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Lage Raho not all about Gandhigiri: psychiatrists

After giving a new lease of life to Gandhian ideals and receiving rave reviews, Bollywood blockbuster Lage Raho Munnabhai has now come in for praise from psychiatrists.

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Durga Nandini
 
CHENNAI: After giving a new lease of life to Gandhian ideals and receiving rave reviews, Bollywood blockbuster Lage Raho Munnabhai has now come in for praise from psychiatrists.
 
The Sanjay Dutt-starrer Vidhu Vinod Chopra production, a sequel to the hilarious Munnabhai MBBS, is not all about adherence to Gandhian principles via Gandhigiri, but a movie on mental well-being, they say.
 
The movie portrays a transient mental state in a very positive manner, they feel.
 
The film contains spells of delusions undergone by lead character Munnabhai essayed by Dutt, in which he feels that he is able to see and communicate with Mahatma Gandhi.
 
This is a typical portrayal of a mental state, according to psychiatrists at the Schizophrenia Research Foundation here, which is why the movie was screened in the international film festival on mental health organised by it recently.
 
"The film is not about mainstream psychiatry. The striking fact is that it depicts psychiatric symptoms in a very positive manner and not as the usual 'sop' story about mentally ill characters," Dr Mangala, Consultant Psychiatrist at SCARF, says.
 
It shows that a person in a confused state of mind can still be normal, and can be respected as a human being.
 
'Lage...' deals the issue of mental health very sensitively, which is evident from a scene in the movie, wherein a psychiatrist explains the scientifically plausible reasons for Dutt's hallucination, she says.
 
 
"Hallucination cannot be termed formally as mental illness. However, it is a mental state caused due to sleeplessness, heightened experience or extreme tension," explains Dr Dinesh Bhugra, Dean, Royal College of Psychiatry, London.
 
Lage…, Munnabhai avoids sleeping for days together and tries to collect as much information as possible on Gandhiji, under extreme stress, which is a reason for his delusionary state," Bhugra adds.
 
According to him, such spells of hallucination are very common and more than half in a sample population of 100 are sure to have undergone such spells at some point of time.
 
"A typical example of hallucination is when people are in love. They always imagine the voice of the person they are in love with," Dr Thara, Director, SCARF, says.
 
Be its much-hyped Gandhigiri or a refreshing projection of mental health, the movie is a super hit here.
 
"The theme of the movie has gone well with audiences and has succeeded in generating a curiosity," its distributor in Chennai, Madhav Chabbria of Saraswathi Films, says.
 
"The movie has done extremely well as was shown in some theatres in Chennai for seven weeks in a row," he adds.
 
Gandhigiri, the term referring to the antics of lovable rogue Munnabhai, has created a social wave, with Gandhigiri clubs set up in some cities to tame reckless drivers and corrupt officials by handing them flowers with a smile –as Munna and his followers do in Lage...
 
The movie, released across the country on September 1, has won applause from movie buffs not only across the country but also abroad.

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