List of films featuring hallucinogens
Appearance
There is a body of films featuring hallucinogens.
List of films
Film | Description | Hallucinogen featured | Year | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|
Altered States | Believing that altered states of consciousness are just as real as "normal" consciousness, a professor of abnormal psychology combines a hallucinogenic mixture with sensory deprivation and begins to "regress" into progressively earlier stages of evolution. | LSD, DMT, psilocybin | 1980 | [1] |
Artificial Paradises | 2012 | |||
Awakening of the Beast | 1970 | [2] | ||
Beavis and Butt-Head Do America | 1996 | [3] | ||
Blueberry | 2004 | [4] | ||
Brain Damage | 1988 | [5] | ||
Crystal Fairy & the Magical Cactus | 2013 | [6] | ||
The Doors | 1991 | [7] | ||
Dredd | In the science fiction action film future United States is a dystopic irradiated wasteland known as the Cursed Earth. On the east coast lies Mega-City One, a violent metropolis with 800 million residents and 17,000 crimes reported daily. The only force for order are the Judges, who act as judge, jury and executioner. Judge Dredd is tasked by the Chief Judge with evaluating new recruit Cassandra Anderson, a powerful psychic who failed the aptitude tests to be a Judge. Dredd and Anderson raid Peach Trees, a 200-storey slum tower block a drug lord selling Slo-Mo, an addictive new drug which reduces the user's perception of time to 1% of normal. | (Fictional) Slo-Mo | 2012 | |
Easy Rider | LSD | 1969 | [8] | |
Embrace of the Serpent | The film tells two stories thirty years apart, both featuring Karamakate, an Amazonian shaman and last survivor of his tribe. He travels with two scientists, firstly with German Theodor Koch-Grunberg in 1909 and American Richard Evans Schultes in 1940, to look for the rare yakruna, a (fictional) sacred plant. | 2015 | ||
The Emerald Forest | 1985 | [1] | ||
Enter the Void | DMT, LSD | 2009 | [9] | |
Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas | LSD, mescaline | 1998 | [1] | |
A Field in England | 2013 | [10] | ||
Hot Rod | 2007 | [2] | ||
I Love You, Alice B. Toklas | 1968 | [8] | ||
In the Name of the Father | 1993 | [7] | ||
Jacob's Ladder | 1990 | [7] | ||
Midnight Cowboy | 1969 | [7] | ||
Naked Lunch | 1991 | [7] | ||
Natural Born Killers | 1994 | [7] | ||
Nightbreed | 1990 | [11] | ||
Performance | An ex-hitman (Chas) hides from his former boss by moving in with an ex-rock star (Turner) and his two girlfriends. Chas begins to leave behind his hypermasculinity, and under the influence of the hallucinogenic mushroom Amanita muscaria he admits that he is relieved to be out of the gangster lifestyle. He begins exploring his bisexuality and dressing in more feminine clothing, including a wig. When Chas' former boss finds him, Chas shoots Turner before being led to his own death. | 1970 | [7] | |
The People Next Door | 1970 | [7] | ||
The President's Analyst | 1967 | [7] | ||
Psych-Out | 1968 | [7] | ||
Seven Psychopaths | In the metacinema crime black comedy film Marty Faranan is a struggling writer who dreams of finishing his screenplay, Seven Psychopaths. Marty's best friend, Billy (Rockwell), is an unemployed actor who makes a living by kidnapping dogs and collecting the owners' cash rewards for their safe return. His partner-in-crime, Hans Kieslowski - a religious man with a cancer-stricken wife - has a vision of his late wife telling him that there is no heaven and that she's just sitting in a completely grey room, which lets Hans doubt his believes in afterlife. | Peyote | 2012 | [12][13] |
The Serpent and the Rainbow | 1988 | [14] | ||
Shrooms | On a vacation in Ireland, a group of American students gather and eat psilocybin mushrooms. One of the group members accidentally ingests the wrong mushroom, a deathcap. She has a seizure and visions of her friends being murdered. As the trip continues, the group becomes separated and are murdered, apparently by an insane monk out of a ghost story from the area. | 2007 | [15] | |
Skidoo | 1968 | [8] | ||
Tenacious D in The Pick of Destiny | 2006 | |||
Training Day | 2001 | |||
Taking Woodstock | 2009 | |||
The Tingler | 1959 | [7] | ||
The Trip | 1967 | [8] | ||
The White Sound | 2002 | [7] |
See also
References
- ^ a b c Rosen, Winifred; Weil, Andrew T. (2004). From Chocolate to Morphine: Everything You Need to Know About Mind-Altering Drugs. Mariner Books. p. 134. ISBN 978-0-618-48379-2.
- ^ a b Markert, John (2013). Hooked in Film: Substance Abuse on the Big Screen. Scarecrow Press. pp. 347–348. ISBN 978-0-8108-9131-9.
- ^ http://www.herbmuseum.ca/content/beavis-and-butthead-do-america-peyote-scene
- ^ Russell, Jamie (July 12, 2004). "BBC – Films – Blueberry". bbc.co.uk. BBC. Retrieved February 5, 2014.
- ^ Hantke, Steffen (2004). Horror Film: Creating and Marketing Fear. University Press of Mississippi. p. 232. ISBN 978-1-61703-411-4.
- ^ Arnold, Joel (July 12, 2013). "To The Beaches Of Chile, Hallucinogens In Tow". npr.org. NPR. Retrieved January 13, 2014.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Levounis, Petros; Arnaout, Bachaar (2010). "Movie Library – Hallucinogens". Handbook of Motivation and Change: A Practical Guide for Clinicians. American Psychiatric Publishing. p. 257. ISBN 978-1-58562-370-9.
- ^ a b c d Boyd, Susan C. (2009). Hooked: Drug War Films in Britain, Canada, and the United States. University of Toronto Press. pp. 73–74. ISBN 978-1-4426-1017-0.
- ^ Cheney, Alexandra (August 12, 2010). "Hallucinogenic 'Enter the Void' Shakes Up Lincoln Center". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved January 6, 2014.
- ^ Burrell, Ian (28 June 2013). "Ben Wheatley and Film4 go where no British film has gone: 'A Field in England' to be shown on TV on the same day as its cinema release". The Independent.
- ^ Packer, Sharon (2012). Cinema's Sinister Psychiatrists: From Caligari to Hannibal. McFarland. p. 88. ISBN 978-0-7864-6390-9.
- ^ "Movie review: Seven Psychopaths, Lurid pulp metafiction with a sly touch of the Tarantinos". The Independent. Retrieved 25 May 2016.
- ^ "SEVEN PSYCHOPATHS REVIEW". IGN. Retrieved 25 May 2016.
- ^ Mazur, Eric Michael (2011). Encyclopedia of Religion and Film. ABC-CLIO. p. 454. ISBN 978-0-313-33072-8.
- ^ Floyd, Nigel (November 20, 2007). "Shrooms". Time Out. Retrieved January 6, 2014.