Chest Binding in Movies, Shows, Documentaries, and Other Media

What is Chest Binding, and Why Do People Bind?
Put simply, chest binding is the act of flattening your chest. A wide range of people flatten their chests. Here are some examples:
Cis men with gynaecomastia (increased breast tissue).
Trans men.
Non-binary people.
Gender non-conforming women.
Lesbians and butches.
Drag kings.
Cosplayers and crossdressers.
Here are some motivations for binding:
Reducing body dysphoria toward one's chest, and/or experiencing the gender euphoria of a flatter chest.
Reducing social dysphoria which may result from being misgendered.
Being safer in public, if being read as male will protect a person from harassment or violence. For example, see the documentary Transition (2023).
Temporarily presenting in a masculine, male, or androgynous style, for identity or fandom or fashion purposes.
Is Binding Safe?
Binding comes with risks, even if a reputable, well-designed, properly-sized binder is used. In this study, 97% of respondents had experienced at least one negative symptom caused by binding, including minor symptoms like temporary skin irritation. This study found that most symptoms will become apparent quickly, with more serious symptoms (such as rib fractures, which are rare) taking many more years to develop. This emphasises the importance of taking symptoms seriously when they do appear, rather than pushing through pain or discomfort.
For many people, if they take minor symptoms seriously and proceed with caution, binding will be relatively safe. For me, however, binding was not sustainable or painless, even when I wore binders which were advertised to me as being absolutely safe. Ultimately, more research is needed into chest binding, so that we have a more robust body of research to be informed by. Binding is a huge part of many people's lives, especially those who bind for safety reasons, and those people deserve empirical evidence. You can learn more about chest binding here.
Some methods of binding are safer than others. Unfortunately, more dangerous methods dominate media depictions of trans men, non-binary people, and gender non-conforming individuals assigned female at birth. Disclosure (2020), a documentary purporting to thoroughly analyse trans representation in the media, failed to offer an in-depth critique of chest binding depictions, despite how widespread harmful binding depictions are, which is one of the reasons I created this site.
Safer binders are typically stiff/taut at the front, to flatten the chest, while being looser across the back. The safest binders also have shoulder straps, as that extra support helps take pressure of the ribcage and back, compared to wrap-around binders which apply consistent pressure around the entire torso, just like bandages.

Bandage Binding in Media
You might think bandaging your chest flat is an ideal, consequence-free way to alleviate your dysphoria and otherwise affirm your gender. Nobody could really blame you for having that belief; films and shows continue to reinforce this false, dangerous myth, despite resistance from our communities. The truth is that binding with bandages is unsafe, difficult, painful, and potentially injurious. That is why misrepresentations of bandage binding are so important to criticise.
Plus, not all trans men are slender, small-chested people who have someone to help us wind bandages around our ribcage. Bandage binding isn't just painful, it's impractical. In reality, a person binding with bandages is more likely to get this kind of outcome:

To my immense disappointment, genderfluid star Ruby Rose perpetuated the myth of easy bandage binding in her video Break Free, which has been watched over 55 million times. Her video, much like other media depictions of bandage binding, cuts from footage of her manually wrapping herself in bandages, to footage of bandages perfectly wrapped around her and neatly clipped down behind her back. Folks and fellas, believe me, she did not accomplish that by herself. She had a team of people to help wind the bandages around her, keep them straight and untwisted, and clip them down where she couldn't reach. I don't need to guess whether that was the case, because the behind-the-scenes footage proves as much:

Break Free gave, and is still giving, millions of people the impression that bandage binding is an easy, safe, and accessible way to flatten your chest. Trans men, questioning people, non-binary individuals, butch lesbians, cosplayers, and others are harmed by Rose's video, and by all media which depicts bandage binding in a similarly unrealistic way. Break Free is, therefore, a notable example of irresponsible media depicting chest binding unrealistically.

Ironically, the most accurate depiction of bandage binding (in terms of how much pain it can cause) comes from Titane, a 2021 body horror film where a woman assumes the identity of a missing man in order to escape arrest. While it is not a trans film, I consider it valuable because it does not glorify, idealise, or promote bandage binding as an easy method of chest flattening. In that department, though it's a gruesome movie, I consider it less harmful than idealised depictions like Break Free. Nobody walks away from Titane thinking that bandage binding is safe or comfortable.

Duct Tape Binding in Media
Duct tape binding is even more dangerous than bandage binding, with a higher risk of serious or lasting symptoms. One of the most dangerous depictions of this practice occurs in Venus Boyz (2002), when a drag king is shown being tightly bound by another drag performer. Clearly in pain, the king admits that the binding is hurting his body, but this is not taken seriously by himself or by anybody else, and his group proceeds with the plans they'd scheduled, this king accompanying the group while wrapped in duct tape beneath his clothes. The Aggressives (2005) also features a performer being bound in duct tape, with the documentary's promotional material featuring that same king with a duct-taped chest. Such documentaries are crucially important to illustrate what our communities have been through, and how we used to bind, but modern-day media needs to set a safer example for vulnerable and dysphoric viewers. Disclaimers are the bare minimum, if binding practices like this are being depicted.

Chevy, a trans man in the short documentary Girlz to MEN (2019), revealed to interviewers that he binds with duct tape, believing that this harmful practice makes him more "real" than trans men who opt for less dangerous methods of chest flattening, or who do not bind at all. I found this very concerning, especially because viewers are not informed how debilitating duct tape binding is, and his interview is shown with no disclaimers.
Trans men and gender-diverse people sharing their life experiences, and filmmakers not considering the safety of viewers when representing such experiences, is one thing. A whole other issue is the thoughtless misrepresentation of duct tape chest binding by cis-centric media.
