News | Entertainment
12 Aug 2025 19:21
NZCity News
NZCity CalculatorReturn to NZCity

  • Start Page
  • Personalise
  • Sport
  • Weather
  • Finance
  • Shopping
  • Jobs
  • Horoscopes
  • Lotto Results
  • Photo Gallery
  • Site Gallery
  • TVNow
  • Dating
  • SearchNZ
  • NZSearch
  • Crime.co.nz
  • RugbyLeague
  • Make Home
  • About NZCity
  • Contact NZCity
  • Your Privacy
  • Advertising
  • Login
  • Join for Free

  •   Home > News > Entertainment

    Weapons: the film’s horror stems from moral disengagement – a psychologist explains

    The film illustrates how someone’s own brain can transform them from a decent person into the villain in someone else’s story.

    Edward White, PhD Candidate in Psychology, Kingston University
    The Conversation


    Director Zach Cregger’s new horror film Weapons explores the unsettling notion that the real monsters might not be lurking under your bed, but can instead be found within your own mind.

    More than merely a scare tactic, the film illustrates how someone’s own brain can transform them from a decent person into the villain in someone else’s story.

    Following his breakout hit with the horror flick Barbarian (2022), in Weapons Cregger presents a psychological nightmare that serves as a twisted exploration of human behaviour. It shows how quickly normal people can turn into agents of cruelty, all while still believing they’re the heroes of the story.

    The film opens with the chilling premise of 17 children from the same classroom vanishing without a trace, leaving behind only grainy security footage of them running like helpless little planes. However, the true horror unfolds as the community of Maybrook – a small town in Pennsylvania – spirals into chaos instead of unity.

    Parents accuse teachers, neighbours distrust one another and innocent lives are upended in the search for a culprit. This breakdown is grounded in psychological research, showcasing how human behaviour can deteriorate under pressure.

    The psychology behind Weapons

    Social identity theory is a scientific concept that theorises that your brain is wired to compartmentalise the world into “us” (those we consider good) and “them” (those perceived as threats). This process intensifies when people face fear or stress.

    In Weapons, we see this theory in action as the community dismantles itself. Teacher Justine Gandy (Julia Garner) becomes an easy target, not due to concrete evidence, but because she fits neatly into the role of the other – “them”. The parents of the missing children seek someone to vilify, and she becomes the scapegoat of their fears.

    The trailer for Weapons.

    This idea is based on decades of research showing that even the flimsiest group divisions can trigger vicious “us versus them” thinking. In laboratory experiments, people assigned to completely meaningless groups (like “overestimators” versus “underestimators”) will immediately start favouring their own group and discriminating against the other.

    Here’s where things get truly frightening. The film shows characters doing horrible things while convinced they’re being righteous – this is a phenomenon psychologists call “moral disengagement”.

    Think of it as your brain’s built-in excuse generator. When you want to do something that violates your normal moral standards, your mind helpfully provides justifications, such as:

    • “it’s for the greater good”

    • “they deserve it”

    • “everyone else is doing it”

    • “I’m just following orders.”

    Recent studies show that this isn’t just about film villains – it’s how ordinary people convince themselves that cruelty is justified.

    One 2025 study found that when people are under stress (like, say, dealing with missing children), they become much more likely to make cold, calculating decisions that prioritise results over moral principles. Your stressed-out brain rewrites your ethics in real time.

    Weapons taps into these, and other, unsettling psychological findings. Take, for instance, the controversial 1971 Stanford prison experiment, where participants tasked with being “guards” quickly adopted sadistic behaviours towards the “prisoners”. Or the equally contentious obedience experiments by American psychologist Stanley Milgram, which demonstrated how ordinary people administered what they thought were lethal electric shocks under authority’s command.

    Both the Milgram obedience experiment and Stanford prison experiment are now universally condemned by psychologists as deeply unethical, with experts agreeing that ethics gatekeepers would swiftly bar such studies from proceeding if they were proposed today. These controversial experiments were so harmful to participants that they directly led to major reforms in research ethics, including the National Research Act of 1974 and modern institutional review boards that protect human subjects.

    But many still believe that these experiments revealed a chilling truth – almost anyone can become a “bad guy” under the right circumstances. Alarmingly, in Milgram’s tests, around 65% of participants proceeded to maximum voltage shocks, indicating that normal people are vulnerable to psychological manipulation within group settings.

    Weapons presents this same dynamic, but within the context of a seemingly idyllic suburban neighbourhood.

    The empathy trap

    Weapons also shows that the people who care the most about a situation can become the biggest targets. The film doesn’t punish characters for being cruel – it punishes them for being kind.

    Take teacher Justine Gandy (Julia Garner). Her downfall isn’t that she’s evil or incompetent. It’s that she cared too much about a neglected student and crossed the invisible boundaries of the “proper” teacher-parent relationship. Her empathy makes her an outsider, and outsiders make perfect scapegoats. The community turns her compassion into evidence of her guilt.

    Even more chilling is what happens to Marcus (Benedict Wong), the school principal. In a moment where he shows concern for a child, his care gets twisted into something sinister. His empathy is punished with extreme prejudice, transforming his human decency into malice and destruction.

    Recent studies have explored “virtue signaling”: when people perform moral outrage not because they genuinely care, but because it makes them look good socially. The research shows that online moral crusades often have little to do with actually helping anyone and everything to do with personal image management.

    Even worse, psychologists have identified “weaponised empathy” – using people’s natural desire to help others to manipulate them into supporting harmful causes. Your compassion becomes the weapon someone else uses against you.

    Weapons succeeds as horror because it doesn’t rely on supernatural monsters or gore. Instead, it shows us the real monsters – the ones we become when our psychology works exactly the way evolution has led it to.

    The film suggests that the greatest threat to any community isn’t some external evil. It’s the collective decision to abandon empathy, critical thinking and basic human decency in favour of tribal warfare and moral theatre.

    As the credits roll over the film’s blood-soaked finale, you’re left with an uncomfortable question: In a crisis, which side of that warfare would you be on? And more importantly, would you even know?


    Looking for something good? Cut through the noise with a carefully curated selection of the latest releases, live events and exhibitions, straight to your inbox every fortnight, on Fridays. Sign up here.


    The Conversation

    Edward White is affiliated with Kingston University.

    This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license.
    © 2025 TheConversation, NZCity

     Other Entertainment News
     12 Aug: Brooklyn Peltz-Beckham would renew his wedding vows with wife Nicola "every single day" if he could
     12 Aug: Chad Michael Murray was once so close to death, his family called in a priest to perform the last rites
     12 Aug: Halle Berry's first husband ended their marriage because she didn't "cook and clean"
     12 Aug: Machine Gun Kelly chooses "not to stay contained in a societal box"
     12 Aug: Kristin Scott Thomas confronted the tragedies of her childhood head-on through her directorial debut My Mother's Wedding
     12 Aug: Kelly Clarkson is said to be putting her children first as she grieves over the death of her ex-husband Brandon Blackstock
     12 Aug: Park Chan-wook has been expelled from The Writers Guild of America
     Top Stories

    RUGBY RUGBY
    All Blacks coach Scott Robertson claims he has no need to coddle first-fives Beauden Barrett and Damian McKenzie when Richie Mo'unga becomes available for selection from October 2026 More...


    BUSINESS BUSINESS
    Businesses in South Waikato and Tauranga have been caught selling alcohol to minors in undercover operations More...



     Today's News

    Entertainment:
    Brooklyn Peltz-Beckham would renew his wedding vows with wife Nicola "every single day" if he could 19:12

    Politics:
    Australia spends $500m on Papua New Guinea's Lombrum naval base expansion 19:07

    Rugby League:
    The Warriors have recalled Tanah Boyd to halfback for Friday night's home NRL game against the Dragons at Mount Smart Stadium 18:57

    Entertainment:
    Chad Michael Murray was once so close to death, his family called in a priest to perform the last rites 18:42

    Soccer:
    The start of the new season in football's Premier League looms this weekend - but Chris Wood admits he has a secondary green and gold target in the back of his mind 18:37

    International:
    Taylor Swift announces new album after suspenseful countdown 18:17

    Entertainment:
    Halle Berry's first husband ended their marriage because she didn't "cook and clean" 18:12

    International:
    Reconnecting with Sri Lanka as an adult 18:07

    Law and Order:
    Another two men have been charged with murder in relation to a 20-year-old's death after a brawl in Hamilton last month 18:07

    Entertainment:
    Machine Gun Kelly chooses "not to stay contained in a societal box" 17:42


     News Search






    Power Search


    © 2025 New Zealand City Ltd