The Enterprise of the Self
When characters treat their own souls like a start-up that must turn a profit.
Modern cinema increasingly reflects a world where human beings are no longer citizens, but walking business models. Under this lens, personal relationships, survival, and even morality are reframed as market transactions, risk management, and personal branding. Characters must constantly optimize themselves to survive, turning the human soul into a highly competitive, self-governing enterprise.
In modern cinema, the ultimate horror is the realization that characters must act as their own boss, their own product, and their own HR department. This is the essence of the self as a market entity, where survival requires relentless self-optimization. Consider the hyper-competence of the amnesiac protagonist in "The Bourne Identity (2002)". Stripped of his history, he does not seek community; instead, he operates as a highly adaptable, deterritorialized, and self-sufficient unit. He is the ultimate flexible worker, treating his own body and lethal skill set as assets to be managed in a hostile global marketplace. Where Bourne optimizes for physical survival, the toxic spouses of "Gone Girl (2014)" optimize for domestic market share. Here, marriage is stripped of romance and reframed as a failing enterprise. Nick and Amy Dunne negotiate their relationship not through mutual affection, but through calculated PR campaigns, brand management, and hostile takeovers of the narrative, proving that intimacy is just another contract to be leveraged. Even contract killing gets a corporate upgrade. In "The Killer (2023)", the protagonist's lethal trade is thoroughly subsumed by mundane consumerism. He does not lurk in gothic shadows; he rents spaces from WeWork, orders tools from Amazon, eats at McDonald's, and tracks his heart rate on a Fitbit. Murder is no longer a sin or an art—it is merely a series of optimized micro-tasks executed by a disciplined gig-worker. Perhaps the most extreme manifestation of this philosophy is found in "Saw (2004)". Jigsaw’s gruesome traps are, at their core, the ultimate performance reviews. His rehabilitation philosophy is a twisted form of extreme self-help, forcing victims to literally invest their own flesh to prove they value their life-asset. In this cinematic landscape, there are no victims of systemic failure—only individuals who failed to manage their personal risk.
Examples
Defining cases
- The Bourne Identity (2002) — Jason Bourne's self-sufficiency and hyper-competence
Palmer analyzes Jason Bourne's character using the concept of neoliberal subjectivity. Bourne embodies the ideal neoliberal individual: deterritorialized, highly adaptable, resourceful, and responsible only for his own survival, effectively operating as a free-market agent in a hostile world. This interpretation reveals Bourne as a paradoxical figure—a product of state control who represents the ultimate form of self-reliant individualism championed by neoliberal ideology.
- Slumdog Millionaire (2008) — Jamal's "rags-to-riches" narrative arc
Jamal's "rags-to-riches" narrative arc is interpreted through the concept of "neoliberal subjectivity." His success is framed as the triumph of an individual who leverages personal history as capital to win, rather than a result of luck or systemic failure. This ideological fantasy promotes the neoliberal belief that poverty is a personal obstacle overcome through individual grit and ambition, thereby ignoring structural inequality.
- The Conjuring (2013) — The financial precarity of the Perron family
The financial precarity of the Perron family can be understood through the lens of neoliberal subjectivity. The demonic force attacking their home functions as a supernatural metaphor for the invasive and destructive pressures of economic instability. This precarity ultimately serves as an allegory for how the dream of homeownership transforms into a nightmare under neoliberal capitalism, as the family finds itself besieged by forces far beyond its control, highlighting systemic vulnerabilities rather than individual failings.
- Bridesmaids (2011) — The economic and social rivalry between Annie and Helen
The economic and social rivalry between Annie and Helen embodies competing models of womanhood under neoliberalism. Helen represents the perfect, self-monitoring, entrepreneurial subject who has successfully managed her life, while Annie embodies the "at-risk" subject who has failed. Their conflict is a drama about the intense pressure on modern women to be successful self-brands, highlighting the societal demands placed upon them to achieve and maintain a polished image.
- Train to Busan (2016) — Seok-woo's character arc from fund manager to sacrificial father
Seok-woo's character arc, from a self-interested fund manager to a sacrificial father, critiques neoliberal subjectivity. His personal transformation argues that a true ethical existence can only be reclaimed through embracing communal responsibility and familial sacrifice. This repudiates the neoliberal ideal of individual profit and self-interest, instead valorizing a return to collective well-being and altruism in the face of crisis.
Unexpected kin — far apart on the surface, family underneath
- Pale Rider (1985) — The Preacher's role as an outside agent who solves the community's problems
The Preacher's role as an outside agent who solves the community's problems functions as an allegorical figure for Reagan-era privatized intervention. He acts as a deregulated, hyper-competent individual who resolves a crisis of capital (mining claims) that the community cannot. This reinforces a political ideology that champions individual power and market solutions over collective or state action, embodying the ideal of self-reliant problem-solving.
- Spider-Man (2002) — The wrestling promoter cheating Peter and Peter letting the robber escape.
The wrestling promoter cheating Peter and Peter letting the robber escape serves as a cautionary tale against radical self-interest. Peter’s initial refusal to stop the thief, stating "I missed the part where that's my problem," perfectly embodies an atomized, self-interested individual. Uncle Ben's subsequent death forces Peter to adopt a new ethic—"with great power comes great responsibility"—that directly counters this neoliberal ideology.
- Saw (2004) — Jigsaw's "rehabilitation" philosophy
Jigsaw's "rehabilitation" philosophy is a monstrous parody of neoliberal self-help culture. Jigsaw functions as an extreme life coach, forcing individuals to take radical personal responsibility for their "failed" lives. His games literalize the "do or die" logic of market competition and the cultural demand to constantly work on, improve, and "value" oneself, or be discarded. This approach reflects a dark mirror to contemporary societal pressures for self-optimization.