From burlesque to horror: a century of sleepwalking on the silver screen.

Sleep Med

Sleep Disorder Unit, Pitié Salpêtrière Hospital, Sorbonne University, Paris, France. Electronic address:

Published: September 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • The text explores the portrayal of sleepwalking in cinema, tracing its history from early films to modern times, highlighting how it was initially seen as a mysterious phenomenon.
  • A study analyzed 87 films and 22 cartoons for themes, character behaviors, and treatments related to sleepwalking, noting distinct trends in genre and character representation.
  • Unlike real-life statistics, movies often depict sleepwalkers as women in nightgowns and suggest exaggerated behaviors; this shift in portrayal aligns with advancements in medical understanding of sleep disorders.

Article Abstract

Background: Long before being described as a disorder, sleepwalking was considered as a mysterious phenomenon inspiring artwork. From the early beginning of cinema, sleepwalkers were shown to populations, playing a crucial role in storytelling and collective knowledge.

Objective: We characterized how sleepwalking has been portrayed in a large number of movies from the origins of cinema to recent years.

Methods: Movies containing the words "sleepwalking" or "somnambulism" were searched for in International Movie Databases. Types of movies, sleepwalking characters, postures and behaviors during episodes, triggers, and suggested treatments were collected.

Results: Production of 87 movies and 22 cartoons portraying sleepwalkers was clustered around two peaks, in the 1910s and 2010s. Comedies predominated before 1960, and thriller/horror movies as a dominant genre after 1960. In contrast with real-life sleepwalking epidemiology, sleepwalkers are more often portrayed as women than men (and often wearing a transparent white nightgown), as adults more than children on-screen, and 23% suffered psychiatric comorbidities. The unrealistic posture of outstretched arms and eyes closed was found in 20% of movies and 79% of cartoons. Night terrors, sexsomnias (kissing, having sex, initiated pregnancy), sleep-related eating and sleep driving were also featured. Homicides and falls while sleepwalking were recurrent fear-inducing topics. The first sleep EEG was featured in a sleepwalking movie in 1985, and a sleep specialist gave his first advice in 1997.

Discussion: The representation of sleepwalking on the screen seems to have evolved from popular, unrealistic stereotypes of somnambulism towards a medical condition, paralleling the development of sleep medicine.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.sleep.2021.07.015DOI Listing

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