CinemaPsych Podcast

WHERE PSYCHOLOGY MEETS FILM

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Films tagged with: "Historical Psychology"

Poster for Experimenter, featuring Peter Sarsgaard as Stanley Milgram standing confidently in a grey suit and tie, and Winona Ryder seated beside an electric shock generator panel, referencing the famous obedience experiments. The tagline reads: “Illusion sets the stage. Deception reveals the truth.”
Experimenter (2015)
A stylized poster featuring Michael Fassbender (as Carl Jung), Keira Knightley (as Sabina Spielrein), and Viggo Mortensen (as Sigmund Freud). Their faces are dramatically lit, with the central figure of Knightley torn down the middle, visually separating Jung on the left and Freud on the right. The text reads: “Based on the true story of Jung, Freud and the patient who came between them.”
A Dangerous Method (2011)
A stark black-and-white poster with a wire fence background shows Jack Nicholson gazing upward with a slight grin. The bold title “One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest” appears above in stylized black lettering, with a red drawing of a lock hanging below the word “Cuckoo’s.”
One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest (1975)
Poster for Kinsey featuring a man (played by Liam Neeson) in a brown suit standing on a large printed sex survey. The words “Let’s talk about sex” appear above him, and the ground is covered with large, bold questions about sexual behavior, hinting at the groundbreaking nature of Alfred Kinsey’s research. The tagline and typography highlight the film’s focus on sexology and scientific inquiry into human sexuality.
Kinsey (2004)
Poster for The Stanford Prison Experiment featuring a chaotic and violent scene where several young men, dressed as prisoners and guards, are engaged in a struggle. One guard appears to punch a prisoner against a wall while others crowd around. The tagline at the bottom reads: “They were given 2 weeks. It lasted 6 days.” The film title is printed boldly in red on a crumpled paper-textured background, and the subtitle notes it is “based on true events.” A quote above the title praises the film’s disturbing realism.
The Stanford Prison Experiment (2015)

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