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Saturday, November 10, 2012

Prozac Nation - happy pills

Dit schilderij heb ik gemaakt voor de "normale"mens die geloofd dat gelukkig worden of zijn te koop is in een pilletje, poedertje, slokje of spuitje, alsof je daarmee blijvend de ellende van elke dag mee kan oplossen...
maar net als alle soorten "happy" drugs of zoals ze ook wel eens genoemd worden "recreatieve drugs" werken deze dingen alleen maar averechts als je ze dagelijks gebruikt, want hoe kun je gelukkig zijn, als je vergeet wat het is om ongelukkig te zijn ?

Prozac Nation 
is a 2001 American drama film directed by Erik Skjoldbjærg, starringChristina RicciJason Biggs and Anne Heche. It is based on an autobiography of thesame name by Elizabeth Wurtzel, which describes Wurtzel's experiences with major depression. The title is a reference to Prozac, the brand name of an antidepressant she was prescribed.

Plot :

Elizabeth "Lizzie" Wurtzel is a teenager accepted into Harvard with a scholarship in journalism. She has been raised by her divorced mother since she was two years old, but she misses her father and feels needy and depressed. When she joins the university, she lives with a roommate Ruby and loses her virginity to a man called Noah. Her article for the local column in The Harvard Crimson is awarded by Rolling Stone.
Lizzie abuses sex and drugs as her depression worsens; in her anger and misery, she lashes out at those who love her most, ultimately making her problems worse. Her mother sends her to an expensive psychiatric treatment with Dr. Sterling, in spite of having difficulties paying for her medical bills and therapy sessions. After a long period of treatment under medication, and a suicide attempt, Lizzie stabilizes and adjusts to the real world.
Release :
The film had its world premiere at the Toronto International Film Festival on September 8, 2001; distribution rights were acquired by Miramax Films with the intent of giving the film a wider theatrical release. Months of subsequent test screenings and re-edits of the film never led to a broad commercial release. The film was released in Norway, Skjoldbjærg's native country, in August 2003, but it never had a national release in the U.S. market. It premiered on the Starz! channel in March 2005, and was released on DVD that following summer.
Frank Deasy, who co-wrote the screenplay, offered his opinion to The Guardian on Miramax's failure to release the film:
It's a truthful depiction of Depression. And I think the reason Miramax has struggled is the fact that it doesn't have a traditional dramatic structure, in terms of a clear, unqualified ending. Look at the book: Elizabeth is very clear that Prozac has helped her, but you're left with a dilemma, because perhaps she no longer knows who she is. We didn't want to come down heavily on one side or the other. People who've experienced depression like that aspect of the film, but a lot of people don't like it. Miramax certainly didn't seem to like it.








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