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Shrinks on the verge of a nervous breakdown: how horror movies came for therapists

Shrinks on the verge of a nervous breakdown: how horror movies came for therapists
Culture | The Guardian

From Rose Byrne in If I Had Legs I’d Kick You to Jodie Foster in A Private Life, an onscreen parade of psychoanalysts are unravelling before us, tapping into our worst fears There is an old adage that “every therapist needs a therapist”. Even while the treatment was still in its infancy, Sigmund Freud said all psychoanalysts should “submit” themselves to being analysed. Recent cinema has been acutely aware of that painfully unbreakable cycle. In the likes of If I Had Legs I’d Kick You , Mary Bronstein’s hallucinatory Rose Byrne vehicle in which she plays a therapist and floundering mother caug

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