Psychoanalytic Structure · MGM 1956 · After Freud 1923

Forbidden PlanetThe Freudian Schema

Id · Ego · Superego · Mapped onto Character, Event & Theme

Freud's 1923 structural model divides the psyche into three agencies: the Id (primitive drives, entirely unconscious), the Ego (the rational self, mediating between Id and reality), and the Superego (internalised moral authority). Forbidden Planet is one of cinema's most deliberate dramatisations of this schema — not as metaphor, but as literal plot mechanism.

Cross-Section Diagram

▸ Click any character node to read the analysis

Fig. 1 — Psychic Strata · Altair IV / Dr. Morbius After S. Freud, Das Ich und das Es, 1923
Superego
Über-Ich
United Planets
Institutional moral authority
Cmdr. Adams
Ego ideal; rational law
Robby
Superego made external; built ethics
Civilisation · Law · Moral constraint · Conscience
Ego
Ich
Morbius (conscious)
Scholar, father, investigator — the self he knows
Altaira
Emergent desire; ego awakening
Doc Ostrow
Rational curiosity; fatal inquiry
Krell Educator
Amplifier — bypasses the repression barrier
Morbius's desire
To stay; to possess — half-known, half-repressed
Reality principle · Self-knowledge · Conscious will
THE REPRESSION BARRIER — Verdrangung
Id
Es
The Id Monster
Morbius's unconscious drives made manifest
Morbius (unconscious)
The murderer; the possessor; the self he cannot know
Krell Machinery
The Id's amplifier; planet-wide psychic engine
The Krell
Civilisation destroyed by its own collective Id
Pleasure principle · Aggression · Eros & Thanatos
Conscious
Preconscious
Unconscious
Character / Element Analysis

Select a node from the diagram above to read its psychoanalytic function in the film.

Analytical Notes
I
The Structural Argument
The film does not use Freudian concepts as metaphor — it literalises them. The Krell machinery is not like an amplified unconscious; it is one. The Id monster is not a symbol of repressed desire; it is repressed desire, given physical form by planetary psychic engineering. The film's plot is Freudian theory made into mechanism.
II
The Missing Superego
Morbius's tragedy is specifically a superego failure. His conscious ego is functioning — he investigates, he reasons, he cares for Altaira. But his superego has no jurisdiction over his unconscious. The moral inhibition that should suppress murderous desire cannot reach the Id because the Krell machinery bypasses the repression barrier entirely, allowing the Id to act without the superego's awareness.
III
Eros & Thanatos
Freud's 1920 revision posited two primary drives: Eros (life/love/binding) and Thanatos (death/destruction/unbinding). Both are present in Morbius's Id. His Eros drive is the desire to keep Altaira — to remain, to possess, to protect. His Thanatos drive is directed outward at anyone threatening this possession. The Id monster is Thanatos in its purest form: undifferentiated, disproportionate, lethal.
IV
The Krell's Error
The Krell made the same mistake as Morbius but at civilisational scale. Having solved the problem of consciousness — they built a machine to externalise thought into matter — they forgot to account for the unconscious. In Freudian terms: they amplified the ego's capacity for creation while simultaneously amplifying the Id's capacity for destruction. On the night the machine went live, the combined unconscious of an entire species annihilated it.
V
Adams as Ego Ideal
Adams functions in the schema not as a second ego but as Morbius's ego ideal — the Freudian term for the superego's aspirational component, the image of what the self wishes to be. He represents rational, sociable, emotionally available manhood: everything Morbius once was and has ceased to be. His arrival triggers the crisis because the ego ideal makes the repressed desire visible by contrast.
VI
Altaira as Transitional Object
Altaira occupies a psychically complex position: she is Morbius's daughter (superego claim), his companion and sole emotional attachment (ego function), and — in the Id's logic — a possession to be defended against all rivals. The film is carefully unsettling about this triangulation. Her sexual awakening to Adams is not merely romantic; it is a psychic event that threatens Morbius's entire structure of self-deception.
The Krell Parallel
⊛ Civilisation as Failed Superego

Freud's 1930 work Civilisation and its Discontents argued that civilisation is itself a superego — a collective moral structure that suppresses individual drives in exchange for social order. The neurosis of modern humanity, in Freud's account, stems from this suppression: the more sophisticated the civilisation, the more stringent the repression, the more dangerous the pressure building beneath it.

The Krell are this argument taken to its logical extreme. They were a civilisation so advanced that they had apparently transcended the need for physical instruments — their technology could externalise thought directly into reality. But this is precisely what Freud would have predicted was the most dangerous possible development: a civilisation that gave its Id the tools to act without the superego's mediation. On the night they activated the machine, their collective repressed desires — every unacknowledged aggression, every sublimated violence, every suppressed envy — were simultaneously unleashed and amplified to planetary scale.

In 1956, this is not merely a story about an alien race. It is a story about us. The Krell's machine is the hydrogen bomb's inner logic: a technology that amplifies destructive power beyond any moral framework's ability to contain it. The film's deepest argument is Freudian-civilisational: we have built the Krell machine, and we have not yet reckoned with what our collective Id will do with it.

Conclusion

What the Schema Reveals

The Freudian schema does something the film's surface narrative cannot: it makes visible the structural identity between Morbius and the Krell. On the surface, they are very different — a single man and an entire civilisation, separated by two millennia. But at the level of the schema they are identical: both amplified their unconscious minds beyond the reach of moral constraint, and both were destroyed by what that amplification released.

The schema also clarifies the film's most disturbing implication: Morbius is not an aberration. He is not a uniquely corrupted man whose punishment reassures us that normal people are safe. The Freudian argument is universal — everyone has an Id, everyone has repressed desires, everyone would be dangerous if given the Krell machinery. The film is not a cautionary tale about an exceptional villain. It is a warning about the ordinary human mind.

Robby — cheerful, helpful, ethically hard-wired — is the film's only character without an unconscious. He is entirely superego. And he is the only one who survives Altair IV without damage. The film does not present this as a model: Robby is not human. But the contrast is pointed. The machine that has no Id is safe. The beings that do are not — not without a repression barrier that cannot be bypassed, and not in a universe that gives the Id planet-sized amplification.