The film begins with a
voice-over narration by director
John Huston, describing the story as
Sigmund Freud's "descent into a region almost as black as hell itself--man's unconscious--and how he let in the light." Huston's voice-overs also occur at the film's ending and substitute for Freud's thoughts in some scenes, In 1885
Vienna, young doctor Sigmund Freud has completed his medical training and finds himself at odds with hospital head
Theodore Meynert, especially regarding the status of "
hysteria" as a psychological disorder. With his mother
Amalia's encouragement, Freud goes to
Paris to study the condition with
Dr. Jean-Marin Charcot, who has made some advances with the help of
hypnosis but still has not been able to fully cure his patients. " by
Pierre Aristide André Brouillet. Returning to Vienna, Freud marries
Martha Bernays and sets up practice, trying Charcot's techniques to cure different patients of their
neuroses. He is especially upset and driven to unsettling dreams, however, when one patient, Carl von Schlosser, stabs his soldier father's uniform and fondles the female
mannequin beneath it. Although tempted to live a more routine life as a doctor, Freud partners with another doctor,
Josef Breuer, who has made some progress by getting his patients to talk about their conditions while under hypnosis. Together, Breuer and Freud treat Cecily Koertner (a fictional character based in part on Freud's patient "
Anna O"). When it becomes apparent that Cecily is sexually attracted to Breuer, he leaves her treatment to Freud, who eventually foregoes hypnotism and has her recount her dreams and to
free-associate words, memories, and ideas. Cecily's attachment to Breuer
transfers to Freud, but despite Martha's concerns he presses on through different layers of Cecily's
unconscious. Freud also begins to examine his own neuroses and dreams, leading him to the concepts of
child sexuality and the
Oedipus complex, concepts that Breuer is unable to accept. At a lecture to other doctors and psychologists, Freud's ideas are received with derision, but a few people defend his willingness to break out of old habits and prejudices in search of the truth. Huston's narration closes with the "words carved on the temple at
Delphi: Know thyself. . . . This knowledge is now within our grasp. Will we use it? Let us hope." ==Cast==