SeaSnake
OG
Now this is kinda tough because Vietnam happened first and I think allowed for drugs to hit us easier. But I saw this take about Dead Presidents and how Anthony was extremely traumatized with no name for PTSD at the time and no easy way to provide for his family.
Alright boom
. Letâs get into Dead Presidents because this movie is a masterclass in a slow-burn crashout and I will stand ten toes on that.
Let me say this first before the âhe shouldâve just got a jobâ crowd clears their throats:
Anthony Curtis was not born a criminal. He was manufactured. Period.
Anthony went to Vietnam a boy and came back a ghost. They fought for a country that promised honor, stability, a future and instead gave them trauma, a heroin habit, and a cold shoulder. PTSD wasnât even a word folks cared to use back then especially not for Black men. You were expected to âman up,â shut up, and get back to work like you didnât just watch people d!e in the jungle every day.
Psychologically? Baby, Anthony was already fractured before the robbery ever entered the chat.
He comes home to:
⢠No real job opportunities
⢠No mental health support
⢠A community drowning in poverty
⢠A system that sees him as disposable
⢠And a country that loves Black men in uniform but fears them in civilian clothes
That kind of contradiction will mess with your sense of self REAL bad.
Now letâs talk PTSD
Anthony is hypervigilant. Emotionally numb. Detached. He moves through the world like heâs still in a war zone because mentally he still is. Vietnam never left him. The sounds, the violence, the survival mentality thatâs why the armored truck r0bbery felt logical to him. It wasnât about greed, it was about control. A mission. A plan. A way to finally feel powerful instead of helpless.
And listen poverty will have you doing mental gymnastics to justify damn near anything. When you do everything ârightâ and still end up with nothing, your moral compass starts spinning. Especially when you realize the same government that sent you to war has no problem letting you starve afterward.
Was Anthony wrong?
Morally? Yes.
Psychologically? I get it.
Thatâs the uncomfortable truth people donât want to sit with. His crashout wasnât impulsive it was cumulative. Death by a thousand cuts. Racism. War trauma. Economic neglect. Broken promises. Masculinity tied to providing when the system wonât even give you the tools to do so.
His character arc is tragic because you can pinpoint every moment where things couldâve gone differently if someone anyone had intervened. But in the 60s and 70s, Black men didnât get grace. They got blamed.
Dead Presidents isnât a heist movie to me. Itâs a psychological autopsy.
Anthony didnât just rob an armored truck he was trying to reclaim a life that had already been taken from him.
And thatâs why his downfall hurts. Because it makes you ask:
How many Anthonys did this country chew up and discard?
Whew.
And yâall know I love a good crashout, but this one?
This one was cooked long before the robbery.
#DeadPresidents
#PsychologyInFilm
Stole this from FB
Alright boom
Let me say this first before the âhe shouldâve just got a jobâ crowd clears their throats:
Anthony Curtis was not born a criminal. He was manufactured. Period.
Anthony went to Vietnam a boy and came back a ghost. They fought for a country that promised honor, stability, a future and instead gave them trauma, a heroin habit, and a cold shoulder. PTSD wasnât even a word folks cared to use back then especially not for Black men. You were expected to âman up,â shut up, and get back to work like you didnât just watch people d!e in the jungle every day.
Psychologically? Baby, Anthony was already fractured before the robbery ever entered the chat.
He comes home to:
⢠No real job opportunities
⢠No mental health support
⢠A community drowning in poverty
⢠A system that sees him as disposable
⢠And a country that loves Black men in uniform but fears them in civilian clothes
That kind of contradiction will mess with your sense of self REAL bad.
Now letâs talk PTSD
Anthony is hypervigilant. Emotionally numb. Detached. He moves through the world like heâs still in a war zone because mentally he still is. Vietnam never left him. The sounds, the violence, the survival mentality thatâs why the armored truck r0bbery felt logical to him. It wasnât about greed, it was about control. A mission. A plan. A way to finally feel powerful instead of helpless.
And listen poverty will have you doing mental gymnastics to justify damn near anything. When you do everything ârightâ and still end up with nothing, your moral compass starts spinning. Especially when you realize the same government that sent you to war has no problem letting you starve afterward.
Was Anthony wrong?
Morally? Yes.
Psychologically? I get it.
Thatâs the uncomfortable truth people donât want to sit with. His crashout wasnât impulsive it was cumulative. Death by a thousand cuts. Racism. War trauma. Economic neglect. Broken promises. Masculinity tied to providing when the system wonât even give you the tools to do so.
His character arc is tragic because you can pinpoint every moment where things couldâve gone differently if someone anyone had intervened. But in the 60s and 70s, Black men didnât get grace. They got blamed.
Dead Presidents isnât a heist movie to me. Itâs a psychological autopsy.
Anthony didnât just rob an armored truck he was trying to reclaim a life that had already been taken from him.
And thatâs why his downfall hurts. Because it makes you ask:
How many Anthonys did this country chew up and discard?
Whew.
And yâall know I love a good crashout, but this one?
This one was cooked long before the robbery.
#DeadPresidents
#PsychologyInFilm
Stole this from FB