Bhaag Johnny 2015 | Deluxe
This isn’t sloppy work; it’s expressionist genius. Xerxes Irani uses the fluidity of animation to depict an internal state that live-action cannot capture. When you’re late and stressed, the world does warp. Staircases do feel infinite. The person walking slowly in front of you does morph into an immovable concrete wall.
Johnny sprints down endless spiral staircases. He dodges aggressive crows. He gets stuck in traffic jams where cars literally melt into each other. He runs through monsoons, across collapsing bridges, and past a chorus of faceless, judging strangers. Every time he thinks he’s reached his destination (an office, a party, a home), the door vanishes or the building transforms. The goalpost keeps moving. The finish line is a lie. bhaag johnny 2015
There is almost no dialogue. The sound design is a masterwork of discomfort: the squelch of wet shoes, the harsh ring of an alarm clock, the low drone of city chaos, and Johnny’s increasingly ragged breath. Forget the polished gloss of Pixar. Bhaag Johnny looks like anxiety feels . The animation is rough, hand-drawn, and deliberately unstable. Lines wobble. Backgrounds shift perspective mid-shot. Johnny’s body stretches and contorts in ways that defy physics—his legs turn into spinning wheels, his arms flail like windmill blades. This isn’t sloppy work; it’s expressionist genius
Bhaag Johnny is not a cartoon. It is a mirror. And if you look closely, the person sprinting in the rain looks a lot like all of us. Have you seen the full short film, or do you only know it from the memes? Let me know in the comments below. Staircases do feel infinite
Around 2020-2021, as the weight of remote work, COVID anxiety, and economic uncertainty settled in, people found a perfect visual metaphor for their mental state. Clips of Johnny running were spliced with audio from Interstellar , Blade Runner 2049 , and loud techno music.
If you have spent any time on Indian social media—particularly X (formerly Twitter) or Instagram Reels—in the last three years, you have seen him. A lanky, frantic figure with a shock of unruly hair, sweat dripping down his temple, eyes wide with existential terror. The audio is usually a glitching, hyper-stressed loop of someone panting, or a thumping psytrance beat.
The source of this universal millennial and Gen Z mood is a 10-minute animated short film from 2015: . Created by the incredibly talented Xerxes F. Irani (also known for Dakhma and Chai & Chill ), this film slipped quietly onto the festival circuit nearly a decade ago. It didn't get a theatrical release. It wasn't a Netflix Original. But thanks to the meme economy, it has found a second life as one of the most brutally honest depictions of anxiety ever put to screen.
