Cultural Capital
Knowing the right song, steak, or sonnet is the ultimate social currency.
In cinema, power is not merely wielded through fat wallets, but through the subtle, weaponized mastery of taste, art, and lifestyle. Characters use their knowledge of high and low culture—from classical music to street-smart playlists—to navigate class divides, assert dominance, or seek belonging. Ultimately, these films show that what we consume does not just entertain us; it defines our place in the social hierarchy.
In cinema, class warfare is rarely fought with fists; instead, it is waged with forks, turntables, and poetry books. This invisible currency of taste—how we signal our status through what we know and consume—shapes the social battlegrounds of our favorite films.
Take the culinary clash in Parasite (2019). The Park family’s casual demand for a cheap noodle dish topped with expensive Hanwoo beef is a masterclass in culinary flexing. By marrying instant noodles with premium sirloin, they perform an effortless high-low synthesis that only the truly wealthy can afford to treat as a whim. It is a delicious, dark joke about how the rich colonize working-class comfort food simply because they can.
A more harmonious, yet no less pointed, negotiation of taste occurs in The Intouchables (2011). Here, the film structures its central odd-couple relationship through a sonic duel. The wealthy quadriplegic Philippe lives in the refined world of Vivaldi, while his street-smart caregiver Driss brings the kinetic energy of Earth, Wind & Fire. Rather than keeping them apart, their clash of musical currencies becomes a bridge, proving that cultural wealth can be traded and shared to humanize both sides.
Sometimes, this currency is a gatekeeper to be overthrown, as seen in Ratatouille (2007). The formidable food critic Anton Ego sits atop a mountain of culinary snobbery, using his refined palate to make or break careers. Yet, his ultimate transformation comes not from a complex, high-status delicacy, but from a rustic peasant dish. By elevating ratatouille to haute cuisine, the film democratizes taste, suggesting that genius can bypass traditional elite institutions entirely.
Conversely, in Dead Poets Society (1989), this currency is institutionalized. The elite boarding school Welton Academy uses the canon of "dead poets" as a gatekeeping mechanism to mint the next generation of the ruling class. When the boys sneak off to read poetry in a cave, they aren't just rebelling; they are seizing control of their own education, transforming a rigid tool of social reproduction into a vital, romantic pursuit of self-expression.
Examples
Defining cases
- Dead Poets Society (1989) — The boys' reverence for the "dead poets"
The boys' reverence for the "dead poets" at Welton Academy reflects the concept of cultural capital. While the curriculum aims to imbue students with elite cultural knowledge, Keating's rebellion recalibrates this system. He replaces the stodgy canon with a more passionate, romantic one, equipping the boys with a cooler, more individualistic form of cultural capital that remains appropriate to their privileged class, fostering a distinct yet still elevated taste.
- Ratatouille (2007) — Anton Ego's transformation after tasting the ratatouille
Anton Ego's transformation after tasting the ratatouille embodies the stripping away of constructed cultural capital. Interpreted through Bourdieu’s concept, Ego, a gatekeeper of high cultural capital, finds his refined, exclusionary taste challenged. The simple peasant dish accesses a pre-cultural, emotional memory, forcing him to re-evaluate his role from a cynical arbiter to a genuine lover of art, regardless of its origin.
- Juno (2007) — The contrast between the MacGuff and Loring homes
The contrast between the MacGuff and Loring homes visually represents class distinction, interpreted through the concept of Cultural Capital. The Lorings' sterile, minimalist affluence, indicative of high cultural capital, sharply contrasts with the MacGuffs' cluttered, working-class warmth, representing lower cultural capital. This juxtaposition critiques the emotional emptiness often associated with the aspirational suburban ideal.
- The Intouchables (2011) — The juxtaposition of Vivaldi's "The Four Seasons" and Earth, Wind & Fire's "Boogie Wonderland"
The juxtaposition of Vivaldi's "The Four Seasons" and Earth, Wind & Fire's "Boogie Wonderland" functions as a sonic manifestation of class distinction. Philippe's classical music represents legitimate, high-status cultural capital, while Driss's funk music embodies a popular, embodied form of capital. The film's narrative arc celebrates the eventual synthesis of these distinct cultural forms, highlighting a bridge between different social strata.
- Sideways (2004) — Miles's monologue about Pinot Noir
Miles's monologue about Pinot Noir transcends mere wine appreciation, functioning instead as a performance of taste. This speech acts as a form of cultural currency, signaling his intellectual and social distinction. It is a deliberate display of refined knowledge, designed to elevate his status and forge an intimate connection with Maya. Her recognition and valuation of this specific cultural capital solidify their bond, demonstrating how shared aesthetic understanding can deepen interpersonal relationships and reinforce social hierarchies within the film's narrative.
Unexpected kin — far apart on the surface, family underneath
- Pretty in Pink (1986) — The diegetic and non-diegetic use of New Wave music (e.g., The Smiths, OMD).
The diegetic and non-diegetic use of New Wave music, such as The Smiths and OMD, functions as a marker of taste. This selection of "alternative" music aligns the protagonists with a specific, hip subculture, distinguishing them from the mainstream preferences of the wealthy antagonists. The soundtrack is a key mechanism for characterization and audience alignment, signaling coolness and authenticity through specialized musical knowledge.
- (500) Days of Summer (2009) — Use of The Smiths' music
The use of The Smiths' music transcends mere soundtrack, operating instead as a significant marker of identity and a flawed basis for romantic connection. Tom's affinity for The Smiths represents a form of cultural capital, which he employs to construct his self-image. He erroneously interprets Summer's shared appreciation as definitive proof of compatibility, overlooking fundamental differences that ultimately undermine their relationship. The music, therefore, highlights a crucial misreading of shared taste for genuine connection.
- Trainspotting (1996) — The film's soundtrack (featuring artists like Iggy Pop, Underworld, Blur, Pulp)
The film's soundtrack is more than just background music; it is a curated collection of songs functioning as a badge of "cool." Blending 70s proto-punk with 90s Britpop and electronica, the soundtrack bestows cultural capital upon the film and its audience. This savvy branding helped position *Trainspotting* as a key artifact of the "Cool Britannia" era, linking subcultural authenticity with mainstream commercial appeal.