancet Neurol 2013;12:285–94.

SEIZURES IN FILM

A Matter of Life and Death (1946); David Niven, Roger Livesey, Raymond Massey, Kim Hunter, and Marius Goring; written and directed by Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger; distributed by Eagle Lion Films.

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Rating One reflex hammer – incorrect depictions

Two reflex hammers – some error in depiction but of interest

Three reflex hammers – parts can be used for teaching

Four reflex hammers – mandatory viewing

Criticism and Context One of the best-analyzed films on seizures is A Matter of Life and Death, also known as Stairway to Heaven. The story line is complex and fantastical. It involves an RAF pilot (David Niven) who survives a plane crash. He has fallen in love with an American radio operator whom he talked to just before the crash, and has reunited with her and is deeply in love. Under normal circumstances, he would have died and would have appeared in heaven, but the film shows him not checking in. The story then turns to a heavenly tribunal discussing his failure to arrive in heaven and whether falling in love on earth is sufficient to postpone death. Several chapters during the film show he has spells that may be interpreted as complex partial seizures. The spells are stereotyped and always begin with a smell of fried onions or with a discordant piano piece followed by visions of a “heavenly conductor” and more complex hallucinations of a stairway to heaven to the aforementioned tribunal, where he eventually may have to defend his stay on Earth. A neurosurgeon appears and Dr. Reeves is able to examine him during a spell, and a pupil abnormality and possible Babinski sign is found. Dr. Reeves’s diagnosis is “fine vascular meningeal adhesions binding the optic nerve to the brain, the internal carotid artery, similar adhesions in chiasm and the brain.” He is rushed into surgery and even has a spell under full anesthesia, where the key scene eventually depicts the tribunal arguing his stay on Earth or need to come to heaven. (He wins his case and stays.)

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Quotable Lines of Dialogue A Matter of Life and Death Dr. Reeves

He is having a series of highly organized hallucinations comparable to an experience of actual life, a combination of vision, hearing, and of ideas. To a neurologist, that compares to a direct sense of smell and taste. Once that connection is established, we know to look for the trouble.

A Matter of Life and Death has been analyzed in detail by psychologist David Friedman (1992), who makes a persuasive case of complex partial seizures. The film is obviously exaggerated. One of the film’s strengths is the depiction of a complex seizure. However, visual hallucinations are never that complex or as detailed, and they never present as a full nightmare; but some of it indeed may indicate a temporal lobe lesion. (None of that is clear, and Dr. Reeves’s localization is way off.) No other film has depicted temporal lobe epilepsy well (see Chapter 6 for violence and temporal lobe epilepsy). Epilepsy in film has been well studied, and different types have even been acted out (Table  3.2). Much credit should be given to psychologist Sallie Baxendale (2003), who analyzed 62 films, concluding that there were “examples of all of the ancient beliefs surrounding epilepsy such as demonic or divine possession, genius, lunacy, delinquency, and general otherness.” A link between epilepsy and psychiatry often implied that male characters were mad, bad, and dangerous. Female characters with seizures were exotic and vulnerable. In some films, the protagonist has seizures, but rarely does a seizure disorder drive the full narrative. A recent film from India, Ek Naya Din (A New Day) (2013), got attention when it emphasized bad spirits in epilepsy and treatment with witchcraft. The neurologist, TABLE 3.2  Types of Epilepsy Depicted in Film Epilepsy and violence Posttraumatic epilepsy Photosensitive epilepsy Epilepsy surgery (hemispherectomy) Epilepsy (ketogenic diet) Pseudoseizures Stress convulsions Side effects of antipsychotic drugs

Deceiver (1997) The Winning Team (1952) The Andromeda Strain (1971) The Other Half of Me (2001) First Do No Harm (1997) Drugstore Cowboy (1989) Black Hawk Down (2001) Take Shelter (2012)

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Misra, created this movie to improve understanding. Illiteracy and superstition are prevalent in north India, where tremendous poverty coexists. Several other films are noteworthy. In Frankie and Johnny (1991) , a man has a seizure in a restaurant—“a fit or something”—and Frankie (Michelle Pfeiffer) puts him on his side while in a postictal period. She sees that he has a necklace that says epilepsy. While they are waiting for the ambulance, Johnny (Al Pacino) asks her out, but she is not interested. The man awakens rapidly and asks what happened, and Johnny answers, “Nothing much. I just got turned down by someone.” Pseudoseizures are most prominent in Drugstore Cowboy (1989) . Here pseudoseizures are deliberate, and in the film the “seizing” person takes Alka-Seltzer to fake foaming at the mouth (a clever find from the director). The attention to the “seizing” person allows others to steal prescription drugs in the drugstore. The psychogenic seizure is surprisingly accurately done, with thrashing movements, moaning, and eyes closed shut. When it is over, she suddenly walks away with bystanders asking, “Are you okay?” A pseudoseizure is also seen in The Intouchables (2012), where it also has a deliberate deceiving purpose. Although initially made for TV (and therefore outside the scope of this book), First Do No Harm (1997) is a movie made by Jim Abrahams who had a “similar” experience with his son, Charlie. (He is the founder of the Charlie Foundation.) The film is interesting because of its comprehensive coverage of childhood epilepsy. Meryl Streep plays a desperate mother whose son (Fred Ward) has epilepsy. The movie does not hold back and has caricatured all that may go wrong with epilepsy—arrogant neurologists failing to accept ketogenic diet as a viable alternative, Stevens-Johnson syndrome from antiepileptic drugs, paraldehyde brought in a styrofoam cup showing the cup melting away from direct drug exposure, behavior problems with antiepileptic drugs, and even seizure on an airplane. To top it off, the movie even has a discussion on lack of randomized trials in epilepsy treatment and thus sufficient reason to try more experimental approaches—the “if you think this approach does not work, where is the proof of your approach” argument. All is well with the child after a ketogenic diet is started. Even the separate stages of seizures are shown in film, but rarely accurately. Postictal confusion is never depicted in Robert Altman’s A Wedding (1978). There is immediate recovery after what seems a g­ eneralized tonic clonic seizure. The aura in The Aura (2005) is about the protagonist,

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who has epilepsy. The aura is described in a lengthy scene and is used to profoundly scare the listener. It goes as follows: “There is a moment, a shift…things suddenly change; it is as if everything stops, a door opens in your head that lets things in—sounds, voices, images, smells. Smells from school, kitchen, and family. Cannot move. It is horrible and perfect.” The aura is further accompanied by a screeching horror sound followed by a black screen and awakening with bright light shining in his eyes. The aura here creates a sense of mysticism. It conforms to the general impression that screenwriters think that seizures are a harbinger of doom. A Final Word Seizures are common in the movies, and understandably so. Similarly, as in the real world, their presentation might be frightening and this opportunity for drama has been noted by screenwriters. A wide variety of causes for seizures has been depicted, but many of them occur in stressful situations. It is very obvious that s­ eizures in film are linked to madness, perpetuating the a­ ge-old myth of a link between seizures and psychiatric disorders. Readers ­i nterested in the historical significance of seizures may seek out Cleopatra (1963), where Caesar (Richard Burton) proclaims, “One day it will happen where I cannot hide, where the world shall see me fail.… I shall foam at the mouth and they will tear me to pieces.” Further Reading Baxendale S. Epilepsy at the movies: Possession to presidential assassination. Lancet Neurol 2003;2:764–70. Christie I. A matter of life and death. London: British Film Institute, 2000. Friedman DB. A matter of fried onions. Seizure 1992;1:307–10. Kerson JF, Kerson TS, Kerson LA. The depiction of seizures in film. Epilepsia 1999;40:1163–67. Sharma DC. Indian film on epilepsy busts myths. Lancet Neurol 2013;3:245.

CEREBRAL PALSY IN FILM Gaby: A True Story (1987); starring Rachel Levin, Norma Aleandro, Liv Ullmann, and Robert Loggia; directed by Luis Madoki, written by Martin Salinas and Michael James Love; Academy Award and a Golden Globe for best supporting actress (Norma Aleandro); distributed by TriStar Pictures.

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Rating One reflex hammer – incorrect depictions

Two reflex hammers – some error in depiction but of interest

Three reflex hammers – parts can be used for teaching

Four reflex hammers – mandatory viewing

My Left Foot (1989); starring Daniel Day-Lewis, Ray McAnally, Brenda Fricker, Fiona Shaw, and Hugh O’Conor; written and directed by Jim Sheridan; Academy Award for best actor (Daniel Day-Lewis) and best actress in a supporting role (Brenda Fricker); distributed by Granada Films and Miramax.

Rating One reflex hammer – incorrect depictions

Two reflex hammers – some error in depiction but of interest

Three reflex hammers – parts can be used for teaching

Four reflex hammers – mandatory viewing

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Criticism and Context Cerebral palsy is a brain injury that is mostly established before birth and can dramatically impact a person’s functioning and activities. One of the first major feature films to address this issue was Gaby: A True Story, which described the upbringing and development of the Mexican writer Gabriela Brimmer. The original book is authored in three voices told by Gaby, her mother, Sari, and her caregiver, Florencia Morales Sánchez. Gaby became the leading figure of Mexican people with disabilities; she died at the age of 52 in 2000. Quotable Lines of Dialogue Gaby: A True Story Gaby

How can I scream when I can’t talk? God, if life is so many things that I am not, and never will be, give me the strength to be what I am. How can I stop loving with the seed of a woman inside me?

Norma Aleandro, who plays Gaby, mostly acts out manifestations of chorea but shows no signs of pseudobulbar palsy. In the beginning of the film, the family is incorrectly told that cerebral palsy is a consequence of Rhesus incompatibility and that she can be mentally retarded or “locked inside her body.” Her mother, played by Liv Ullmann, plays a somewhat remote role, but not her nanny, Florencia, who acts as an interpreter. The nanny is the one who first discovers that Gaby can communicate using her feet. At 8 years old, she enters a rehabilitation center’s elementary school. There her language arts teacher persuades her to write. As readers of this book have noticed by now, it is not surprising that this film also includes sexual awakening, once she falls in love with a disabled schoolmate. There is some insight into the disability with cerebral palsy, but the film is easily overshadowed by My Left Foot. The film My Left Foot is painstakingly crafted and represents cerebral palsy played by Hugh O’Conor as young Christy Brown and Daniel DayLewis as adult Christy Brown. The film opens with him at a charity and then flashes back to his birth. (“Your son has been born. There have been some complications.”) The film (inaccurately) suggests a fetal anoxic event

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during labor, but the onset of this static lesion of the cerebral motor cortex is unknown. Very few cases of cerebral palsy are likely to have severe acute hypoxia during birth. Multiple births, maternal infection antepartum, vaginal bleeding, and fetal infection are all risk factors, but the prevalence is very low. The diagnosis of cerebral palsy is based on a major manifestation of spasticity coexisting with dystonia. The film suggests that psychotherapy and occupational and speech therapy could be applied successfully, but there is little evidence these help. In some children, motor skills improve. Long-term effects are common, including joint dislocation, scoliosis, and deformities. Christy Brown came from a family of 13 children, and his mother taught him to write and paint. Dublin in the 1930s housed working people and the poor in large sections of town. Children with disabilities would go to “a home,” and there were no facilities. The Catholic Church provided shelter and food to the poor but had no practical solution to severe disability. Christy was born under problematic circumstances and apparently was unresponsive after birth and floppy. His mother knew he was different, but she also knew that there was more inside and therefore taught him. According to his biographer, Anthony Jordan, “Every spare moment she had was spent trying to communicate with her son, trying to unlock the brain she knew was within the twisted frame.” The film shows the first discovery of intelligence when he is able to write he could write the letter “A” on a chalkboard. The film clearly shows many community members having a fixed presumption about major cognitive deficits, labeling them as instances of major mental retardation. Quotable Lines of Dialogue My Left Foot Man in bar Paddy Brown Man in bar Woman Priest

Are you gonna put him in a home, Paddy? I’ll go in a coffin before any son of mine will go in a home. Now, Paddy, I believe it’s the end of the road. And there he was lyin’ at the bottom of the stairs like a moron. You can get out of purgatory, but you can never get out of hell. He’s a terrible cross to the poor woman.

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Daniel Day-Lewis (Figure  3.9) is incomparable in depicting cerebral palsy with its pseudobulbar signs and dystonic postures and avoids the so-common overplaying of grimacing. The uncontrollable outbursts of screaming and crying may seem a bit unrealistic, but some outbursts like this may occur in real life under circumstances of stress. The happy ending of marrying his nurse in the film should be contrasted to the real Christy Brown (Figure 3.9), who became an alcoholic (some of it is shown in the film having him drink from a straw out of a bottle hidden in his pocket). Christy Brown’s book My Left Foot was followed by Down All the Days, an autobiographical work about living in the slums of Dublin in the first part of the twentieth century. The book showed drink and violence, but also hopelessness and recklessness. (“We are all jarred, Christy, you know. You’re not the only one. We all need a bit of help.”) It has been speculated that his tremendous unchanneled urge and energy and frustration may have resulted in depression and alcoholism. He married Mary Carr, who neglected him. He apparently died when he choked on a lamb chop. The movie shows Christy’s relationship with Dr. Collis, who became the founder of Cerebral Palsy Ireland. Dr. Collis developed a specific program in training and movement and generally getting the athetoid to work in whatever position was easiest. This was usually the sleeping posture. Speech therapy would provide control of the respiratory muscle and swallowing muscle. Christy also joined the New Association for Disabled Artists and began painting. He did painting tours and exhibitions throughout Ireland. A major problem was Christy’s alcohol abuse, and this also affected his writing and output. According to his biographer, A.J. Jordan, he was “erudite and a philosophical man, who endured a long apprenticeship; but when success did come, he succeeded to ‘Vanity Fair.’” Two other films on cerebral palsy should be mentioned. Oasis (2002) portrays an abandoned young woman with cerebral palsy and a complicated courtship. The correct display of dystonia and spastic dysphonia won Moon So-Ri a Best Actress award at the Venice Film Festival. She is constantly grunting, in spasm, with eyes turning, and grimacing. The film is also unique because there are several scenes where she has fantasies of being normal and not spastic. This may occur in patients with cerebral palsy, but the desire to be considered normal is more often seen in patients with much less severe manifestations. Door to Door (2002) was a TV film in the United States that gained prominence because of its theme of

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(a)

(b)

(c) FIGURE 3.9  (a) Daniel Day-Lewis playing Christy Brown; (b)  Christy Brown

painting with his left foot; (c) Christy Brown in later life. (Used with permission of Irish Photo Archives and Ferndale Films/Hells Kitchen and Getty Images.)

Neurologic Disorders in Film   ◾    119  

persistence. It is based on the true story of Bill Porter, a door-to-door salesman who could not drive well, speak well, and walked clumsily as a result of a “mild” cerebral palsy. These skills are needed for any door-to-door salesman, but he muscled through. (In real life, he was the top salesman for the grocery he worked for.) The film stars William H. Macy, who accurately plays his challenge—walking up to 10 miles daily and selling almost anything to everybody. This comparatively mild case of cerebral palsy is poorly acted with unusual distorted faces, unlike Daniel Day-Lewis, and is of little interest. A Final Word Several films portray the major physical disability of cerebral palsy. The films celebrate creativity and normal intelligence. Many of those affected by cerebral palsy are wrongly considered mentally handicapped. It is good to see that this topic has interested directors. Further Reading

Agarwal A, Verma I. Cerebral palsy in children: An overview. J Clinical Orthopaedics Trauma 2012;3:77–81. Aisen ML, Kerkovich D, Mast J, et al. Cerebral palsy: Clinical care and neurological rehabilitation. Lancet Neurol 2011;10:844–52. Bax MC, Flodmark O, Tydeman C. Definition and classification of cerebral palsy: From syndrome toward disease. Dev Med Child Neurol Suppl 2007;109:39–41. Collis WR, O’Donnell M. Cerebral palsy. Arch Dis Child 1951;26:387–98. Hambleton GL. Christy Brown: The life that inspired My Left Foot. Edinburgh: Mainstream Publishing, 2012. Jordan AJ. Christy Brown’s omen: A biography drawing on his letters, incorporating Founding of cerebral palsy Ireland by R. Collis. Dublin: Westport Books, 1998. McIntyre S, Taitz D, Keogh J, et al. A systematic review of risk factors for cerebral palsy in children born at term in developed countries. Dev Med Child Neurol 2013;55:499–508.

AUTISM SPECTRUM DISORDERS IN FILM Fly Away (2011); starring Beth Broderick, Ashley Rickards, and Greg Germann; written and directed by Janet Grillo; distributed by New Video Group.

120   ◾    Neurocinema: When Film Meets Neurology

Rating One reflex hammer – incorrect depictions

Two reflex hammers – some error in depiction but of interest

Three reflex hammers – parts can be used for teaching

Four reflex hammers – mandatory viewing

Adam (2009); starring Hugh Dancy, Rose Byrne, and Frankie Faison; written and directed by Max Mayer; won Alfred P. Sloan Prize at Sundance Film Festival; distributed by Fox Searchlight Pictures.

Rating One reflex hammer – incorrect depictions

Two reflex hammers – some error in depiction but of interest

Three reflex hammers – parts can be used for teaching

Four reflex hammers – mandatory viewing

Criticism and Context Autism spectrum disorders are present in nearly 1 in 70 US children. There are many specialized autism clinics in the United States, and these

Neurologic Disorders in Film   ◾    121  

disorders require a multidisciplinary evaluation and mostly include neurologists. For many viewers, Rain Man (1988) is the key movie portraying autism, but not to experts in the field. Most criticize the film for suggesting that autism is associated with savant syndrome (hypersystemizing, presence of a memory brilliance), which it is not, or rarely so. Dustin Hoffman’s mannerisms feel contrived, and it is sentimentality that wins. Pauline Kael—one of the most revered film critics—called it “wet kitsch.” After Rain Man, films appeared with a more differentiated depiction of autism. Fly Away is largely about the acceptance of Jeanne (Beth Broderick) that her autistic teenage daughter Mandy needs help and cannot stay in her current social environment. Her attacks are muted by the lullaby “Lady Bug, Lady Bug, Fly Away.” The film shows an extreme behavior disorder attributed to autism, with Mandy screaming and attacking other children at school and at playgrounds. The mother, Jeanne, is completely overwhelmed, burned out, and beaten up, living in a messy house. Mandy is a frightening child, and Jeanne is the persevering mother who endures against all odds. Quotable Lines of Dialogue Fly Away Schoolteacher Mother Schoolteacher Mother Schoolteacher

Realistically we have to provide her with skills. Skills?… Like pushing a broom? If it makes her feel good? Mandy is smart. Inside all of that, she is so smart. Just because you cannot handle it, it does not mean my daughter belongs in an institution. If you want to play the martyr, that is your choice, not mine.

The movie has little to say about autism, but Mandy’s moments of quiet drawing followed by night terrors are real. There is a continuous refusal by Jeanne to find a better solution. Because Mandy’s flailing around in a car nearly causes an accident, it leads to her being transferred to a residential home for autistic children. Autism spectrum disorders include Asperger’s syndrome, and the differences between these disorders are shown in Table 3.3. The films Adam and Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close (2011) deal with Asperger’s syndrome. Both display repetitive behaviors and fixation on topics.

122   ◾    Neurocinema: When Film Meets Neurology TABLE 3.3  Differential Diagnostic Features of Autism Spectrum Disorders Features

Autism

Asperger’s syndrome

Age of recognition (diagnosis) a Regression

0–3 years (3–5 years)

>3 years (6–8 years)

About 25% (social or communication) 2:1 Poor Delayed, might be nonverbal

No

Sex ratio (male:female) Socialization Communication Behavior Intellectual disability Cause

Seizures Outcome a

More impaired than in Asperger’s syndrome >60% More likely to establish genetic or other cause than in Asperger’s syndrome Experienced by 25% over life span Poor to fair

4:1 Poor No early delay; qualitative and pragmatic difficulties later Variable (circumscribed interests) Mild to none Variable

Experienced by roughly 10% over life span Fair to good

Data adapted from Volkmar, FR and Pauls D. Autism. Lancet 2003;362:1133–41.

Adam very specifically addresses the social interactions and relationship problems people have with these autism spectrum disorders or, as the character of Beth says in the movie, “not prime relationship material.” Adam is preoccupied with the solar system and the universe, and conversations often start with minute numerical details of the Big Bang and later expansion of the universe. He tells his girlfriend Beth (Rose Byrne) that his brain works differently than “neurotypicals.” Examples of problematic behavior are many and include applying for nearly 100  jobs after getting laid off and being unable to go to a restaurant and eat something different than macaroni and cheese on a daily basis. Adam is angry with Beth’s father, leading to a major confrontation and the couple finally breaking up. Beth gives him chocolates after this because she feels sorry, and he responds, “I am not Forrest Gump.” The disorder is accurately presented as a social interaction problem with outbursts of anger when his world is rocked. He is not able to handle such situations well.

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Quotable Lines of Dialogue Adam Adam Friend

Their sensor systems have detected an error in analyzing space. Adam, I am having lunch. Speak English. No more black holes, black hole radiation, Mars robots. Lunch time is for guys talking about women, the weather, and such.

The thin line between a nerd and being afflicted by Asperger’s syndrome is clear in Napoleon Dynamite (2004). In a film showing features of teen culture and bullying, Napoleon is a social misfit. Psychiatrists Levin and Schlozman (2006) have argued he has a socially disconnected character but may have symptoms consistent with Asperger’s syndrome. There is impairment of nonverbal behavior (facing the floor when speaking), abruptly stopping conversations, irritability, and dysphonia. However, some people have strongly argued that Napoleon could belong to “geekdom” and nothing more. Autism has become more prevalent over the last 10 years (partly as a result of better recognition). It is rarely (
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