• Cast & crew
  • User reviews

The Stanford Prison Experiment

The Stanford Prison Experiment (2015)

In 1971, twenty-four male students are selected to take on randomly assigned roles of prisoners and guards in a mock prison situated in the basement of the Stanford psychology building. In 1971, twenty-four male students are selected to take on randomly assigned roles of prisoners and guards in a mock prison situated in the basement of the Stanford psychology building. In 1971, twenty-four male students are selected to take on randomly assigned roles of prisoners and guards in a mock prison situated in the basement of the Stanford psychology building.

  • Kyle Patrick Alvarez
  • Tim Talbott
  • Philip Zimbardo
  • Ezra Miller
  • Tye Sheridan
  • Billy Crudup
  • 130 User reviews
  • 91 Critic reviews
  • 67 Metascore
  • 4 wins & 3 nominations

Official Trailer

Top cast 38

Ezra Miller

  • Daniel Culp …

Tye Sheridan

  • Peter Mitchell …

Billy Crudup

  • Dr. Philip Zimbardo

Olivia Thirlby

  • Dr. Christina Maslach

Michael Angarano

  • Christopher Archer

Moises Arias

  • Anthony Carroll

Nicholas Braun

  • John Lovett

Ki Hong Lee

  • Gavin Lee …

Thomas Mann

  • Prisoner 416

Logan Miller

  • Jerry Sherman …

Johnny Simmons

  • Jeff Jansen …

James Wolk

  • Jesse Fletcher

Matt Bennett

  • Kyle Parker

Jesse Carere

  • Paul Beattie …

Brett Davern

  • Hubbie Whitlow …
  • All cast & crew
  • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

More like this

The Experiment

Did you know

  • Trivia Although never mentioned in the movie, the real life experiment was funded by the U.S. Office of Naval Research and was of interest to both the U.S. Navy and Marine Corps as an investigation into the causes of conflict between military guards and prisoners.
  • Goofs When Dr. Zimbardo speaks with his colleague, the colleague says that he will see him at the beginning of the semester. Stanford does not have semesters; rather, it has a quarter academic calendar.

Daniel Culp : I know you're a nice guy.

Christopher Archer : So why do you hate me?

Daniel Culp : Because I know what you can become.

  • Connections Featured in WatchMojo: Top 10 Creepiest Historic Events That Are Scarier than Horror Movies (2020)

User reviews 130

Instructive.

  • boboceaelena
  • Feb 20, 2021
  • How long is The Stanford Prison Experiment? Powered by Alexa
  • July 17, 2015 (United States)
  • United States
  • Official site
  • Untitled Stanford Prison Experiment Project
  • Stanford University, Palo Alto, California, USA
  • Coup d'Etat Films
  • Sandbar Pictures
  • Abandon Pictures
  • See more company credits at IMDbPro
  • Jul 19, 2015
  • Runtime 2 hours 2 minutes

Related news

Contribute to this page.

The Stanford Prison Experiment (2015)

  • See more gaps
  • Learn more about contributing

More to explore

Recently viewed.

prison guard experiment documentary

The Stanford Prison Experiment: Unlocking the Truth

Hulu's Black Friday Deal

You May Also Like

prison guard experiment documentary

prison guard experiment documentary

GeekDad

Raising Geek Generation 2.0

prison guard experiment documentary

‘The Stanford Prison Experiment: Unlocking the Truth’ Premieres On National Geographic, Disney+, and Hulu

What started out as a self-contained university experiment turned into a media spectacle that captured the imagination and attention of the world, shaping our understanding of human nature and forever changing the field of psychology.  There was only one problem: The story of what happened during the experiment was shared with the world by only one person . Today, most of the participants have gone on record to tell the whole story . Now, National Geographic takes us on a journey to discover what really happened back in 1971 and the long-lasting effects in The Stanford Prison Experiment: Unlocking the Truth .

What Is The Stanford Prison Experiment: Unlocking the Truth ?

The Stanford Prison Experiment: Unlocking the Truth is a three-part docuseries that offers a groundbreaking look at one of history’s most notorious psychology studies through the firsthand accounts of the original prisoners and guards, many of whom are speaking on camera for the very first time. Their stories unravel a narrative that interrogates the motives of the man in charge, Dr. Philip Zimbardo, while exploring larger questions of human nature and the power of perspective.

The series premieres on National Geographic TV on Wednesday, November 13th and begins streaming on Disney+ and Hulu the following day. Let’s take a look at the three episodes in this series. 

“The Hallway”

Introducing one of history’s most notorious psychological experiments—but with a twist. The study’s prisoner and guard participants take a seat in front of the camera to reveal never-before-heard details of an event that has shaped our understanding of human nature and good versus evil for the past 50 years. Together, they track the key events that took place over the six fateful days in 1971.

prison guard experiment documentary

“The Unraveling”

What if we told you the Stanford Prison Experiment is not what it seems? The participants reveal new perspectives surrounding what happened in the fateful hallway, putting to question Dr. Zimbardo’s long-held claims. An intrepid French researcher claims that the 50-year-old story is riddled with inconsistencies. Meanwhile, the filmmakers expose their own storytelling devices.

prison guard experiment documentary

“A Beautiful Lie”

In a pivotal interview, Dr. Zimbardo takes a seat in front of the camera and defends his experiment and its lessons. Meanwhile, an unexpected and exciting reunion takes place that exposes new layers of the story. This isn’t a tale about an experiment debunked but rather one about the power of perspective and mythmaking.

prison guard experiment documentary

Watch The Stanford Prison Experiment: Unlocking the Truth

The Stanford Prison Experiment: Unlocking the Truth comes from director Juliette Eisner, executive producer Alex Braverman, and award-winning production company Muck Media, which recently won five News & Documentary Emmy ® Awards for “Trafficked with Mariana van Zeller” and one News & Documentary Emmy Award for “Science Fair: The Series.” It premiered at this year’s Tribeca Film Festival.

“In the fifty years since the Stanford Prison Experiment took place, I was surprised to learn that few of the study’s participants had ever spoken about their experiences, and that their stories exposed a web of secrets, inconsistencies, and layers that questioned the experiment’s seemingly simple narrative about whether human beings are inherently good or evil,” said Director Juliette Eisner. “In light of Dr. Zimbardo’s recent passing, this project couldn’t be more timely in its exploration of human nature and the repercussions of differing narratives.”

Through unparalleled access, The Stanford Prison Experiment: Unlocking the Truth embarks on a gripping, ticking-clock journey through the six-day Stanford Prison Experiment with a deluge of reveals, new subjects, and a smoking-gun archive. The docuseries weaves together shocking, poignant, and sometimes humorous firsthand accounts from the very participants who were at the heart of the experiment. Then, in an unexpected turn, the series brings the participants to a replica film set of the “prison,” where they revisit pivotal moments and attempt to find consensus—and closure—about what really happened over the course of those six days.

In one of his final interviews, the late Dr. Zimbardo, along with his wife, Dr. Christina Maslach, sit down to discuss their own experience. The series offers an unflinching look at Zimbardo’s childhood, his motivations for beginning the project, and the notoriety he found in the aftermath.

Be sure to watch The Stanford Prison Experiment: Unlocking the Truth when it premieres Wednesday, November 13th on National Geographic and begins streaming on Disney+ and Hulu the following day. Here is a trailer to enjoy in the meantime. 

Become a patron at Patreon!

Share this:

Related posts.

lyric

Five Gift Ideas for the Geek Who Has Everything

prison guard experiment documentary

Two Different Books Fresh Out of Princeton Architectural Press

prison guard experiment documentary

‘Planet Nigeria,’ a Short Story by Erik Wecks

  • Biz & IT

Revisiting the Stanford Prison Experiment 50 years later

Ars chats with director Juliette Eisner and original study participants in new documentary series.

Blond man dressed as prison guard wearing sunglasses, harassing prisoners in hospital gowns.

In 1971, Stanford University psychologist Philip Zimbardo conducted a notorious experiment in which he randomly divided college students into two groups, guards and prisoners, and set them loose in a simulated prison environment for six days, documenting the guards' descent into brutality. His findings caused a media sensation and a lot of subsequent criticism about the ethics and methodology employed in the study. Zimbardo died last month at 91, but his controversial legacy continues to resonate some 50 years later with The Stanford Prison Experiment: Unlocking the Truth , a new documentary from National Geographic.

Director Juliette Eisner started working on the documentary during the pandemic when, like most people, she had a lot of extra time on her hands. She started looking at old psychological studies exploring human nature and became fascinated by the Stanford Prison Experiment, especially in light of the summer protests in 2020 concerning police brutality. She soon realized that the prevailing narrative was Zimbardo's and that very few of the original subjects in the experiment had ever been interviewed about their experiences.

"I wanted to hear from those people," Eisner told Ars. "They were very hard to find. Most of them were still only known by alias or by prisoner number." Eisner persevered and tracked most of them down. "Every single time they picked up the phone, they were like, 'Oh, I'm so glad you called. Nobody has called me in 50 years. And by the way, everything you think you know about this study is wrong,' or 'The story is not what it seems.'"

Her original intention was to debunk the experiment, but over the course of making the documentary, her focus shifted to the power of storytelling. "Even when stories are riddled with lies or manipulations, they can still capture our imaginations in ways that we should maybe be wary of sometimes," Eisner said, particularly when those stories "come out of the mouth of somebody who is such a showman, such an entertainer."

The documentary's structure reflects Eisner's research journey. The first episode ("The Hallway") focuses on the standard account of the experiment that has dominated for the last 50 years. The second ("The Unraveling") focuses on subsequent criticisms and debunkings and the accounts of original participants, many of whom have rather different takes. The third episode ("A Beautiful Lie") brings the original participants to Los Angeles for a re-enactment with professional actors and includes an interview with Zimbardo himself.

Local police conducted mock arrests of the participants assigned as prisoners.

"We grappled with the structure and how to let the story unfold and decided, let's tell the audience what they think they know, and then let's take it apart," said Eisner. "And then a surprise twist, let's give you a different look at it and let the man at the center of it all defend the experiment against these claims. It was really important to me to have all these perspectives be heard, and not just one person's story as it had been for the past 50 years. Everybody had a different take on this experiment, even though they all lived it together."

For the re-enactment, NatGeo commissioned a set based on the floor plans of the Stanford basement where the original experiment was conducted. "We really needed visuals to help bring a lot of these stories to life," said Eisner. "Despite the fact that Zimbardo says he filmed the whole thing, he really only filmed six hours over the course of six days. So we needed that visual toolbox, but then it also allowed us to play with these different perspectives."

A controversial experiment

Zimbardo's research involved de-individuation and dehumanization in the context of what drives people to engage in antisocial and/or brutal acts that they would normally find morally repugnant. He designed the Stanford Prison Experiment specifically to investigate the power of roles, rules, group identity, and "situational validation of behavior." He recruited the participants via help wanted ads in the local newspapers and selected 24 young men from the 75 who applied. All were screened for criminal backgrounds, psychological problems, and physical health.

The experiment was conducted in the basement of Jordan Hall. A small corridor served as the prison yard; a janitor's closet was used for solitary confinement ("the Hole"); there were several mock prison cells designed to hold three prisoners each with cots, mattresses, and sheets; and a bigger room housed the guards and the prison warden (Zimbardo's undergraduate research assistant David Jaffe). The guards worked eight-hour shifts and were allowed to leave the site; prisoners had to remain 24/7.

The experiment officially kicked off when the Palo Alto police conducted mock arrests of those participants designated as prisoners—something the latter was not told would happen and a breach of ethics. After being booked, fingerprinted, and sitting for mugshots, they were strip-searched and made to wear smocks with no underwear and stocking caps on their heads. Over the next six days, the guards psychologically tormented their charges with sleep disruption, spraying rebellious prisoners with a fire extinguisher, removing mattresses as punishment, forcing prisoners to drop for pushups, restricting bathroom access so that prisoners had to relieve themselves in a bucket in their cells, and so on—all accompanied by constant verbal abuse.

After 36 hours, it became too much for a prisoner named Doug Korpi ("Prisoner 8612"), who had been tossed into the Hole for insubordination. He underwent what seemed to be a mental breakdown, causing him to be released early from the experiment. On Day 5, friends and family were allowed to visit for 10 minutes; those visits were sufficiently upsetting that several parents intended to contact lawyers to get their children released from the experiment. Zimbardo's fellow psychologist and then-girlfriend, Christina Maslach, also visited the setup and was so appalled she sharply chided Zimbardo for his lack of oversight and called the experiment immoral. Zimbardo decided to end the experiment on Day 6.

guards dominate prisoners lined up along the wall.

One positive outcome was that the Stanford Prison Experiment led US universities to overhaul their ethical requirements for any experiments involving human subjects. But many researchers were troubled both by the methodology and the simplicity of Zimbardo's interpretations. French researcher Thibault Le Texier has been among the strongest critics, pointing out that many of Zimbardo's conclusions were written out in advance, and the experiment was carefully manipulated to produce the results Zimbardo wanted. Zimbardo dismissed Le Texier's work as an ad hominem attack that ignores any contradictory data, but the original participants interviewed for the NatGeo documentary largely confirmed many of Le Texier's claims.

Playing to the camera?

Former prisoner Clay Ramsay, for instance, replaced Korpi in the experiment and quickly became disillusioned with the situation. "It had no intellectual integrity at all," he told Ars, noting that this was particularly obvious during the staged parole board hearings the prisoners were forced to participate in. "They clearly didn't have any kind of common script," he said. "So I came up with the idea of a hunger strike, and then most of my behavior was doing nothing. It turned out to be more dramatic than it had to be."

He ended up tossed in "the Hole" for his insubordination, but rather than being traumatized, he took advantage of the isolation to grab some shut-eye to make up for all the sleep deprivation. "It's supposed to be this major penalty, then it's the only place where you can get a night's sleep in the whole joint," he said.

While Zimbardo has repeatedly insisted over five decades that he simply put college kids into a situation with little guidance and just let things evolve, that's not entirely true. The guards, most notably, participated in a lengthy training session that lasted several hours, in which they were given a daily schedule for the prisoners and tips for inflicting psychological pain, starting by referring to prisoners by number rather than name as a means of dehumanizing them.

Zimbardo also occasionally allowed members of his research team to go into the experimental environment; there is even audio of research assistant David Jaffe coaching a reluctant guard and urging him to be tougher in his treatment of the prisoners. This led many of the guards to assume they were not part of the actual experiment but were in league with the researchers.

prison guard experiment documentary

"It was made very clear to us that we not part of the experiment," former guard Dave Eshleman told Ars. "We were there to help the researchers get the results from the prisoners that they wanted to see. So our job was to make them uncomfortable, give them a sense of fear, but not to use physical violence. We could do everything else within our power to create that fear, and I took that very seriously, because I was on board with what they were trying to do: expose the prison system as evil. Given the zeitgeist at the time, we were all on board with that. Those were the days when anybody with the establishment was automatically evil, and what more evil part of the establishment could there be but the prison system?"

There are also valid questions about whether or not the prisoners' behavior was truly authentic. Doug Korpi later claimed he faked his mental breakdown in the Hole, having become disillusioned with the study. He had thought it would give him some downtime to study for the Graduate Record Exam, but the guards wouldn't allow it. So he staged a breakdown to secure his release.

Korpi was not alone in this. Despite being the poster boy for the guards' collective brutality, "I was absolutely playing for the camera," said Eshleman. "I knew where the camera was, I knew that it was on most of the time, I could hear the researchers talking behind the wall. I was also an acting student and did a lot of improv exercises. So I treated this is an improv, and I created my character based on what my understanding was of what the researchers wanted from us." He based his character on Strother Martin, the fictional evil prison warden from Cool Hand Luke (1967); Eshleman even occasionally spoke actual lines from the film, and his antics earned him the moniker "John Wayne."

Ramsay's experience as a prisoner was a bit different. "I don't think any of the prisoners were conscious of the camera, honestly," he told Ars. "We were not entirely sure where it was, we thought we saw it sometimes. But we were not getting regular instructions, we were being fed badly, clothed badly, et cetera. In a situation like that, what the camera angle is, it's the least of your worries."

In retrospect, the Stanford Prison Experiment may have more in common with reality TV; the industry term has evolved into "unscripted" TV because of the countless ways the final product is manipulated and shaped over the course of filming. Zimbardo even admits as much in the documentary, calling his experiment "the first ever reality TV show."

Controlling the narrative

The recreation set of The Stanford Prison Experiment

Zimbardo's version of events has long dominated the prevailing understanding of the Stanford Prison Experiment, even though some of the original participants have frequently tried to counter that narrative; their voices just never held as much sway. While Eshleman has participated in many media interviews over the ensuing decades, he said that much of his commentary was often edited out in favor of Zimbardo's preferred narrative.

For his part, Zimbardo has said repeatedly that Korpi, for instance, was lying about faking his breakdown, pointing to the fact that Korpi became a prison psychologist because of how deeply the experiment affected him. Zimbardo also denies in the NatGeo documentary that Eshleman was acting for the duration of the experiment; his interpretation is that this is how Eshleman rationalized his behavior and dealt with the guilt.

"I think I knew if I was acting or not," Eshleman countered. "How could he not even consider the possibility that not just I, but everybody in his little demonstration was acting, that we simply fell into roles that were expected of us, to be paid $15 a day? That's what galls me. He kind of decided to throw us [the guards] under the bus after directing us to do what he wanted. Maybe he never took an acting class. Those of those in the theater department are always acting in some way." In fact, the basic scenario of the Stanford Prison Experiment has found its way into many improv classes as an exercise prompt.

"I was very fortunate that Zimbardo never really got into characterizing me," said Ramsay. "But for Dave and two or three of the others, he did. He put labels on them, ascribed motivations, and went, 'I'm a professor of psychology at Stanford University. Are you going to listen to me or to them who are driven by unconscious needs?' A lifetime of that is really insulting."

Eisner admitted that her experiences making the documentary produced some complicated feelings about the Stanford Prison Experiment. "I think that it's absolutely clear there was no scientific methodology," she said. "The data was all over the place, if you can even call it data. I think it's wrong to frame it as such. But do I think the big picture questions it asks are not true, that power does not corrupt? No, I don't think so. I've spent far too many years working on documentaries about fraud and felonies not to know that power can corrupt. But I do think it's dangerous to call to a faulty experiment in order to try to prove those things."

"I really do think there was nothing genuinely malicious in what Zimbardo was doing," said Eisner. "I wish he had been more forthcoming about certain things that he definitely glossed over. But is the experiment important? Absolutely. I love that it has this life 50 years later where now we're looking at it and re-contextualizing it in a way that is totally different from back when he actually did the study."

Dr. Philip Zimbardo shares his own thoughts on his experiment 50 years later.

Ramsay and Eshleman are less charitable in their assessments. "This was the chosen vessel of Zimbardo's ambition and his extraordinary PR skills," said Ramsay. "Because that was his real gift, much more than academic research. He could drive a story, and this was the one that made his career. It gave him fame and notoriety at the same time. It's a package that he drove over the needs, requirements, and values of everybody else involved throughout his life."

"He was not somebody we felt we could question at the time," said Eshleman. "It was only later that I looked back and said, 'It was good theater, but it was not good science.' There were no controls. The conclusions that supposedly came out of this, I thought were completely faulty. The whole concept that 'Oh, we just take these innocent young kids and put them in this evil environment and suddenly they do these evil things.' That's been the narrative for 50 years, and it's BS."

Perhaps the most valuable thing to come out of the documentary project was the re-enactment, which reunited the original participants for the first time in 50 years. They were able to rehash their experiences, mend some fences, and interact with the actors playing them. Eshleman even apologized to Ramsay during the reunion for his actions during the experiment. "I sincerely meant that," he said. "I would feel terrible if anybody actually suffered any damage as a result of this big play acting that we did. I wasn't aware of it at the time."

"All of us were manipulated to an extreme but in really different ways; that's why it was all so dramatic," said Ramsay. "So the things that we ascribed to each other in the experience, it's all entangled. You can't say that any one person did this. I do think that Zimbardo was wrong. There's always an underlying moral possibility that you could always choose to do something different the next day. You can act better tomorrow."

The Stanford Prison Experiment: Unlocking the Truth is now streaming on Disney+.

Photo of Jennifer Ouellette

  • 2. How should we treat beings that might be sentient?
  • 3. It’s Black Friday, and here are the best shopping deals we could find
  • 4. Code found online exploits LogoFAIL to install Bootkitty Linux backdoor
  • 5. Vintage digicams aren’t just a fad. They’re an artistic statement.

IMAGES

  1. Stanford Prison Experiment

    prison guard experiment documentary

  2. Inside The Stanford Prison Experiment That Revealed Humanity's Depths

    prison guard experiment documentary

  3. )Feature Film

    prison guard experiment documentary

  4. Review: ‘The Stanford Prison Experiment’ Revisits the Psychology of Power and Abuse

    prison guard experiment documentary

  5. Stanford Prison Experiment

    prison guard experiment documentary

  6. 4. Guards

    prison guard experiment documentary

VIDEO

  1. The prison guard that changed my life

  2. Peter prison guard? 💂‍♂️🤣 #familyguy

  3. Aqua guard experiment 👹 #shorts #CrazyExperiments

  4. Student's Psychological Experiment Was Sick

  5. Transferred a young guard to a women's prison😨 #movie #series

  6. The prison guard was discovered by the warden to have secretly hidden prohibited items.#shortvideo

COMMENTS

  1. Quiet Rage: The Documentary

    Guaranteed to stimulate critical thinking and discussion, the film features archival footage, flashbacks, post-experiment interviews with the prisoners and guards, and comparisons with real prisons. It documents the surprise arrests by city police and vividly shows the pathology that developed among participants, forcing the two-week study to ...

  2. The Stanford Prison Experiment (2015)

    The Stanford Prison Experiment: Directed by Kyle Patrick Alvarez. With Billy Crudup, Michael Angarano, Moises Arias, Nicholas Braun. In 1971, twenty-four male students are selected to take on randomly assigned roles of prisoners and guards in a mock prison situated in the basement of the Stanford psychology building.

  3. The Stanford Prison Experiment: Unlocking the Truth

    Watch full episodes of The Stanford Prison Experiment: Unlocking the Truth online. Get sneak peeks and free episodes all on Nat Geo TV.

  4. Stanford prison experiment

    The Stanford prison experiment (SPE) was a psychological experiment performed during August 1971.It was a two-week simulation of a prison environment that examined the effects of situational variables on participants' reactions and behaviors. Stanford University psychology professor Philip Zimbardo managed the research team who administered the study. [1] ...

  5. The Stanford Prison Experiment: Unlocking the Truth

    Documentary. Buy Episode 1 HD $2.99. Buy Season 1 HD $6.99. More purchase options. Watchlist. Like. ... as told through the firsthand accounts of its prisoners and guards. Available to buy. Buy HD $2.99. More purchase options. S1 E2 - The ... The Stanford Prison Experiment. Kids Behind Bars: Life or Parole. True Crime Story: Smugshot.

  6. Stanford Prison Experiment

    Learn about the classic psychology experiment that simulated prison life in 1971 and its impact on human nature. Watch the trailer, the film, the documentary, and the book by Philip Zimbardo.

  7. The Stanford Prison Experiment (film)

    A 2015 docudrama film based on the 1971 psychological experiment by Philip Zimbardo, in which students played prisoners or guards for 14 days. The film stars Billy Crudup, Michael Angarano, Ezra Miller and others, and received positive reviews.

  8. 'The Stanford Prison Experiment: Unlocking the Truth' Premieres On

    The Stanford Prison Experiment: Unlocking the Truth is a three-part docuseries that offers a groundbreaking look at one of history's most notorious psychology studies through the firsthand accounts of the original prisoners and guards, many of whom are speaking on camera for the very first time. It premieres Wednesday, November 13th on National Geographic and begins streaming on Disney+ and ...

  9. Revisiting the Stanford Prison Experiment 50 years later

    Zimbardo died last month at 91, but his controversial legacy continues to resonate some 50 years later with The Stanford Prison Experiment: Unlocking the Truth, a new documentary from National ...

  10. The Stanford Prison Experiment: A Film by Kyle Patrick Alvarez

    A psychological thriller based on the true story of a college psych study that went wrong in 1971. Billy Crudup stars as Dr. Philip Zimbardo, who cast 24 students as prisoners and guards in a simulated jail.