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'Prozac Nation' Was the Film That Made Me Get Help for My Depression

After watching the adaptation of Elizabeth Wurtzel's autobiography about being a narcissistic, mentally ill student with no redemption, my life completely changed course.

I probably discovered the movie adaptation of Elizabeth Wurtzel's autobiography, Prozac Nation, in a lethargic haze. I was depressed at the time, and likely just googled "good movies about depression." There are too many movies about depression that aren't really about depression. Instead, it's put down as a quirky side effect, a "trait" designed to make the character more pitiful or abject. Prozac Nation is not one of those movies.

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The film is a hell ride. It's a lethal combination of beauty, brains, and narcissism masquerading as a human grenade. Based on Wurtzel's Generation X best seller, it describes depression with unparalleled accuracy and prose sharper than a razor blade. While this is unfortunately one of those annoying cases in which the book is better than its adaptation, don't let that stop you from watching. Five minutes in, you'll realize you can't look away. It's like witnessing the most bewitching car crash you can fathom.

Jessica Lange is in it, as the official mascot for bad, chain-smoking moms everywhere. Christina Ricci is in it, in the role of reckless Harvard-journalism student Lizzie. She gets into the college on a full-ride scholarship, after writing a tell-all account of her parent's divorce for Seventeen magazine. She fabricates an imagined relationship with her deadbeat dad to please its readership. Then she becomes a self-described "beautiful literary freak." What follows is sex, drugs, and Lou Reed concert reviews for her school paper, the Harvard Crimson. However, Lizzie is one of those death-or-glory people, one whose efforts end up Pyrrhic at best. Predictably, all her relationships implode because she's an angry person suffering from a very real mental illness. She yanks her hair, screams at friends. Her face is streaked with tears when her peers aren't accommodating enough or try to offer unwanted help or simply exist near her. When they don't succumb to her outbursts, her eruptions only intensify. She's asking for help but rebuffs its advances.

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Ricci narrates the film in her seductive vocal fry, and while most voiceovers can be grating, this is her character's salvation. It's like Wednesday Addams 2.0. Paired with Wurtzel's potent words, the effect is intoxicating: "Hemingway has his classic moment in The Sun Also Rises when someone asks Mike Campbell how he went bankrupt. All he can say is, 'Gradually, then suddenly.' That's how depression hits. You wake up one morning, afraid that you're gonna live." Everything she says could be a tattoo, but it's her sarcastic aphorisms that make her so relatable.

The only likely reason Ricci lost out on an Oscar nomination that year for her lung-stabbing performance is because the film was never released in the States. Due to some executive-level bullshit, the distributor (Miramax) pawned it off on the premium cable channel Starz four years later. It was released in the director's home country of Norway to an audience of tens. That brought about the ironic New York Times headline, "For Author of 'Prozac Nation,' Delayed Film Is a Downer."

In comparison to the multitude of depressing films out there, Prozac Nation is wildly entertaining, but only if you get off on watching people self-destruct. (See also: Sarah Silverman's I Smile Back). When she claims her best friend Ruby (young Michelle Williams) doesn't know what it's like to truly love someone, Lizzie finally gets what's coming to her. A verbal bitch slap. Ruby, choking back tears, retorts with one of the best on-screen truth servings of all time, saying, "I'm not crying because you're mean. I'm crying because I can't imagine how incredibly painful it must be to be you."

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At this point in the movie, it's impossible not to hate Lizzie. She's the devil incarnate, catering only to her own whims and edging her friends and lovers out. It forces you to consider the worst: that people might eventually give up on you. Maybe not now, but getting out of bed in the morning is something only you can do for yourself. It's sobering. The other thing I noticed was how high-functioning her character was. If the process of watching and re-watching this movie was some fucked-up journey of self-diagnosis, if I really were depressed, then I had found what I was looking for. It was time to get help before I became a human sinkhole.

One day after I'd inhaled the movie and it left me gasping for air, I found myself standing in my university library, thumbing through titles like How to Think Straight About Psychology. I chuckled at the idea of the school relegating a popular work of fiction like Prozac Nation to a library pregnant with ancient, academic textbooks. I checked it out, huffed and sobbed through the chapters. I re-watched the film, drinking in the dialogue. I made a decision to call my parents and told them that I wasn't happy.

I quit college a semester before graduation and moved back home. One year and a shitty telemarketing job later, I landed a different job, and a very small part included arranging a Reddit AMA with the Dame of Depression herself, Elizabeth Wurtzel. So I emailed her. She responded. We exchanged pleasantries, and I tried to tell her how much she meant to me in so many words. She told me about her newfound work as a lawyer and the weird legal cases she'd been working on. I can't remember all the stuff we spoke about because, like an idiot, I never saved the emails. Now they're long gone, like all my feelings of depression—a faint memory of a random interaction with someone who I may have unknowingly appointed to save me.

Follow Trey Taylor on Twitter.

A version of this article originally appeared on VICE UK.