The Russian Formalists split story into two planes: the fabula — events in their true chronological order — and the syuzhet — the order, duration, and emphasis the narrative actually presents them in. Forbidden Planet's power derives almost entirely from the gap between the two.
The raw chronological sequence of all events — including those that happened before the film begins, those withheld from the audience, and those occurring off-screen. The complete causal chain, reconstructed. In Forbidden Planet, the fabula spans roughly 2,000 years: from the Krell civilisation's self-destruction through to the film's climax.
The narrative as constructed and delivered — its sequencing, its ellipses, its focalisations, its withheld information. The syuzhet is the film's argument about how to tell the story. Wilcox's syuzhet begins in medias res, withholds the central truth (Morbius's unconscious guilt) until the final act, and feeds the audience only what Adams knows.
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Select an event from the timeline above to read its structural significance.
| Knowledge / Secret | Fabula Status | Morbius | Adams / Crew | Audience | Dramatic Function |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Krell annihilated themselves via Id amplification | True from before film's start | Partial | Withheld | Withheld until Act 3 | Slow revelation mirrors Adams's investigation |
| Morbius's Id powers the monster | True from the first Bellerophon nights | Unknown to self | Unknown | Unknown until climax | Maximum dramatic irony — audience shares Morbius's ignorance |
| Morbius killed the Bellerophon crew | True — 20 years past | Repressed | Suspected | Suspected mid-film | Mystery engine; Adams's suspicion drives Act 2 |
| Altaira has never met men other than Morbius | True from birth | Known | Unknown at arrival | Unknown at arrival | Colours Adams/Altaira dynamic; later reveals Morbius's control |
| Morbius boosted his intellect via Krell machine | True — occurred 20 years ago | Known | Unknown | Revealed mid-film | Reframes Morbius from scientist to experimental subject |
| The monster leaves no physical trace | True — it's psychic energy | Unknown | Discovered Act 2 | Discovered Act 2 | Forces genre pivot from monster movie to psychological horror |
| The Krell planet-brain is still active | True from before the film | Known | Unknown | Revealed Act 2 | Escalates stakes; reframes Altair IV as still-dangerous site |
What makes Forbidden Planet's narrative construction so sophisticated is that the syuzhet doesn't merely withhold information from the audience — it traps the audience inside the focalisation of a man who cannot know the truth about himself. We are imprisoned in Morbius's point of view, sharing his genuine bewilderment, because his unconscious mind — the very thing doing the killing — is by definition inaccessible to him.
The film's fabula, reconstructed in full, tells a story of hubris and unconscious violence. But the syuzhet tells a detective story that progressively reveals its own detective as the culprit — with the additional cruelty that the culprit is entirely sincere in his ignorance. This is structural psychoanalysis: the narrative form enacts the argument the film is making about the unreliability of conscious self-knowledge.
The gap between fabula and syuzhet is, in the end, the gap between what the mind does and what the self knows. The Krell learned this too late. So does Morbius. The audience learns it only when he does — which is precisely the point.