Synopsis:
Animated Minds is a series of animated documentaries using real
testimony from survivors of mental illness, combined with engaging
and sometimes humorous visuals, to climb inside the minds of the
mentally distressed. Windows into experiences rarely seen, each
piece draws us in to these people's inner worlds, journeying around
the landscape of their minds, and leaving us with a greater
understanding of what it is to suffer from mental distress.
Fish on a Hook, 3min
Mike suffers from panic attacks and agoraphobia, and often finds it
difficult to get out of the house. As he describes in visual detail
("As I get more anxious, I feel as if I am being strangled. My
heart beats louder and louder to the point where if I go out I feel
that other people can see my heart beating") what its like to
suffer from debilitating anxiety we witness the trials and
tribulations of how even a journey to supermarket can be "like a
bloody nightmare!"
Dimensions, 3min
Chattering, whispers, sometimes benign, sometimes malevolent.
Disordered thought, tangential ideas, and delusions of grandeur,
persecution and paranoia. Lilliputian hallucinations, and deafening
imperatives from the cacophony of characters that reside within.
This piece focuses on what it is to experience psychosis, but more
importantly what it is not: it is not split personality, it can
exist in otherwise 'normal' people, and it does not give rise
to a culture of violent people, unable to function or be connected
to the 'real' world.
Obsessively Compulsive,
3min
Steve describes how whenever he thought of Saddam Hussein he
thought that he was contributing to the conflict in the Gulf.
Walking, talking, eating, and drinking - all these actions had to
be completed in the absence of an intrusive thought about Saddam,
otherwise he would have to repeat the action again and again and
again. A rare glimpse into the struggle for those faced with
Obsessive Compulsive Disorder.
That Light Bulb Thing,
3min
A woman's story about becoming more manic, as she soars to the
heights of euphoria, literally floating through the air on the
winds of grandiosity, and disinhibition. And then, without warning,
we see the fall to despair, to a dark world without meaning; an
inner world of depression made all the worse by the still-fresh
memory of the essence of her euphoria, the light bulb within her.
This is the world of manic-depression, from the oh-so-highs, to the
oh-so-lows, when the brightness within her, that light-bulb thing,
has gone out.
Synopsis:
Animated Minds is a series of animated documentaries using real
testimony from survivors of mental illness, combined with engaging
and sometimes humorous visuals, to climb inside the minds of the
mentally distressed. Windows into experiences rarely seen, each
piece draws us in to these people's inner worlds, journeying around
the landscape of their minds, and leaving us with a greater
understanding of what it is to suffer from mental distress.
Fish on a Hook, 3min
Mike suffers from panic attacks and agoraphobia, and often finds it
difficult to get out of the house. As he describes in visual detail
("As I get more anxious, I feel as if I am being strangled. My
heart beats louder and louder to the point where if I go out I feel
that other people can see my heart beating") what its like to
suffer from debilitating anxiety we witness the trials and
tribulations of how even a journey to supermarket can be "like a
bloody nightmare!"
Dimensions, 3min
Chattering, whispers, sometimes benign, sometimes malevolent.
Disordered thought, tangential ideas, and delusions of grandeur,
persecution and paranoia. Lilliputian hallucinations, and deafening
imperatives from the cacophony of characters that reside within.
This piece focuses on what it is to experience psychosis, but more
importantly what it is not: it is not split personality, it can
exist in otherwise 'normal' people, and it does not give rise
to a culture of violent people, unable to function or be connected
to the 'real' world.
Obsessively Compulsive,
3min
Steve describes how whenever he thought of Saddam Hussein he
thought that he was contributing to the conflict in the Gulf.
Walking, talking, eating, and drinking - all these actions had to
be completed in the absence of an intrusive thought about Saddam,
otherwise he would have to repeat the action again and again and
again. A rare glimpse into the struggle for those faced with
Obsessive Compulsive Disorder.
That Light Bulb Thing,
3min
A woman's story about becoming more manic, as she soars to the
heights of euphoria, literally floating through the air on the
winds of grandiosity, and disinhibition. And then, without warning,
we see the fall to despair, to a dark world without meaning; an
inner world of depression made all the worse by the still-fresh
memory of the essence of her euphoria, the light bulb within her.
This is the world of manic-depression, from the oh-so-highs, to the
oh-so-lows, when the brightness within her, that light-bulb thing,
has gone out.