Empathy: A Mask for the Unfeeling

Our visual media of the week, Possessor and Futurama‘s “I Second that Emotion”, explore the topic of empathy. However, it shows empathy in a way that the average person may find unsettling. Empathy is expressed in a manner that is forced or curated, not natural. How far does the mask of empathy go?

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Possessor

In Possessor, empathy is a rather disturbing topic. Our main character, Tasya Vos, is arguably unable to feel the emotion or characteristics of others without observation. She is the opposite of our module’s discussion of direct perception: when you can feel how another is feeling without interpretation. Vos plays people (including herself) like characters in order to get into their mindset. Early on in the film, Vos talks to Girder about the assassination of Elio Mazza. Girder asks, “Why stab Elio Mazza. You were provided with a pistol.” Vos answers, “Well maybe it just seemed more in character.” Girder replies, “Whose character?” Vos doesn’t provide an answer to this question. The way Vos views herself as being “in character” implies that she cannot directly feel emotion.

There is another account in the film that exhibits the idea of playing a character. Vos observes Colin Tate with his fiancée Ava through a camera with a large lens. Colin says things such as, “I don’t think there’s any left” and “You wanna get dinner?” In this scene, we can see Vos copy his mannerisms to emulate his character before she must take over his cognition. She repeats the lines multiple times to perfect them. We come to a close-up shot of her face as she copies the words, “Let’s just go walk and find somewhere.” She closes her eyes and repeats it to herself as if she is trying to memorize it. She is like an actress practicing her lines. She cannot naturally feel what Colin is feeling.

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Prior to the close-up shot, we get what we can most closely describe as a medium shot of Vos looking into the (on screen) camera. It establishes how and why she is observing Colin.

Part of what makes us human is our emotion affected by the experiences of others’ and our own. Vos doesn’t quite have this. If anything, she is robotic. She can be compared to the concept of cybernetics. Kind of like how AI uses the information around it to learn, she does the same in order to play her characters. She stores the information in her mind for later use.

Futurama

The way empathy is showcased in Futurama‘s episode
“I Second that Emotion” is not disturbing, but we are dealing with another character that has a lack of natural empathy. Without the empathy chip that is attached to Bender by Professor Farnsworth, he cannot feel any of the emotion that radiates from others.

Before the empathy chip, there is a scene in which Bender watches the television. A robot is visiting the doctor, and the doctor tells him, “Your entire family died when a plane piloted by your fiancée crashed into your uninsured home, and you have inoperable cancer.” A normal, empathetic individual would feel terrible for the robot, but in the next seen we get a medium shot of Bender laughing at the television. He doesn’t feel the pain of the character on screen.

After the empathy chip, Bender can feel Leela’s emotions. Leela and Fry find Bender in the sewer. Leela says, “Bender, you didn’t have to come down here.” Bender responds, “I know, but I just miss Nibbler so much.” Leela says, “He was so cute.” Bender adds, “He was so sweet.” The two end up hugging while Bender cries. Bender has emotion in this scene because he can directly feel how Leela is feeling- the love and longing for Nibbler. This scene encapsulates emotional empathy, which is defined as feeling similar emotions to someone else in the VoiceThread. Bender can feel the same emotions as Leela, but only with the chip.

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Bender hugs Leela as he feels her emotional pain.

Conclusion

Both Possessor and Futurama share a mask of empathy. Vos’ is curated, and Bender’s is forced. Neither can feel the natural empathy that we do.

4 thoughts on “Empathy: A Mask for the Unfeeling

  1. Hi Sara,
    You had really interesting take on the Possessor film, and made me notice things I didn’t the first time I watched the film. You mentioned how when Vos is asked why she stabbed Elio, and she says ” well maybe it seemed more in character”, which hints at the fact that Vos is already emotionally slipping before we even see everything go haywire with Colin Tate. I don’t think I saw her signs of unstableness kick in until a little later. This idea that Vos is unsure of her own identity stems from the fact that her job requires her to become other people. Vos stepping into what you called a “role” is the perfect way of putting it, she is actively performing when she is inside her hosts.

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  2. Hi Sara,

    I love your observation about how Vos plays herself like a character. We see her rehearsing her interaction with her partner and child—in much the way that she rehearses the gestures and intonation of the people whom she possesses. It is worth noting how she uses her body to “sense-in” and become these characters—”living through” their gestures and facial expressions. I think that we can potentially connect this to what we learned about in the VoiceThread this week, about using our bodies to understand the feelings and intentions of those around us. At the start of the film, too, it seems that she does have at least a little empathy for the characters she is playing (she does feel guilty about the butterfly after all), which the film implies is why she has difficulty forcing the people she is inhabiting to commit suicide. This makes sense (and it is something that professional actors have talked about)—often embodying a role (even if it is fictional character) creates an empathetic connection to them. By the end of the film, though, she seems to have completely lost her empathy.

    Good discussion of Bender’s artificial experience of empathy in Futurama. I love the connection that you make between his inability to feel empathy and Vos’s. The fact that they are both “robotic” entities (literally or not) is really interesting. Why do you think that empathy and social cognition is represented as something that marks us as human? What does that suggest about how we see ourselves and understand human nature? How might this connect to ideas of embodiment?

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  3. Hello.

    We both picked up on the fact that Tasya’s methods, while they replicate a momentary version of the victim perfectly, they never capture how the victim is generally. She can replicate Tate’s mannerisms, but only the ones she saw at that specific moment.

    We see how when she is in his body, his girlfriend realizes that something is off. Since you also mentioned getting into character, which is a great way of describing it, it’s like seeing an actor, knowing they are good at their job, but also knowing that they’re not really who they are showing to be.

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    1. Hi Guga,

      This post brings up an important point! As much as we “body-read,” this is not an infallible method to understanding someone’s mental state, feelings, intentions, etc. After all, actors often embody feelings that they are not necessarily experiencing at the moment, but that we nevertheless perceive through their performance.

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