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The Banality of Evil

Monstrous acts are rarely committed by monsters, but by people filling out paperwork.

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In cinema, the most chilling atrocities are often committed not by cackling supervillains, but by ordinary citizens preoccupied with domestic chores, office politics, and polite conversation. By stripping evil of its gothic grandeur, filmmakers reveal how easily horror integrates into the mundane routines of daily life. This lens shifts the focus from psychological deviance to the terrifying complacency of the status quo.

Cinema has long loved its monsters larger-than-life, but a far more unsettling horror lies in the quiet, compartmentalized lives of ordinary bureaucrats and neighbors. When films explore this everyday indifference, they reveal how easily the unspeakable becomes routine. Nowhere is this more devastatingly realized than in The Zone of Interest (2023). Here, the horror of the Holocaust is kept just over the garden wall, while the protagonist's wife focuses obsessively on her domestic paradise. Her manicured flowerbeds and household management are not just distractions; they are the literal insulation that allows genocide to function as a background hum to a comfortable middle-class life. This bureaucratic detachment takes on a darkly satirical edge in The Cabin in the Woods (2012). Here, the architects of global doom are not hooded cultists, but white-collar technicians placing bets on monster attacks while complaining about office coffee and planning the evening's party. The film brilliantly equates the mechanics of horror cinema with corporate complacency, showing that apocalypse is just another day at the office. Sometimes, this mundane mask is worn by the individual predator. In Barton Fink (1991), the seemingly harmless, sweat-soaked insurance salesman Charlie Meadows represents the terrifyingly neighborly face of destruction. His folksy charm and working-class grievances hide a monstrous reality, proving that the guy next door might just be keeping his horrors neatly tucked away in a cardboard box. Even when dealing with modern extremism, as in Timbuktu (2014), the focus shifts away from zealous caricatures to highlight the absurdly human flaws of the oppressors. By showing jihadists sneaking smokes, debating football, and struggling with awkward conversations, the film strips them of their terrifying mystique. It reminds us that the enforcement of tyranny is often clumsy, petty, and deeply, pathetically human.

Examples

Defining cases
Unexpected kin — far apart on the surface, family underneath