Madness at the Movies is a great read. As the book closes with its final words, when the good professor dismisses you without, thank goodness, final exam, you will have devoured a compelling, entertaining and enlightening university level course in film studies and clinical psychiatry.
For me, however, the book was more than that. You know when you read a book you wonder about who the author is or was, what were his intentions and so forth? Well, Dr. Charney reveals he is a learned, rational, insightful, ethical and gifted practitioner worth getting to know. This is refreshing. Hearing him as the voice-in-the-text, you will find also a gifted writer, engaging teacher, film aficionado and, not arguably, conscientious clinical coach. He will elevate you from making offhand remarks about directors, movies, actors, performance and peculiar, to say the least, personalities. You will have a deeper understanding and appreciation of what specific mental and emotional challenges people have, what we (might) have. He does this through whether and how well selected movies, really the characters portrayed in them, convey these.
Experiencing this scholarly but entirely accessible book deserves even a second go; it is that rich for the curious as well as the reader who wants more. It will reward you as much as the first screening, er reading. Have at it. And don't be a chicken like me, squeamish. See the films Dr. Charney has chosen to examine and those he refers to with the analyses and spoilers you already have at hand. You will experience the movies differently because you have changed.
Finally, beware, even if you don't see the films or read this gem a second time, Dr. Charney and/or films/analyses he includes in his book may well touch you personally, viscerally. But you are in a professional's hands, one who demonstrates compassionate understanding but is clear and direct with how he sees fictional as non-fictional characters and their challenges.