
Mr. Nobody
[1987, 36 min.] Mr. Nobody is Jack Huggins, an old man who has not sought
adequate treatment of his diabetes. Jack's personal struggle for autonomy is shown
in the context of the claims of public health agencies and the ongoing assistance
of local health-care advocates and social-service agencies.
Introduction
Mr. Nobody is a film that explores issues relating to self-neglect in
the elderly population. In this particular film viewers are introduced to Jack
Huggins, an older man who has not sought adequate treatment of his diabetes.
He also exhibits a disabling pattern of hoarding behavior. Every room in his
house is crammed with bags, boxes, radios, televisions, and assorted junk. His
residence might be termed a "garbage house." Naturally, Jack's house
attracts the attention of his new neighbors, a young couple. They notice a rancid
odor emanating from Jack's house on spring days. Concerned about the potential
public health risks associated with this problem, they contact the city public
health department and file a formal complaint. Empowered by city statutes, the
health department cleans Jack's house. One quarter of his savings is required
to pay for the cleanup. Then the court appoints a Public Trustee to oversee
all of Jack's financial affairs. Jack is left with a meager allowance provided
by the Trustee. The film begins after these events have transpired. Viewers
are introduced to Jack, enter his house, and follow the progress of his struggle
to regain a measure of independence in the face of these problems. Several representatives
of social services agencies interact with Jack and support his attempts to regain
control of his financial affairs. The film offers no easy answers regarding
the competing claims for the public's right to healthful living conditions and
the individual's right to personal autonomy.
Pre-Viewing Notes
and Activities
- Members of your audience may not be aware of this type of self-neglect.
They may not have experienced interaction with someone who exhibits this form
of behavior. If so, ask them to imagine that they are the neighbor of someone
whose residence has become a "garbage house." What would their reaction
be to this problem? Would they talk to the neighbor? Would they contact the
city health authorities? To complicate matters, note that the next door neighbor
also has the reputation of being the "cat man" because he owns ten
or twenty animals. Although the animals don't run free, neighbors have expressed
concern about potential health problems. If members of your audience were
this man's neighbor, how would they respond now? Add another complicating
factor: what if the neighbor was an old man? How would that alter their response
to the overall problem? Tell members of your audience that these complicating
factors establish a context for which viewers will examine an actual case
documented by the filmmaker in Mr. Nobody.
- Note that there are two narrators in this film. One is an external narrator
who never is shown on camera. She recounts the major events in Jack Huggins'
story in a straightforward, objective style. This narrator seeks to be sympathetic
to Jack's cause, but fair in the summary and interpretation of events. The
other narrator is Jack Huggins himself. His version of the events, provided
through the film technique of the "voice over" (see summary of scenes),
are charged with emotion. Viewers need to judge for themselves what is most
honest or reliable in Jack's version of the story by comparing what he tells
them to what they see for themselves
- This film also requires an unflinching willingness to view scenes that are
graphic and unpleasant. Viewers may feel uncomfortable when they see Jack's
ulcerated leg in one scene. Remind viewers that documentary films often require
us to see what is unsettling, painful, or unpleasant. Jack Huggins is not
a fictional character; he is a real person whose life is caught up in the
competing claims of society's right to the public health and the individual's
right to self-determination
Summary of Scenes
NOTE: This documentary uses narration and the "voice-over"
film technique; in the former a narrator explains specific issues relating to
Jack's case; in the latter we hear Jack's voice, as he talks about his life
and his battle with the Health Department, but we do not see him speaking. To
save space in this summary, quotations by the narrator will be noted "NARRATOR";
references to voice-overs by Jack will be noted "JACK".
- Jack Huggins, 65, is shown walking on the sidewalk near his home. We hear
his voice-over as he reminisces about the many people he used to know years
ago. NARRATOR: "A growing number of old people find themselves alone.
Many are frail and need support. They want to care for themselves, but their
minds and bodies begin to fail them. Then there are seniors capable of caring
for themselves, but who choose not to--victims of their own neglect. Too often
institutions are the quick solution." Jack slowly climbs the long set
of stairs from the sidewalk to his front porch. JACK: "This is where
I was born. It's something I light up to."
- Jack in his bathroom. The sink is caked with grime; the walls are mildewed.
He removes his shirt and bathes himself. Jack was an only child, and he never
married. NARRATOR: "Since the death of his parents, Jack has let things
slide." Jack explains his "hobbies"--his interest in fixing
radios and televisions. He walks into a room crammed with these devices.
- Jack helps his neighbors, a young couple, who are erecting a fence at the
back of their property. In a voice-over the neighbors comment on Jack's eccentricities.
"He's a good neighbor," one says. Jack shows his sense of humor
when he braces one of the fence posts with his head ("Let's put some
brains into it!"). While they work together, we hear the neighbor in
a voice-over describe the "rancid smell" they discovered shortly
after they moved next door to Jack. "Then we started hearing stories
about the cat man."
- Jack enters a room filled with cats--at least ten of them--and feeds them.
JACK: "I love those animals. If I had my parents I would feel the same
way. I have my pets, and when I lose them, it hurts me." In his kitchen
Jack pours water into a large wastebasket. He sits down and takes off a shoe
and wool sock. The flesh on his leg appears tender and raw. Part of his leg
is discolored. His foot is wrapped in gauze. Jack explains that he has diabetes
and is troubled by ulcers in his legs. NARRATOR: "Concern for Jack's
health and for their own well being had prompted neighbors to call in the
Health Department."
- The two neighbors recall asking themselves, "What in God's name is
going on next door that it smells so bad?" Then we see Jack sweeping
one of his rooms. JACK: "I will admit that there was a bit of a mess
in the house." He complains that he was involuntarily restrained, dragged
down his steps, and taken to the hospital. JACK: "This is where all the
trouble started."
- The neighbor relate their side of the story. They had wanted Jack's place
to be cleaned up, but they were shocked at the Health Department's insensitivity
to Jack's plight. Jack walking on the street. He routinely checks people's
trash. In a voice-over his neighbors note that Jack is "an eccentric,
a pack rat, and he may exaggerate the value of his belongings." But they
complain that when the Health Department cleaned out the house, they threw
away many precious family treasures (such as pictures, furniture). They admit,
"If he's angry, he has a right to be angry. And if he's distrustful of
the city authorities, he has a right to be distrustful."
- Jack in his house. The narrator explains that the Health Department's cleanup
of his house was legal. We see one of Jack's rooms, crammed with boxes, bags,
and junk. He carries a cat in his arms. JACK: "I get depressed. It haunts
me." He goes up the stairs to his bedroom. Several cats scurry after
him. The narrator explains that doctors certified Jack as mentally incompetent
to handle his financial affairs. His estate is in the hands of a Public Trustee.
But the Health Department cleanup used one fourth of Jack's savings.
- A volunteer from Senior Link, a community based agency that represents the
interests of senior citizens, visits Jack. Before the volunteer can explain
why he is visiting today, Jack interrupts, "I'm not signing no papers."
The volunteer explains that Jack needs to sign a release to obtain before
and after photographs taken by the Health Department representative. Jack
signs. The young man reminds Jack of the Health Department's deadline for
further cleanup.
- Jack in his kitchen. The tables and cabinets are cluttered with boxes, pans,
and other items. JACK: "This diabetes is what is causing the trouble."
He complains about the meager allowance he is given by the Public Trustee.
JACK: "I could walk around in my bare skin as far as [the Health Department
is] concerned. I had intentions of doing it, only for getting arrested on
the street." He walks to a cemetery. He recalls that his parents' pictures
were discarded along with other personal memorabilia. JACK: "This is
what actually tormented me." He stops at the graves of his parents and
recalls that before his mother's death, he promised her that he would take
care of his father. When his father died twenty- one years ago, he said to
himself, "Now I have to fight my own battles. I'm a man now."
- A psychiatrist, invited by Senior Link to evaluate Jack's mental competence,
interviews Jack in his house. Jack gives evidence of his knowledge of certain
financial details. Jack talks about his "hobbies." He admits, "I
tell you the truth, I can't pass a radio store . . . . It's like a germ with
me." Jack asserts, "I never owed a person a cent until these people
took over. And now I'm being treated like Mr. Nobody." The narrator summarizes
the psychiatrist's report: "Jack is mentally competent and able to manage
his financial affairs. But the doctor is concerned about potential self-abuse.
- The daily visit of one of the nurses who tends to Jack's feet. She applies
ointment to Jack's leg and foot. On one side of his leg there is an open sore.
The kitchen is crowded with boxes and miscellaneous junk he has scavenged.
The nurse wraps his leg and advises him, "Stay off your legs as much
as possible." He nods. But then we see Jack back on the sidewalk. JACK:
"I love to walk. It gets it out of my system."
- A lawyer from Senior Link arrives at his house to evaluate his case against
the Health Department. She asks to see the house in order to know what needs
to be cleaned up. She points to a refrigerator. "Does this one work?"
she asks. "No," he shouts. He opens the door. She stands back from
the refrigerator and holds her nose as she looks at the contents inside. "That
was supposed to be clean," he says. They go to the basement. She cautiously
walks down the stairs. The camera pans across the basement space: everywhere
there is wood, metal, boxes, cans of paint, bottles, cans, ladders--all stuffed
and crammed into every nook and cranny.
- Two Senior Link volunteers have carried out several loads of materials from
the basement. Jack "supervises" them in the back yard and jokes
about their hard work. In the basement the two young men are barely able to
move around within the cluttered space. Six weeks later Jack calls the Public
Trustee's office and complains that a hot water heater still has not been
installed. He reminds the Trustee that he has a letter from a psychiatrist
testifying to his competence.
- NARRATOR: "The photos that arrived from the Health Department were
not designed to advance Jack's case. Few things of value were visible between
the piles of boxes and bags." Jack holds up some of the photographs,
and we see firsthand evidence of what the inside of Jack's house looked like
before the initial cleanup. Jack denies that the rooms looked the way they
are depicted in the photographs. The narrator explains that some time later
a new Health Department inspector, who appears to be more sympathetic to Jack's
case, was appointed. He visits Jack. JACK: "I think he knows that I do
have a problem." Jack launches into a diatribe against the Health Department.
The inspector listens. Jack stands face-to-face with the inspector and claims,
"To my dying breath I will fight until they put me in the cemetery."
- JACK: "If I didn't have my animals, it makes me wonder what would come
out of it." He goes outside to bury a kitten. JACK: "I would say
there is close to 75 cats to bury in the back yard over time." He digs
a hole in the garden. A young neighbor boy looks over the fence between their
properties. As Jack buries the kitten, which he has placed in a cookie bag,
we hear his voice-over as he strains to speak above the tears: "I can't
help it if I miss them. They're my family, and I love them."
- Jack goes into a bedroom and lies across the bed so that his legs are elevated.
NARRATOR: "It's been a year since Jack agreed to tell his story. He may
never get compensation form the Health Department, and the assets are being
held by the Public Trustee until a dispute over Jacks' account is settled.
For the time being he's won the right to stay home." Jack comes down
the steps in front of the house with his favorite cat on a leash. He sits
down and holds that animal in his arms. He rubs its head and hugs it.
Discussion Questions and Sample Worksheet
Text of The Great Circle
of Life: A Resource Guide to Films and Videos on Aging, copyright ©
1987, 1999, 2005, Robert E. Yahnke. All photographs copyrighted by Robert E.
Yahnke. All rights reserved. Contact author for permission to copy
photographs or reprint portions of text.