Exclusive: Aaron Johnson discusses Chatroom

With Kick-Ass making headlines both sides of the pond this weekend, Aaron Johnson is definitely a name on everybody’s lips.

The 19-year-old star - who also appeared in last year’s John Lennon biopic Nowhere Boy - will also be garnering attention over in France this May.

This time it will be for horror-thriller Chatroom, showing during this year’s Cannes Film Festival as part of the Un Certain Regard category.

Directed by Ringu maestro Hideo Nakata, “it’s a thriller sort of drama,” Johnson tells us. “It’s basically about these teenagers who are online. They talk on chatrooms and manipulate [ each other ] into committing suicide. They bully each-other online.”

Johnson plays William, an onliner who ends up manipulating – some would saying torturing – a group of teenagers in a chatroom for his own pleasure. It’s an about-turn for the actor, who up ‘til now has played more honourable characters like wannabe-superhero Dave Lizewski.

“My character is really a bit of a chameleon; he adapts to what the other characters are like and changes his personality to be a friend,” Johnson says.

Considering Chatroom is directed by the man behind some of the most chilling imagery to come out of Japan in the last 20 years ( Ringu 's telly shocker still gives us the willies), the film also has a distinctive visual look.

“It’s shot like... like a parallel universe,” explains Johnson. “You’ve got his online world that’s all exciting and a vision of what the online world would look like. So we’re all in the same room together, yet we can’t actually see each other.

“It’s all sort of really bright, light and heightened, and you can make up your own personality or persona, what you want. And then offline it’s really this grey, dull atmosphere, everything’s more depressing.”

Just don't expect Johnson's seemingly villainous character to be quite as easy to write off as all that. Johnson has a knack for picking multi-dimensional roles that never take the door marked 'easy'.

“William’s quite a vulnerable, lonely person," the actor admits. "Online is where he feels comfortable. Then it gets out of hand.”

The next Ringu? Or does a moderater need to shut this Chatroom down? Leave a comment...

Josh Winning has worn a lot of hats over the years. Contributing Editor at Total Film, writer for SFX, and senior film writer at the Radio Times. Josh has also penned a novel about mysteries and monsters, is the co-host of a movie podcast, and has a library of pretty phenomenal stories from visiting some of the biggest TV and film sets in the world. He would also like you to know that he "lives for cat videos..." Don't we all, Josh. Don't we all.  

Latest in Biography Movies
The Wolf of Wall Street
The 32 greatest Leonardo DiCaprio movies
Billy Zane as Marlon Brando in Waltzing with Brando
Upcoming Marlon Brando biopic gets its first look and fans cannot get over how uncanny Billy Zane looks: "I honestly thought this was Brando"
Keke Palmer, Daniel Kaluuya, and Brandon Perea in Nope
Don't call Jordan Peele the best horror director - he'll tell you it's John Carpenter
James Cameron announces Avatar 2 has finished filming, Avatar 3 "95% done"
The Avatar sequels have a reported budget of $1 billion
New Avatar 2 set photos show James Cameron filming with underwater technology
Latest in News
A AMD Ryzen 7 8700G being put into it's socket by a reviewer
AMD's new Ryzen 9 X3D processors launch today, here's the stock I've found so far
GTA 3 Mobile screenshot showing claude running away from police near a casino
The fan-made Dreamcast version of GTA 3 is looking way better in the latest look, introducing tech that "would’ve previously been a slideshow"
Scarlett Johansson in Jurassic World Rebirth
Jurassic World Rebirth studio asked Scarlett Johansson to join Instagram, but she refused: "The film will do fine"
Deltarune
Undertale creator Toby Fox's tomfoolery leaves Deltarune testers thinking an intentional nerf was actually a bug after they "independently" discovered it
Pokemon Go player trying to catch a Croagunk
Pokemon Go developer Niantic is being bought for $3.5 billion, CEO says it'll help its games be "'forever games' that will endure for future generations"
A Minecraft Movie
Minecraft movie's popcorn bucket is an explosive, game-accurate continuation of a cinema trend that shows no signs of slowing down