She played a disturbed and homicidal leading lady in 1987 s highest grossing film, Fatal Attraction, but Glenn Close now fears her portrayal of Alex Forrest contributed to media stigmas surrounding mental illness.Close told CBS News she would read the script and play the character differently now - even though her portrayal earned her a Best Actress Academy Award nomination. I was in Fatal Attraction and that played into the stigma, Close said. I would have a different outlook on that character. <a href=https://www.stanleymugs.us>stanley flask</a> I asked Close if she read the script differently now. I would read that script totally differently, Close said. The astounding thing was that in my research for Fatal Attraction I <a href=https://www.stanley-cup.pl>stanley cup</a> talked to two psychiatrists. Never did a mental disorder come up. Never did the possibility of that come up. That, of course, would be the first thing I would think of now. In the movie, Close s character, Forrest, sought revenge on a married man with whom she had a brief sexual encounter. She first sought to hold onto the relationship but eventually became so obsessed with her lover, Dan Gallagher, played by Michael Douglas, that she briefly kidnaps <a href=https://www.stanleycups.at>stanley flasche</a> Gallagher s daughter and tries to kill his wife and Gallagher. Close s portrayal of Forrest ranks No. 7 on the American Film Institute s list of top 100 heroes and villians.Though Close says the psychiatrists she consulted before playing the role never mentioned a specific mental disorder, subsequent intervie Pvln Midterm campaigning off to a slow start for Obama
ARAB PUBLIC OPINION....Marc Lynch points us to the latest poll of Arab public opinion from Shibley Telhami, and for the most part not too much has changed since 2006. Support for Iran s nuclear program is a bit higher than before and suprisingly high in absolute terms given that this poll was limited to the Arab public ; Hamas is twice as popular as Fatah; the U.S. continues to be viewed extremely unfavorably; al-Qaeda has lost popularity but still retains a fairly sizeable base of sympathy; China is more widely liked than we are; and al-Jazeera remains the most popular news channel by a mile.But here s an interesting chart. Asked what would happen if the U.S. quickly withdraws from Iraq, hardly anyone thinks the Iraqi civil war will expand. The p <a href=https://www.stanley-cups.at>stanley cup</a> ercentage who think Iraqis will find a way to bridge their differences grew from 44% two years ago to 61% this year. What s more, the most optimistic countries tended to be the one <a href=https://www.stanley-cup.cz>stanley hrnek</a> s closest to Iraq Jordan, Lebanon and Saudi Arabia . Obviously the Arab public could be wrong about this, but this strikes me as a mostly pragmatic question, no <a href=https://www.stanley-cups.uk>stanley cups uk</a> t the kind of thing driven either by dislike of the U.S. or weird conspiracy mongering. Given that, it s perhaps telling that the opinions of ordinary Arabs who are close to the scene and who would bear the brunt of a widened civil war if it happened are so at odds with the nearly unanimous opinion of U.S. foreign policy opinion leaders.The full report is here.