Dick Johnson Is Dead

2020

Action / Biography / Documentary / Drama

Plot summary


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720p.BLU 1080p.BLU 720p.WEB 1080p.WEB
825.17 MB
1280*714
English 2.0
PG-13
23.976 fps
1 hr 29 min
P/S 0 / 1
1.66 GB
1920*1072
English 5.1
PG-13
23.976 fps
1 hr 29 min
P/S 1 / 2
828.28 MB
1280*714
English 2.0
PG-13
23.976 fps
1 hr 30 min
P/S ...
1.66 GB
1920*1072
English 5.1
PG-13
23.976 fps
1 hr 30 min
P/S 2 / 4

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by MOscarbradley5 / 10

I don't think it was the intention but this leaves a very bitter after-taste.

"Dick Johnson is Dead" is a documentary but it's not like any documentary you might have seen since director Kirsten Johnson constructs this portrait of her father like a work of fiction; an apparent 'tribute' to her father as he approaches death done as a series of surreal sketches in which Dick, the dad in question, 'dies' over and over again in a variety of ways. Of course, for the purposes of the film it's not the real Dick who is dying but a number of recruited stand-ins while death, in some form, permeates the picture. Now I don't have a problem with death but as someone who loves life and who wants to hang on to it for as long as possible, I'm not sure I go along with Kirsten's fantastical view of what might take Dick from this earth and what might happen to him after he goes.

If Heaven is anything like Kirsten imagines then keep me from it, (it's a kitsch, camp John Waters version). What keeps you watching is Dick himself. A one-time psychiatrist, he's the kind of personable, sweet, funny father we might all wish for and I just wish his daughter could have celebrated him in a less morbid fashion. Ultimately this is a professional home-movie the Johnson family might treasure but it feels just a little too personal for the rest of us while the final 'funeral' scene, meant to be uplifting no doubt, I found almost unendurably tasteless.

Reviewed by Cineanalyst7 / 10

Deadpan

A movie about a retired psychiatrist named Richard Johnson who pretends to be a stiff, and there's not one dick joke. Freud is rolling over in his grave.

As made by his daughter, Kirsten Johnson, "Dick Johnson is Dead" is an amusing picture for a documentary about an old widower with worsening dementia moving into a one-bedroom New York apartment with his daughter who films different ways of killing him. The expounding on dying--you know, that everybody's doing it--isn't very profound. The brief overview of the Johnson family's Seventh-day Adventism even less so. The loss of memory is a bit more interesting as it relates to documentary filmmaking, and Kirsten's late mother and Dick's late wife's photography. At one point, Kirsten laments that the only film she made of her mother was when she was well into being affected by Alzheimer's Disease. Although it has been far from always the case, there is a general sense that photographs and motion pictures may outlive the people in them and the memories thereof. Appropriately, then, the documentary is made in the reflexive mode, exposing the filmmaking process, including the staging of Dick's death scenes, and including the filmmaker as a heard and seen presence in the picture.

Apt as much of that is, what really sells "Dick Johnson is Dead" is the charm of its eponymous would-be corpse. This guy has life figured out. Eat chocolate cake and ice cream and crack jokes with friends and family, don't let stuff bother you too much, and if you're not sure what to do, take a nap or watch TV. The movie may get carried away with some of the heavenly imagery and interludes with cutouts and at other times not seem to be going much of anywhere, but it's worth sticking around for that wisdom from the demented dead man.

Reviewed by ferguson-68 / 10

death march

Greetings again from the darkness. Hal Ashby's 1971 cult classic HAROLD AND MAUDE takes a comical look at death, and in the process shows us the importance of living, and the jolt delivered by dying. Documentarian Kirsten Johnson (CAMERAPERSON, 2016) makes this a more personal project by involving her dad in a series of staged deaths for her film. Initially the purpose was to help him begin to deal with an end that could be coming soon, but it evolved into something altogether different.

Dick Johnson is an elderly psychiatrist. He's a charming and lively man, boasting a nice sense of humor and a twinkle in his eye. His daughter Kristen is "a camera person", and suggests to him that they make a film about him dying. He's on board. Kristen then stages various "deaths" for her father. These scenes include getting crushed by a falling air-conditioner, getting hit by a car, taking a horrific fall down stairs, and a construction site mishap. The more we get to know Dick, the more we like him. We learn it's been 30 years since he had a heart attack, and 7 years since his wife died. She suffered from Alzheimer's for years before she passed. We learn he's a Seventh Day Adventist, and loves chocolate fudge cake. My how he loves chocolate cake.

Initially gung-ho for his daughter's idea, and fully supportive of the situations she puts him in for her art, Dick begins to show signs of forgetfulness and confusion. At times we have our doubts that he fully comprehends what's happening - not just in the film, but in everyday life. The comical elements shift to wistfulness, as we are present when Dick has to shut down his practice, sell his car, and ultimately box up his belongings and move out of his beloved home. Kristen moves him to her one bedroom New York City apartment, which is right next door to that of the two fathers of her children.

In addition to the staged deaths, we also meet a stuntman who gets involved, and we are on set for the filming of Dick's "Heaven" which includes chocolate and popcorn, and his "Last Supper" featuring, among others, Bruce Lee, Frieda Kahlo, Farrah Fawcett, and Frederick Douglass. There is also a family trip to a beach in Lisbon, and a reunion with Dick's college girlfriend in California. The strangest bit is the staged funeral, replete with Dick in a coffin, and friends offering tributes. We also celebrate Dick's 86th birthday, and see many family pictures and home videos.

Leonardo da Vinci is quoted: "As a well spent day brings happy sleep, so life well used brings happy death."

Watching Dick's spirit fade along with his memory is anything but happy. His daughter Kristen tries to remain sensitive to his changing state, but the feeling we are left with is anything but happiness towards death. Her film is likely structured much differently than she originally intended, but has so much value for discussion with loved ones and a reminder of just how precious life is for those who appreciate it. Now showing on Netflix

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