Monday, 2 February 2015

Preproduction - Research

Inspirational Shorts 
Ruth Lingford - Death and the mother

A short film from 1988, Ruth Lingford animated this piece through a black and white, sketchy style.

Pleasures of War
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xu5d4UsjSkg

Types of Dreams

Lucid Dreams - 


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8jhPt4r70kU

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yC0Gqt8VRKk

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xco_IWBfqsQ
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LiQMHokZqr4
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WkURrBpoHBk

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ViK2ZYjHf5Y

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t9Uq-yXc7x0


http://www.dreams.co.uk/sleeptalk/2011/stress-and-dreams/
http://www.livescience.com/17290-facts-dreams-nightmares.html
http://www.psychologytoday.com/conditions/nightmares
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lucid_dream

Psychosis



Psychosis is a mental disorder that causes an individual to lose contact with reality, symptoms that are present include disorientation,  paranoia, delusions and hallucinations.  http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/psychosis
 
Through the individuals delusions, they would be developing false ideas about actions taking place around them as well as misunderstanding who certain people may be. Through hallucinations, they begin imagining stuff, seeing and hearing things that aren’t actually there. As well as an invasive side effect of a mental disorder, psychosis and psychotic episodes can be caused by the administration of certain illegal drugs such as methamphetamine and LSD. http://bipolar.about.com/od/definingbipolardisorder/g/gl_psychosis.htm?utm_term=what%20is%20a%20psychosis&utm_content=p1-main-1-title&utm_medium=sem&utm_source=msn&utm_campaign=adid-19a630b9-8ec7-4c66-a4c6-4a7542af1a1d-0-ab_msp_ocode-4349&ad=semD&an=msn_s&am=phrase&q=what%20is%20a%20psychosis&dqi=&o=4349&l=sem&qsrc=999&askid=19a630b9-8ec7-4c66-a4c6-4a7542af1a1d-0-ab_msp

Psychosis and Dreams 
Many different factors can effect the severity of an individuals condition, a difficult life story or a stressful current situation can take a considerable toll on a persons’ sanity. Often, the loss of reality can be understood as a coping mechanism, devised for protection when “contradictions between the inside and outside world can no longer be papered over readily”,  if the individual is having difficulties handling their emotions or feeling, expectations placed upon them concerning personal or work goals can become overbearing and suffocating, important decisions that need to be made become impossible tasks. It is at times like these that one suffering from psychotic episodes may begin to unintentionally invent a new reality for themselves. The mood of the patient greatly differs the type of alternate reality that they fall into, perception and mood influence one another, meaning that they can either be stuck in a vortex where they see nothing but black, or they can end up floating in the sky on pink fluffy clouds.
Psychosis can create ‘an experience comparable with that in a dream’, but fails to offer the protection of sleep. When we dream, our adventures cannot harm us, however when a patient travels to another dimension through their unprotected mind, its another problem altogether.  “In a dream it is not dangerous to feel like a bird, in psychosis it is. Just like there is wishful thinking and there are nightmares, in psychoses as well wishful and anxious components are mixed: in allegorical terms in paranoid psychosis as a mixture of meaning and danger. Sometimes the anxiety functions in the foreground and the wishes remain encrypted. And yet in therapy and in search of the subjective meaning it is helpful to look in both directions: wherefrom and whereto?” this can be summarised by saying “an access to unconscious experience – as in wishful thinking and nightmares, the psychosis also has wish and anxiety components. Comparably, delusion of grandeur or paranoia in psychosis can also signify "something valuable", however at least not insignificant.” http://www.psychosis-bipolar.com/understanding-psychoses-01.html


Schopenhauer 2: ‘A dream is a short-lasting psychosis, and a psychos is is a long-lasting dream.’ http://www.celiagreen.com/charlesmccreery/dreams-and-psychosis.pdf