In “Crazy, Not Insane,” the prolific documentarian Alex Gibney turns his camera on Dr. Dorothy Otnow Lewis, a psychiatrist and professor with a particular theory of murder. She believes that killers tend to act out of a combination of neurobiological and environmental factors, and that premeditated, repeated murders don’t occur solely because of what some psychiatrists see as a severe lack of empathy. Look closely, she suggests, and psychosis, abuse or brain damage will inevitably factor in.
Dr. Lewis is an engaging interview subject whose clarity and upbeat demeanor contrast strikingly with the macabre material. Her writings are read as voice-overs by Laura Dern.
Dr. Lewis has also kept an excellent archive. Gibney shows video of her interacting with Arthur J. Shawcross, a serial killer, as he manifests what Dr. Lewis diagnosed as dissociative states, in which he would seem to change personalities. Lewis met and recorded audio of Ted Bundy, whom she contends had far from a normal childhood. But the most chilling footage is of Dr. Lewis interviewing an electrician who did part-time work electrocuting death-row inmates. Dr. Lewis raises the possibility that only chance separated his life from theirs. The electrician was as “confused and muddle-headed, as battered and beaten, as the violent men I had interviewed on death row,” Dr. Lewis concluded.
Although Gibney includes some dissenting voices — such as Dr. Park Dietz, who at Shawcross’s trial questioned Dr. Lewis’s interviewing techniques — he moves on quickly from Dr. Lewis’s discussion of Nazism and the Nuremberg trials without clarifying whether genocide contradicts her views on biological predisposition. Gibney also doesn’t broach the issue of confirmation bias — the idea that Dr. Lewis, in searching for traumatic family histories or multiple personalities, might be prone to finding them. But Dr. Lewis is clearly sharp enough to account for that, and the movie makes you want to read her work, not stick with Gibney’s overview.
Crazy, Not Insane
Not rated. Running time: 1 hour 57 minutes. Watch on HBO Max.
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November 18, 2020 at 07:00PM
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‘Crazy, Not Insane’ Review: Inside the Criminal Mind - The New York Times
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