Skip to content
Medicine on Screen: Films and Essays from NLM

Medicine on Screen

Films and Essays from NLM

  • Home
  • About this Site
  • Who Makes Medical Movies and Why
    • Overview
    • A Parallel Movie Industry
    • Corporate Entities
    • Doctors and Scientists
    • Medical and Advocacy Organizations
    • Public Sector
  • Genres and Techniques
  • Read Essays
  • Explore the Vault
  • View Resources
  • Comments and Privacy
  • National Library of Medicine
Press Enter / Return to begin your search.
  • All
  • Clinical & Surgical
  • Educational & Instructional
  • Research & Documentation
  • Animation
  • Color
  • Black & White
  • Sound
  • Silent
Combat
Educational & Instructional Black & White SoundAugust 2, 2013January 6, 2020

Gene Kelly’s Unknown Wartime Star Turn

By Michael Sappol, PhD

As America entered World War II, the prestige of science and technology was very high. From early on, the conflict was seen as a total war and a modern war, requiring modern methods in every respect.

READ ESSAY | VIEW FILM

Read Essay
Fila
Research & Documentation Black & White SoundAugust 2, 2013January 6, 2020

Modernizing the Tropics, Making a New Nation with Public Health

By Michael Sappol, PhD

Filariasis, a parasitic disease typically found in tropical areas, is caused by microscopic thread-like nematodes (roundworms; also known as filariae).

READ ESSAY | VIEW FILM

Read Essay

Page navigation

  • Prev
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3

NLM Historical Audiovisuals Collection

Infographic describing NLM historical audiovisual collections: 30 percent uncataloged, 70percent cataloged, 600 titles digitzed.
Learn about the world-renowned historical audiovisuals collection of nearly 10,000 titles from the silent era to the present.

SEARCH

COMING NEXT

A black man in a baseball cap talks with a white man in a suit behind a desk in a wood paneled office. Psychiatric Interview Films in the Age of Reform: Notes on the Depressive Neurosis Series filmed by the University of Mississippi Medical Center (1969)

When one thinks of audio-visual recordings of psychiatric patients in the United States in the 1960s, the distressing images of Frederick Wiseman’s observational documentary Titicut Follies (1967) may come to mind. The Depressive Neurosis series from 1969 bears no resemblance to these films. Instead, the series offers a rare glimpse into the day-to-day world of late 1960s psychiatric practice, in which people with addiction, mental illness, or mental disabilities seek help and are received with an open mind and treated with dignity by the doctors they speak to and the camera crew that films them.

NEW IN NLM DIGITAL COLLECTIONS

Film still of a large steaming pot hung on a tripod over a fire pit. The Medicine Man (1959)

This 1959 film aims to expose quackery in medicine and nutrition, telling the story of a charlatan who peddles "VitaLife" and special diets and supplements. He offers them as a general insurance of health and a cure for all manner of ailments. Calling his salesmanship educational, he maneuvers to offer "lectures" in any location that will have him, combined with a hard sell to those in attendance. Food and drug regulators keep the public safe by exposing the quack for what he is.

CATEGORIES

  • All
  • Clinical & Surgical
  • Educational & Instructional
  • Research & Documentation
  • Animation
  • Color
  • Black & White
  • Sound
  • Silent

Subscribe to Medicine On Screen

Enter your email address receive notifications of new posts.

Explore History

  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
  • Flickr
  • YouTube

Connect With NLM

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • YouTube

VISIT US

History of Medicine Division at the National Library of Medicine

National Library of Medicine
8600 Rockville Pike
Bethesda, MD 20894

Web Policies
FOIA
HHS Vulnerability Disclosure

NLM | NIH | HHS | USA.gov

NLM Support Center
Accessibility
Careers

Powered by WordPress.com.
 

Loading Comments...