The Commodity Fetish
When things become human, humans become things, and the price tag is everything.
In cinema, commodity fetishism occurs when social relations and human values are systematically replaced by the allure of consumer goods, market transactions, or capital. Films expose this by showing how characters mistake manufactured objects, commercialized dreams, or cold financial transactions for genuine human connection, agency, or justice. By treating the market as a living force and people as mere inventory, these narratives critique the very systems of production that birthed them.
Cinema has always had a complicated relationship with the marketplace, but when a film turns its lens on the magic trick of capitalism, it reveals how easily we mistake transactions for transcendence. This is the essence of commodity fetishism on screen: the process by which human relationships are obscured, and inanimate objects or financial transactions are endowed with mystical, life-giving power.
Take the hyper-stylized world of Ocean's Eleven (2001). Here, the film's aesthetic—from the tailored suits to the neon glow of the Las Vegas strip—celebrates the ultimate triumph of the commodity. The heist isn't just about survival; it is a slick, seductive ritual where human charm and criminal expertise are packaged as the ultimate luxury lifestyle accessories. In this world, to be cool is to be expensive.
Conversely, Total Recall (1990) takes this commodification to a dystopian extreme by turning human memory itself into a retail product. Through the Rekall corporation, lived experience, identity, and even political rebellion are bought off the shelf, suggesting that in a fully realized capitalist future, even our subconscious is just another piece of real estate to be rented.
This substitution of market value for human value takes a more satirical, plastic form in Barbie (2023). When Ken constructs his Mojo Dojo Casa House, he isn't just redecorating; he is attempting to buy a ready-made patriarchal identity through a chaotic assemblage of leather couches, mini-fridges, and horse imagery. The house becomes a physical manifestation of how identity is not felt, but purchased and displayed.
Even the gritty, mud-splattered frontier of Unforgiven (1992) cannot escape this economic gravity. The film strips the myth of the American West down to a cold business arrangement, where the pursuit of justice for a brutalized woman is translated into a simple bounty. Honor and vengeance are demystified, revealed to be nothing more than labor traded for coin. Across these diverse genres, cinema warns us that when everything has a price, humanity itself becomes the ultimate disposable product.
Examples
Defining cases
- The Neon Demon (2016) — The treatment of models' bodies as interchangeable, disposable assets
The treatment of models' bodies as interchangeable, disposable assets exposes the extreme logic of commodity fetishism within a hyper-competitive capitalist system. Here, physical bodies are completely alienated from the self, valued solely for their exchange-value in the beauty market. The literal consumption of the protagonist serves as the grotesque, logical endpoint of this reification, where human beings are reduced to literal commodities to be acquired, consumed, and discarded in the relentless pursuit of capital.
- Pretty Woman (1990) — Vivian Ward's character transformation
Vivian Ward's character transformation embodies commodity fetishism. Beginning as a literal commodity, her "redemption" is not about gaining humanity but about being successfully repackaged as a luxury item. Her value and identity become mystically fused with the high-end goods she wears and the wealthy man who "owns" her. This process obscures the underlying economic and social labor, presenting her as a desirable product rather than a person with inherent worth, reflecting a broader societal tendency to equate value with marketability.
- M3GAN (2022) — M3GAN as a commercial product, the "Purrpetual Petz" advertisement
M3GAN as a commercial product, particularly through the "Purrpetual Petz" advertisement, represents the ultimate fetishized commodity within late capitalism. The product mystically appears to possess a life of its own, obscuring the human labor (Gemma's coding) and social relationships (parenting) it is designed to replace. This embodies Karl Marx's theory of commodity fetishism, where a manufactured item gains an almost magical autonomy.
- Edward Scissorhands (1990) — The attempt to open a salon for Edward
The attempt to open a salon for Edward illustrates the destructive process of commodity fetishism. Through this venture, Edward's unique artistic ability—his intrinsic use-value—is stripped of its personal meaning and converted into an abstract, marketable product. This commercial exploitation reduces his identity from a complex human being to a mere novelty commodity, setting the stage for his inevitable rejection once his market value fades.
- Clerks (1994) — The Quick Stop Groceries store as a workplace
The Quick Stop Groceries store as a workplace highlights commodity fetishism, revealing the characters' cynical detachment. Dante and Randal's obsession with pop culture artifacts (films, comics) over the actual products they sell signifies their alienation. The social relations of their labor are obscured, replaced by a fascination with the abstract social life of external media commodities, which offer a false sense of meaning and control that their menial jobs lack.
Unexpected kin — far apart on the surface, family underneath
- The Godfather (1972) — The Corleone family's business operations and structure.
The Corleone family's business operations and structure serve as a direct allegory for American corporate capitalism. Within this criminal enterprise, violence and loyalty are treated as commodities, and human relationships are obscured by the abstract logic of profit and power. This mirrors the mystification of labor in capitalist production, where the true nature of transactions and relationships is hidden beneath a veneer of legitimacy and economic exchange. The family's structure reflects a ruthless pursuit of capital.
- Still Life (2006) — The 10 yuan banknote on which Sanming's wife's address is written.
The 10 yuan banknote on which Sanming's wife's address is written symbolizes how human relationships are mediated by economic value in modern China. Sanming's search for his wife is entangled with monetary debt; the address to a lost human connection is literally inscribed on a unit of currency. This object embodies the transformation of social bonds into transactional relationships, where personal history and affection are inseparable from the abstract logic of capital.
- Napoleon Dynamite (2004) — Napoleon's "Vote for Pedro" T-shirt.
Napoleon's "Vote for Pedro" T-shirt is initially a handmade piece of campaign merchandise. However, through its association with Napoleon's triumphant dance, it becomes imbued with power far beyond its material reality, representing friendship, loyalty, and defiance. The T-shirt transforms into a fetishized object where social relationships and abstract values are mistakenly perceived as inherent properties of the commodity itself, embodying a deeper cultural significance.