Review: The Strange Thing About the Johnsons (2011) ★★★★ - Philosophy in Film (2024)

I don’t usually write about short films, but as a diehard Ari Aster fan, I felt the need to review his first and most controversial project, The Strange Thing About the Johnsons (2011). While Ari Aster gained mainstream fame with his two horror masterpieces, Hereditary (2018) and Midsommar (2019), it was The Strange Thing About the Johnsons that established his penchant for the bizarre and unspeakable.

“Unspeakable” is probably a word that applies best to this 30-minute familial horror film. Aster claims that the idea for the film came about while discussing things that you simply could not show in a film. The challenge of showing the unshowable and speaking the unspeakable pushed Ari Aster to submit The Strange Thing About the Johnsons as his thesis film at the American Film Institute. It has since gone on to draw a lot of attention and controversy online.

The Strange Thing About the Johnsons opens on a scene of a young teenage boy, Isaiah, masturbating. His father, Sidney Johnson (Billy Mayo), walks into the room. While Isaiah is naturally embarrassed and wants his father to leave, his father reassures him that it’s completely normal and there’s nothing to be ashamed of. As Sidney leaves the room, the camera pans to reveal that Isaiah was masturbating to a picture of his father.

The film fast-forwards 14 years to the day of Isaiah’s wedding. When Isaiah’s mother, Joan (Angela Bullock), starts looking for Isaiah, she finds him performing fellati* on his father, who grimaces and appears highly distressed. Though Joan doesn’t speak of what she saw, Sidney attempts to communicate with her by way of a book.

Sidney leaves a manuscript entitled Cocoon Man: Confessions by Sidney Johnson under Joan’s pillow, only to have Isaiah discover it first. The manuscript chronicles the years of sexual abuse Sidney has faced at the hands of his own son. Over the years, he could never fully address the issue or reveal it to Joan. The manuscript is his way to finally tell his story and reveal his tortured life to his wife and the world. Sidney’s book infuriates Isaiah, leading to a series of violent events that tear the Johnson family apart.

It’s easy to see why many viewers find The Strange Thing About the Johnsons so controversial. It addresses what cannot be addressed: a father who is sexually abused by his own son. Moreover, Aster focused his story on an African-American family, which many found to be offensive in its own right. Nonetheless, despite being just short of 30 minutes long, The Strange Thing About the Johnsons is a very uncomfortable watch from start to finish.

Review: The Strange Thing About the Johnsons (2011) ★★★★ - Philosophy in Film (1)

To be clear, the film never feels p*rnographic; at least, not through its intention. Ari Aster gives us just enough information and visual cues to induce disgust, but not enough to be explicit. It is this balance that makes The Strange Thing About the Johnsons so mesmerizing. We recoil from what we see on-screen, yet we can’t look away.

While The Strange Thing About the Johnsons is one of the best short films I’ve seen in a while, it is not without fault. I firmly believe that you cannot fault the film for being overly controversial, as that was Aster’s intention from the start. However, it falls short in the same way that many student films do.

The acting, though generally good, occasionally falls flat. Isaiah’s character is particularly difficult to convey, even if he were portrayed by a veteran actor. In scenes in which adult Isaiah (Brandon Greenhouse) confronts his family members, the cracks begin to show.

On the other hand, both Bill Mayo and Angela Bullock do an excellent job portraying parents caught in an impossible situation. Joan is a mother who wants to act as though the past 14 years never happened, while Sidney is a tortured father whose only hope for salvation is his own story.

From a technical standpoint, The Strange Thing About the Johnsons also does about as well as any other student film. That said, Ari Aster shows a command for storytelling that many other amateur filmmakers simply do not possess. He understands that the camera is there to show images, but that images do not a great film make.

It is the empty space between these images in which the audience exists. Incest is at the heart of the story, but it is put in the minds of the viewers through sound and implication more than anything else. We are shown more than enough to understand, but we are never shown more than is necessary. The story flows seamlessly without the need for endless dialogue. These quiet, empty spaces lead us to a climactic ending that is both tragic and horrifying.

Review: The Strange Thing About the Johnsons (2011) ★★★★ - Philosophy in Film (2)

Since his debut film, Ari Aster has dialed back his penchant for controversy. This enabled his films to reach and be palatable to mainstream audiences. But the horror that lies just under the surface is always there. Aster has a knack for extrapolating the issues we can’t talk about, even in his mainstream films; and for that, I will continue to sing his praises.

There are plenty of films about incest out there. However, few of them deal with the subject matter in a way that is repulsive without being reprehensible. You never feel as though Ari Aster has ill intentions; nor do you feel that he wants to punish his audience. Instead, Aster treats the subject with complete reverence. All of the cards are on the table, leaving the audience to directly confront an issue that most would rather sweep under the rug.

In this way, we are all Isaiah’s mother. We want the story to be over, or to simply never have happened at all. When it comes to incest, we would prefer to be revisionist historians. You may look at a film like The Strange Thing About the Johnsons and think that it’s grotesque, revolting, or unwatchable, and you’d be right.

But it’s also a necessary film. We should never sweep sexual abuse under the rug. If we can’t confront issues like incestuous relationships and sexual abuse in a fictional movie, there’s no way we can confront them in real life. In that way, I find The Strange Thing About the Johnsons to be far more than an attempt to push the envelope. It takes us what we need to see, even if we’d rather keep our eyes shut.

Rating: ★★★★ out of 5

If you’d like to watch The Strange Thing About the Johnsons (2011), it is currently available to watch on Youtube.

For more film reviews like this one, check out the Philosophy in Film Homepage!

Related

Review: The Strange Thing About the Johnsons (2011) ★★★★ - Philosophy in Film (2024)

FAQs

What is the message of the Strange Thing about the Johnsons? ›

The reason he decided to make The Strange Thing About the Johnsons was to get the audience to feel shocked and disgusted at the abuse shown, and to make people realize that it this case of a son sexually abusing his father was so disturbing, we should feel the same exact way when the roles are reversed.

What is the summary of everything strange about the Johnsons? ›

Pitch-black satire about a desperate helpless father who decides to write a tell-all memoir and finally expose his family's dark secret: that his beloved son has been sexually assaulting him and abusing him behind closed doors for years.

What happened in the bathtub scene in The Strange Thing About the Johnsons? ›

That night, while Sidney is listening to a self-help tape in the bath, Isaiah breaks down the door and rapes him.

Did the father abuse the son in the Strange Thing About the Johnsons? ›

2) Isaiah is a deeply disturbed individual who was sexually abused by his own father.

Is The Strange Thing About the Johnsons based on a true story? ›

The Strange Thing About The Johnsons is not a true story, but it could be anyone's story, and now more than ever, we as an audience are cognizant of the true extent to which abuse can have anyone, big and small, in its clutches.

What message have you taken from the movie Strange World? ›

These are the main messages from Strange World: Parents shouldn't expect their children to become exactly like them; children have their own dreams and their own paths to follow. Everything in the natural world is connected; you cannot damage one part without other parts also being affected.

Is The Strange Thing About the Johnsons worth watching? ›

The Strange Thing About the Johnsons 2011 ★★★½

In a lot of ways, it was his desire to be iconoclastic (he succeeds pretty well at that) that stops me rating this more highly. Aster could have made a stronger film had he dialled down the desire to shock and dialled up the satire about the perfect American family.

Is it the Johnsons or the Johnson's? ›

If your last name is Johnson and you want to send a card from your family, simply add an "s": The Johnsons ("Merry Christmas from the Johnsons!"). Only use an apostrophe when you want to make a name possessive. ("From The Smith's" is always wrong, but "The party is at the Smiths' house" is correct.)

Where can I watch Meet the Johnsons? ›

Watch The Johnsons | Prime Video.

What is the mystery of the girl in the bathtub? ›

Based on the real life mystery surrounding the death of Julia Law, a young paralegal whose body was found in the apartment of her boss and lover, a prominent Philadelphia lawyer.

How long is the strange things about the Johnson family? ›

it's 29 minutes long. and it's called The Strange Thing About the Johnsons.

What is the cartoon Strange World about? ›

Is the strange thing about the Johnsons gory? ›

Violence & Gore (4)

A man gets ran over by a truck and dies. When he is moved, we see blood on the ground. A man slapped his own mother twice. A woman stabbed a man with a letter opener.

Why did Joan burn Cocoon Man? ›

Joan burning Sidney's Cocoon Man manuscript, all just to protect her family's reputation and avoid blame for ignoring the incestuous rapes.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Lilliana Bartoletti

Last Updated:

Views: 5451

Rating: 4.2 / 5 (73 voted)

Reviews: 80% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Lilliana Bartoletti

Birthday: 1999-11-18

Address: 58866 Tricia Spurs, North Melvinberg, HI 91346-3774

Phone: +50616620367928

Job: Real-Estate Liaison

Hobby: Graffiti, Astronomy, Handball, Magic, Origami, Fashion, Foreign language learning

Introduction: My name is Lilliana Bartoletti, I am a adventurous, pleasant, shiny, beautiful, handsome, zealous, tasty person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.