A paranoid schizophrenic woman finds treatment to her mental illness after 18 years of suffering.A paranoid schizophrenic woman finds treatment to her mental illness after 18 years of suffering.A paranoid schizophrenic woman finds treatment to her mental illness after 18 years of suffering.
- Awards
- 2 nominations
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Rusty Gray
- Bartender
- (as Rusty Schmidt)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
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Did you know
- TriviaIn an attempt to improvise the "walk" of a homeless indigent, Diana Ross discreetly placed an orange between her skirted thighs and proceeded to hobble along on cue. The effort required to keep the concealed orange in place without using her hands, effected a gait so uncanny that Ross's director, Larry Elikann, later quizzed her about how she walked the "walk." According to Ross, herself, as related to the audience on Inside the Actors Studio (1994) (19 February 2006), she never did disclose the simplicity of her little ruse.
- Quotes
Paulie Cooper: Well, it feels like being in a dream... and it feels like a really important dream. But it's not a dream, because you're not asleep. And because you're not asleep you can't wake up.
- ConnectionsFeatured in The 52nd Annual Golden Globe Awards (1995)
Featured review
Diana Ross is gripping as a 42-year-old woman just finished with her third year of medical school who is sidelined by a particularly destructive bout of paranoid schizophrenia, a condition she's aware of and has lived with since her mid-20s. The delusions and voices come and go, but when a kindly doctor intervenes with a new drug, Ross has a chance to actually rebuild her life. A sensitive, educational TV-film that strives--and perhaps stresses a might too hard--to teach the viewer something about mental illness (as well as the shame family members feel about the disease, and their eventual acceptance of it). It's a heady acting vehicle for La Ross: she takes on this highly dramatic, unglamorous (and some may say well-trodden) role and gives it bitterness, rage, confusion and, finally, hope. The narrative is engineered to relay the overall goodness of our medical community (which may seem like a stretch to Ross' character, having been hospitalized over 40 times), while the writing is occasionally too flowery. Still, a disturbing and moving effort, with a gem of an ending.
- moonspinner55
- Jul 22, 2006
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- Esquizofrenia, un hilo de esperanza
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