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Director's Therapy Group Inspires New Film Drama
23 Mar
Summary
- A film set in a simulated Manhattan group therapy session.
- A filmmaker joins a therapy group to create a TV series.
- The director's personal therapy experience inspired the film.

"Group: The Schopenhauer Effect," a new film by Alexis Lloyd, is currently screening in New York City. The feature unfolds within a simulated Manhattan group therapy setting, where eight patients and one analyst explore the dynamics of group psychoanalysis. Actors portray characters encouraged to voice their deepest desires and urges, leading to intense dramatic exchanges.
The narrative introduces a filmmaker named Alexis, portrayed by Thomas Sadoski, who seeks to develop a television series based on group therapy. He aims to cast the group's analyst, blurring the lines between reality and fiction. This concept directly reflects Lloyd's personal experience with a therapy group he joined in 2017.
Director Lloyd has crafted a self-referential scenario, turning actors into patients and patients into characters. The film explores the complex relationship between the filmmaker and his 78-year-old therapist, raising questions about leadership within the therapeutic context. The inspiration for Lloyd's participation in group therapy reportedly stemmed from advice given by his father, Alexander Lloyd, an analyst in Paris.




