Rushmore
2024
with

Kristen Delevich

Assistant Professor - Integrative Physiology & Neuroscience, Washington State University

Rushmore— Inside the teenage brain

In Rushmore, Wes Anderson captures both the folly and superpower of youth. WSU neuroscientist, Dr. Kristen Delevich, will discuss what the latest research tells us about the inner workings of the teenage brain.

Kenworthy Performing Arts Centre Moscow, ID

Film Synopsis

The extracurricular king of Rushmore preparatory school is put on academic probation.

Wes Anderson brings wit and emotional depth to this offbeat coming-of-age tale chronicling a year in the life of wunderkind Max Fischer (Jason Schwartzman), a tenth-grade scholarship student at posh Rushmore Academy. Max is Rushmore's least scholarly pupil, but also its most extracurricular. He's editor of the school newspaper and yearbook, captain of the fencing and debating teams, founder and director of the Max Fischer Players, and president of the French Club, German Club, Chess Club, and almost everything else. His world is thrown into turmoil when he's put on academic probation and falls madly in love with widowed first-grade teacher Rosemary Cross (Olivia Williams). To win her heart, he enlists the help of self-made millionaire industrialist and Rushmore benefactor Herman J. Blume (Bill Murray). But when Max learns that his friend is dating Rosemary, he declares all-out war.

About the Speaker

Dr. Kristen Delevich completed a B.Sc. in Neuroscience and Philosophy in 2009 at the University of Pittsburgh. She then went on to complete a Ph.D in Biological Sciences in 2015 at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory. She was then a postdoctoral fellow at UC Berkeley in the Psychology department and Helen Wills Neuroscience Institute until 2021 when she started her faculty position at Washington State University. Research interests include puberty, adolescent brain development, reward/motivation and decision making.