ABSTRACT Sean Baker’s Anora has garnered significant critical acclaim and awards, including the Palme d’Or at Cannes and multiple Oscars. Praised for its “raw energy,” “dark comedy,” and “humanistic portrayal,” the film has been celebrated for its depiction of life on the fringes. However, beneath this veneer of praise lies a deeply troubling core. The narrative, which explores themes of coercion, trafficking, and psychological degradation, normalizes suffering and exploitation through its stylistic choices. This analysis argues that Anora uses dark comedy and frenetic pacing to desensitize audiences, blunting moral outrage and undermining empathy. Through the lenses of Kantian duty, Aristotelian virtue, and Social Contract theory, this critique examines how the film’s portrayal of exploitation and coercion violates fundamental ethical principles. Despite its artistic merits, Anora raises urgent ethical questions about the normalization of harmful content and the responsibilities of creators in depicting the darkest facets of human experience.
Cyril De La Torre (Sun,) studied this question.