Glazer’s use of hidden cameras and real interactions with non-actors blurs the line between fiction and documentary. The scenes of the Female cruising for men are largely improvised; the men in the van are genuine members of the public who were unaware they were being filmed for a feature film. This methodology achieves two goals.
The Unbearable Alien Gaze: Embodiment, Ethics, and Erasure in Jonathan Glazer’s Under the Skin Under The Skin Film
First, it captures an uncomfortable authenticity of male desire. The men are not movie-star predators; they are ordinary, sometimes kind, sometimes pathetic figures. Their willingness to enter the van reflects a casual, everyday objectification. Second, the Scottish landscape becomes an extension of the alien’s psyche. The Highlands are shot with a desaturated, almost monochromatic bleakness. Unlike the romanticized wilderness of Braveheart , Glazer’s Scotland is a wet, grey void—a perfect hunting ground because it is already empty of warmth. Glazer’s use of hidden cameras and real interactions
Jonathan Glazer’s Under the Skin (2013) subverts the traditional science fiction invasion narrative by displacing spectacle for sensory immersion. This paper argues that the film uses the perspective of an alien predator—disguised as a human female—to perform a phenomenological dismantling of human identity. Through its distinctive visual grammar (hidden cameras, non-professional actors, and minimalist dialogue) and Mica Levi’s dissonant score, the film transforms the Scottish landscape into a liminal hunting ground. Ultimately, the paper posits that the protagonist’s gradual acquisition of human feeling leads not to redemption, but to a tragic erasure, suggesting that empathy is as destructive as it is connective. The Unbearable Alien Gaze: Embodiment, Ethics, and Erasure