The State of Exception
The terrifying moment when the law suspends itself to preserve its own power.
In cinema, the state of exception represents those volatile zones where normal laws are paused under the guise of an emergency, leaving individuals at the mercy of raw, unchecked authority. Whether triggered by a virus, a vigilante, or a bureaucratic crisis, this narrative device strips away civil protections to reveal the naked machinery of power. By rendering the legal system temporarily obsolete, filmmakers expose how easily society's safety nets can be folded up and tucked away.
In cinema, the state of exception is the ultimate legal magic trick: the law vanishes in order to save itself. This paradox manifests in wildly different cinematic landscapes, proving that when the rules are paused, anything goes.
In Terry Gilliam’s dystopian satire Brazil, the exception is a permanent, bureaucratic lifestyle. Here, casual terrorist bombings serve as the perfect, perpetual justification for the state to suspend civil liberties, turning surveillance and sudden abductions into mundane clerical duties. The emergency is no longer a temporary crisis; it is the very engine that keeps the gears of the totalitarian machine turning.
If Brazil shows the state of exception as a bureaucratic nightmare, Christopher Nolan’s The Dark Knight presents it as a sleek, high-tech necessity. When Batman abducts a money launderer from Hong Kong, he operates entirely outside international law, embodying a sovereign force that must break the rules to protect them. The film positions this extra-legal overreach as a tragic but vital burden, asking audiences to cheer for the very suspension of rights they would normally protest.
But the exception isn't always about geopolitical chess; sometimes, it is written directly onto the body. In The Shape of Water, the Cold War military apparatus treats the Amphibian Man not as a living being with rights, but as a biological asset stripped of legal status. Locked away in a secret laboratory, his body becomes a zone of total vulnerability, proving that the state of exception can shrink to the size of a sterile operating room.
Finally, Ruben Östlund’s Triangle of Sadness takes this concept and washes it ashore. When a luxury yacht sinks, the survivors find themselves on a deserted island where the social and economic hierarchies of the modern world are instantly rendered useless. In this new, lawless vacuum, power is radically redistributed based on survival skills rather than bank accounts, demonstrating that when the grand structure of society collapses, a new—and equally ruthless—sovereign will always rise to fill the void.
Examples
Defining cases
- Sicario (2015) — The task force's extralegal operations
The task force's extralegal operations at the US-Mexico border reveal a zone where sovereign power suspends the rule of law to combat a perceived existential threat. Operating within this 'state of exception,' the task force renders legal distinctions between police work and military action meaningless. Any action is justified as necessary, illustrating how exceptional circumstances can erode established legal and ethical boundaries.
- Triangle of Sadness (2022) — The transition from the structured life on the yacht to the lawless state on the island
The transition from the structured life on the yacht to the lawless state on the island is a clear example of the state of exception. The island becomes a space where law is suspended, reducing the survivors to "bare life" (zoē). In this state, a new sovereign, Abigail, emerges to exercise absolute biopolitical power over the bodies of the others, demonstrating the fragility of social order.
- Memories of Murder (2003) — The recurring civil defense drills that plunge the town into darkness and halt the investigation.
The recurring civil defense drills that plunge the town into darkness and halt the investigation function as a 'state of exception,' where normal law is suspended under the guise of security. These mandated blackouts, remnants of military rule, inadvertently create optimal conditions for the killer to operate. Rather than safeguarding citizens, the state's authoritarian control perversely facilitates the very crimes it purports to prevent, exposing the flawed logic of such governance.
- Batman Begins (2005) — Batman's extra-legal vigilantism
Batman's extra-legal vigilantism is interpreted as an allegory for post-9/11 executive power, operating within a state of exception. Batman, as a sovereign figure, operates outside the law, suspending normal legal processes to combat an existential threat. This mirrors the political climate of the War on Terror, where extraordinary measures are taken in the face of perceived danger.
- The Bourne Identity (2002) — Operation Treadstone
Speck interprets the rogue US agency, Treadstone, using the concept of the State of Exception. The agency operates outside the law, assassinating targets with impunity, justified by a nebulous threat. This reveals Treadstone as a manifestation of a sovereign power that defines its own enemies and uses extra-legal means to eliminate them, mirroring post-9/11 anxieties about unchecked state power and the erosion of legal norms.
Unexpected kin — far apart on the surface, family underneath
- V for Vendetta (2005) — V's characterization and actions, specifically his bombing of the Old Bailey.
V's characterization and actions, specifically his bombing of the Old Bailey, reflect contemporary anxieties surrounding the 'War on Terror.' V's 'terrorism' mirrors the extra-legal measures of the state he opposes, forcing the audience to confront the blurred lines between freedom fighter and terrorist. This creates an ambivalent reflection of the 'state of exception,' where the hero's methods become indistinguishable from those he fights.
- Taken (2008) — The electricity torture scene
The electricity torture scene functions as a cinematic justification for extra-legal violence, mirroring post-9/11 political discourse. Bryan Mills operates outside the law, creating a temporary zone where normal rules are suspended to extract information. The film presents this as not only necessary but righteous, framing torture as an efficient tool for national—and in this case, familial—security, embodying a 'state of exception' where normal rules are suspended for perceived security.
- Loveless (2017) — The volunteer search group
The volunteer search group highlights the breakdown of the social contract in modern Russia, interpreted through Agamben's 'State of Exception'. The stark contrast between the indifferent state police and the highly organized volunteer search party reveals the official state's failure to act effectively, rendering the missing child, Alyosha, 'homo sacer' or bare life, excluded from legal protection. The volunteers emerge as a form of counter-sovereignty, a citizen-led response operating within the void left by the state.