Yalom’s Cure – Film Review |
A review by Rachel Flanagan.
Yalom’s Cure will not introduce those who are unfamiliar with the work of Yalom but for those the vast population of shrinks, patients, and others familiar with his work will find this biography an enjoyable one getting to spend time with him and his family. In a relaxed and deep voice, Yalom guides us through his relationships with his mother and father, recalls his aspirations of pairing psychoanalysis with literary techniques, and his discovery on the benefits of group therapy to both the terminally ill and the healthy. A majority of the film focuses on Yalom as a teenager trying to woo his future wife Marilyn. They both recount how their successful marriage cast an unfortunate shadow over the marriages of their children, whose marriages were the opposite of their parents’ nuptials ending in divorce. Their children reveal how one of the secrets to a successful marriage seemed to be putting their marriage first over their children. Yet, fans of Yalom get to see the person he is outside of his successes as one of his grandchildren recalls the fun he has with his grandfather who is not a successful psychotherapist at home but just his fun loving grandfather. Yalom’s guides the audience through the fear and terror of death and the pain and loneliness of life. He speaks of how these fears are universal to everyone and how we need to face these fears in order to make peace with life and we learn that Yalom himself has seems to have conquered these fears in order to make peace with himself. Sabine Gisiger’s, Yalom’s Cure, offers a fascinating dichotomy between Yaloms’ professional image and his private life. For those familiar with his work, they may find this film a sense of psychoanalysis through cinema and find themselves looking deeper into themselves yearning for answers to our own existential uncertainties. For those unfamiliar with the Irvin D. Yalom, they may find themselves on a journey to discover who he is and perhaps, look into picking up a book or two to create their own excursion through existentialism and psychotherapy. |
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Posted By Rachel Flanagan on March 30, 2016 |
See the full review on Discover Hollywood by clicking Here.