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I have an idea about an alien that conquers the world by assuming human form and releasing a film that drives whoever watches it insane. The masses that see it go on to destroy civilization in a constant fit of anxiety and terror. It would be the audio visual equivalent of the fear toxin in Batman Begins.

Scientifically, how could a film do that to any human?

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  • $\begingroup$ Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat. $\endgroup$
    – Monty Wild
    Commented May 27, 2021 at 23:52
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    $\begingroup$ "Snowcrash" - Stephenson $\endgroup$
    – Tony Ennis
    Commented May 28, 2021 at 13:06

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It is a trope of science fiction that there are so-called "basilisks" that will neurologically impair anyone who views them. These things are visual patterns/shapes/whatever that human brains (or perhaps any brain) cannot process without being harmed in some way (think about bricking an electronic device). Common examples are the movie Bird Box, an episode of Star Trek The Next Generation (used against the Borg), and about 3000 articles on the SCP collaborative fiction website.

For a basilisk to be viable, one would have to know how a human mind processes information (whether this is the whole brain, or just the visual cortex, I couldn't say) to some very profound level, and to debug it like you would any other software. You might identify some inputs that crash this software, and given that human brains don't have a reset button (that we're aware of), it would likely stay in this locked-up state forever after (especially if it crashes the visual cortex, so that no one can feed therapeutic inputs to it that revert the brain to a non/less-crashed state). The sorts of experiments that would be necessary to conduct this research would be, by necessity, absolutely unethical. It might even require being able to simulate human minds (something we don't currently have enough processing power to do, let alone several other missing technologies).

For the purposes of your story, these might be still images, or might be video. They might or might not have an audio component. They could work in such a way that some are immune, or none are. The details would be entirely up to you.

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  • $\begingroup$ Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat. $\endgroup$
    – Monty Wild
    Commented May 27, 2021 at 23:52
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    $\begingroup$ In regards to the SCP note, those articles with sensitive information often include a "Memetic agent" they call an amnestic to wipe the memories of folks who look at it. It's usually a mandela-like fractal, and I believe their in-universe explanation is that it's something akin to hypnotizing a chicken or alligator, shorting something in the brain by firing neurons in the right pattern - Like you described. It made a lot more sense to me after watching videos explaining how speedrunners implant information into the memory of a game. $\endgroup$
    – Aww_Geez
    Commented May 28, 2021 at 18:50
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Does it matter?

Sometimes things don't need a full explanation. We never learn why Phil is forced to relive the same day over and over in Groundhog Day. We don't get to hear or read Monty Python's "Funniest Joke in the World". (How could we? It would kill us too!) If the means by which the movie drives the viewer insane is not important to the plot of the story, why not just leave it out?

Explaining things like this creates the risk of creating a "voodoo shark": the explanation is less believable than the thing it attempts to explain. And, in fact, the Groundhog Day script did originally have an explanation for why Phil was forced to relive the same day over and over again—a sort of voodoo curse, as it happens—and it was cut because it was just silly. The writers tried a few different explanations, but none of them worked better than no explanation at all, so that's what they went with.

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    $\begingroup$ OP might have already decided that they really do need to go into a bit of detail, but this is still a good point -- it may not need to be a completely detailed, physiologically accurate explanation. Flicks like The Signal , Halloween 3 , Cell and The Happening come to mind (and probably OP's Batman fear toxin) -- even if they explain some of the mechanics of madness, a lot is still left to the imagination. See also: hand waving. $\endgroup$
    – A C
    Commented May 27, 2021 at 7:45
  • $\begingroup$ This would be a great answer on Writing SE but I don't think it's suitable for Worldbuilding SE. $\endgroup$ Commented May 28, 2021 at 1:11
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    $\begingroup$ That's a fair point. However, while some people worldbuild for its own sake, many use it as merely a writing tool, a means toward an end. I think it's legitimate to question whether worldbuilding is the correct tool for the job. Furthermore, I think making a believable world is as much about what you leave out as it is about what you put in. $\endgroup$ Commented May 28, 2021 at 16:02
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    $\begingroup$ TV Tropes warning on that second link :P $\endgroup$
    – Cireo
    Commented May 28, 2021 at 17:21
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It's not the movie itself, it's rather the movie and what they spray in the room where the movie is projected.

Psychedelic drugs are known for

  • having their effect depending on the "set" of the user, meaning their mental state at the moment of the assumption
  • being capable of surfacing latent psychosis.

Put the two together, with a movie which creates the right "set", and most of your audience might turn psychotic.

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  • $\begingroup$ I do not think that most people will turn aggressive unless you have in mind a specific drug that is known to make people violent. I still agree that this is a plausible solution. Even if a fraction of viewers become violent they might be capable of causing a lot of trouble. $\endgroup$
    – Otkin
    Commented May 25, 2021 at 21:27
  • $\begingroup$ Taking this idea further, could the alien do something to the entire cinema to evoke whatever they want to the humans? In The Expanse, there's a simplistic explanation of a procedure that removes empathy as "someone just waves a magnet". Could such a thing be done en-masse in the cinema, along with the psychedelics and disturbing imagery in the film itself to evoke a desired outcome? $\endgroup$ Commented May 27, 2021 at 10:01
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Sentience Off-Switch.

In the distant past some apes were artificially given sentience by a race of advanced aliens.* These apes became modern humans. When these aliens performed the uplift they added a failsafe that the sentience could be deactivated by issuing a certain visual pattern.

The pattern only works when observed in its entirety at the correct speed and frequency. If any of the variables are off it looks like white noise. The movie contains the pattern.

When someone views the movie they revert to feral ape behaviour. Wild apes are mostly nonviolent in their natural home on the Savannah. But the modern world contains hundreds of people and noises and flashing lights that get the ape all riled up. Then all nearby humans are recognized as interlopers on their territory and attacked.

*Please do not ask me how these aliens themselves acquired sentience. It is a mystery.

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    $\begingroup$ Maybe they didn't? In Blindsight it has been suggested most intelligent species aren't sentient and sentience actually slows us down... $\endgroup$ Commented May 26, 2021 at 12:33
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    $\begingroup$ @htmlcoderexe and Daron - I believe you actually mean sapience, not sentience. Apes already have sentience, sapience is the extra bit. I made the same mistake a little while ago in one of my answers and was corrected, now passing along the knowledge :-) $\endgroup$ Commented May 26, 2021 at 23:05
  • $\begingroup$ RIght, I remeber reading this distinction pointed out before. I have noticed it is a very common mistake though. Perhaps there's some "popular science" factor that causes this confusion... $\endgroup$ Commented May 27, 2021 at 11:13
  • $\begingroup$ I have to be that guy: so how did the aliens gain sentience? $\endgroup$ Commented May 27, 2021 at 13:16
  • $\begingroup$ @htmlcoderexe: I generally use sentient for anything smart enough to have personhood. $\endgroup$
    – Daron
    Commented May 27, 2021 at 13:48
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Meme.

  1. A movie that produces doubt and suspicion about the underpinnings of civilization (examples: rule of law, democratic ideals, civil society) with slick, plausible and easy to digest ideas that augment tropes and concepts already circulating in the populace.

  2. The old tropes and concepts which the movie augments have themselves persisted because these concepts can manifest ambient anxiety and fear in the susceptible population. Augmented ideas level up and become memes, reproducing themselves and gaining power and audience. More people watch the movie to find out what it is all about and become hosts to these ideas. The memes mutate and evolve, with more powerful and transmissible ideas gaining dominance.

  3. Skillful political operators take advantage of the large and growing population infected with these memes. They stoke the fear and anxiety that feed the memes, which become stronger. The operators use the infected population to gain political power.

  4. Led by these operators, the population infected by the memes destroy their own civilizations from the inside out. Civilization is replaced with a different type of society of a form driven by the memes and anxieties / fears they nurture. This destruction is in some cases gradual, over years and in some cases paroxysmic.
    It takes persistence to kill civilization. Civilization is big and durable. It will take more than one shot.

  5. Drives them insane - this is part of the OP. Are infected people insane? They do not think so. They do not froth at the mouth and eat their pets. But they will vigorously defend the reality of the memes they are infected with. They will defend them against evidence and common sense. The memes are a shared delusion - fixed false immutable beliefs. Delusions are a hallmark of mental illness.

Just a fun fictional scenario for a work of fiction!

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    $\begingroup$ So effectively an invasion of frog-shaped aliens through 4chan? $\endgroup$
    – Shadow1024
    Commented May 26, 2021 at 7:28
  • $\begingroup$ I was at a Comic-Con panel discussion years ago where author David Brin said he and other military consultants once came up with a meme they thought would bring down civilization or something to that effect. Wouldn't say what it was... $\endgroup$ Commented May 26, 2021 at 23:28
  • $\begingroup$ Several John Barnes books have viral mind-altering memes as a thing. Best is "The Sky so Big and Black". $\endgroup$
    – FuzzyChef
    Commented May 28, 2021 at 18:07
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Conspiracy theory

What you describe is partially possible; you can get a small portion of humanity to get aggressive and murderous with the right push. Case in point: Pizzagate. It's just a stupid fabrication about a polictician using a chain of restaurants to sell babies to satanists. This could have ended there, but Youtube and other social media had thousands of people making videos describing it. And then this happened:

Members of the alt-right, conservative journalists, and others who had urged Clinton's prosecution over the emails, spread the conspiracy theory on social media outlets such as 4chan, 8chan, and Twitter. In response, a man from North Carolina traveled to Comet Ping Pong to investigate the conspiracy and fired a rifle inside the restaurant to break the lock on a door to a storage room during his search. The restaurant owner and staff also received death threats from conspiracy theorists.

You may think that was an isolated case, but a few years later the same kind of stuff led not just a guy but a whole mob to storm the US capitol.

Right now about half of the american population votes and stands for the party that endorses policticians such as Marjorie Taylor Greene, who speaks publicly for the execution of house representatives for the mere crime of being against the former government's projects. She also pushes further conspiracy material in her social networks. She is actually one of the main spreaders of the whole Pizzagate thing, as well as being associated with Qanon.

Now imagine a world in which that woman is a chief of state - does 't have to be the US, could be any other country - with extensive support of the media and masses. Any government-backed movie telling you that some portion of the population should be eliminates for the greater good will lead to people to go killing each other.

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    $\begingroup$ Square I am hopeful that the half of the people will not realize your answer is the same as mine and will vent their fury on your answer and give mine a solid "huh". $\endgroup$
    – Willk
    Commented May 25, 2021 at 20:03
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    $\begingroup$ This works but requires more than 1 film and more than 1 screening. The US public went through years of conditioning. $\endgroup$
    – Otkin
    Commented May 25, 2021 at 21:30
  • $\begingroup$ If you want to do it US-style, wouldn't you need to create insane memes for both sides? Rigging election... of 2016 through Russiangate? Half year of race riots because of conspiracy theories like "systemic racism" were also impressive. $\endgroup$
    – Shadow1024
    Commented May 26, 2021 at 7:35
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    $\begingroup$ Tell one group that phrase A is the secret recognition-signal of the reptilians and give them phrase B as a rallying cry, and tell the other group that phrase B is the secret recognition-signal of the reptilians and give them phrase A as a rallying cry! $\endgroup$
    – A. B.
    Commented May 26, 2021 at 7:42
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    $\begingroup$ Yeah, one look at US politics shows OP's crazymaking movie has been out for a while now lol. $\endgroup$
    – bobflux
    Commented May 27, 2021 at 7:41
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Photosensitive seizures

"flashin

Primitive lifeforms sometimes end up causing seizures with primitive forms of what the Majestic Zeta Reticulans can accomplish with properly crafted long form videos.

The simple versions? cause seizures... flashing lights of the wrong form. Like a baby babbling causing headaches.

Long form versions can reprogram the conscious - way past what hypnosis can do. Simpletons and their hypnosis. Primitives not knowing how to properly use the flashing lights to reprogram the soul.

Time to show those baby apes what a real advanced society can do.

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    $\begingroup$ All hail Hypnotoad! $\endgroup$
    – Eric Brown
    Commented May 28, 2021 at 0:14
  • $\begingroup$ @EricBrown lol perfect connection. Didn't even think of it. $\endgroup$
    – WernerCD
    Commented May 28, 2021 at 3:59
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Hypnosis.

The aliens have abducted countless humans and experimented extensively on their brains. From this, they were able to create the perfect combination of words, music, visuals, etc. to put a human being into a hypnotic trance state. From there, they are able to subtly implant false memories or suggestions in them that can nudge at least a few of them into becoming psychotic serial killers.

We take for granted our safety in modern civilization. In truth, it would only take a tiny handful of concerted mass murderers to bring civilization to its knees. You don't need to make EVERYBODY insane from the movie directly. Even if only 1 in 100 people who watch it decide to grab a gun, walk into a public place, and start shooting people indiscriminately with no regard for their own lives (for example), it would easily cause widespread panic and anxiety. Civilization is fragile and the resulting panic, looting, and paranoia (any of us could be brainwashed! It could be you, it could be me, it could be your own mother or child...) could easily break society.

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  • $\begingroup$ I would argue that modern events in many parts of the "civilized" world prove otherwise. $\endgroup$ Commented May 27, 2021 at 13:18
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Insanity. n. mental illness of such a severe nature that a person cannot distinguish fantasy from reality, cannot conduct her/his affairs due to psychosis, or is subject to uncontrollable impulsive behavior.

By this criteria, any successful advertisement causes insanity.
Ditto any propaganda or indoctrination which "takes".

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The movie shows clear logical every-day steps that allows a person to create a doomsday device

So imagine a 45 minute movie that gives any person, no matter ability skill or how 'sound of mind', simple instructions to create an all-powerful device that will certainly cause the death of everyone.

For instance, by knowing somehow a system of quantum mechanics that is beyond (or within) our understanding, the aliens say 'put a cup of x with a cup of y, add a dash of z, and you can make a black hole that will destroy the world'.

Now that everyone on the planet is armed by this simple knowledge, everyone now knows that at any time the world will end. This is now an extreme form of PTSD. Everyone knows that there is always one lunatic somewhere in the world, who could build the device and cause the planet now to collapse, killing you and everyone you love.

It now makes logical sense for your own survival, or even your duty, to go mad and destroy as much as you can, in the vain small chance that you can do so before some lunatic creates the doomsday device.

(Oh no... I have just created a basilisk :( May need to delete this answer to not give anyone crazy any ideas...)

Ok - I have undeleted my delete because I realised that if I haven't thought of this basilisk, someone else would eventually. So the only defence is to know about it... and prevent any person from making a movie like this.

I'm already going insane just thinking about this. We need worldwide laws on this now.

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  • $\begingroup$ I should add the disturbing thing about this answer is that people would WANT to go see this film. So it would show in all theatres around the world, pushed by marketing companies, shared on social media, distributed by word of mouth. There would be no stopping it. It would also constantly plague us, and cause 'constant incessant anxiety', and people would debate it regularly and constantly. It's the end, and we are constantly reminded how 'on a knife-edge' we are. $\endgroup$
    – flox
    Commented May 28, 2021 at 4:55
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For something like this, I think it is best to stay away from too detailed a scientific explanation, or at least anything that refers in too much detail to how it works.

We all understand that our psyches are influenced by what we see and hear. You don't need science to imagine that there could be some sights and sounds that are just too much to bear.

You could make analogies with computer malware, and you could also have your characters speculate. Obviously they can't research it directly.

This is not a totally new idea. The Neal Stephenson novel Snow Crash is based on something that's similar in principle, and the Dennett/Hofstadter compilation The Mind's I reprints a story where a mere concept makes people comatose. These references aren't meant to discourage you but really more to give you examples.

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    $\begingroup$ ...and then there's Kingsman, where a sound turned people instantly into homicidal maniacs, implacably determined to murder everyone around them. Granted, that was a rather campy movie, but it didn't attempt to explain it either. $\endgroup$
    – Matthew
    Commented May 26, 2021 at 12:17
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The movie is laced throughout with a language of the aliens race.

Just like we have many languages on Earth, so do they on their planet. One of those languages is a weapon on their world.

Another language makes machines move, another language provides energy, another language allows them to travel from one place to another, etc. This is a large part of their technology, controlling the world around them with language, written and spoken.

Their "Dark Language" is used to kill one another with during times of war, and in humans it creates the insanity you're looking for.

The movie has these images cleverly inserted throughout, and the soundtrack has it in there too. Its like subliminal stuff but more profound.

How does it all actually work? Scientifically, I don't see how. So handwave. Its alien.

P.S. The Alien should really download the movie throughout TV, social media and streaming services too.

This reminds me a little of Halloween 3: Season of the Witch

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    $\begingroup$ This isn't an answer to the question, as such, but it is a nice possible piece of fluff for the story. Makes sense that this technology would have a name and a history on the alien's world, and "the Dark Language" is an excellently spooky name. $\endgroup$
    – A. B.
    Commented May 27, 2021 at 4:57
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The film presents the alien civilization's advanced understanding of human mental processes and of their resulting behaviors and social interactions.

The video offers detailed, accurate and verifiable proofs that these mental processes are deeply flawed and through their sheer existence, will inevitably lead to collective decisions bringing about our civilization's destruction.

The destruction itself can be through war, climate change or resource depletion - it doesn't really matter, as long as it's brought about eventually by choices and actions born of some inescapable flaws of the human mind.

The movie is long enough to contain very convincing explanations at various levels of complexity, ranging from abstract and formal to dumbed-down and easy to understand, even for children. Seeing it might trigger existential dread and fits of anxiety and terror, but that's just icing on the cake of proving that we all are already insane and self-destructive, but we didn't yet know it.

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  • $\begingroup$ This already exists in book form, the title is "Ponerology". $\endgroup$
    – bobflux
    Commented May 27, 2021 at 11:38
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This isn't quite what you're looking for, but if you're happy to settle for 'causes mass instability and drives many people insane', consider revealing some terrible truth about the world.

The example that came to mind was an event in Scott Alexander's Unsong, where the Devil releases a video tape which he forced a deceased National Geographic presenter to film, depicting the horrors that await people when they die and gloating that even knowing about them won't be enough for people to avoid sinning. You can read the whole chapter here, but a few relevant extracts:

The Broadcast had destroyed the original United States, driven a lot of people insane, even made a couple commit suicide despite that maybe being literally the worst possible response to its contents. I like to think of myself as a dabbler in forbidden mysteries, but the Broadcast just had the wrong ratio of enticing-to-horrifying.

[There follows quite a lot of description of the contents of the video, which you can read for yourself if you want]

Thamiel [Satan] thrust his bident at the camera, and as the tip pierced the lens there was some final vision of ultimate horror – something I will never be able to describe and which really was no worse than any of the rest but which seemed more ontologically fundamental – and then the screen went black.

“So,” said Ana. “That’s the Broadcast. What did you think?”

I vomited all over the couch.

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An Actual Scientific Answer: Use Shepard Tones

Shepard tones are a certain pattern of sounds that trick the ear into believing that the pitch or rhythm is infinitely increasing or decreasing. Extended exposure is known to cause panic and anxiety attacks in people.

SOURCE: DON'T CLICK IF YOU ARE PRONE TO ANXIETY ATTACKS

If Shepard tones are paired with things that you want to become the subject of someone's anxiety, then you can classically condition them to go into a state of panic whenever the see the paired stimulus. So if your movie pairs Shepard tones with scenes of social gathers, cooperative behaviors etc. and only stops them during times of violence or isolation, you can train a person's mind to have anxiety attacks around positive social behaviors and to seek out antisocial behaviors to alleviate the anxiety.

While it is possible that this is a malicious attempt by aliens to harm humans, it could also be explained as an innocent misunderstanding depending on your plot needs. The human mind breaks up sound into chunks of frequencies called octaves which make this illusion and subsequent mental distress possible, but the alien minds may not chunk/process sounds the same way that humans do; so, while a human film director may never intentionally make a film that pairs Shepard tones with positive interactions, the aliens might find these patterns soothing and use them the same way that humans like a soft flute or violin melody to emphasize the positive experience of a scene.

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  • $\begingroup$ Similarly, exposure infrasound has been known to cause massive anxiety and even hallucinations in some people. This insanity probably wouldn't be as permanent, but could easily spark a riot inside the theater. $\endgroup$
    – Perkins
    Commented May 28, 2021 at 20:39
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Theoretically, it's impossible. But what's this forum for, eh?

When you say "insane", I will assume you mean psychosis, a symptom which causes difficulty to discern what is real. There are many different disorders which can manifest psychosis, but for a large part they only manifest in people with specific genetics or that have been involved in substance abuse(weed or hallucinogens). There are a few left though, including extreme depression and PTSD. Assuming Marvin from the hitch hikers guide is unavailable, the best chance is PTSD.

PTSD is a very complicated disorder, but at it's most basic level you can think of it as someone being trapped in a moment. (This is clinically inaccurate. It's far more complicated than that.) It can manifest gradually, but the example everyone will recognize is shell shock. In battle when something extremely violent or surprising happens people will just stop reacting, freeze and lose perspective of what is going on. If not treated immediately (there is a simple protocol for this.) that person will probably suffer from PTSD for the rest of their life, possibly reacting violently to psychosis reminding him of the incident.

If you could somehow shock the entire audience in some very unexpected way, possibly also lacing the movie with subliminal messaging to build the person's tension, you could then just let them sit until the end of the movie. The rest of the film doesn't really matter. Of course, the results wouldn't be a theater of violently insane, but more a bunch of nightmare screaming individuals who's disorder can be triggered by certain sites and sounds.

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  • $\begingroup$ Generally speaking, people who are vulnerable are more likely to get PTSD while those who are emotionally strong can go through many traumatic events without getting PTSD. Thus, it would be difficult to force PTSD on everyone. $\endgroup$
    – David R
    Commented May 25, 2021 at 18:54
  • $\begingroup$ subliminal messaging +1. If it didn't work then there wouldn't be laws against it. $\endgroup$
    – Mazura
    Commented May 26, 2021 at 1:26
  • $\begingroup$ @Mazura not ture, there are laws against hunting bigfoot $\endgroup$
    – John
    Commented May 26, 2021 at 4:57
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Personal Future

The movie changes itself to fit the viewer, and even presents itself differently to multiple people who are viewing it at the same time.

The movie would show the viewer themselves acting out the thing the alien wants them to do, and it does so in a way that convinces the viewer that this is their future and that it is inevitable.

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  • $\begingroup$ This is supposed to be science-based - how could every person in a cinema be shown a different film, without requiring handwavy magic that makes "a movie that drives people insane" look plausible by comparison? On the other hand, if the OP was OK with it being released only via online streaming, then a site that was cleverly set up to show each viewer a tailored version would be possible (presumably it'd have to detect if two or more people were trying to watch it together and "accidentally" crash). $\endgroup$
    – A. B.
    Commented May 26, 2021 at 7:50
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I imagine any premise that proved to the viewer a boolean-logic impossibility, objectively, would cause a lot of people to flip. That is, self-contradicting circular logic, showing that something must be true because it's false and vice versa. Anything that would knock down fundamental axioms of logic.

The major advantage would be that people would immediately, as it sank in, lose their trust of the people, and world, around them. It wouldn't matter if they were delusional or not, because the world would become a delusion to them in itself.

Maybe the alien is from a species that already jumped that shark and is one of the survivors, putting it to good personal use conquering planets. Perhaps planet-conquering is just an odd nervous habit to help it cope with its own insanity. Who knows.

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Propaganda

This is arguably already happening in the world. Your hypothetical alien creates a film arguing that COVID originated from a Chinese lab as a weapon of war, that the virus was actually released by the Chinese government to damage all other economies, etc. Some people will be ready to believe this kind of theory, and once they watch the film, they'll even happily watch sequels and/or venerate your alien as their prophet. Then this group of people start launching pre-emptive attacks on China "in a constant fit of anxiety and terror", and your alien achieves their goal.

Carduus wrote a more in-depth explanation of how this kind of technique works in a question on the Politics.SE, if you are interested.

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(Warning: TvTropes links abound.)

Frame challenge:

You basically want a brown note. This is a sufficiently common trope that it may be better to not explain it, because trying too hard risks either losing your audience with an implausible (or disturbing or distasteful) explanation, or being worse than what your audience comes up with on their one (note). Instead, just let willing suspension of disbelief do the work. You don't need to explain how it works, and depending on your end goal, doing so may be counterproductive, at least with respect to your audience's enjoyment.

(I want to say something about eldritch entities, black speech and so forth, maybe even point you at Call of Cthulu, but it sounds like you aren't looking to write classic horror. Other answers have already suggested more "science fiction" slants on this approach.)

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