There have been countless depictions of sociopaths and other predatory personalities in film. Most are pretty bad, incomplete and/or inaccurate. But some have been dead-on.
And so I’ve canvassed my memory for what I regard as several notably excellent portraits of sociopaths in film. I’d be curious what you think of these performances (if you’ve seen them), and eager to discover, through you, new film/television portraits of sociopaths that ring disturbingly true.
In no special order, I’ll start with the original foreign film, The Vanishing, 1986 (not the subsequent and lame Hollywood remake). The Vanishing delivers-up one of the most sinister depictions of a sociopath I’ve ever seen. The fright derives less from graphic violence (there is none) than from the movie’s success at immersing you into the compartmentalized world of its principal character, who is seamlessly managing the presentation of a normal, well-adjusted family man, as he simultaneously and covertly pursues his secret life and morbid agenda.
Next is Unlawful Entry, 1992, a movie starring Ray Liotta as a local cop who smoothly enters the life of a young neighborhood couple (actors Kurt Russell and Anne Archer). Although somewhat formulaic plot-wise, the movie’s performances are impressive. Liotta’s sociopath—glib, charming and seductive—will make the hair on your skin rise. And both Archer and Russell vividly express the tension and alarm arising from their slow awareness that Liotta isn’t who he appeared so convincingly to be.
Richard Gere, in a somewhat unheralded role, nails-down a sociopathic cop in Internal Affairs, 1990. Gere gives a riveting presentation of the sociopathic mentality. Andy Garcia (actor), an Internal Affairs cop in Gere’s department, finds himself in the unenviable position of having to confront the slowly unfolding breadth (and horror) of Gere’s sociopathy. Garcia is also incredible. As in Unlawful Entry, the movie accurately shows how sociopaths can invade, lodge themselves in, and violate innocent, dignified lives.
One of the greatest performances of a sociopath I’ve ever seen can be found in Episode#44 of the former HBO series Six Feet Under. The episode is called, “That’s My Dog.” In it, David (actor Michael C. Hall) extends a random act of help to a road-stranded stranger, Jake (actor Michael Weston). David then finds himself overpowered by Jake, who, in the course of the episode’s hour, manages to embody virtually every relevant, sinister quality for which the sociopath is notorious. Weston’s demonic performance is astonishing. Hall’s as the traumatized victim of a sadistic sociopath is equally amazing.
Great performance, yes. Sociopath? Maybe not.
Dexter
Speaking of actor Michael C. Hall, I wonder what your take is on Dexter, the great Showtime Series in which Hall plays a sociopathic serial killer working, by day, as a Miami crime-scene forensics analyst?
I love this series, which is coming into its third season. But as disturbing a character as Dexter is, I would not characterize him as a sociopath. This is just a fun diagnostic quibble. Ostensibly, Dexter grows up a budding, violent sociopath. His father (or father-figure) recognizes the dark, evil side over which, as a boy and adolescent, Dexter seems to have little, and diminishing, control. The father sees that Dexter is compulsively, inexorably inclined to sadistic violence.
His solution is to somehow train Dexter to direct his sociopathic, homicidal proclivities towards cruel, menacing, destructive individuals. Best, if someone’s got to be snuffed-out by Dexter, it be someone the world will be better without!
And so Dexter becomes skilled, over time, at identifying individuals the world won’t miss; individuals as dangerous and creepy as he.
Why, then, is Dexter not really a sociopath—and indeed, diagnostically speaking, not even necessarily plausible? Because, despite his violent, murderous compulsions, Dexter is, first of all, a fundamentally sincere person. He is also loyal–for instance to his sister and a girlfriend. And while Dexter struggles to “feel” warm feelings, indeed anything—a struggle, incidentally, that he embraces—he knows how to have the backs of others, even where his self-interest may be at risk.
In a word, Dexter strives, against his darkest, most sordid inclinations, for growth. This is precisely what makes him and the series so fascinating, and precisely what rules him out as sociopath.
What do you think?
(This article is copyrighted (c) 2008 by Steve Becker, LCSW.)
Hens,
DEFINITELY there is a connection between that dream and the articles I was reading here last night! I don’t necessarily see that as bad. Evil is very real, too. It’s just odd….I have read a lot of articles here, but for some reason, the ones last night obviously really affected me more than usual.
Sky, your comments are so interesting. I never even made a connection between the two places in that dream and the two cultures of America and Costa Rica. Good memory and powers of perception.
I do have a lot of dreams about a utopian society of simple, happy people living in the woods and running around naked with pools and streams to bathe in and everyone being like a family. And I don’t mean fantasies, I mean actual dreams I have at night while I’m sleeping. Perhaps in my psyche, the tropical countries like Costa Rica more closely approximate that kind of society. 🙂
BTW, hens, I DO remember Dark Shadows. It probably had a big impact on me from my childhood.
Star, good to see you sweetie! Yes, I have the VHS tapes of ALL the dark shadows shows! Love’em!
star your dream is very vampire ish – your woman is under a spell – and she is aborting satans child – she is trauma bonded and brainwashed – I hope tonite you dream of siver bullet’s to the heart…
dark shadows – I has such a crush on that dude – wasnt he a vampire?
What was that dude’s name? Barnaby or Barnabus Collins? Or something like that?
Barnabus collins —he started out as a bad guy but then became a good guy vampire.
i have mentioned the matt damon as ripley (a spath) in the incredible mr ripley before (and the fact that i believe the author of the books to exhibit spath behavior), but the philip seymour hoffman character may well be a spath, also.
Hey Oxy and One joy! Go back a few posts and read my Stephen King-esque dream that I had last night. Don’t you guys think it would make a good movie?
Did anyone mention No Country for Old Men? That was one of the coldest psychopaths ever portrayed in film IMO.
star – i stopped at your Utopian, runnin’ around naked dream; I’ll take that one. 😉
Heh heh. I don’t think you want to see my 50 year old body naked. LOL