The Atlantic

<em>Russian Doll</em> Shatters the Word <em>Crazy</em>

Understanding Netflix’s trippy masterpiece means understanding what it’s saying about mental illness and the stigma around it.
Source: Netflix

This article contains spoilers through all eight episodes of Russian Doll.

“No, no, no, no, no, we do not use that word in this house.”

So says Ruth, the no-nonsense parental guardian of Nadia, the ever-dying star of Netflix’s psychedelic triumph Russian Doll. Ruth, a therapist, actually says it twice—varying the number of nos each time—in separate “loops,” in separate episodes, when confronted with the forbidden word: crazy.

Ruth’s rule fits with changing mores, as have tried to retire the term for being insulting to people with mental illness. But Ruth and Nadia share a particularly intimate understanding of the harm the word can do. With the same humanity and attention to detail that it , unwinds how the incoherent, shame-laden cultural image of mental illness diverges from—and worsens—the real thing.

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