
If you have watched the iconic film Aparichitudu (Anniyan), you probably remember the chilling transformation of the protagonist. In one moment he is a quiet, soft-spoken man who cannot tolerate injustice. In another moment he appears as a flamboyant, charming romantic personality. And in yet another moment he becomes a ruthless vigilante, punishing corruption with terrifying conviction. Three distinct personalities — different voices, different behaviors, different moral compasses — living inside the same individual.
Cinema has always been fascinated by this phenomenon. The Bollywood psychological thriller Deewangee explored a similar theme, where the protagonist’s shifting identities create a dramatic and unpredictable narrative. While these stories are exaggerated for cinematic effect, they echo something that psychology has long recognized as real: Dissociative Identity Disorder (DID), previously known as Multiple Personality Disorder (MPD).
For most people, the idea of multiple personalities feels mysterious and almost supernatural. How can a single person suddenly behave like a completely different individual? How can memories vanish, emotional responses change, and behavior shift so dramatically that even close family members feel as though they are interacting with different people?
Modern psychiatry explains Dissociative Identity Disorder primarily through severe psychological trauma, particularly trauma experienced during childhood that fragments a person’s developing identity. This explanation is supported by many clinical observations and remains an important part of understanding the disorder.
