Theory about Scott Pilgrim
There seems to be a pattern in all the confrontations in the movie. It seems like everyone is trying to avoid having to resort to the superego block. Being forced into a position which requires it is like a social checkmate, characterized in the movie as a "K.O." or death.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8R7we...eature=related
Like for example when Scott cheats on Knives with Ramona, he does so on basis of his own private Te judgments. He is ashamed of these judgments, and believes that if exposed to his peers they qualify him for ostracism. His general easygoingness and ambivalence with regard to personal possessions qualifies him as an SEI: others' standards of Te are not important to him, only his own is. This along with his attentiveness to others' opinions, and the importance he puts on staying in others' good graces.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OYwdFDQfOx8&feature=related
However the scene with the third evil ex seems to suggest that that character, an LSI, relied mostly on the presumption of superiority on basis OF his avoidance of the superego block. By abstaining from his desire for meat, he puffs up his own ego on basis of himself and his peers, on basis of this abstinence being a sort of liberating factor from the criticism of others: he alone can abstain from the sins of the superego block, therefore he has greater virtue than the others.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lS1-xbI-FT0&NR=1
In the final scene, with Gideon, the tide turns when Gideon attacks Ramona: Gideon flagrantly abuses his Se and commits a major EII foul. (he's pretty blatantly EII given that his entire strategy revolves around baiting people with shining opportunities, so that they will give in to him). He is seen pleading his innocence before his peers (even though they are his enemies) before being pummeled into social oblivion. The notion that the superego is always watching is a key theme of the movie: whether we like it or not, we feel a sense of accountability both to society and to the objects (people) who remind us of it. The key to avoiding this innate social anxiety is to become a superego unto ourselves, as represented by Scott's attainment of the Power of Self-Respect.