The Identity Trap
How films trick characters into believing they chose their own straightjackets.
Cinema excels at showing how individuals are seduced into roles they did not write, a process where external forces call out to a character until they willingly step into their own ideological cage. Whether through the glow of a television screen or the whisper of a mentor, this cinematic trap makes submission feel like self-actualization. By watching characters answer these invisible summons, the audience is often subtly recruited into accepting the same values.
The magic trick of modern society is making individuals believe their deepest desires are entirely their own. In cinema, this psychological conscription—where a character is summoned into a pre-packaged identity—takes many forms, ranging from the tragic to the absurd.
Consider the agonizing descent of Sara Goldfarb in Requiem for a Dream (2000). Her obsession with the "Tappy Tibbons" television show is not a harmless pastime; it is a predatory broadcast that summons her to become the ideal, red-dressed consumer. She does not just watch the screen; she is reconstructed by it, starving her body to fit a media-engineered fantasy of validation.
A more violent, domestic fracturing occurs in Cold Fish (2010). Here, the dynamic between Shamoto, his wife Taeko, and his daughter Mitsuko illustrates the horror of failing to answer the social summons. Shamoto’s inability to inhabit the traditional, dominant patriarch role leaves his family unit vulnerable to a charismatic psychopath, proving that when characters fail to perform their assigned societal scripts, the vacuum is filled by nightmare.
Sometimes, this summoning is wrapped in the thrilling guise of heroism. In Batman Begins (2005), Henri Ducard's mentorship of Bruce Wayne is a masterclass in ideological recruitment. Ducard does not just teach Bruce how to fight; he hails him into a rigid, vigilante worldview, shaping a traumatized orphan into a weapon for a specific brand of cosmic justice.
Even popcorn entertainment relies on this trick to recruit the audience. The Hunt for Red October structures its narrative so that Ramius's defection feels like an inevitable, noble choice, subtly hailing the viewer into a pro-Western, Cold War subject position where American supremacy is the only logical default. Conversely, The Hangover (2009) offers a temporary escape hatch. It hails the audience into a fantasy of consequence-free, hyper-masculine hedonism, suggesting that true freedom is just a wild, forgotten weekend in Vegas—a safety valve that ultimately reinforces the very status quo its characters return to on Monday morning.
Examples
Defining cases
- Cold Fish (2010) — The dynamic between Shamoto, his wife Taeko, and his daughter Mitsuko
The dynamic between Shamoto, his wife Taeko, and his daughter Mitsuko reveals a failed interpellation. The characters reject their socially prescribed family roles—obedient wife, respectful daughter, authoritative father—creating a vacuum of authority. This void is then violently filled by the monstrous patriarch, Murata, highlighting the breakdown of the family unit and the dangerous consequences of unfulfilled social roles.
- The Hunt for Red October (?) — The film's overall narrative structure, specifically Ramius's defection
The film's overall narrative structure, specifically Ramius's defection, functions as an ideological apparatus that hails the viewer into a pro-Western subject position. By framing the desire for American-style freedom as a natural, universal human impulse, the narrative naturalizes Western political values. This structural alignment ultimately reinforces the moral and political superiority of Western ideology at the Cold War's end, transforming a complex geopolitical defection into a simplified, self-evident triumph of democratic capitalism.
- Batman Begins (2005) — Henri Ducard's mentorship of Bruce Wayne
Henri Ducard's mentorship of Bruce Wayne is an ideological process where Ducard "hails" Bruce, calling him into a new identity. By offering him a purpose and the League of Shadows' worldview, Ducard shapes Bruce into a "subject" of his ideology. This process is later co-opted by Bruce to create his own identity as Batman, demonstrating how initial ideological interpellation can be reappropriated for personal agency.
- Requiem for a Dream (2000) — Sara Goldfarb's obsession with the "Tappy Tibbons" television show.
Sara Goldfarb's obsession with the "Tappy Tibbons" television show functions as a powerful ideological apparatus that hails her as a subject. Rather than offering mere entertainment, the broadcast provides a fantasy of self-transformation and social recognition that she desperately craves. This obsession is ultimately the mechanism of her subjugation, a media-driven delusion that masks the brutal reality of her lonely, neglected existence under late capitalism.
- The Hangover (2009) — The film's overall theme of irresponsible, consequence-free hedonism
The film's overall theme of irresponsible, consequence-free hedonism functions as an ideological response to the 2008 financial crisis. It hails anxious male viewers into a fantasy of reckless consumption and risk-taking. Unlike the real world, this cinematic world allows everything to work out with no lasting repercussions, offering a powerful, if ultimately hollow, escape from economic anxieties.