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Dan4th
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14 Mar 2012, 3:05 pm

I'm an NT psychology student working on a dissertation that involves interviewing adults on the spectrum. Eric Bana's claymation film, Mary and Max, was one of the most helpful resources for me when I began learning about adult AS. Watching the film helped me avoid some of the pitfall's that Mary's character experiences in approaching her research. Does anyone have opinions about how Max is depicted in this film?


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eristocrat
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23 Mar 2012, 2:22 pm

I thought Max was a really good character for exactly the purpose of explaining AS to people in a simple way. He's definitely (and necessarily) a composite character. I was thinking about this when I watched the movie. I mean, the way he gets upset about littering. It's a combination of very black and white thinking, meltdowns, near obsession, and literal-mindedness, all directed at one thing. Traits are not always quite that obvious in real life. Some people are more intellectual about their interests, some more emotional, some kind of neither, depending on their personality. So he sort of describes everybody and nobody.

And Max's special interests and routines were kind of condensed into one and the same. I mean, he liked chocolate so he ate chocolate a lot and that was it. If it was just part of my routine, I can see having a comfort food. But if it were like a special interest, I'd be researching all about the origins, history, production, etc. of chocolate and telling everyone about it.

Max is a very uncomplicated guy in a lot of ways. He has childish interests, expresses himself like a child. But a more intelligent, nuanced (real) person with AS could easily experience all the difficulties Max has. That's the thing I'm afraid people don't get. I think the movie does a good job at showing a lot of hints that this is only a little animated world and the characters are only representations, but some people will not be able to see that there's a bigger reality behind it because they aren't really understanding AS. If you do know about it and watch the movie, though, you can see the filmmakers were aware they're providing an incomplete picture and try to throw irony and little damning details in. So overall I like the character of Max and the way he interacts with the other characters.



Jory
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23 Mar 2012, 2:27 pm

It's one of the better ones.



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29 Mar 2012, 12:30 pm

Hmmmm. I want to see this film.

How would it work for explaining AS to people who are basically intelligent, but with a high school education that they didn't put much stock in 40+ years ago and very little desire to think?? The kind of people who are really decent and not by any means stupid, but mostly go by what they learn on TV (and spend entirely too much time watching things like The Today Show and (gaaaaaaaag) Maury Povich???


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DaveTheRave
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15 May 2012, 2:49 pm

funnily enough i heard about this film today. and will be watching it on thursday at my aspergers group. is it any good??



mariofan1
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25 May 2012, 3:13 pm

DaveTheRave wrote:
funnily enough i heard about this film today. and will be watching it on thursday at my aspergers group. is it any good??


A bit weird but overall very good and funny