In an unprecedented intersection of cinematic storytelling and psychiatric rigor, Bravery Pictures has officially launched an international Clinical Review Board for its upcoming feature, Call Me Nothing. Moving beyond the typical “medical consultant” role, the production is inviting a global cohort of experts to treat the film as a living clinical laboratory—offering a unique “blue-sky study” path for practitioners to maintain their professional licenses while shaping the narrative of mental health on screen.
Beyond the Screen: The Case of Amaris Everheart
Call Me Nothing eschews the traditional tropes of the abduction thriller. Rather than focusing on the crime itself, the film interrogates the deep-tissue psychological aftermath. The narrative centers on Amaris Everheart, a survivor of early-childhood kidnapping who, as an adult, suffers a catastrophic psychotic break leading to spousal homicide.
The film serves as a reconstruction of her “interior cage,” featuring:
- Complex Dissociative Structures: A mind fractured by early trauma.
- Auditory Phenomenology: Four distinct internal voices and command hallucinations.
- Memory Sequestration: The “identity rewriting” required for survival.
Clinicians are not being asked to critique the cinematography, but rather to validate the clinical continuity of Amaris’s behavioral trajectory. They will evaluate whether her internal landscape aligns with the diagnostic frameworks of the DSM-5 and ICD-11, providing a level of realism rarely seen in mainstream media.
A Global Brain Trust
Call Me Nothing A Poetic Descent into Inner ChaosThe call for experts has already seen a massive response. Bravery Pictures has confirmed that the Review Board currently includes:
- Forensic Psychiatrists & Neuropsychiatrists from North America and Europe.
- Child Protection Specialists & Trauma Psychologists from Asia and Latin America.
- Senior Forensic Consultants specializing in dissociative disorders and command hallucinations.
These professionals are tasked with reviewing not just the film, but a comprehensive Clinical Dossier that includes “recovered” cassette transcripts and diary pages. Their collective feedback will be synthesized into a Consensus Report—a document designed to be used in university training, grand rounds, and public education to improve trauma-informed practices.
Professional Incentives: CE and License Maintenance
Recognizing the demanding schedules of medical professionals, Bravery Pictures has structured the review process to qualify for Category 2 Continuing Education (CE) and CPD hours. By mapping participation to “self-directed learning” and “pro-bono consultation,” the program allows clinicians to earn documented hours required for annual license renewal.
Participation Tiers and Credits:
| Level | Clinical Commitment | Professional Recognition |
| Tier 1: Associate | Review first 30 mins + DSM-5/ICD-11 checklist. | On-screen credit: Contributing Clinical Observer. |
| Tier 2: Consultant | Full 95-minute screener + advanced forensic tools. | Premium on-screen credit + official IMDb listing. |
| Tier 3: Brand Partner | Strategic partnership & priority visibility. | Option to voice the “Consulting Doctor” in the film. |
A Note on Ethics: While the film is inspired by real-world psychological phenomena, the “Amaris Dossier” is an anonymized, fictionalized construct. All participants are required to sign strict Non-Disclosure Agreements (NDAs) to maintain the integrity of the clinical data and the film’s pre-release secrecy.
Reshaping the Narrative of Psychosis
The goal of this initiative is twofold: to provide a high-fidelity training tool for the medical community and to ensure the responsible portrayal of mental illness for the general public. As the producer of Bravery Pictures notes, the film was built from “artistic rigor and lived fear.” By inviting the clinical community into the fold, the production ensures that the “architecture of a shattered mind” is portrayed with the accuracy it deserves.
For those in the psychiatric and psychological fields, this represents a rare opportunity to step outside the clinic and into the culture, ensuring that the stories we tell about trauma are grounded in scientific truth.
How to Apply
Positions for the pre-release review cycle are limited and are being filled on a rolling basis. Clinicians interested in reviewing the dossier and securing CE-compatible documentation should visit the Call Me Nothing Clinical Review page or contact the production team directly.
Contact Information:
- Email: hello@braverypictures.com
- Web: braverypictures.com