The Abject
The messy, boundary-blurring horrors that disrupt our clean sense of self.
In cinema, the abject represents that which we cast off to maintain our identity, only for it to return and disrupt our sense of order. It manifests as bodily fluids, physical decay, or social outcasts who expose the fragility of our constructed boundaries. By confronting the viewer with the grotesque or the discarded, these films force an unsettling recognition of our own vulnerability.
Cinema has always been obsessed with what we push to the margins, but the abject is the return of that repressed material, threatening to dissolve the boundaries between self and other. It is not merely scary; it is fundamentally destabilizing, turning the familiar body or social order into something monstrously fluid.
Consider the biological puberty of Spider-Man (2002). Here, the superhero origin story is filtered through a sticky, visceral lens. Peter Parker’s transformation isn't just a clean, heroic upgrade; it involves organic web-shooters and tiny, insectoid finger barbs that erupt from his skin. It is a shudder-inducing reminder of the animalistic, biological reality lurking beneath the teenage boy's skin, blending the human with the arachnid in a way that feels delightfully, creepily abject.
In a completely different register, Full Metal Jacket (1987) weaponizes the abject through the psychological and physical disintegration of Private Pyle. As the military machine strips away his humanity, Pyle becomes a leaking vessel of madness and sweat, eventually spilling his own blood in a pristine latrine. He is the discarded waste of the war machine, a physical manifestation of the system's failure that must be purged.
The corporate world has its own version of this horror. In Office Space (1999), Milton Waddams is the ultimate abject figure of the cubicle farm. Mumbling, ignored, and physically pushed into the dark basement, Milton represents the corporate waste product—the employee who cannot be neatly integrated or easily fired, whose very presence threatens the sterile, professional facade of Initech.
Finally, Annihilation (2018) offers a poetic, terrifying embrace of this dissolution. Josie Radek’s transformation into humanoid flowers is the ultimate surrender to the abject. Instead of fighting the alien shimmer, she allows her physical boundaries to dissolve entirely, merging her flesh with plant life. It is a beautiful yet horrifying erasure of the self, proving that the abject can be a site of strange, transcendent peace just as easily as it is a source of terror.
Examples
Defining cases
- Under the Skin (2013) — The final scene where the alien's true form is revealed
The final scene, revealing the alien's true, black, non-humanoid form after its human skin is torn away, is a moment of pure abjection. It represents that which has been violently cast out from the symbolic order, marking a breakdown of the self/other and inside/outside boundaries. This revelation provokes horror by exposing the terrifying formlessness beneath the familiar, disrupting any sense of order or recognition.
- The Forest of Love (2019) — Scenes of physical and psychological degradation, including torture, murder, and the dismemberment of bodies.
Scenes of physical and psychological degradation, including torture, murder, and the dismemberment of bodies, are a cinematic confrontation with the abject. These depictions force the audience to confront that which is violently cast out from the symbolic order—like corpses and bodily fluids. This challenges the fragile boundaries of self and society, provoking a visceral reaction to the horrifying and repulsive.
- A Gentle Creature (2017) — The protagonist's silent, suffering body
The protagonist's silent, suffering body becomes an abject object, systematically stripped of dignity and made a passive receptacle for society's filth and violence. Her body represents something violently cast out from the community's symbolic order. This degradation embodies the primal horror of a system that expels and degrades all that is pure or "gentle," highlighting the profound dehumanization she endures.
- Poetry (2010) — The discovery of Agnes's corpse floating in the river
The discovery of Agnes's corpse floating in the river functions as the film's central abject object. This horrific reality represents what society violently expels from its symbolic order to maintain a sense of cleanliness and normalcy. The corpse embodies a profound disturbance, a visceral reminder of what lies beyond the accepted boundaries of existence. Mija's poetry ultimately becomes the essential means through which this unsettling abject reality can be confronted and processed, offering a pathway to engage with the expelled horror.
- Mulholland Drive (2001) — The decaying corpse of Diane Selwyn in bed
The decaying corpse of Diane Selwyn in bed embodies the abject, representing that which has been violently cast out from the symbolic order of fantasy. It reveals the horrifying, material reality of death and psychic decay that Diane's entire "Betty" narrative was constructed to repress. This image serves as the ultimate embodiment of the abject, disrupting the carefully constructed illusion and exposing the raw, unsettling truth beneath.
Unexpected kin — far apart on the surface, family underneath
- Law of Desire (1987) — Tina's traumatic past, including her relationship with her father and her transition
Tina's traumatic past, including her relationship with her father and her transition, reveals her former male identity and the incestuous trauma associated with it as violently cast out to form her present self. This past, however, constantly threatens to return, representing a source of both horror and fascination. Tina lives on the border of identity, defined by the very parts of her history that she has abjected, perpetually navigating the return of the repressed.
- Ratatouille (2007) — Remy's presence in a pristine human kitchen
Remy's presence in a pristine human kitchen transgresses the symbolic order that separates the clean from the unclean. As a rat in a sterile gourmet environment, Remy embodies what society casts out, representing a violation of cultural boundaries between human food and vermin. Yet, his unexpected creativity from this abject position ultimately revitalizes the very culinary culture that initially rejects him, challenging established notions of purity and pollution within the film's narrative.
- Casino Royale (2006) — Vesper Lynd's death in the sinking Venetian house
Vesper Lynd's death in the sinking Venetian house marks the traumatic "birth" of the emotionally detached 007 agent. Vesper, representing Bond's emotional vulnerability and love, becomes the abject—something violently expelled for him to form a stable identity. Her drowning in the dark, collapsing elevator, a symbolic womb/tomb, is the moment Bond purges his "un-Bond-like" self, emerging reborn as the cold, hardened agent defined by this profound loss.