The Empty Vessel
A cinematic symbol that means absolutely everything because it means absolutely nothing.
In cinema, certain motifs refuse to be pinned down to a single, tidy metaphor. Instead, they act as narrative mirrors, absorbing whatever fears, desires, or political anxieties the characters project onto them. By stripping a symbol of its stable origin, filmmakers create a dynamic void that drives the story forward through pure projection.
Cinema loves a mystery, but it loves an interpretive wild card even more. When a visual cue or a line of dialogue sheds its fixed meaning, it becomes a vessel for whatever the surrounding world wishes to pour into it. Consider the chaotic antagonist of The Dark Knight (2008). His shifting, contradictory explanations for his facial scars do not build a tragic backstory; instead, they turn his physical trauma into a terrifying blank slate, forcing Gotham to project its own deepest anxieties onto his grin.
This blankness can also be weaponized for dark comedy. In Mars Attacks! (1996), the alien invaders offer only one repetitive, harsh utterance: "Ack! Ack! Ack!" Rather than recognizing this as a meaningless noise of destruction, the human characters desperately project hopes of peaceful diplomacy and cosmic brotherhood onto it, right up until they are vaporized. The joke is on the human need to find profound meaning where there is only a vacuum.
Sometimes, this interpretive drift happens in silence. In Drive (2011), the protagonist's gleaming satin scorpion jacket is never explained, yet it carries the weight of the entire film. Is it a symbol of a cold-blooded predator, a protective armor for a lonely soul, or merely a stylish relic of retro-cool? Because the film refuses to define it, the jacket becomes all of these things at once, shifting in meaning as the driver moves from quiet protector to ultra-violent avenger.
Finally, this phenomenon can spark a revolution. In Joker (2019), the clown mask worn by the protagonist is initially just a sad clown's work uniform. Yet, when adopted by a seething, disenfranchised populace, it transforms into a symbol of anti-rich protest. The mask ceases to belong to Arthur Fleck; it becomes a chaotic emblem of systemic rage, proving that the most powerful cinematic symbols are those filled with collective noise.
Examples
Defining cases
- Joker (2019) — The "Kill the Rich" protest movement adopting the clown mask.
The "Kill the Rich" protest movement adopting the clown mask exemplifies the concept of the floating signifier. The clown mask is an empty symbol, devoid of inherent meaning, allowing it to be appropriated by diverse and even contradictory ideologies. Its adoption by anti-capitalist movements and, by extension, other subcultures like right-wing 'incel' groups, demonstrates its malleability and capacity to signify vastly different messages depending on its context and the group that claims it.
- The Shape of Water (2017) — The film's green and teal color palette
The film's pervasive green and teal color palette functions as an unstable symbol, a floating signifier. It simultaneously represents the alien, the futuristic (in cars and Jell-O), nature, and decay. This visual motif links all the film's marginalized elements in a shared visual otherness, demonstrating how color can accrue multiple, sometimes contradictory, meanings to enhance thematic depth and characterization.
- Brazil (1985) — The elusive and contradictory figure of Archibald Tuttle, the renegade heating engineer.
The elusive and contradictory figure of Archibald Tuttle functions as a floating signifier, representing pure resistance. Tuttle exists only in fleeting moments, ultimately consumed by the very bureaucratic system he fights. This deconstructs the traditional hero narrative, revealing the impossibility of a singular, stable meaning for "freedom" within a postmodern, bureaucratic state. He is not a character in the traditional sense, but a symbol of fleeting defiance against an overwhelming system.
- Dark Habits (1983) — The nuns' transgressive pseudonyms (Sister Rat, Sister Manure, Sister Viper)
Smith analyzes the nuns' names as a deconstruction of femininity using the concept of the floating signifier. He argues Almodóvar empties the traditional signifier of 'nun' (pious, chaste) of its meaning and refills it with abject, masculine, or animalistic traits. According to this interpretation, 'woman' is revealed not as a stable identity but as a fluid, performative signifier, open to radical redefinition and parody.
- Reservoir Dogs (1992) — The film's repeated and casual use of the N-word.
The film's repeated and casual use of the N-word functions as a floating signifier, detached from genuine racial animus. Instead, it serves as a performative tool for white criminals to project a transgressive, "authentic" hardness. By appropriating the language of the racial "other," these characters construct their own masculine identity, using the slur not as an expression of hate, but as a means of self-definition within their criminal subculture.
Unexpected kin — far apart on the surface, family underneath
- Get Out (2017) — The recurring motif of the deer
The recurring motif of the deer functions as a symbol with no fixed meaning, accruing different, conflicting associations throughout the narrative. It represents Chris's unresolved maternal trauma, is reframed by Dean as a pest to be exterminated, and ultimately becomes a tool of violent liberation. This embodies the film's complex racial anxieties, demonstrating how a single image can carry multiple, evolving interpretations.
- Drive (2011) — The Driver's satin scorpion jacket
The Driver's satin scorpion jacket serves as a symbol with multiple, unfixed meanings. It simultaneously references the fable of The Scorpion and the Frog (alluding to his inescapable violent nature), the zodiac sign Scorpio (passion, vengeance), and 1950s rebel cool. The jacket's meaning shifts depending on context, perfectly mirroring the Driver's own ambiguous and unknowable character, functioning as a potent floating signifier.
- Mars Attacks! (1996) — The Martians' only repeated utterance: "Ack! Ack! Ack!"
The Martians' only repeated utterance, 'Ack! Ack! Ack!', functions as a semiotic void. Humans in the film desperately attempt to assign meaning to it—a greeting, a threat, a misunderstanding—but all attempts fail. This represents the absolute failure of communication and satirizes the human assumption that all language is a code that can be cracked, highlighting the absurdity of forced interpretation.