Villain Therapy: VOLDEMORT

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  • Опубліковано 21 лис 2024

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  • @CinemaTherapyShow
    @CinemaTherapyShow  Рік тому +239

    If you’re struggling, consider therapy with our sponsor BetterHelp. Click betterhelp.com/cinematherapy for a 10% discount on your first month of therapy with licensed professional specific to your needs.

    • @dietotaku
      @dietotaku Рік тому +105

      umm, if your sponsor has to come with a disclaimer that they're complying with federal law, maybe don't work with that sponsor? i mean you've already gotten a multitude of comments from people who were harmed by betterhelp instead of helped, especially marginalized people. but that line just seems like a big waving red flag to me, idk 🤷‍♀

    • @familiarwhale5925
      @familiarwhale5925 Рік тому +5

      Yes! Please do Emperor Palpatine.

    • @typo1345
      @typo1345 Рік тому +16

      Another villain that would be good to do therapy on is Azula from Avatar the Last Airbender

    • @ИванСнежков-з9й
      @ИванСнежков-з9й Рік тому +7

      If you want to teach the value of morality to somebody who has no empathy, make them play the interactive game/simulation "Evolution of Trust". It takes about 30 minutes.
      There is objective mathematical reason morality exists and it's engraved in our basic instincts.

    • @louvegouroute
      @louvegouroute Рік тому +3

      hi, i like your channel in general, so here's an important advice to you and to other subscribers: AVOID BETTERHELP.
      they are Bad.
      here is the FTC report about it : www.ftc.gov/business-guidance/blog/2023/03/ftc-says-online-counseling-service-betterhelp-pushed-people-handing-over-health-information-broke

  • @jessicablack9960
    @jessicablack9960 11 місяців тому +3487

    Fun fact: in the book, Tom Riddle says “I can make bad things happen to people who annoy me” which is a lot worse than “I can make bad things happen to people who are mean to me”

    • @eviana3876
      @eviana3876 11 місяців тому +189

      Yeah, i had Fun with that fun fact :D
      But seriosly, that IS worse.

    • @Name.she-her-hers
      @Name.she-her-hers 11 місяців тому +99

      yea that is definitely a lot worse

    • @EnbyGaemer2005
      @EnbyGaemer2005 11 місяців тому +208

      Didn't he also at one time mention he found the crying babies at the orphanage "annoying"

    • @davidfairweather3301
      @davidfairweather3301 11 місяців тому +304

      Annoyed me so much that the movie changed that. They made it seem more like he was being bullied and picked on. But in reality he was the one bullying and terrorising the other children. Two kids who went into a cave with him were changed for the rest of their lives and never spoke about what happened in there, and he hung another child’s rabbit on the ceiling by its ears.

    • @jessicablack9960
      @jessicablack9960 11 місяців тому +121

      @@davidfairweather3301 I agree. It annoyed me too. I understand the movies need to cut some things or maybe change some things a little to reduce screen time, but it wouldn’t have added any screen time at all if he had quoted the books in that scene, so I don’t understand what they were thinking when they changed it. In the movies, you get the impression that the other kids were mean to Tom and he had a rough upbringing in the orphanage, so maybe that’s why he went bad. But really Tom is just evil. No redeeming qualities whatsoever.

  • @Jonathan_Collins
    @Jonathan_Collins Рік тому +4614

    "There is no good and evil, there is only power, and those too weak to seek it..." This line is one of those that define Voldemort, both as a character and as a villain.

    • @TheRibottoStudios
      @TheRibottoStudios Рік тому +214

      Oh I knew Silco's power line seemed familiar. He has the same idea of power as Voldemort.
      "You see, power, real power, doesn't come to those who were born strongest, or fastest, or smartest. No, it comes to those who will do _anything_ to achieve it. Time to let the monster out."

    • @ultimatebishoujo29
      @ultimatebishoujo29 Рік тому +17

      @@TheRibottoStudiosthat’s very true

    • @chill-lady-brook
      @chill-lady-brook Рік тому +23

      Too bad Harry Potter is poorly written and he gets defeated because of a technicality of rules. Such good writing right? When evil just defeats itself.

    • @SilverionX
      @SilverionX Рік тому +84

      @@chill-lady-brook You'll find whatever you're looking for.

    • @Omegafire17
      @Omegafire17 Рік тому +87

      @@chill-lady-brook I mean, sometimes it does. Whenever someone evil thinks they've won, that they're good, they can make mistakes that lead to their downfall (just as good can become too complacent, and thus make mistakes that leads to their downfall)
      ^It may not always happen, but it's common enough that it's hardly "bad writing" on principle imo. Just depends upon the usage and execution, as does all tools/aspects of writing

  • @oracleofdelfi
    @oracleofdelfi 10 місяців тому +1527

    The thing that most annoyed me about Movie vs Book Voldy was that in the movie, he died in this weird Infinity War kinda way, turning to dust and crumbling. But in the book, he died just like any other human. He fell down and was just a lifeless body. Despite everything he killed for and preached, his death was no different than the ones he caused. It showed just how mortal he really was.

    • @Nope2022HugeTheWarningFan
      @Nope2022HugeTheWarningFan 9 місяців тому +157

      I also prefer the book ending. All the grandiose narcissism is basically laid to waste in a body rather than a separation of his physical self. He wasn't that special after all.

    • @khadijahasani7473
      @khadijahasani7473 9 місяців тому +82

      Yeah I 100% agree with you and find it weird. Like Voldemort literally spent all his life trying to be different, powerful But i the books, he ended up dying like any other person, like any other pureblood, half-blood, or muggle.

    • @Toonwalla2010
      @Toonwalla2010 9 місяців тому +95

      Yeah his book death was perfect karma for him because not only did he just drop dead on the floor just like any other human being, he died when he was only in his 70s. In the books a lot of wizards tend to live longer than average muggle because of using magic. But for all his horcruxes and sacrifices Voldemort only ended up living the same amount of time as the average muggle.

    • @dr.shivago2404
      @dr.shivago2404 9 місяців тому +58

      I partially agree and I agree with the argument specifically. However, I also like the idea that the reason movie Voldemort crumbles like that is because beyond the horcruxes and the magic, there’s nothing human left to him. He gave up his humanity and his very soul in the pursuit of power, therefore without that power, only dust remains

    • @Irish__Clan
      @Irish__Clan 9 місяців тому +7

      Lazy directing.

  • @superfanmusicmaker
    @superfanmusicmaker Рік тому +1292

    3:42 - In the book, Tom actually says he makes bad things happen to people who _annoy_ him, not people who are mean to him.
    It may not seem like a major change at face value, and it wasn't until I saw MovieFlame's analysis when I realised it was even changed in the first place. But this one little line completely changes the kind of kid Tom Riddle was, and not really for the better.
    Saying that they're mean to him implies that Tom was bullied as a child and makes him seem sympathetic. Saying he does it to people who annoy him implies that Tom _was_ the bully.

    • @justalpha9138
      @justalpha9138 Рік тому +61

      I'm happy you said this because I also made a similar comment. XD

    • @raenkord7881
      @raenkord7881 Рік тому +107

      It wasn’t even implied. The words “bad evil child” written on a sheet of paper, glued to a hammer, and beaten into your skull. And this breakdown misses the entire scariest part of him. His self lotion over his heritage. As soon as he found out he had magic, and as soon as he found out his father was non magic, he buried that past. Framed himself as being pure and perfect and pristine, while persecuting anyone who was not, and it was all from a place of deep self loathing.

    • @sonjaimmonen6610
      @sonjaimmonen6610 Рік тому +64

      That could still be manipulation on Tom's part in the movie. It sounds better to imply it was self-defence. It doesn't mean he wasn't a bully and hurt those who annoyed him. He just said it in a way that would make him look better in front of this strange professor.

    • @beast6213
      @beast6213 Рік тому +52

      Saying they "annoyed" him also contributes to the fear and instability because then you don't know what's going to set him off or how he'll react so it forces others, if they can't avoid him, to walk on eggshells around him all the time. Either way making it completely about himself

    • @He-Man00
      @He-Man00 Рік тому +24

      ​@@sonjaimmonen6610Yeah in the movie I took it as him being smart to not imply that he actually hurts innocent kids. I think the movie made it pretty clear that Tom was an evil child

  • @jenniferkerner6444
    @jenniferkerner6444 Рік тому +972

    Jono, I've gained many respect points for you today for the same reason I gained respect points for my primary care doctor a couple years ago. When I started experiencing some weird health issues and went to my primary about it, that appointment ended with him saying "I don't see an obvious reason for your symptoms, so I'm setting you up with this specialist I trust." The fact that he said that, instead of saying "I don't see a reason, so your symptoms are stress/weight/pretend," let me know that he BELIEVED me - he treated my issue as real and as deserving of real treatment, even if that treatment had to come from a different doctor and even if he had to say the sentence "I don't know" out loud. Putting the health, needs, and well-being of the client/patient above your own professional pride = all the respect.

    • @kingblanketfort
      @kingblanketfort 11 місяців тому +37

      I had a therapist completely give up on me, telling me to, and I quote: "get out. Leave. Now."
      I never heard another word from them again.
      It didn't help that before all of this went down, they straight up told me, "You're fucked up."
      It's made me begin to lose faith in not only therapy, but also myself. And I'm still left suffering without answers. I don't like myself, I can't find a reason to.
      So every day I am forced to live with and take care of a person I don't even like, just because I have no real choice. I would let myself just wither and die but there is only one person I care about, and they are the only thread keeping me here.
      And I can't even tell them, because I don't want them to have that weight of responsibility. I don't want them to feel obligated to stick around out of sheer guilt.

    • @jenniferkerner6444
      @jenniferkerner6444 11 місяців тому +42

      @@kingblanketfort that's awful, I'm sorry you were mistreated in that way. It's no wonder you're not keen on trusting therapy. What they said to you was cruel, and more than that, it was just wrong. Like, factually incorrect. All I know about you is that you are a person who took the difficult step of asking for help, and just from that one fact, I feel confident saying that you are not "f'd up" - you are courageous and deserving of the help you asked for. (Also I love your username because blanket forts are a valid coping skill for all ages, but that's beside the point)

    • @cristyablad
      @cristyablad 11 місяців тому +19

      I, too, had major respect for my doctor when he told me, 'at this point I don't know -- let's find you someone who does.' That is WAY BETTER than letting their pride take over and just guessing, or pushing unnecessary pills on you, or acting like you're not really that bad off or you're pretending etc.
      Also sorry that people haven't had that experience and good doctors/health workers. They are out there, and so are the bad ones. Keep trying.

    • @RhamanaChan
      @RhamanaChan 11 місяців тому +22

      Yes! My doctor sent me to a ENT specialist when I was having balance issues, and after some time that doctor sent me for an MRI which found that I have MS. Medical professionals working as a team is how it should always work.

    • @jenniferkerner6444
      @jenniferkerner6444 11 місяців тому +13

      @@RhamanaChan I hope your doctors have continued being a team and finding ways to help you manage your MS! Good on them for doing right by you.

  • @truthhertz10
    @truthhertz10 11 місяців тому +482

    I really respect the therapist saying "I'd refer", that shows an integrity to the field and a humbleness that is so rare nowadays.

    • @insyteCounseling
      @insyteCounseling 10 місяців тому +11

      Completely agree.

    • @paulcrenshaw812
      @paulcrenshaw812 9 місяців тому +4

      TBH, this part was a bit frustrating to me. Many therapists don't have enough training on differentiating ASPD from other common disorders or circumstances (such as Autism Spectrum Disorder, less severe personality disorders, or social manifestations of severe trauma). It's sometimes gotten completely wrong and a person who could benefit from talk-based therapy is left without help. There's a difference between referring to get someone out of your office and referring to help someone. Clients can and do notice the first. And that's a massively damaging experience (see: looking-glass self theory). Doing a knee-jerk referral, if it looks like lack of empathy, is not uncommon with some therapists. To me, this is missed opportunity to support someone who desperately needs it (mostly outside of ASPD, but also sometimes in early intervention for conduct disorders).
      Making an effort to go through the diagnostic checks (FULLY) and finding someone with specialty and success in this area, while making a logical and strategic plea to the client that they should remain in therapy because it can actually help them... It's all necessary. On first reaction, the blanket "I'd refer" seemed to skip over much of that.

    • @camv3236
      @camv3236 3 місяці тому +3

      There’s a difference too between refer and reject. I’ve had therapists, even those who DO claim to specialise in my issue, last two sessions with me and then tell me they can’t handle this. Which is annoying honestly. This is not a nice specialty - it’s totally foreseeable that these things would be involved. What a responsible therapist should do is what I’m assuming Jonathan means here - if someone’s issues aren’t in your area or they are too severe a case for you, referring them means helping them find someone who CAN deal with them, either through the therapist’s own network or assisting the patient to find someone else. But all I’ve ever got is “sorry this is too severe for me, goodbye.” So, you admit someone’s problems are too much for you, then expect them to cope when you drop them without any support at all. Brilliant.

    • @truthhertz10
      @truthhertz10 3 місяці тому

      @@camv3236 woaw I'm so sorry to hear that, that makes a lot of sense honestly, if I'm referring someone I would do my best to send them to someone who can actually help, if they couldn't I'd have to do my best until I find someone who can, obviously I'm not a doctor but that's how I'd look at it.
      I really do hope you find the help you need.

  • @epycs93
    @epycs93 Рік тому +5617

    I like the theory, that Voldemort can't feel emotions like love or empathy, because he was conceived while his father was under a lovepotion.

    • @CinemaTherapyShow
      @CinemaTherapyShow  Рік тому +1251

      Yes!

    • @Harmonious028
      @Harmonious028 Рік тому +268

      No way really??

    • @BatAmerica
      @BatAmerica Рік тому +387

      It would make his hug with Draco much more heartbreaking.

    • @dawnmcauley6411
      @dawnmcauley6411 Рік тому +652

      @@Harmonious028 If I'm not mistaken, it's Dumbledore's own theory in the books and while it's never ultimately revealed that's the case, it's Dumbledore who is wrong maybe twice in the entire series.

    • @eddiecactus1085
      @eddiecactus1085 Рік тому +797

      ⁠@@Harmonious028No, this isn’t canon at all. The main source is an old interaction with a fan on an online blog:
      Fan: “How much does the fact that Voldemort was conceived under a Love Potion have to do with his nonability to understand love, is it more symbolic?”
      J.K. Rowling: “It was a symbolic way of showing that he came from a loveless union - but of course, everything would have changed if Merope had survived and raised him herself and loved him.
      The enchantment under which Tom Riddle fathered Voldemort is important because it shows coercion, and there can’t be many more prejudicial ways to enter the world than as the result of such a union.”
      People are taking this way too literally imo. The potion didn’t somehow make Voldemort incapable of love, rather the circumstances of Voldemort’s childhood (growing up without any experience with real love) led Voldemort to consider love unimportant.
      Choices are a really big theme in HP (Harry and the Sorting Hat, Voldemort choosing Harry over Neville, Sirius’ speech to Harry) and it’s discussed dozens of times that choices define who someone is. Harry in the books even gives Voldemort a chance at remorse, which Voldemort rejects. It would go against this entire theme to pin the blame for Voldemort’s inability to love or empathise on some side effect of a potion rather than his personal choices. It also ruins the parallels between Voldemort and Harry, because their similar upbringings yet different choices become obsolete if one is just magically hardwired to never choose love or empathy.
      This potion theory has horrible implications for children born from sexual assault. It also brings Voldemort closer to a pure evil villain, which cheapens his character and the overall story quite a bit.
      As far as I can tell, this is the closest JK has ever come to confirming the potion theory (which is to say, she didn’t confirm it at all), so unless she’s said something recently the theory is (thankfully imo) nonsense.

  • @flyingbeagleee25
    @flyingbeagleee25 Рік тому +756

    Ralph Fiennes performance as Lord Voldy is just something else, HE WAS HIM

  • @MrNicoJac
    @MrNicoJac 11 місяців тому +255

    12:52 actually, it makes _total sense_ why Tom is monologuing here.
    In the books, he's very clearly stalling for time, for Ginny to fully die and him to fully live.

    • @Lwkboy
      @Lwkboy Місяць тому +5

      Exactly and he didnt hit snape with the killing curse because he was afraid it would rebound on him due to him thinking snape was the true “Master” just like how it rebounded on him when he did it to harry

    • @xyincognito
      @xyincognito День тому

      @@Lwkboy Interesting thought, I just thought it was a writing trick so that Snape has enough time to give Harry the information we needed. Otherweise there wouldnt have been time. Because he should have directly killed Snape, as - technically- otherwise Nagini might then become the true next master and not VOldy.

  • @tlotlomolefe4057
    @tlotlomolefe4057 Рік тому +613

    Voldemort putting a curse on the position of Defense against the Dark Arts so no one lasts more that a year on it simply because Dumbledore wouldn't hire him is the most hilariously savage thing he ever did.

    • @kyuubinaruto17
      @kyuubinaruto17 Рік тому +49

      Which kinda makes no sense in the grand scheme of things. If he can curse a teaching position, why only that one?(I know it's specifically the one he applied for, but other positions can teach powerful magic too.) Why not curse other abstract concepts like Ministry of Magic positions? There's so many potential game-breaking things he can do and he only does this once because he was slighted.
      If he can curse his name in the final book so that it removes all protective enchantments and summons people right to your location why not make it deadly? He'd be rid of Dumbledore and Harry easily, since they're two of the few people brave enough to say his name. Not even his own followers are brave enough to say it. Another abstract ability that could have powerful uses and only gets used for capturing resistance members.

    • @KxNOxUTA
      @KxNOxUTA 11 місяців тому +34

      @@kyuubinaruto17 He did not cause at the time he cursed the position he was still young and it may not even have been a conscious type of curse to start with.
      Making it deadly defies his pride. He is not interested in "easy". He was interested in a) winning them for his team and b) getting rid of them in a way that would bring glory to him and very clearly display to everyone else, that he is worth of worship. He's very capable of ruling by cruelty alone, but he does not, because he understands how much easier it is to control people on a large scale by establishing that he is "just" and so powerful that he does not require to hide behind cheap tricks when facing the opponents he deems worthy. Which is why he keeps insisting that Harry is brought to him, not killed by Deatheaters. While Dumbledore's sickly condition + Voldemort's persistent, childhood related fear of him, leads to that task being left to handle by his "tools". Yet, even there, he insists on making it an impressive stage, to show everyone how noone will be save anywhere.
      plus, do you really want your enemy summoned to you at any time they say your name, when you aren't certain you'll be able to kill them and if enough ppl will be watching? XD You might be on the toilet (assuming he still does that LOL)

    • @thacobell4700
      @thacobell4700 11 місяців тому +22

      @@kyuubinaruto17 Its because Rowling isn't a very good author 😆

    • @adde9506
      @adde9506 11 місяців тому +8

      Honestly, once that was confirmed instead of being some sort of self-fulfilling superstition, I hated it. If he could do that, why not curse the Minister of Magic's position? Voldemort isn't as smart as he thinks he is, but he's not stupid. If you want to sew fear and anarchy, destabilizing the government is a good place to start.

    • @williamozier918
      @williamozier918 11 місяців тому +15

      I always took this as more strategic from him than (just) out of spite. He was making sure that no one in the future would be properly trained to defend themselves against him.

  • @BasicallyBaconSandvichIV
    @BasicallyBaconSandvichIV Рік тому +1298

    What I love about this channel is that you guys take the time to point out that nobody is intrinsically evil. And just because someone has a diagnosis doesn't mean they are going to be evil, good or less of a person. I think that's really important to mention. So thank you.

    • @Elven.
      @Elven. Рік тому +17

      avoid narcissists always, avoid them

    • @BasicallyBaconSandvichIV
      @BasicallyBaconSandvichIV Рік тому +17

      ​@@Elven. Sounds like sound advice. I was at ~2 minutes in though, so I didn't know what the diagnosis would be.
      Edit: Edit was a spelling mistake.
      Also the thing about the intrinsically evil still stands. Probably not good to be around them, but that doesn't mean they are intrinsically evil.

    • @BasicallyBaconSandvichIV
      @BasicallyBaconSandvichIV 11 місяців тому +1

      ​@@dcworld4349 So the advice is very sound. I honestly think it is best to stay away from these people. But I can't condemn a whole group of people who got a diagnosis to intrinsically evil even if most of, if not all, the people diagnosed with it are bad to be around. There may be a person who has learned to live their life in a way which isn't harmful to others (Not that I'm saying it's likely, but it is a non-zero chance.), or someone who got the wrong diagnosis (Probably still someone who could/would do harm, but like earlier, non-zero chance they also won't. Though if they did get the wrong diagnosis, it probably was for a reason.), or something else.
      But I can't in good conscience say that anyone is intrinsically evil. Because even just calling someone evil denies that person the help and growth they need. It also dehumanises people. And while people with a diagnosis (Not specifically psychopathy or narcissism or anything else, just a diagnosis. Because my original comment was made without the knowledge of what the diagnosis would be.) have problems, they aren't any less human due to it. If we make the precedent of saying these people are intrinsically evil, we open the pathways to saying that ANYONE who is different from the norm is evil and not a human. It has been done before, and I really don't want it happening again.
      So, in summary:
      Are narcissists and people with antisocial personality disorder good to be around? No. Probably not. In most cases I, as a very much not expert, would advise caution.
      But are they intrinsically evil? No. Probably not. Because I don't think anyone really is. And I don't think we should call most actual people evil. We can call fictional characters evil, because they are fictional. Often they are made to be evil. Like they said, these characters can help recognise bad things. But the characters in fiction aren't human. Not really. At least not at the same level.
      So when do we use the term evil to describe someone? We take away part of their humanity. For people who do empathise it is the calling card to stop empathising. And while you probably shouldn't empathise too much with the person who is currently ruining your life, or stealing from you, that I agree with. If we stop empathising with entire groups of people based on their diagnosis we are practising very dangerous actions. Because dehumanise one group of people with a diagnosis and it makes it easier to dehumanise another, and another, and another. And suddenly decades of progress with understanding and humanising people who are different (Because honestly some diagnoses simply boil down to: This person is different. They can't do task X as well as what is expected.) is all down the drain. I don't want to be treated like I'm broken (Or at least, I wouldn't if I had a diagnosis. Not that I have one, future Palpatine-esque government/Umbridge-like future employer.).
      If we are not careful to treat everyone with some basic human empathy and see them as human beings. We will lose EVERYTHING.
      Something I'm very wary and concerned about.
      I hope this is clear. Please ask if I wasn't and you have questions.

    • @macmcleod1188
      @macmcleod1188 11 місяців тому +4

      From experience, I've known one person who was just evil. Always. As a child, as a teen, as an adult.
      He's in prison now. If there was a way to save him, I can't imagine what it was. I believe some people are just wired to violence, lack empathy and enjoy cruelty. Just like some animals (including dolphins) enjoy killing other animals in cruel playful ways.

    • @williamfinch9858
      @williamfinch9858 11 місяців тому +6

      Considering that you think it's probably not good to be around them just because of their diagnosis, people are going to believe that you think they're "prone to being evil" which isn't that different from thinking they're "intrinsically evil". @@BasicallyBaconSandvichIV

  • @gatorboymike
    @gatorboymike 11 місяців тому +746

    Speaking of psychopaths, I thought it was interesting how Movie Slughorn is clearly creeped out by teenage Voldemort and gives him information about Horcruxes seemingly out of terror, whereas Book Slughorn seems quite pleased and unperturbed to explain it.

    • @LeahWalentosky
      @LeahWalentosky 10 місяців тому +120

      That could also be memory manipulation. When we focus on our memory and what ifs they change the truth. He could have been impress but dwelling on it changed to being creeped out

    • @isabelmcgaugh711
      @isabelmcgaugh711 10 місяців тому +84

      @@LeahWalentosky That makes a ton of sense to me. we know slughorn tried desperately to avoid recalling this memory at all due to his immense guilt, to the point he was doing damn near everything to dodge dumbledoor even after Voldemort was back. Editing it when he can no longer avoid handing it over, and in a way to give himself more credit for realizing the severity of the situation at the time, seems incredibly in character for him.

    • @tfly999
      @tfly999 8 місяців тому +46

      In the books, Horace Slughorn was almost certainly creeped out, at one point refusing to talk about it any further (though the harm was already done) when then-teen-Tom mentioned making SEVEN Horcruxes... but at first yes, he was fine when Riddle was treating it like a hypothetical.
      The flashbacks should've been handled better, they should've been the focal point of the movie; all of "Half-Blood Prince" was a look into what made Voldemort before the final book and final battle against him.

    • @smitefulaxe1344
      @smitefulaxe1344 8 місяців тому +72

      @@tfly999 To be fair, it's almost the equivalent of a student asking you "How do they make atomic bombs?"and you give a brief answer to reward their interest in advanced chemistry, but then they say "And where would I find those materials?" and you know they're no longer being theoretical...

    • @TheVermilliaFamily
      @TheVermilliaFamily 6 місяців тому +10

      @@smitefulaxe1344You totally got it!

  • @colleenmueller7556
    @colleenmueller7556 11 місяців тому +803

    Dumbledore once told Harry, "Lord Voldemort has never had a friend. Nor do I believe has he ever wanted one."
    Also, I would love to see villain therapy on Palpatine and Umbridge.

    • @Selly_2007
      @Selly_2007 11 місяців тому +59

      I second the Umbridge therapy! That would be a VERY interesting video...

    • @Howlflame
      @Howlflame 11 місяців тому +46

      Umbridge, definitely! I have never wanted to personally throttle a character quite like her!

    • @DianeKang
      @DianeKang 11 місяців тому +25

      ​@@HowlflameShe is the pinnacle of lawful evil...which makes her so terrifying

    • @pauli7051
      @pauli7051 11 місяців тому +5

      There is a video called Harry Potter vs bullies and it includes Umbridge

    • @tenellefrankland9532
      @tenellefrankland9532 11 місяців тому

      I agree.

  • @raigrant680
    @raigrant680 11 місяців тому +863

    As someone who has struggled with my mental health for forty years plus, I hold by the saying "mental illness is a reason, not an excuse".

    • @missnaomi613
      @missnaomi613 11 місяців тому +19

      Amen!

    • @lizlishman2820
      @lizlishman2820 11 місяців тому +8

      I'd like to see a Palatine episode

    • @klaratehcoolcat
      @klaratehcoolcat 11 місяців тому +41

      Similar gist, but I've always gone by "trauma/mental health issues/etc are NOT your fault. But they are your responsibility."

    • @colt1903
      @colt1903 11 місяців тому +1

      What about DID or whatever it's called where you pretty much have multiple personalities, and one of them is just an absolute ass? How does that get dealt with under that philosophy? They kill someone, you get arrested, and then say "they did it".
      Like, how does that work, just in general? Because if you send the guy to jail you're technically sending MULTIPLE PEOPLE to jail... Most of which are innocent. So how does that get sorted out?

    • @ryannvolner2089
      @ryannvolner2089 11 місяців тому +13

      ​@colt1903 hi OSDD 1-B system here, with 3 "problematic alters". Someone with sociopathic tendencies, someone that has homicidal urges, and a narcissist. We tend to operate by the rule of the host is responsible for the actions of the system. Not sure if other systems do though.

  • @fallonfireblade4404
    @fallonfireblade4404 11 місяців тому +320

    Alan Rickman's acting the moment Snape saw Charity Burbage floating there was excellent. You could see him a little bit frozen, trying to mask his concern as indifference or being mildly surprised

    • @cathyl7944
      @cathyl7944 3 місяці тому

      Burbage, but yes

    • @fallonfireblade4404
      @fallonfireblade4404 3 місяці тому

      @@cathyl7944 Oop, I'll fix the spelling on that

    • @noorbohamad5796
      @noorbohamad5796 3 місяці тому

      @@fallonfireblade4404so you’re saying he’s basically trying to pretend that he’s surprised?or maybe that he’s NOT surprised or what?

    • @fallonfireblade4404
      @fallonfireblade4404 3 місяці тому +2

      @@noorbohamad5796 Basically he's trying to show an attitude of "Oh, the dark lord's got Charity Burbage. Okay." So he's trying to show indifference, when in reality he's alarmed and concerned about her

  • @ShikisStupidComics
    @ShikisStupidComics Рік тому +2061

    "Even Umbridge has a Patronus cause she takes pleasure in beinga B-Witch... A Witch." I laughed so hard 😂

    • @wolfishpotato6978
      @wolfishpotato6978 Рік тому +28

      Same lol

    • @Hawner
      @Hawner Рік тому +33

      That was a very good save. XD

    • @daniellemusella1594
      @daniellemusella1594 11 місяців тому +14

      @@Hawner It was also a pretty cool girl-band, when I was a child. Every once in a while, I still hum their most famous song, "C'est La Vie", though I'm now old enough to recognize the thinly-veiled dirtiness in it. (1/28/2023)

    • @Verdha603
      @Verdha603 11 місяців тому +74

      Now I'm just hoping Cinema Therapy does a video covering Umbridge; even if she was a minor antagonist she just came off as so much more villainous sometimes because it was the kind of evil I'm sure most people had to deal with at some point in their childhood, if not in adulthood.

    • @daniellemusella1594
      @daniellemusella1594 11 місяців тому +33

      @@Verdha603 On the DVD for "Deathly Hallows: Part 2", there is a featurette called "The Women Of Harry Potter", which profiles the prominent female characters of the series. In this, one commentator describes Umbridge as, quote, "-- self-righteousness that covers self-interest...as sadistic as Bellatrix, but it's all justified, because, 'I work for the Ministry.'" Another person says, "On the surface, she's all fluffiness, and pinkness, and niceness. But on the inside, she's pure evil." (11/28/2023)

  • @ander2317
    @ander2317 11 місяців тому +1635

    Little bit of lore for you two; Voldemorts soul is so mutilated by his horcruxes, he actually immune to the dementors. They are not attracted to him because he has no soul or happy feelings for them to feed off of. There’s a good chance him casting a Patronus would actually kill him…again. He’d suffer the same fate as the original dark wizard who created the first Horcrux. It did not end well for him when he tried. Sorry if I ruined you dreams of a 1v1 with Voldy and the Dementors 😅

    • @i_Hate_All_of_You420
      @i_Hate_All_of_You420 11 місяців тому +100

      Nah just made me happy imagining voldy self imploding like credence

    • @Scrofar
      @Scrofar 11 місяців тому +162

      Voldy and the Dementors is one heck of a band name

    • @McKay2
      @McKay2 11 місяців тому +69

      I seem to recall Rowling saying that Snape was the only one of the Death Eaters who could cast a Patronus. Can’t remember for sure, though…

    • @demonzabrak
      @demonzabrak 11 місяців тому +42

      Not the point of your post, but dementors definitely don't eat happy memories, they eat negative ones, that's why they amplify negative memories and are defeated by a spell powered with happy memories. If JK said they eat happy ones in some interview years later or in some supplemental writing, she forgot what she wrote in book 3 and made some stupid shit up. Which is on brand.

    • @GubbiGap
      @GubbiGap 11 місяців тому +65

      @@demonzabrak I thought they ate the happy ones and left people feeling horrible because of the lack of happiness in them hence why people see their worst memories in the process and then you defeat them by highlighting the happiness within you

  • @kikishiba
    @kikishiba 11 місяців тому +409

    Can you do a video on Draco pleeeeeease? Maybe like generational trauma and how parents/guardians can influence your beliefs/actions? He’s such an interesting character and I would love to hear your take on him!

    • @vjmcdonn
      @vjmcdonn 10 місяців тому +6

      Yesss!! That would be awesome!!

    • @bramijdema759
      @bramijdema759 10 місяців тому +30

      I don’t think the book version of Draco is all that interesting. He’s simply a brat who tries to imitate his dad. The movies added some abuse to make Draco more sympathetic, charming and redeemable. Lucius would be more interesting, as he’s a very bad person, but a loving father and husband at the same time.

    • @kikishiba
      @kikishiba 10 місяців тому +8

      @@bramijdema759 what about both :0 the Malfoy family?

    • @bramijdema759
      @bramijdema759 10 місяців тому +5

      @@kikishiba That would be interesting

    • @allinix7
      @allinix7 10 місяців тому +7

      What ? He is a boring character...

  • @busraterzi8189
    @busraterzi8189 Рік тому +328

    My heart warmed when I heard Jonathan say “That is not my area of expertise". There is so much self-awareness and wisdom in knowing what you don't know, in knowing your limits. Keep up the good work Cinema Therapy. We love you 😊

  • @gray7433
    @gray7433 11 місяців тому +680

    Voldemort: *fears death, seeks to become immortal*
    Also Voldemort: *dies at 72* -- while Dumbledore makes it to 115-150 easily

    • @nurglecultist2521
      @nurglecultist2521 11 місяців тому +32

      Actually, if Tom were more sneaky and don't teared his soul for 8 pieces (7 hocruxes and his own body has a part of his soul), but 2-3 instead, he would easily take power and do whatever he want. And became immortal dictator of magic society

    • @Nezumi99
      @Nezumi99 11 місяців тому +38

      He fears death, not because he is afraid of dying, but because it makes him same as everyone else. He never had anything when he grew up he wanted to feel like he is better than others

    • @lisboah
      @lisboah 11 місяців тому +64

      @@nurglecultist2521 No, the main problem is that he chose to put fragments of his soul into famous objects. He could have literally picked anything, but instead he chose to put into objects that were either connected to him (his mother's ring, his diary, Nagini) or that were famous (Slytherin's Locket, Hufflepup's Cup, Ravenclaw's Diadem).

    • @rowantic6539
      @rowantic6539 11 місяців тому +25

      Or a Nokia

    • @NotAlwaysBilly
      @NotAlwaysBilly 11 місяців тому +39

      ​@@lisboahso fucking true. He could've just split his soul into a bunch socks then bury them in some random location

  • @hollyhartwick3832
    @hollyhartwick3832 11 місяців тому +35

    That smile when young Tom saw the fire covering his wardrobe was genuinely unsettling. It was a creepy smile that wasn't a fascination with seeing magic. He was enjoying watching something burn.

  • @Rembreiker_lychec9257
    @Rembreiker_lychec9257 Рік тому +955

    For someone so obsessed with immortality, Voldemort lived a pretty average lifespan, only 71 years old. Turns out that him meddling with fate is what caused most of his downfall. Had he just lived a normal life, it is highly probable that with him being as magically gifted as he is, he probably would have lived 120-130 years.

    • @ultimatebishoujo29
      @ultimatebishoujo29 Рік тому +40

      That’s true

    • @Talon1124
      @Talon1124 Рік тому +153

      Those who fight against fate/destiny, often are the architects of their own downfall.

    • @Firegen1
      @Firegen1 Рік тому +113

      That might of been the biggest burn of all. "Bit average, Tom" 😅

    • @OctEddie
      @OctEddie Рік тому +42

      But he didn’t want to live to 120 where he didn’t have the control. He wanted total control and immortality.

    • @2xYuW
      @2xYuW Рік тому +49

      "One often meets his destiny on the road he takes to avoid it"

  • @iDunnoMan9000
    @iDunnoMan9000 11 місяців тому +411

    I love how Jonathan is basically like, "I treat people, and he ain't one".

    • @miriamrosemary9110
      @miriamrosemary9110 11 місяців тому +24

      Jonathan doesn't say Tom Riddle isn't a person, not at all, just that he would defer him to another therapist that would be better at treating him and at handling the struggles of having such a difficult patient.

    • @iDunnoMan9000
      @iDunnoMan9000 11 місяців тому +18

      ​@@miriamrosemary9110Yea, no I get that.
      I was referring to the "losing his humanity both figuratively and literally" kinda stuff.
      Voldemort shouldn't be considered human anymore. Jonathan even said to get rid of him lol

    • @miriamrosemary9110
      @miriamrosemary9110 11 місяців тому +7

      @@iDunnoMan9000 Good point lol. Thanks for clarifying :)

    • @iDunnoMan9000
      @iDunnoMan9000 11 місяців тому +7

      @@miriamrosemary9110Thanks. Like, I know we don't wanna look at anyone as "too far gone," especially from a therapist's point of view; but if there was ever a person who was too far gone, it's Voldemort lol.
      We love to hate him XD

  • @breebree8200
    @breebree8200 11 місяців тому +181

    One example of Tom being charming is him wooing Hepsibah Smith for a long time, basically doing a long con, bringing her flowers and being all charming before killing her, pinning the blame on her house elf and making off with Salazar Slytherin's locket (okay, so technically it was his birthright that Merope was swindled off for a ridiculously low reward) and Helga Hufflepuff's cup. And there's also the time where he killed his own *father* and *grandparents* and shifted the blame onto his *uncle*. But you have to read the books for those scenes. 😉

    • @skankhunt9078
      @skankhunt9078 5 місяців тому +1

      Yeah, in Canada we call a slow Cosby "love"

  • @nickpickety8303
    @nickpickety8303 11 місяців тому +291

    My friend’s boyfriend is a diagnosed sociopath. They found out because he kept pushing for her to get treatment for her own mental health and attended her therapy appointments. It’s fascinating listening to his logic about himself and their relationship. He firmly believes that the only way she will chose to be with him is if she is safe mentally and at home, so he goes out of his way to make a pretty healthy environment for them. He doesn’t believe morals are needed, just that he wants her in his life and that maintaining an environment she thrives in is the best way to ensure she stays. He’s kinda creepy and I know that there are risks, but all in all, he gets treatment for himself, encourages her to get treatment, and they seem pretty good together.
    I wonder how many people have undiagnosed anti-social personality disorder and live “normal” lives like he does

    • @s70driver2005
      @s70driver2005 11 місяців тому +32

      That's just.... sorry for my word choice, but crazy

    • @vtetrooo1312
      @vtetrooo1312 11 місяців тому +6

      That’s because you need her for something that you don’t see… I would never stay because you never know when he’ll use it against you. And mostly, he doesn’t feel love so…

    • @elyalvarz
      @elyalvarz 11 місяців тому +56

      That's really interesting. What is love but wanting someone to thrive and feel safe? Huh.

    • @s70driver2005
      @s70driver2005 11 місяців тому +38

      @@elyalvarz I think it depends on the motivations behind it. Wanting the best for them because it's what they deserve is different than you want them to rely on you for it.

    • @elyalvarz
      @elyalvarz 11 місяців тому +46

      @@s70driver2005 very true! Seems like a very fragile situation, and I wonder if he'd be able to let her go if she ever decided she's no longer happy with him.

  • @kathyastrom1315
    @kathyastrom1315 Рік тому +376

    One of the biggest failings of the HP film adaptations was in Half-Blood Prince, where Kloves cut out almost all of Tom Riddle's backstory. That was so important to not only understand Tom, but also to explain how he chose the Horcruxes. And, most importantly of all, it establishes the similarities between Tom and Harry and why that insight that Harry learns from Dumbledore’s private lessons was pivotal in his success in defeating Tom the following year.

    • @ultimatebishoujo29
      @ultimatebishoujo29 Рік тому +8

      I agree with you

    • @Harmonious028
      @Harmonious028 Рік тому +3

      What’s the backstory????

    • @ChristineTheHippie
      @ChristineTheHippie Рік тому +41

      ​@@Harmonious028Voldemort comes from a family of pure bloods that have become unstable and impoverished because of inbreeding to keep the blood "pure"

    • @dawnmcauley6411
      @dawnmcauley6411 Рік тому +41

      @@ChristineTheHippie In addition to his mother using a love potion on his father (a muggle, Tom Riddle Sr.) to conceive him. She stopped using the love potion after birth, his father left her and she committed suicide which is why Tom Jr. is at the orphanage (the muggle Riddles being some of Tom's first victims after school.)

    • @TheRibottoStudios
      @TheRibottoStudios Рік тому +35

      I hate it. I hate verything about that movie. That and five have the biggest failings. Five fails to showcase Harry's internal mental struggle, and completely omitted his breakdown in Dumbledore's office. Six just...fcks up everything. The Half Blood storyline, Voldemort's backstory, the felix felicis thing....ugh.

  • @MelancholicGiuseppe
    @MelancholicGiuseppe 11 місяців тому +93

    22:36 It's not that he didn't want to waste an avada kedravra. The reason Voldemort makes Nagini kill Snape is that he couldn't risk using his wand, the Elder wand, against who he believed to be its true owner.

    • @hederlisa
      @hederlisa 10 місяців тому +6

      the wand refuses to kill it's owner...

    • @Phoenixtear101
      @Phoenixtear101 4 місяці тому +2

      Too bad for him that it backfired on him in the end. 😂😂😂

    • @cali.cruzin
      @cali.cruzin 3 місяці тому +1

      This whole thing about "Nagini, kill," confused me anyway, because I thought, "Okay, even if it WERE that you had to kill the previous wand's owner to fully possess it...the snake was the one who did the killing?"

    • @MelancholicGiuseppe
      @MelancholicGiuseppe 3 місяці тому +2

      @@cali.cruzin Nagini has a special bond with Voldy. She is a Horcrux and he controls her somewhat. So you could just consider her one of Voldy's weapons

    • @cali.cruzin
      @cali.cruzin 3 місяці тому

      @@MelancholicGiuseppe True, I hadn’t considered the fact that she was a horcrux.

  • @maikenelissen3767
    @maikenelissen3767 11 місяців тому +275

    Alan saying "Lord Voldemort, I am" in a perfect Yoda voice had me in tears.

    • @CrabtasticCrabs
      @CrabtasticCrabs 4 дні тому

      More like… Lord Yodamort? Srry that was rlly bad.

  • @ximenaallessandrij.5972
    @ximenaallessandrij.5972 Рік тому +262

    I like that response from Jonathan of passing that kind of patient to someone else, it speaks to me how a well and caring therapist he is, is not about “I have to help him”, is the “if I can’t, I’ll leave him with someone I think can help him” and I respect that a lot ✨

    • @RPGLover87
      @RPGLover87 11 місяців тому +5

      Ironically that might also put Voldemort on a better path on it's own - he approaches things on a purely logical level, and Jono would be a person who'd see his bullshit and just go "I'm not letting you in at all, you have been a shit so you can go away from me." and that would be a concrete result of his negative actions - the fact that new people who haven't already met him do not want to have anything to do with him. He cannot get any new pawns as all his secrets are out.

  • @brianfoss571
    @brianfoss571 11 місяців тому +70

    The sound design from the Pensieve scene in 8:21 on is perfect. Just as Tom pauses after saying "as I understand it", we hear a fading scream (like the murder required to make a Horcrux). Then, when he says "Horcrux", we hear the high-pitched whistling, chirping motif that's used again and again in both Deathly Hallows movies. When Tom asks Slughorn about splitting the soul multiple times, the shot cleverly doesn't show Tom's face (since he's referring to the future unraveling of his humanity), instead showing the Slytherin serpent crest and subtly zooming in on the ring he's wearing (later revealed as the Resurrection Stone). The whistling, ticking sound returns, indicating that Tom already made it into a Horcrux and has in fact split his soul more than once. (The first time he did was murdering Myrtle Warren in his 5th year to turn his diary into a Horcrux). Tom really wanted information on what would happen if he split his soul into 7 pieces - that's what he "didn't fully understand" about Horcruxes. Slughorn's reaction confirmed to him that it was at least theoretically possible and so terrifying even a Potions master would be horrified by it. Fantastic performances by both Broadbent and Dillane - sad that Frank didn't land a better horror role than the lead in "Astral."

  • @danielallen3454
    @danielallen3454 Рік тому +218

    I'm glad you mentioned Lucius in his scene. You look at what Voldemort does. He takes a man we've only ever seen as a cold, collected pillar, and he turns him into a cringing, unshaven, fool who can only cut and run when his master faces defeat.

    • @daniellemusella1594
      @daniellemusella1594 11 місяців тому +11

      @danielallen When questioned about that scene in an interview, Jason Isaacs said it showed Lucius being, quote "emasculated". (11/28/2023)

    • @danielallen3454
      @danielallen3454 11 місяців тому +7

      @@daniellemusella1594 My wife and I had similar thoughts. Given the nature of wands and the (honestly) rather phallic shape of them.

    • @samalight7249
      @samalight7249 11 місяців тому +2

      the poor boy was so scared of doing that scene when he did the hug

    • @daniellemusella1594
      @daniellemusella1594 11 місяців тому +7

      @@samalight7249 If I remember correctly, Tom Felton said he had no idea Ralph was going to do that, when they shot the scene. There's still a hint of threat, which is demonstrated by how the wand is held against his back like a gun. (11/28/2023)

    • @c.k.mcknight8921
      @c.k.mcknight8921 11 місяців тому +9

      I always saw this as one of the actions Voldemort took that turned Narcissa against him. It started when he gave her son the mission to kill Dumbledore, a mission that would have gotten Draco seriously hurt or worse had Dumbledore and Snape not stepped in to keep an eye on him, and of course, culminated in that awesome moment where she lied to Voldemort and told him Harry was dead.

  • @Madenoak
    @Madenoak Рік тому +189

    3:40, the line was actually changed in the movies for some reason.
    In the book tom states:
    "I can make bad things happen to people who annoy me."
    The line changes the context because he was never the bullied in the books he was constantly using his powers to bully others. Especially when the head caretaker hinted, he used his powers to hang one of the other kids' bunnies.

    • @TheRibottoStudios
      @TheRibottoStudios Рік тому +19

      God I hate HBP soooooooo much. Not going deep enough into Tom's backstory, fumbling with the Snape reveal....god it just pisses me off as an adaptation lol.
      It DID give us book harry though for like one scene with the spider funeral though so there is that at least.

    • @tigerunicornpegases
      @tigerunicornpegases Рік тому +2

      @@TheRibottoStudioswaiiiit how was the reveal on the books?? With Snape being hbp like it felt a bit lackluster in the movies watching it over but was there more plot?

    • @Szokynyovics
      @Szokynyovics Рік тому

      ​@@tigerunicornpegasesnah, it was lackluster in the book too, like okay, who cared about that...

    • @tigerunicornpegases
      @tigerunicornpegases Рік тому +1

      @@Szokynyovics oh damn lmaoooo I sworeeeee it was gonna be Voldemort first time I watched it that would’ve been WAY BETTER

    • @adde9506
      @adde9506 11 місяців тому +1

      @@tigerunicornpegases The books are each better than the corresponding movie. If you haven't read them, you should.

  • @Jemini4228
    @Jemini4228 11 місяців тому +111

    I think the "bury your dead with dignity" thing in the 'stay of annihilation' speech in Deathly Hallows pt II may also reveal a touch of emotional sadism on Voldemort's part. He wants to give the people he's fighting chance to feel their grief and he wants to see them doing it. I think it is also to make his opponents more likely to believe that he will hold up his end of any bargin they strike with him by making him appear to have decency and some honor code.

    • @aubreycarter7624
      @aubreycarter7624 10 місяців тому +6

      That's a theory that I haven't heard before, but it totally makes sense!

    • @regina_m3358
      @regina_m3358 3 місяці тому

      He lies. After bloody scary Snape death his speech about some dignity to dead people it's manipulations only.

  • @codyedwards1788
    @codyedwards1788 Рік тому +134

    One thing that always creeped me out is in the scene with Slughorn, Voldemort is asking about the horcruxes and making multiples. In the shot, you can see he's holding the Gaunt family ring-which means by this conversation he's already killed Myrtle (For the diary) and the Riddles (For the ring). He knows exactly how the horcruxes are made, but he's posing a question solely to figure out how far he can go with their creation.

    • @JP-uf9sh
      @JP-uf9sh Рік тому +19

      In the books he hasn't jet killed at this point - The actor is sadly too young for this scene and it confused some people. In the books Tom was already 16 when Myrtle died but it makes sense to use the same child actor for both scenes simply because anything else would have been confusing. For the movie this scenes visuals with him twirling the ring was a genius way to foreshadow the core of what happened in the books and true to the rule "show don't tell".

    • @stephaniejane306
      @stephaniejane306 11 місяців тому +9

      I saw it more as he already has an idea of what the horcruxes will be. Like he knows the ring will be etc

    • @samstromberg5593
      @samstromberg5593 11 місяців тому

      Personally I thought they should’ve brought back the CoS actor but I guess he probably would’ve been too old at that point

    • @annalisageiger
      @annalisageiger 9 місяців тому

      ​@@JP-uf9sh the actor was 17 and 18 when it released. he was old enough???

  • @andrewtaylor6755
    @andrewtaylor6755 11 місяців тому +744

    Half Blood Prince is a flawed film adaptation because they made Tom Riddle way too creepy. CoS did it right where he's incredibly charismatic and handsome- this is why Dumbledore was fooled with regard to Tom; he assumed Tom wanted a second chance after their orphanage meeting and didn't question that until it was too late.

    • @akselandor8975
      @akselandor8975 11 місяців тому +101

      I'd say all of the movie adaptations after Chamber are like that. They ham it in too much, lose all fairytailish feel the first two movies had and display just plain weird acting/directing choices, like Dumbledore losing his shit on Harry for having his name in Goblet of Fire. Hate them.

    • @wawaristi
      @wawaristi 11 місяців тому +42

      ​@@akselandor8975i actually think 3rd movie is the better one amongst them, it definitely went downhill afterwards tho. the 4th movie was the worst!! they cut so many scenes and create so many unnecessary ones i hate it

    • @akselandor8975
      @akselandor8975 11 місяців тому +8

      @@wawaristi
      Gotcha. But I hate third one vehemetly.

    • @kx2174
      @kx2174 11 місяців тому +40

      @@wawaristi The 3rd movie has one major flaw that's very telling, werewolves are supposed to look like actual wolves in the HP universe. They even talk about it in class in the same movie! The only differences are slightly shorter muzzles, more human looking eyes, and tufted tales. (Plus the desire to kill humans of course). They weren't supposed to look like some bizarre alien CGI monster.
      They probably thought their CGI creature was more scary, but it makes no sense at all. Also a blood thirsty wolf is plenty scary.

    • @Larka661
      @Larka661 11 місяців тому +16

      ​​​@@kx2174 that was because the concept of a werewolf is a humanoid wolf. Plus the whole animegas thing would be confusing. I mean, what if your animrgas form was a wolf? Then what's the difference? A werewolf and an actual wolf are two different things. Lupin looked like a giant long starved dog. There's ledgends somewhere about a creature like that, but it's not called a werewolf.

  • @TO-hz9dr
    @TO-hz9dr 11 місяців тому +31

    Umbridge would be an amazing episode. She like Frollo is so utterly convinced of her own righteousness and is so real of a character you’d might actually meet.

  • @audreyglass3125
    @audreyglass3125 Рік тому +158

    I think Dumbledore thought that leaving Tom by himself to figure things out on his own would be more dangerous and that by bringing him to Hogwarts that he could keep an eye on him and teach him to be a better person. But you know, it obviously backfired.

    • @tiffanypersaud3518
      @tiffanypersaud3518 11 місяців тому +18

      I was thinking that too. Tom was not better off left to his own devices.

    • @cathygrandstaff1957
      @cathygrandstaff1957 11 місяців тому +13

      Also Fantastic Beasts indicated there are problems that an happen when untrained witches and wizards are left to their own devices so the practice of enrolling every magically gifted child into a wizarding school is probably as much for the benefit of the kids as it is for wider society.

    • @GoddoDoggo
      @GoddoDoggo 11 місяців тому +10

      I mean, idk, if he was left in the mental facility then at worst he might have burned it down or exploded or gone on a mini-killing spree, which sucks, absolutely, but isn't quite as damaging as becoming Wizard Hitler and doing a holocaust.

    • @crystalward1444
      @crystalward1444 11 місяців тому +2

      ​@@GoddoDoggoDumbledore feeling he could correct the mistakes he made with Grindelwald?

    • @map5490
      @map5490 5 місяців тому +1

      Tom Riddle's Hogwarts admission wasn't ever Dumbledore's decision. Armando Dippet was Headmaster at the time. Dumbledore was Deputy Headmaster, he was sent to inform Tom he was a wizard. Tom was raised in a muggle orphanage, he had no prior exposure to the Wizarding world.

  • @MystèreEtBoule2Gomme
    @MystèreEtBoule2Gomme Рік тому +187

    I think Voldemort was motivated solely by the hatred he had for his mother for abandoning him... He saw her as weak because she died... instead of being there for him. So he spent his entire life trying to be different from her, to prove to himself that he was not weak like her, that he wouldn’t just die. He doesn’t want to identify with her, because that would mean accepting her humanity. Accepting to let the hatred go.Facing whatever is beneath. Forgiving her. Accepting the pain of being abandoned, alone and unloved. I think that’s what he wants to avoid facing within himself... And he’ll burn the world to the ground if he must. Much like Hitler would do so, only to avoid facing his own inferiority complex... Much like a narcissist would create a little fantasy world out of their life, where everyone must play a part in their fiction and adore them and NEVER trigger them, because they essentially never want to face their own trauma...
    That’s my take on it.

    • @rociogallegossanchez
      @rociogallegossanchez 11 місяців тому +29

      To be honest, I don't know if Voldemort gives his mother enough importance to actually care so much about being different to her, or at least not on a consciously aware level. In the 6th book he tries to reconnect to his family roots because he thought they must've been very powerful people. The first thing he does is completely discard his mother because she must be a filthy muggle, too weak to even survive, and goes directly at idolising a fantastic ideal of his father who he thinks is a powerful wizard. When he discovers his roots and especially his mother's history, he is completely disgusted and hateful about it, and loses all interest in his family (even killing his uncle). While he did feel some hate towards his mother for being so weak and dying, he seemed to hate even more his father for being human and blind to his existence. Maybe Voldemort just wanted to find in his remaining relatives or family history some vestige of power he could use to his advantage

    • @celestinebuendia
      @celestinebuendia 11 місяців тому +23

      @@rociogallegossanchez I think what you said actually matches the original point here that Voldemort wanted so badly to be different from his mother who was ‘weak’ who ‘left him’. That’s why he abandoned her memory completely and latched on so hard to the fact that he was a wizard and that she couldn’t be a wizard because she was weak and died.

    • @celestinebuendia
      @celestinebuendia 11 місяців тому +6

      Oh my god, I LOVE this reading. It’s crazy I’ve never thought about this before.

    • @bunez69x
      @bunez69x 11 місяців тому +3

      Facts

    • @reginap.8571
      @reginap.8571 11 місяців тому +4

      I think Rowling even commented that Harry and Voldemort started in life very similarly and the main difference being, that Harry at early life got unconditional love from his parents and Voldemort didn't, giving early experiences as a child more meaning. Also, throughout all books it was highlighted that even in his similarities in starting life, the choices Harry makes has more meaning than the circumstances he has to endure being an orphan.

  • @ethanfrench9111
    @ethanfrench9111 11 місяців тому +201

    I know this is a little off topic, but how do we not have a villain therapy about Prince Zuko & Uncle Iroh on Pride V.S. Humility? Does anybody else want to see that? I know it might be a long, hard project for John and Alan but to see the payoff I think would be worth it. “Happy birthday, my son.” Changes so much about Iroh and you see he was in a similar place to his brother until his son changed his perspective on everything.

    • @chloeedmund4350
      @chloeedmund4350 11 місяців тому

      Yes!!!!

    • @mandywaynick8725
      @mandywaynick8725 11 місяців тому

      Absolutely!!!

    • @jacquelynworkman8516
      @jacquelynworkman8516 11 місяців тому +10

      lol it’s your lucky day! I just came from their new Prince Zuko episode

    • @ethanfrench9111
      @ethanfrench9111 11 місяців тому +6

      @@jacquelynworkman8516 wow, I guess they heard me. I’m going to watch it now!

    • @jacquelynworkman8516
      @jacquelynworkman8516 11 місяців тому

      @@ethanfrench9111 haha yeah, it’s a great video!!

  • @TraceyOwusu
    @TraceyOwusu Рік тому +69

    I love how the subtitles refer to him as "You Know Who"

    • @CinemaTherapyShow
      @CinemaTherapyShow  Рік тому +38

      Our caption writer, Anna, is the best!

    • @cellano5223
      @cellano5223 11 місяців тому +1

      Wait they do? That's awesome. Now I'm going to have to turn them on.

  • @Naafidy
    @Naafidy 11 місяців тому +177

    I heard someone say it this way, "there are two types of people who lack emapthy: those who don't know but are willing to learn, and those who know empathy and don't care."

    • @MrsRowse
      @MrsRowse 11 місяців тому +6

      Very interesting!!🤔

    • @azarishiba2559
      @azarishiba2559 11 місяців тому +8

      That's essentially having affecting empathy but no cognitive empathy (who don't know but are willing to learn) vrs having cognitive empathy but no affective empathy (who know empathy and don't care).

    • @ChristopherJames1993
      @ChristopherJames1993 11 місяців тому +4

      "Knowing empathy but not caring" is just apathy. Apathy is not caring about anything, including empathy. "Why should I care if nobody else cares about me".

    • @ellakramar1931
      @ellakramar1931 10 місяців тому

      True!

  • @alivia8123
    @alivia8123 9 місяців тому +35

    i interned at a male county jail during grad school for social work. most of the men i met were honestly so kind and just had made so many mistakes or had serious mental health concerns. but i will never forgot the two individuals i met that i could physically feel how off they were. in some way looking back both definitely had ASPD but both fit into both these categories like you mention of Voldemort embodying both sociopathic and psychopathic traits with both falling differently on which one more. they never attempted to frighten me, but my interaction with them i just won't ever forgot just how much a knot my stomach felt it was in, how cold i felt but also slightly clamy, and overall how much my body wanted me to escape the interactions. ill never forget them and how much i truly believe our body knows these personality disorders first before our brains register it.

  • @yulia_1
    @yulia_1 Рік тому +138

    I don't think Voldemort would need to protect himself from dementors, because they have no happiness for them to suck out of him.

    • @Persnikity-yv3nh
      @Persnikity-yv3nh 11 місяців тому +37

      That's such a clever take... and he only has a fraction of a soul left, so they might not be interested in him anyway

    • @thedeliveryboy1123
      @thedeliveryboy1123 11 місяців тому +16

      They'd probably try but then throw up afterwards

    • @samstromberg5593
      @samstromberg5593 11 місяців тому +3

      He does have a soul though, which means they could still perform the Kiss on him

  • @michaelgrey1503
    @michaelgrey1503 11 місяців тому +232

    I think the other reason Dumbledore brought Tom in was to keep an eye on him. He recognized the character traits in Tom. He wanted to help him be better, but he also wanted to keep an eye on someone who was going to figure out greater heights to their power anyway.

    • @marcpeterson1092
      @marcpeterson1092 11 місяців тому +44

      Also, an uncontrolled, undisciplined Riddle would also be a problem. The magic is in him, no matter what.

    • @Larka661
      @Larka661 11 місяців тому +14

      Dumbledore did say "did I know I had just met the most dark wizard of all time? No. If I had Id..." he never answered.

    • @Larka661
      @Larka661 11 місяців тому +9

      Well due to stuff Tom said to Dumbledore, thats probably why voldemort could never fool him. But if Tom was never admitted to hogwarts, how would he have turned out? Basically Riddle knew he could do stuff, but didn't fully understand how or why? I mean wizards go to school to learn how to control their abilities. What happens to an untrained wizard?

    • @carolbaker2773
      @carolbaker2773 11 місяців тому +11

      I also think it was because he recognized that Tom was just a child and deserved a chance. But Dumbledor was arrogant in thinking that he could fix him when he had zero qualifications and training to do so.

    • @Larka661
      @Larka661 11 місяців тому +18

      ​@carolbaker2773 well most people grow up, maybe Dumbledore figured Tom was in a phase or something. Plus by Wizarding law, he had to be taught how to control his powers. But the whole "I can talk to snakes" thing defiantly cought Dumbledore's attention. That's why Dumbledore knew Hagrid didn't open the chamber of secrets. But Dumbledore couldn't prove it at the time.

  • @DemonKing19951
    @DemonKing19951 10 місяців тому +31

    I will say, a show about a therapist who's dealing with the world's worst villains would actually be kind of great. Since I could imagine it being some spoof of DC or marvel where they're always throwing these villains in prisons. Who are they throwing them to? A specialist super hero who's like a sane dead pool and tries to help them find a way to be beneficial to society. Mostly just by surviving their onslaught and possibly breaking down their world views physically if they have to. (I love the trope where the more powerful you get the harder it is deal with emotional problems. How are you supposed to address the fact you need to forgive your father for dying when its so insignificant next to the ability destroy planets?)

  • @jocelynfisher3174
    @jocelynfisher3174 Рік тому +99

    What I have always appreciated about Harry Potter heroes, villains, etc. is that they mature with the reader. Voldemort starts all cartoony and obviously kid's story villain in the first book/movie. As the story progresses, Voldemort becomes more fleshed out (pun intended) and uanced because the reader can understand that since they are older.

    • @meganrogers3571
      @meganrogers3571 11 місяців тому +7

      Harry Potter is a very rare book series that starts as middle grade and ends as YA. It crosses genres as it goes. It does so organically and it makes sense, but it's a unicorn.

    • @hallaloth3112
      @hallaloth3112 11 місяців тому +6

      @@meganrogers3571 I feel like part of this is because of its serial natural. It literally written during a seven year 'school' period that would in correlation to us. . .be middle-school through highschool. Most children/YA series don't regularly take into account the passage of time. . .they just do broad time skips and say 'its been years' or 'a couple weeks passed' without really getting the how and why people change during that time frame.
      HP still has its flaws, don't get me wrong, But there are aspects to it structure that are great to this day.

    • @novastarburst3939
      @novastarburst3939 11 місяців тому +5

      It feels like we see them in the eyes of the main trio, themselves maturing, understanding the situation.

  • @feywanderer89
    @feywanderer89 Рік тому +58

    I posted a similar comment on your Jack Sparrow video, but please remember folks that there are people with anti social personality disorder who struggle every day to fit into society. I am one of those people. I have both psychopathic and sociopathic tendencies that I try very hard to keep under my control. And I echo our internet dads sentiment at the beginning. Mental disorder does not equal evil. Thank you.

    • @BrokensoulRider
      @BrokensoulRider Рік тому +9

      It's the choices of the people that make one good or evil, never the mental disorders, never the disabilities or being raised well.

    • @baileyjones7570
      @baileyjones7570 11 місяців тому +8

      And just like a lot of things on the DSM-5 the parameters are constantly changing or expanding or merging with other things, like autism research from the past decade. Stereotypes can be very harmful, especially in storytelling.

    • @samstromberg5593
      @samstromberg5593 11 місяців тому +1

      Well then I have a question that maybe you’re comfortable answering and maybe not and either way is fine but either way I’ll ask
      I’m always interested in hearing about how different people perceive the world differently and everybody I’ve ever talked to sees friendship a little differently than me - I’ve never been tested or diagnosed with APD or anything similar (though I have been diagnosed ADHD and suspected for Autism but never tested for it) but I have always thought it was interesting that I make connections differently than literally anyone I’ve ever known
      So for me, friendship is purely transactional - (using my best and just about only friend as an example) I make him happy and he makes me happy when we’re around each other so we might as well, right? In any given situation regarding him, I’m thinking about what’ll make him have the most fun because I owe him for lighting up my life
      Quick clarifying note: It’s mostly unconscious at this point - I don’t spend every minute we’re together thinking “what do I say to that that’ll make him happy??” but just when it comes to things like
      Am I going to tell him this thing that, if he knew, would make him sad, but if he found out I was hiding from him, he would feel betrayed? Am I gonna call him out on this thing he’s being stupid about? But not like day to day interactions
      Most people that I’ve talked to about it just say something about “he’s my friend” and then can’t reason anything beyond that and I just don’t understand that
      What’s your experience like?

    • @betts1658
      @betts1658 11 місяців тому

      @@samstromberg5593 not APD but diagnosed autistic. Sounds to me like, and I could be wrong hard to say from a singular comment, that you are doing the classic deconstructing a concept to the most core elements where it sounds clinical. You find happiness in his company and in turn you go out of your way to try to return the sentiment. You’ve not indicated you do it simply so you don’t lose your supply of happiness from him, but because you are trying to return the favour out of gratitude - that my friend is simply friendship in a nutshell, an investment in your SHARED happiness. It can be hard when you have a brain that demands answers about such abstract concepts, I do the same thing, but I would say from where I am sitting you’ve got a good honest friendship and just unlike most people who take that for granted, you are breaking it down so far it ends up sounding clinical and cold. Unless you are only returning happiness JUST enough to keep your friend around so they can feed your ego and do things for you or something like that, then it sounds pretty sane safe and healthy to me. And even subconsciously going out of your way to find things that make him happy is healthy, so long as you aren’t doing it to the detriment of yourself or others, it is normal to do that when you care about someone (I think you’ll find most genuine friendships involve investing energy, compromising and actively putting thought into your relationship). Doesn’t make you fake or antisocial or even make your friendship transactional - it just makes you human. Humans want to be liked by the people they care about, humans want to make the people they care about happy, no shame in that.

  • @SiriusGalilei
    @SiriusGalilei 11 місяців тому +31

    Another note from the books is that he has a tendency to take trophies from his victims, and give them a certain significance. He displays this first in the scene of where Dumbledore first, but basically his horcruxes are another product of this behavior. It’s not just that he chooses the items because they are a link to what he values, magical history and his own links to that, but the fact that he creates this Hotcruxes with specific deaths that have meaning to him, and are placed in spots that have a personal meaning to him. I’m not too familiar with psychology and specifically the field of serial killers, but, he does have a tendency to create trophies to mark kills that mean something to him.
    Also in the books, you see more of Riddles ability to manipulate people into getting what he wanted, of how he makes it seem like he cares or understands what the person he is manipulating is talking about, but only until he gets what he wants.
    I think another reason Slughorn doesn’t tell anyone what he talked with Riddle about is because Slughorn is a true Slythrryn at heart, he is ambitious but prefers to be the one who influences all the students he championed, often often expecting a favor in return. He prides himself on his Ability to check for talent, but Riddle was his biggest failure.he got a brief glimpse underneath the mask. Part of what holds him back from saying anything is his fear, but also his own shame at not seeing the signs when he could have. That’s my take on it.

  • @aspergianstoryteller6204
    @aspergianstoryteller6204 11 місяців тому +196

    When Harry tried using Tom's lines to get the real memory from Slughorn it was so cringe, but I think it meant to contrast how bad at manipulation he is and show the differences between him and Tom, since we've already seen how many similarities they have. His later, successful attempt worked because while it started out with magic luck and charm, Harry ended up speaking from the heart. His sincerity won out.
    Oh my god, that outro. 😂

    • @ninjanibba4259
      @ninjanibba4259 11 місяців тому +4

      It wasn’t cringe at all

    • @Sageddegas
      @Sageddegas 11 місяців тому +9

      @@ninjanibba4259definitely cringey

    • @ninjanibba4259
      @ninjanibba4259 11 місяців тому +1

      @@Sageddegas definitely not

    • @Sageddegas
      @Sageddegas 11 місяців тому +7

      @@ninjanibba4259 it really was. It was an obviously dumb plan on Harry’s part that clearly wasn’t going to work

    • @ninjanibba4259
      @ninjanibba4259 11 місяців тому +3

      @@Sageddegas it’s not dumb at all, if you need information on something from someone, you need to feed into memory, Harry said what Tom said to bring back memories of the night Slughorn talked so it’d be an opportunity for discussion, it failed and that’s why another approach worked later in the film
      The story of Lily came from Slughorn and that was Harry’s in, this time he approached it with honesty and confidence instead of tricks from Dumbledore and that’s why it worked
      These things are done for a purpose, there’s nothing cringe about it

  • @isla9831
    @isla9831 Рік тому +227

    Had to replay the “Nagini… eat the lawnmower…” part a couple times because it was too funny 💀

    • @Haze-xr9rc
      @Haze-xr9rc 11 місяців тому +11

      it's a bunch of words you wouldn't expect together and it was hysterical

    • @deepseareppy
      @deepseareppy 7 місяців тому

      I couldn't stop laughing until I cried 😂

  • @s.h.3111
    @s.h.3111 11 місяців тому +56

    You should do an episode on Dumbledore. I don't know how to categorise him, he is a dividing character. We were introduced to him as wise loving mentor but how he planned Harry's sacrifice and ignored Dursley's behaviors mostly cracked the image of him. I was never that fond of him to be feel betrayed but still I struggle to understand how he is viewed by people.

    • @milenaelzinga9967
      @milenaelzinga9967 10 місяців тому +2

      Definitely would like to see a video on this

    • @cc1k435
      @cc1k435 9 місяців тому +8

      He was such a powerful wizard and had influenced the education of most wizards alive in the UK by then. He was entirely well-respected almost to the point of being a caricature. It turns out he was human, wrestling with his own insecurities and flaws, and trying to right some of the wrongs he knew by the end he'd played into. Such a complex character. ❤

    • @SilverstreamPJ28
      @SilverstreamPJ28 8 місяців тому

      Not to mention how he and Grindelwald had an actual plan to subjugate muggles "for their own good" and he actually genuinely believed this at one point

    • @chamoritaamanda
      @chamoritaamanda 7 місяців тому +1

      This would require book lore not movie adaptation. The movies flip the intentions of Dumbledore and Snape

    • @alyssamurphy2002
      @alyssamurphy2002 5 місяців тому +1

      Dumbledore is an excellent character. He was somewhat prideful in his talented and brilliant youth, captivated by interesting and "unacceptable" political beliefs, then when he saw what it wrought, changed his mind. He was humbled and knew he shouldn't have power and loved others even when it was hard to let go of several very admirable individuals (Snape, Harry) for the good of mankind. He asks for forgiveness for his weaknesses and works his whole life to amend his wrongs. Excellent redemption arc.

  • @Miss_Lexisaurus
    @Miss_Lexisaurus Рік тому +66

    It's really fascinating to hear you talk about how empathy is tied to morality as an Autistic person because so many people think we lack empathy and yet we're considered "too" moral.

    • @tell-me-a-story-
      @tell-me-a-story- Рік тому +1

      Is there such thing as being too moral?

    • @emsytraut
      @emsytraut Рік тому +11

      Not autistic but HSP (Highly Sensitive Person)
      I would say from experience it can backfire on you a little bit cause you can be overly open or honest in trying to live in integrity and that can often come across as disingenuous or manipulative even if you don’t mean it to be.
      Not everyone wears their hearts in their sleeve and extreme empathy can be confusing and even frightening for people at times who are more reserved. Whilst I’d guess people don’t necessarily lack morals they’re not so strained by trying to live by them to the point it becomes paradoxical and society itself is a heartache. Hope that makes sense. 😊

    • @evacombs9720
      @evacombs9720 Рік тому +17

      @@tell-me-a-story- I am also autistic. The 'too moral' comes often from what other people perceive as our 'over adherence' to rules. For (a small) example, I can't jaywalk or steal from a store (like little things), I return other people's shopping carts and get pissed at them for not returning it them themselves (for me, barring disability or wrangling 8 children, etc.). This has caused others to think I'm weird. - This is probably tied to common gender expectations (girls must always follow the rules), though I'm sure it's not exclusive to women.

    • @user-C-Zira
      @user-C-Zira 11 місяців тому +3

      Also when they were talking about how our brain subconsciously picks up on something that's off about a person's behaviour. My brain doesn't seem to do that, people never unsettle me for no apparent reason (and I'm far less likely to find people unsettling overall), but plenty of people found me unsettling as a child (usually other children) before I learnt to be deliberately non-threatening (and get mistaken for shy/awkward/childish instead).

    • @KxNOxUTA
      @KxNOxUTA 11 місяців тому +9

      Thankfully it's more and more understood that autistic people do not necessarily lack empathy, specially not the girls, who get more socialised that way, whereas normalized alexithymia in men is a very real thing. There's empathy, but reasoning tends to go other pathways. And it forms more via other channels. Aka rather than via observation, via talking and explaining. Empathy has cognitive/logic and emotional/intuitive components. And different people find their own "access" to empathy on that spectrum.

  • @benschrose
    @benschrose 11 місяців тому +262

    It is not just some spell to cut his neck. That spell likely is Sectum Sempra, invented by the Half-Blood Prince himself. To be defeated by his own spell... I can see this hint of surprise in Snape's eyes, clouded by both his constantly distant demeanor mixed with a fainting consciousness. Almost as if he wasnt even aware Voldemort knew his spell.

    • @IrynaMerinova
      @IrynaMerinova 11 місяців тому +5

      I don't think it was Sectum Sempra, we saw it in the 6th film when Harry used it. And Snape knows contr spell and can do wordless magic.

    • @chloewilliams1702
      @chloewilliams1702 11 місяців тому +3

      Yes but that’s assuming he would have reacted quickly enough to cast. It definitely could still be sectum sempra provided Voldemort caught him off guard. It does bring up an interesting conversation about whether snaps could have held his own if they had actually dueled in the scene!

    • @DanBeech-ht7sw
      @DanBeech-ht7sw 11 місяців тому +6

      He was killed by Nagini

    • @IrynaMerinova
      @IrynaMerinova 11 місяців тому

      @DanBeech-ht7sw so a question. Nagini killed Severus, but several times bite Arthur and he survived. How?

    • @DanBeech-ht7sw
      @DanBeech-ht7sw 11 місяців тому

      @@IrynaMerinova a very good question and I don't know except it was touch and go with Arthur wasn't it? And maybe he was just in the way and attacked with less mortal determination? Snake on another mission got a bit muderously sidetracked, not focussing properly?
      I honestly don't know but I agree it's a very good question.

  • @noranhossam6188
    @noranhossam6188 10 місяців тому +24

    I love Jonathan's input of course, but I wish Allan's comments about filming would have more room in the episodes.
    Good job guys. This is my fav channel 👏🏼🙏🏻

  • @Aspriha_G
    @Aspriha_G 11 місяців тому +191

    I really like the thought of no one beige born inherently evil. Tom Marvolo Riddle had so much potential as a complex character born during both wizard and muggle wars, essentially to be an Anti-Hero.
    Because Lord Voldemort isn't deserving of redemption but Tom Riddle was.
    During the London Blitz being born in an Orphanage and labelled as devil child due to accidental magic definitely did something to his psyche.

    • @Lenori55
      @Lenori55 11 місяців тому +14

      That's an error. Tom riddle was not a child during the london blitz. In fact, he was born right after and grew up obsessed with Grindlewald the moment he learned about him.
      Tom's lack of empathy is due to the love potion his mother fed his father in the beginning of their relationship.

    • @emiliepaquet2892
      @emiliepaquet2892 11 місяців тому +12

      @@Lenori55 Tom was born in 1926. You're right that Tom wasn't a child: he was a teenager.

    • @ninjanibba4259
      @ninjanibba4259 11 місяців тому +8

      There are plenty of people born evil, there’s lots of stories on killers that never had any chances

    • @davidfairweather3301
      @davidfairweather3301 11 місяців тому +16

      Tom riddle was never really deserving of redemption. His backstory of being an orphan is sad, but even at 11 years old he showed that he was manipulative and sadistic. He terrorised the children at the orphanage

    • @yellowstickers394
      @yellowstickers394 11 місяців тому +21

      He wasn’t labeled as a devil child because of accidental magic. He was a complete terror and even the staff at the orphanage were wary of him. He used his magic to terrorize the other kids at the orphanage… I mean he even killed a pet rabbit of one of them.

  • @rebasack21
    @rebasack21 11 місяців тому +71

    The bit about how a diagnosis doesnt define who you are its your choices is something that really hits hard for me. I was born with an extreme case of rapid cycling bipolar, was diagnosed properly at the age of 10. with working meds and years of therapy and hard work i have reached a place where depression is no longer in charge and i have family i trust with me all the time.
    What i hate is when i mention being bipolar most people freak out and think serial killer because of movies and TV shows. The fact that the only other 2 ive met who also have it used it as an exceuse to hurt others doesnt help.
    I try to help others when i can because if i hadnt been helped by strangers i wouldnt be here today. Helping others helps me too. My diagnosis doesnt define me, it just helps me know what i need when its time to get new medications.

    • @MaaZeus
      @MaaZeus 11 місяців тому +4

      The old name for bipolar is manic depression, right? Maybe sticking to the old name helps to keep other peoples mind away from the TV tropes because the word bipolar seem so cold and alien compared to word depression that everybody understands, even if yours happens to be manic and hyper at the times.

    • @anainesgonzalez8868
      @anainesgonzalez8868 11 місяців тому +2

      Have you watched Spinning Out? May be is not your kind of show but I believe it is a very good depiction of Bipolar Disorder. Both the protagonist and her mom are bipolar and it is really interesting to see how that impacts their lives

    • @Razshagaul
      @Razshagaul 11 місяців тому +5

      My cousin has bipolar as well, and his was aggravated by years of mental abuse by his dad. He definitely has his issues, but honestly when he comes to my state to visit, I love just taking him out to lunch for a chat because he’s one of my favorite people to just chill and talk with.

    • @sugaandspice9815
      @sugaandspice9815 11 місяців тому +4

      My brother had bpd that manifested itself when he was almost 20. It was crazy for me to observe because it wasn’t the Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde type nonsense that I’d vaguely believed bipolar was. In mania or hypomania, the things that excited him before just excite him more intensely. In depression, things that excited him before excite him far less. It’s like a dial that controls his personality is being cranked too far in either direction. And there are stages between the manic and depressive phases where he acts the way he did before he started having symptoms. Mental disorders are definitely very different in real life from how they’re normally depicted onscreen

  • @Harrjannk
    @Harrjannk 11 місяців тому +12

    I love you guys pointing out that mental illness doesn't mean you're evil. It's so easy to forget when terrible things happen and the news emphasize on any mental illness they believe the perpetrator had. But in Harry Potter I felt there was always a different story told, like with Remus Lupin for example.

  • @katgargia5687
    @katgargia5687 Рік тому +56

    what I don't quite like in his backstory exploration both in the movies and books is that he basically spent his Hogwarts years with WW2 going on in the muggle world (he studied there from 1938 to 1945). so each summer, while being a child, he went back to the orphanage and war London and bombings which occured very actively during 1940-1941. I believe that probably played a part in this quest for immortality of his, because as a child facing something like that you will feel powerless, wizard or not, and people like these usually despise this type of feeling. it's a pity it was never explored in the books, because it would've added more depth to this, instead of "oh I want to be immortal because I want the ultimate power and no weaknesses in me".

    • @wolfishpotato6978
      @wolfishpotato6978 Рік тому +9

      Oo interesting point, I never realized that

    • @crimson_bailey
      @crimson_bailey Рік тому +15

      Reading this kind of inspired another thought. What if his childhood and adolescents being spend during ww2 inspired him to start a Wizarding war of the same scale. Because the parallels are certainly there.

  • @tntori5079
    @tntori5079 Рік тому +74

    I like to think that Dumbledore let him into the school to try and 'fix' him. Secondary: to keep his close and under watch. But mostly the former. Dumbledore is still human, and possibly hanging onto a bit of pride and thought he could help this boy. Hence by the time of Harry's journey he's waaaay more hands off - cuz he learned his lesson about his ability to choose for ppl. Harry to to grow and choose and discovery his heroism on his own.

    • @1pknail
      @1pknail 11 місяців тому +17

      And the alternative is to let Riddle develop his powers either on his own or with someone less likely to try and curb his more sinister inclinations.

    • @ScreamInPanic
      @ScreamInPanic 11 місяців тому +12

      Dumbledore was not Hogwarts headmaster when Tom started school. It was Dippet who was the headmaster. Dumbledore was just the Transfiguration professor so it was not his call to deny or accept Tom at the school.

    • @auricstorm
      @auricstorm 11 місяців тому +1

      I'm a little iffy on the timeline: when was Fantastic beasts happening? Coz he's also learnt what sort of student comes out of Durmstrang (his boyfriend played by Johnny Depp who I forget name of)

    • @fleetskipper1810
      @fleetskipper1810 11 місяців тому

      @@auricstorm Grindelwald

  • @metrux321
    @metrux321 Місяць тому +4

    I think it's also important to put a distinction, that sociopathy is something you become, while psicopathy you're born with. They're both disorders, but really different, and of course, as with most psychological issues, it's a spectrum.

  • @bruceweatherly6559
    @bruceweatherly6559 Рік тому +33

    Please do a Villian Therapy episode on President Snow. I like to see how you guys would analyze him from his teen years in the Ballad of the Songbird to the main trilogy series.

    • @bruceweatherly6559
      @bruceweatherly6559 Рік тому +3

      Also, other Hunger Games character breakdowns would be fun to watch too.

  • @JoyviaI
    @JoyviaI Рік тому +119

    Both in the movie and the book, I always found it incredible how fleshed out Voldemort’s character is. He has depth, and emotions. He is not just a heartless villain, but he is not without flaws. His backstory feels more real than most, where something bad happened and now they are terrible because of bad logic. He acted one way, that got him treated one way, and he chose his path.

    • @adde9506
      @adde9506 11 місяців тому +1

      Voldemort is very clearly BORN evil. Everything bad that happens to him is a direct result of his own actions. Frankly, the attempt to explain him with all the bad nurture stereotypes does him a disservice.

    • @JoyviaI
      @JoyviaI 11 місяців тому +5

      @@adde9506 Sorry for the confusion. What I meant to say was that he didn’t have something bad happen that made him evil, like most protagonists these days (no hate to them of course), but instead saw how people reacted when he acted one way, and chose to continue the manipulative behavior to get what he wanted. Looking back, what I wrote is pretty confusing, huh? 😅

    • @samstromberg5593
      @samstromberg5593 11 місяців тому

      Okay first of all nobody is born evil (or you could make the argument that EVERYONE is born evil, but my point is that he wasn’t any different than anyone else)
      Certain characteristics of your personality are slightly genetic sure but I can confirm that being a murderous wizard bent on European domination is not🤝👍
      ALL little kids are narcicists and while most people are somewhat taught away from that he just … wasn’t. Didn’t have parents to teach him and the staff at his orphanage didn’t really have time for him. Which normally would probably just result in a pretty stuck up narcisist but Tom’s ability to use magic was always going to set him apart and it just spiraled out of control - he saw the world as a hostile place and reacted accordingly, and the world saw him as a threat and acted accordingly
      To be clear, none of this excuses what he did. He was still a net negative on the world and deserved/needed to be eliminated. But you can’t really saw that “he was just born different and destined to be this way” nah he was raised this way

  • @BloodylocksBathory
    @BloodylocksBathory 8 місяців тому +3

    As discussed in the video, you can lack empathy but still have compassion, and Voldemort doesn't even have that. True psychopath.

  • @olenaolena9073
    @olenaolena9073 Рік тому +74

    I’m so sad they didn’t include Voldemort’s full story in the movies, especially HBP. I wish I could see his father’s family murder, Hebzibah Smith, job interview at Hogwarts, happiness after Azkaban breakout, an attempt to avenge Bellatrix’s death, the real way he died, etc. It all would’ve added depth to his character, but unfortunately, he’s shown as a very evil clown in most films. Voldemort was decently portrayed only as Tom Riddle and partly in GOF/OOTP.

    • @wifipigeon01
      @wifipigeon01 11 місяців тому +10

      I mean they are planning on doing the series as close to the books as possible so... You'll probably like it 😄

    • @Toonwalla2010
      @Toonwalla2010 11 місяців тому +17

      The scene of Dumbledore meeting Tom at the Orphanage is even creepier in the books because of how quickly he switches between being charming and perfect and his true vindictive self to get what he wants. Stephen Fry did a great job getting this across this young version in the audiobook of Half Blood Prince but it's sad we don't get more in teh movies.
      Also in the books it goes into more detail about how he was already hurting his fellow orphans long before he knew he was a wizard. This included, not just theft, but the killing of a fellow orphan's pet rabbit and the implied torture two other orphans in the cave that appears at the end of the movie. In the book he shows very little remorse for his actions but pretends to when he realises that he could get into trouble for it.

    • @dcworld4349
      @dcworld4349 11 місяців тому

      @@Toonwalla2010 I don't blame the kid actor, or the teen actor in HBP, I think they did what the script and director told them. But they really should have cut out most of the filler romance plot to make room for the Riddle scenes. I could feel the scenes rushing and them needing to use short hand to get the main points across as quickly as possible but Johnathan is right it makes Dumbledore look like an idiot. In the book Harry does think to himself that this was Dumbledore's weakness of wanting to see the best in everyone. Yet in the book, during his first meeting with Dumbledore. Riddle does not act the way he's here where you sort of get the feeling that he's the spawn of Satan. Dumbledore reasoning that this was a child with a troublesome past, but seeing it was a child who had no guidance, didn't know what he was or how he could do the things that he did. And as Dumbledore also points out Riddle got so excited about being told that he was special that he forgot himself and let more things slip than he would have liked to. So while he was able to charm all the other teachers, Dumbledore always kept an eye on him from that moment. With Riddle himself admitting that he never was able to fool Dumbledore. Not that he went out of his way to make his life a living hell the way Snape did against Harry. In the subtext Dumbledore does say something to the effect of he had hoped once Riddle got to Hogwarts and started to learn who he was, gaining some friends. That his past behavior stemmed more the way a child raised in a somewhat cold environment would. Since lets be honest if a young child could get revenge on people who are mean to them, they would do so and they wouldn't be thinking with consequences or proportionality in mind.
      Dumbledore wasn't the head master at the time so all he could do was give his opinion. But the strangest thing to me is actually how Riddle got away with framing Hagrid after Mertyl died. Riddle might have been able to prepare to counter truth serums, altering memories for pensive exploration and such. But Hagrid wouldn't have, and they have plenty of method of finding out the truth, so I've never really understood how anyone who has a "it's my words against yours" would not be resolved by proving it with magic.

    • @dcworld4349
      @dcworld4349 11 місяців тому

      @@wifipigeon01 I really hope they commit to at least two seasons for the show. Obviously they are going to need more to tell the full story. But so that we don't end up in a House of the Dragon situation where they waited to see the reaction before deciding to move on. By committing to two season, they can do season 1, normal break, start right back up with season 2 since at that point they will know if it's worth it for them to do all the books. It's so annoying with the current model of TV where season 1 and season 2 has such gigantic breaks (I know there has been a strike but this was happening before the strikes). We used to get 23 episodes a year like clock work, the episode count is now as low as 6-8 on some shows. And I understand that more episodes means filler and you can't make it look as great for budgetary reason. But 12-13 episodes each 57-59 minutes should be something they can pull off. And here it's kind of important to actually do one book per year since no matter if they have to cheat and cast 12-14 year olds for the parts in season 1. Considering finding young child actors that are great is no easy feat. You can't stop them from growing, and at that age you never know what you are going to get. They are going to have to shoot things more chronologically, because you don't want a situation where they have filmed scenes at the end of the school year early, film for another 3 months and suddenly one or several go through a huge growth spurt filming a scene at the beginning of the school year.

  • @Alabamatruck00
    @Alabamatruck00 Рік тому +125

    If you guys are up for another Harry Potter themed video, I would love to hear your input on Draco's story.

    • @CinemaTherapyShow
      @CinemaTherapyShow  Рік тому +71

      It's definitely on our list!

    • @m_with_a_bee
      @m_with_a_bee Рік тому +21

      I'd love to see their take on the parallel between Harry and Draco with the line "he's just a boy",
      where Harry took the role of a martyr so save the world vs Draco who was a victim of chasing his father's acceptance and how that led to Draco ending up on over his head in a war he never chose to fight in

    • @rainbowstarfall
      @rainbowstarfall Рік тому +7

      ​@CinemaTherapyShow yes please do Draco! It's a travesty that JKR didn't give him a full redemption arc.

    • @MahrukhMurt
      @MahrukhMurt Рік тому +1

      YES!

    • @kyuubinaruto17
      @kyuubinaruto17 Рік тому +2

      Well, they already replied it's on their list, but is there enough for a full episode in the movies? Draco rarely gets much screentime compared to how much they interact in the books.

  • @marshallburlew7549
    @marshallburlew7549 11 місяців тому +11

    In the book, before he left Snape for dead and apparated away. Voldemort literally, said, "I regret it!" Snape was the only murder that he actually regrated.

    • @luna.1409
      @luna.1409 5 місяців тому +2

      Because he needed Snape, not because he actually felt sorry.

  • @LittleHobbit13
    @LittleHobbit13 Рік тому +53

    I like that you pitched Dumbledore essentially is the "I can fix him" trope. XD

  • @samanthashipman5218
    @samanthashipman5218 11 місяців тому +283

    Oh man, I would love to see an analysis of Lynda's sessions with Lucifer, how realistic, what you would do, how it changes from when she thinks he's delusional compared to when she knows he's the actual devil

    • @divinelangene6813
      @divinelangene6813 11 місяців тому +19

      Same, the shock when she saw his devil face, so well acted

    • @vsyovomrakenochi8960
      @vsyovomrakenochi8960 11 місяців тому +2

      Absolutely

    • @simonargent4650
      @simonargent4650 11 місяців тому +17

      This. And just a whole video on Lucifer himself. Narcissism for sure, but what else? Does the devil himself get villain therapy, or psychology of a hero? Is he bad, or just misunderstood?

    • @rose-yeah
      @rose-yeah 9 місяців тому +1

      Love to see that too. Her reaction was perfect, I mean she literally saw the devil. I wouldn’t think it’s realistic is she just saw him, get shocked and then she accept it and talked to him immediately.

    • @divinelangene6813
      @divinelangene6813 9 місяців тому

      @@simonargent4650 well he's not exactly evil in the show, so maybe anti-hero

  • @lefloeck
    @lefloeck 11 місяців тому +39

    Voldemort: "I am evil."
    Dumbledore, thinking: "I can change him."

    • @newhybrid101
      @newhybrid101 6 місяців тому +6

      No,he wanted him there to keep an eye on him and teach him rules and control.
      If he left him it would have been worse,he would have continued hurting kids

    • @Xehanort10
      @Xehanort10 4 місяці тому +1

      Dumbledore: This kid bullies the other orphans, made a boy's pet rabbit hang itself because the boy argued with him, lured 2 other kids into a cave and did something horrible to them. Better let him learn magic. What could go wrong?

  • @ashtingreene8725
    @ashtingreene8725 11 місяців тому +889

    I love that the fandom recognizes that the problem is usually Dumbledore 😂

    • @anainesgonzalez8868
      @anainesgonzalez8868 11 місяців тому +139

      I would love a Dumbledore analysis

    • @LizLuvsCupcakes
      @LizLuvsCupcakes 11 місяців тому +108

      I love Dumbledore, cried so hard when he died, but for FUCK'S sake.

    • @ZariDV
      @ZariDV 11 місяців тому +73

      @@LizLuvsCupcakes For real. Love me some Dumbledore but good lord man get it together.

    • @colt1903
      @colt1903 11 місяців тому +29

      He's a good man...
      Just not very good at much else. 😂

    • @ser132
      @ser132 11 місяців тому +33

      to be fair to Dumbledore, in this case, as he wasn't headmaster at the time Tom came to Hogwarts, it wasn't his decision to him to admit Tom.
      He's still a problematic dude, though.

  • @arcanearts9656
    @arcanearts9656 11 місяців тому +49

    The thing on Dumbledore allowing Tom in, isn't just that Dumbledore believes that a better environment can make better people, and in his own way that therapy can help people with sociopathic or psychopathic tendencies, but he has demonstrably seen it. In the books, when Harry basically asks if he didn't take any of that as a red flag, he made it clear that a lot of it was the sort of stuff he had seen before, and generally tried to ensure students like had direction to support them.
    Probably the biggest failing of Dumbledore, at that point of time, was possibly failing to carefully consider the effect Tom could have on Slughorn, particularly given he would have the motivation to do so-Heads of Houses, Their Head Boys and Girls, and the Prefects are the ones with the most regular impact for direction and guidance , but everything about Slughorn basically ensured that entire structure at school was exactly the sort of thing that would fold to Tom rather than catch him and guide him. He can't have had an influence on how Tom was Housed, but he might've picked different teachers and elder students to try and pick up the slack.

    • @hallaloth3112
      @hallaloth3112 11 місяців тому

      Where in the book does it suggest that? Because I read these books every few years and cannot recall ANYTHINg that suggests that Dumbledore ever suggests he 'sees this all the time'

    • @hihey229
      @hihey229 11 місяців тому +11

      Dumbledore wasn't the headmaster at the time and has no influence on wether Tom is accepted/the teachers teaching him. Even in the films he introduces himself as a professor.

    • @js66613
      @js66613 11 місяців тому +6

      I think, just in general, the Hogwarts Houses are a large part of the problem. You're shoving people together, but you're shoving them with people who they likely click with already so they never learn to see the other side because they're trapped in a bubble. And a bubble they can use and manipulate to their advantage.

  • @Zornroeschen90
    @Zornroeschen90 6 місяців тому +3

    I would love to see an analysis of Dumbledore. He's made out to be the benevolent genius savior. But if you zoom out, he collects the rejects and outcasts. Snape, Hagrid, Harry... all become loyal out of gratitude and admiration but Dumbledore still uses them for his schemes while cuttin them off or ignoring them when they reach out to him in need. So he's not that different from Slughorn who collects the capable ones for prestige and favors.

  • @spirktrekker362
    @spirktrekker362 11 місяців тому +178

    I would love if you did a Villain therapy on Gellert Grindelwald. He’s got an intriguing backstory and he had genuine feelings of love for Dumbledore along with his bias against muggles. You could do a lot with it!

    • @maplelaker
      @maplelaker 11 місяців тому +7

      I was thinking the same thing, but wait until all the Fantastic Beasts movies are out. It would be especially cool given the fact 3 actors played Grindelwald: Colin Farrell when Grindelwald was using Polyjuice potion, Johnny Depp, then Mads Mikkelsen.

    • @elijahyoung8116
      @elijahyoung8116 11 місяців тому +5

      But from what I’ve heard the FB films have been canceled

    • @idunnhatling5481
      @idunnhatling5481 11 місяців тому

      @@maplelaker They have been officially cancelled, unfortunately

    • @vampforte793
      @vampforte793 11 місяців тому

      The perfect example of that is professor x and magneto

    • @ninjanibba4259
      @ninjanibba4259 11 місяців тому +1

      @@elijahyoung8116thank goodness

  • @Aryanna182
    @Aryanna182 Рік тому +25

    We also learn in the books that Dumbledore was a professor at the time Tom was invited to Hogwarts not the headmaster. So Dumbledore was to Tom like Hagrid was to Harry when they learned they were wizards and as Dumbledore told the orphanage lady, Tom's name was down for him to attend Hogwarts since he was born. It wasn't Dumbledore's decision to admit Tom, but if he could have convinced the rest of the staff to expel him it mat have stopped Tom before he started

  • @alonanomi5809
    @alonanomi5809 6 місяців тому +1

    I'm a diagnosed Psychopath, it is true that it's all about choices. I think Jonathan is right and that it's our choices that matter. Yes the diagnosis or the way we are, can make it harder to make the "right" choices but it's possible.
    As for Empathy, I don't have any. I might say things that will make you believe that I have some. But I learned to pick up the cues of when people wished to receive Empathy and I play along with those lines.
    As you learn those cues and how people work you quickly realize that people with natural empathy are usually bad at it anyways. They rely on their feelings of empathy and either miss a lot of cues or simply don't know how to react to the situation.
    So it makes it easy for people who learn to use those cues to fake empathy to actually get people to trust them and think they are truly good for them.
    Really.... it's easy !
    But that's when it comes to choices. Because knowing how to trap someone and doing something bad to them is two different things.
    I was described as an Amoral person because I didn't seem to even understand morality. ( Still don't to some degree, a lot of it seems useless and a hindrance ) The way I manage to handle myself was with intense very tight follow up with my therapist who showed me morality, what it was and all. They didn't just told me. " You don't do that cause that's how it is and society sees it working like that. "
    That doesn't work.
    " You are allowed to do whatever you want. You are just not allowed to be caught. "
    What they needed to teach was the whole logic and importance of things.
    For me to accept the logic that I shouldn't be doing something.
    I was taken in charge very early. I did receive my diagnosis once I was an adult but the work with the therapist started years before I was an adult.
    So I think for Voldemort it should have been taking in charge of as a child. He shouldn't have gone to school to hone his skill but to learn Morality and how to direct his skills in a way it would align enough with morality that it would be "okay".
    However, as an adult and the way he is in the movies I agree that there isn't much to do about him. Mostly because anyone who would need to teach him anything would need to gain his respect.

  • @sarahgesell7275
    @sarahgesell7275 Рік тому +17

    In the book series “The Parasol Protectorate” by Gail Carriger; the main character was born “without a soul” which she is told as a young child means she lack natural morals so she works instead to create a moral framework based on study, laws, and logic. It’s a great series and sounds like what Voldemort needed as a youth!

  • @erevan9962
    @erevan9962 Рік тому +51

    Jon got me so excited with the idea of a Palpatine episode. I'd love to see that.

  • @expensivepink7
    @expensivepink7 11 місяців тому +4

    ugh you are like music to my ears after i just finished 6 months of PHP/IOP. you are a good therapist it's evident in how you explain these things

  • @katarzynaherman5424
    @katarzynaherman5424 Рік тому +25

    I loved all interactions between Voldemort and Snape. Those were the most human, the closest to actual relationship Voldy had with anyone. Obviously he didn't love him and did not regret his death. But I think he could refer to him on some level (similar family story) and respected him greatly as a peron and wizard. There was no attachment on either side but this really shows how disconnected Voldy was when his best relationship is based (at best) on respect and usefullness of the other person.

    • @sawanna508
      @sawanna508 11 місяців тому +8

      I think the closesed realtionship Voldemort has with anyone is that with Nagini and even she is someone he uses for himself.

    • @RedundantDan
      @RedundantDan 11 місяців тому +8

      Both sides knew that Snape was courting the other side, and both sides believed that Snape had the other side fooled. So everyone knew that he was either fooling Dumbledore, one of the greatest wizards of all time, or he was fooling Voldemort, one of the other greatest wizards of all time. It'd be impossible not to respect his abilities, the man was GOATed and everyone knew it.

    • @fleetskipper1810
      @fleetskipper1810 11 місяців тому

      Voldemort was congenitally unable to respect anyone. He could recognize Snape for his abilities abilities and could also see him as a personal threat. That’s about it. Respect did not come into it.

  • @sailormoon2001-p7b
    @sailormoon2001-p7b 11 місяців тому +93

    Would love to see a villian therapy about Coriolanus Snow! He is a super interesting character

    • @aubreycarter7624
      @aubreycarter7624 10 місяців тому +9

      Yes! He's such a well written, fascinating villain!

    • @spazzyshortgirl23
      @spazzyshortgirl23 10 місяців тому +2

      @@aubreycarter7624I just suggested that on the Zuko video too, especially now that they can use clips from BOSAS

  • @calypsosgarden203
    @calypsosgarden203 11 місяців тому +37

    Not only was the actor playing young Tom cast as the romantic lead in the "After" series of films; he's actually Ralph Fiennes's nephew.

    • @bananatiergod
      @bananatiergod 9 місяців тому +4

      Thank gods that this god awful series is over with, he deserves a role that can let him actually act for once LMAO

    • @newhybrid101
      @newhybrid101 6 місяців тому

      The resemblance in their faces is obvious.
      Perfect casting
      We havent seen Pre Voldie face adult Tom though

  • @forestelf86
    @forestelf86 Рік тому +105

    "He was cast in the after movies and was more scary in that." Brilliant😂
    I would love to see a Psychology of a Hero video on Lockwood from Lockwood & Co. What is his diagnosis?
    ADHD? Depression?Grief? PTSD? Narcissism? RSD? So curious!

    • @LittleHobbit13
      @LittleHobbit13 Рік тому +11

      Feels like we need a second season of L&C for that since they were JUST about to really dig into Lockwood's backstory. Doesn't feel like we got to see enough to judge.

    • @forestelf86
      @forestelf86 Рік тому +7

      @@LittleHobbit13 Okay, fair...then what about a Couple's Therapy episode on Lucy/Lockwood to discuss how Lucy sticks to her standards with him and him struggling/trying to meet her where she's at? We need to see more dynamics like this among young couples.
      Tying it back to my original comment: It'd be a heck of a lot healthier than anything young girls get with "After" movies.

    • @Kagomai15
      @Kagomai15 Рік тому +4

      My mom and I are so mad they canceled this show!

    • @AutisticKittyStar
      @AutisticKittyStar Рік тому +2

      He's Voldemort (Ralph Fiennes)'s nephew in real life

    • @LittleHobbit13
      @LittleHobbit13 Рік тому +4

      ​@@forestelf86 That I would totally be down for! They did have a really interesting dynamic. And yes, I agree, I'd love to see more "couples therapy" episodes for younger characters that aren't just kinda toxic YA romances. ^^;

  • @Lukeywoodsey
    @Lukeywoodsey 11 місяців тому +40

    The Emperor is definitely a good idea for a video, the contrast between being Chancellor, Darth Sidious and then Emperor is such a contrast it really shows intelligence and calculating mind. Great idea

  • @anjelica948
    @anjelica948 11 місяців тому +14

    I know you guys don’t typically cover horror movies since it’s difficult for them to be monetized, but I think there is a ton of material that fits your show perfectly in Silence of the Lambs. Clarice Starling would make an excellent subject for Psychology of a Hero. Buffalo Bill for Villain Therapy. And Hannibal Lecter I think would make a great case study in true psychopathy like you guys touched on in this episode, which is what made me think of Silence to begin with while watching this episode. Also Alan would have a ton to chew on from a filmmaker’s perspective as well.

    • @GuineaPigEveryday
      @GuineaPigEveryday 10 місяців тому +3

      Great point, but also they should do Talk To Me. I really hope they do it, its a perfect film for therapeutic discussions

  • @sorilea5593
    @sorilea5593 Рік тому +70

    This is for the editor, who knew why Voldemort didn't use the Elderwand on Snape. Cheers to you :)

    • @sunnybayliss3221
      @sunnybayliss3221 Рік тому +3

      That also made me smile!❤

    • @CinemaTherapyShow
      @CinemaTherapyShow  Рік тому +38

      It was a Producer's Note this time, and that producer was me! -Corinne :)

    • @kyuubinaruto17
      @kyuubinaruto17 Рік тому +6

      Except it doesn't make sense in the movies regardless. If the Elder Wand could slit his throat without issue then why wouldn't the killing curse work?
      In the books Voldemort had Nagini in a protective enchantment since she was one of his few remaining horcruxes, and had her pounce on Snape before biting him. He was brought down by the weight.

    • @crains8087
      @crains8087 11 місяців тому +2

      timestamp?

    • @BrandiUntzGamingChannel
      @BrandiUntzGamingChannel 11 місяців тому +5

      The cruelty of it all being that Snape did not command the Elder Wand. Malfoy had disarmed Dumbledore before Snape killed him. And Harry defeated Malfory, which is why the Elder Wand belonged to Harry by then.

  • @Lunasera
    @Lunasera Рік тому +78

    Dumbledore had little choice in allowing Tom to enter Hogwarts as he wasn't headmaster yet. But Tom says that Dumbledore always kept an eye on him.
    As for the question of Therapie:
    I think he had a predisposition and his environment fed into it.
    In the books we learn that Tom's uncle Morphin killed animals and showed clear signs of a mental disorder. Dumbledore deduced that this was partially rooted in the excessive incest that was practiced in the Gaunt family. Merope was also effected and it's likely Tom as well.
    But I believe it's also important to consider that Tom grew up in muggle orphanage during difficult times. Resources were probably not the best and he was the weird kid. He said he hurt children that were mean to him, which could possibly mean he was bullied until he turned it around and he had magic for it.
    Adult Voldemort definitely became a monster, but it's hard to tell if that could have been avoided with the correct help.

    • @FrisbeeGorbeh
      @FrisbeeGorbeh Рік тому +24

      I agree with all of this that you said, these are all really good points. There's one thing that was different in the book from what you said though. I think Tom said he hurt the kids that annoyed him, not kids that were mean to him. I know that doesn't seem like much of a change, but it gives the impressions that Tome was never bullied. It was always him who as cruel and demanded to be in control.

    • @Lunasera
      @Lunasera Рік тому +3

      ​@@FrisbeeGorbeh Yes, for that one I was going with what the movies said, but I believe it is correct, in the books his cruel streak was way more emphazised. Would have to look it up, cause while I know the books by heart, word for word is not there yet. XD

    • @kyuubinaruto17
      @kyuubinaruto17 Рік тому +6

      @@Lunasera I mean, it's not directly stated in the movies, but Tom wasn't thieving from other children. Those toys from trophies from those he hurt.

    • @elarianasky
      @elarianasky 11 місяців тому +1

      also not to mention that he was conceived while his father was under a love potion and the adverse effects of that were what made Tom... Tom

    • @FrisbeeGorbeh
      @FrisbeeGorbeh 11 місяців тому

      @@elarianasky I've heard that theory too. Tbh it makes me a bit uncomfortable. Love potions are messed up, it basically takes away consent. So to imply that people who are born from nonconsensual relationships are destined to be horrible people doesn't sit right. I'd much sooner blame the incest in his ancestry than the non-consent of his father as to why he's an deranged person.

  • @scifiauthor
    @scifiauthor 7 місяців тому +12

    "Nagini, eat the lawnmower." I about died laughing at that. If that were on a shirt (or even a bumper sticker), I'd totally buy one. Love ya'lls show!

  • @Wordsmith012
    @Wordsmith012 11 місяців тому +55

    Hey you guys. I discovered your channel about 2 years after my engagement fell apart.
    Though I’ve come to learn a long time ago we were not right for each other, I wasn’t quite out of the woods just yet. I drank, over indulged in fatty foods, overspend money I didn’t have, and placed myself in a vicious cycle of sex, false love, and broken hearts, be it mine or someone else’s.
    Since I’ve found your channel though, and through taking personal growing steps in my own personal life, I’m pleased to say I’ve found a second job to get myself out of this financial hole, have been working out consistently for over a year (still working out), have cut down on my drinking, having been going to therapy twice a month for the last 3 months, and am currently practicing monogamy with someone I’m very fond of (I don’t know if it’ll lead to something more, but I know we like each other and are both in places where we are respectful of each others space, time, boundaries, and personal journeys). I wrote all of this because I wanted you guys to know your videos have been extremely helpful in allowing to see other perspectives, understand feeling of guilt and when it is useful and when it is not, and what makes a person who they are. I hope your show continues to explore the psychology of movies because I, like you guys, love movies too and enjoy dissecting the characters from their most winnable traits to their most human flaws.
    Thank you for all the words of wisdom, the dad jokes, and the support in the fight against hopelessness, fear, and self destruction. 👍🏼

    • @JonathanDecker
      @JonathanDecker 11 місяців тому +4

      Thank you for sharing your story! You've inspired me and made my day.

    • @Wordsmith012
      @Wordsmith012 11 місяців тому +1

      @@JonathanDecker Happy to hear it, have a wonderful day. 😁

    • @CinemaTherapyShow
      @CinemaTherapyShow  11 місяців тому

      Aw... Wordsmith! Thanks so much for this. YOU are the reason we keep doing this! -alan

  • @damiensharp2138
    @damiensharp2138 11 місяців тому +142

    Palpatine is fascinating. His style of manipulation is the exact opposite of Mother Gothel but achieves the same result

    • @samstromberg5593
      @samstromberg5593 11 місяців тому +3

      ???
      I see his manipulation almost identical to Mother Gothel’s, how do you see them different?

    • @damiensharp2138
      @damiensharp2138 11 місяців тому +17

      @@samstromberg5593 Gothel insults and belittles Rapunzel. Palpatine praises Anakin and inflates his ego. Exact opposite

    • @JansenGlasc
      @JansenGlasc 11 місяців тому +9

      @@damiensharp2138 Good take! They are inherently opposite ways of manipulation but in the end, it's the same objective: to make them need you.

    • @samstromberg5593
      @samstromberg5593 11 місяців тому +1

      @@damiensharp2138 Mm. Okay I do see where you're coming from there
      My view was (and still is, technically) that both of them set up the victim to only trust Gothel/Palpatine and see the rest of the world as untrustworthy, unappreciative of their talents
      But you are right about HOW they go about it, I gotcha now

    • @cosmicspacething3474
      @cosmicspacething3474 11 місяців тому

      @@damiensharp2138 That’s with just Anakin, I’m pretty sure he uses multiple types of manipulation

  • @no2402
    @no2402 11 місяців тому +18

    Voldemort- sadistic
    Jack Sparrow- opportunistic and avoidant of violence unless necessary

  • @zoesnow8966
    @zoesnow8966 Рік тому +11

    One of the neat behind the scenes details I learned from the studio tour in London, was that they changed the shade of green used for Voldemort’s robe during the movies as an indication of how powerful he was becoming. It’s subtle, but a really neat filmmaking detail that I found fascinating

  • @danielbingham2644
    @danielbingham2644 Рік тому +33

    I'd love to see you do Palpatine. But even more, I'd love to see you do a series on Andor covering the psychology of both fascism and resistance to it. Andor did such a fantastic job examining both and it is so important in this moment.
    You could easily do multiple hero therapies - one on each of Cassian, Kino Loy, Luthen Rael, and Mon Mothma studying each of their reasons for resisting and the struggles and moral quandaries they grapple with. You could do really interesting villain therapies on each of Dedra and Syril studying their reasons for joining the fascists and how it leads them to doing horrible things. Syril especially would be a fascinating one. Or you could group them into just two: Psychology of a Rebel and Psychology of a Fascist. Either way, I'd love to see you do those!

  • @omegax1289
    @omegax1289 11 місяців тому +6

    Man, I'd love to see your guys' take on Linda from Netflix's Lucifer. I know you guys typically don't do TV shows, but I thought that the character dynamic between Lucifer and Linda was just absolutely brilliant and I'd love to see a therapist's perspective on the stuff that goes on in the show!

  • @kazza6078
    @kazza6078 Рік тому +66

    "Nagini, eat the lawnmower" absolutely killed me

    • @lilith6314
      @lilith6314 11 місяців тому

      I’m still trying to recover

  • @blazcraz6992
    @blazcraz6992 11 місяців тому +33

    I feel like Dumbledore's belief in a person's inherent goodness stems from his own transition from a power obsessed, arrogant, smarter than thou, young man to genuinely being "The Greatest Wizard Of His Generation" from learning from his fatal mistakes. So he believes anyone has the capability to change and become good. Unfortunately he extended this to Tom Riddle.

  • @luisasalgado2926
    @luisasalgado2926 9 місяців тому +4

    I love your channel and your heroes and villains therapy videos, and I would love to watch a Villain Therapy of Coriolanus Snow, as I do believe its a compelling character, how a young man went through a war, the loss of his parents, his wealth, and was about to loose the last thing he hung onto, HIS STATUS, made him a cold old man ready to kill whoever threatened his position, and his home.

  • @moonchild6489
    @moonchild6489 Рік тому +105

    "Dumbledore thinks he can help them" meaning "I can fix him"😂😂😂

    • @ultimatebishoujo29
      @ultimatebishoujo29 Рік тому +7

      Lol yup

    • @wolfishpotato6978
      @wolfishpotato6978 Рік тому +7

      So accurate XD

    • @wjhdtyqbc324
      @wjhdtyqbc324 Рік тому +9

      I don't think he actually thought this way cause when Harry asked him if he knew back then that he met the darkest wizard of all time, Dumbledore said no. Dumbledore is very intelligent but you cannot spot a psychopath based on one encounter and most importantly you never know what a child is gonna be like when they grow up. He's not a clairvoyant after all

    • @Olivetree80
      @Olivetree80 Рік тому +3

      He moreso thought he was saving him and that it was the environment that was the problem

    • @lunamooncat1243
      @lunamooncat1243 Рік тому +3

      ​@Olivetree80 the environment was the problem because he never received enough love because of that
      If Tom was adopted by a loving family he would have been similar to draco(there would still be some good)

  • @kelseywarren-bryant2682
    @kelseywarren-bryant2682 11 місяців тому +78

    Palpatine would be great. I'd also love to see a video on villain therapy for President Snow from Hunger Games. I've had a lot of debates with other people after seeing this new movie about whether what he felt for Lucy Gray was actual love/empathy, or if it was she was only ever a means to an end for him. I'd love to hear your guys' take!

  • @hugablestpersonever
    @hugablestpersonever 11 місяців тому +4

    I loved the way you started this video. Highlighting the fact that your diagnosis doesn’t define you. Hitting the nail on the head once again ❤ Love you guys!