one of my favourite representations of anxiety in film that wasnt mentioned is wilhelm in the netflix show young royals. theres just something about the way they so subtly show his anxiety attacks(?) in a realistic way that hit so close to home and really resonated with me on a personal level.
I have general anxiety disorder, and i have panic attacks when my anxiety gets too high. I really appreciated Puss in Boots' depiction of a panic attack. I understood how he was feeling in that scene and it just really resonated with me.
So wait, let me just clarify this. You are using SCREEN RECORDING to do dynamic zoom but then using capcut THAT HAS INBUILD FEATURE OF DYNAMIC ZOOM to cut the video? Nah bro that is enough of tips ‘n tricks for today 💀
My anxiety is so bad, since a young age, I had multiple ACCIDENTS in front of class. So much so I was almost known for it. As I got older that stopped, I personally rarely have panic/anxiety attacks that make me sit in a corn and clench my shirt. Most of the time, I’m still, and almost quiet. I really liked Puss’s portrayal, I hope one day I can see someone have an attack like me, so it doesn’t feel like I’m faking every time it happens. Of course as an artist and writer I can do this, and I do, but I hope one day I can actually see it. I’ve been told off so many times because when I have these attacks, I’m apparently not ‘freaking out’ enough. It’s really tiring. Pair that with my sensory processing disorder and heavy dissociation, and it’s even worse.
What a great depiction. My earliest experience with panic attacks before I experienced them, was Jessie in Toy Story 2. "I can't do storage again!" I could feel her desperation and the pain it caused her, the lack of control. Some directors feel the need to dumb things down TOO MUCH for kids, or make it lighthearted so the child doesn't have to sit in yucky emotions. Children experience anxiety, disordered or not. Having these scenes depicted properly is an opportunity to teach coping mechanisms, give them the language, to show that mental anguish doesn't exclude you from performing heroic acts. Recognizing emotion is something most of us learn as infants, so let scary be scary and guide them into their next milestone of regulating those emotions.
I know its not yet proven, but i think anxiety is related to the food we eat. Im not sure but i suspect Milk, Sugar, coffee and some salads do have direct relation with it.
I was Born and raised in America (California), this is all I know about France/French/Paris: 1. French Fries (McDonald's) 2. Mona Lisa 3. Disney's "Anastasia" 4. Baguette 5. Merci 6. Eiffel Tower 7. The Louve (Tomb Raider) 8. Beret hats 9. ? I can't remember what else
As someone who has quite severe anxiety and has panic attacks out of nowhere- Puss in Boots really did it for me, and it actually made me feel quite nervous for him just by watching it. All the choices made with how it’s shot, the sounds and the overall change in tone were really well done
Puss and boots panic attack was very accurate, I’ve had panic attacks because I have very high anxiety and they feel like how puss and boots portrayed it. And like they said it’s not always visual, I’ve had many panic attacks in my head, but puss and boots represents the feeling well
I was high when I had my first panic attack and during it I was thinking “I’m just like Puss in Boots fr” because my panic attack played out just like his lmao
In one our believes names is the one gave us character. But it wasnt the name meaning, instead certain names bring certain characteristic. And how you lived will define your figure, like you born with sense of belonging, it can become either prudent or just plain stingy. Or Born intelegent can make you either wise or just sly, it depend on the life you've been through. But being Intelegent, or curious, or naive, gentle or though, it something the name brought. That is why peoples with same name have similar trait on them. But it was nonpopular believe, some people studied it like horoscope etc. but mostly dont even believe it at all. Ps: what i mean by intelegent is not revering to the brain capacity, but more likely how we willingly use our brain.
As a citizen of Australia, another anglophone country built by immigrants, many of them Irish, I can tell you that one of the the stark cultural oddities of the US compared to other comparable countries is the sheer tenacity of compartmentalised ethnic identity over multiple generations. It’s deeply weird to a non-American to watch an American movie where some character is described as being “an Irishman”, and what they mean is a seventh generation American who happens to have Irish heritage. In Australia, if you hear that someone is “Irish” it means that they, personally, come from Ireland.
the orange on the flag represents IRISH Protestants, NOT all the Irish that came over were CATHOLIC huge misconception. The green signifies catholic, white unity, and the orange protestants.
This video start and ends with Blue Curtains, which ofcoarse is a reference to David Lynch movie Blue Velvet. This is enhanced by how Lynch works alot with both blue (as in Blue Rose Task Force, the investigators of mystery) and curtains (like the red curtains in Twin Peaks, representing the mystery and creation of meaning. This especially from a theather point of view there the curtains seperate the play from reality so we can fill it with meaning). When saying that the blue curtain is a detail of a book, the video is saying that even though every detail is important, we still need to approach cinema lika an open book, like investigators (blue) of the mystery (curtain) to reveal the meaning behind the curtain, manifesting as the play on stage. Marvellous!
To any lucky people who haven’t experienced a panic attack: A panic attack isn’t that you’re so nervous you think you’re dying, it’s that it feels exactly like you’re dying so you become nervous.