John's Not Mad

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John's Not Mad
Format Documentary
Directed by Valerie Kaye
Presented by Eleanor Bron (narrator)
Country of origin United Kingdom
Production
Running time 30 minutes
Broadcast
Original channel BBC1
Original airing 15 March 1989

John's Not Mad is a QED documentary made by the BBC in 1989. It was ranked, in a British public poll, as one of the 50 Greatest Documentaries.[1]

Overview

The film shadows John Davidson, a 15-year-old from Galashiels in Scotland, who had severe Tourette syndrome. John's life was explored in terms of his family and the close-knit community around him, and how they all coped with a misunderstood condition. Oliver Sacks, a neurologist, offers observations on aspects of John's behaviour. The documentary was narrated by the actress Eleanor Bron.

A follow up documentary, The Boy Can't Help It, was aired by the BBC in 2002, catching up with Davidson – at 30 – to see how he continued to cope with the condition. It also visits an 8 year old named Greg Storey, from Yorkshire – who has Tourette's, and offers his experience of it at an early age.

DVD release

Both John's Not Mad and an edited version of The Boy Can't Help It omitting the scenes dealing with Greg Storey were released on DVD in 2006 with the proceeds going to the Tourette Scotland foundation.[2]

The documentary achieved a cult status soon after it was first aired and, contrary to the "possible good intentions of the film crew, it has been seen as some sort of comedy classic."[3]

John Davidson also featured with Keith Allen in a Channel 4 documentary entitled Tourette De France where he travelled with Allen and a group of Scottish people with Tourette's to Paris to visit the hospital where Georges Gilles de la Tourette practised.

Twentieth anniversary

In May 2009, BBC television broadcast Tourettes: I Swear I Can't Help It, a follow-up to the 1989 and 2002 documentaries, that caught up with both John (at 37) and a 15-year-old Greg, to see how their lives had changed in seven years.[4]

References

  1. Channel Four Television Corporation, "The 50 Greatest Documentaries," October 2005.
  2. "John's Not Mad". Play.com. Retrieved 2009-05-31. 
  3. "John's Not Mad". DVD Times. 2004-02-09. Retrieved 2007-06-20. 
  4. "What happened to the boy with Tourette's?". BBC. 2009-05-28. 

External links

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