Self Reliance, the lively, funny, weird new Hulu comedy movie produced by The Lonely Island and directed by New Girl and Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse co-star Jake Johnson, has a premise built for action. A schlubby guy named Tommy (played by Johnson) is so depressed and disengaged with his life that he agrees to be part of an underground streaming reality show where he tries to evade assassins for a month. If he wins, he gets $1 million. If he loses, he dies.
That may sound a lot like a riff on The Most Dangerous Game, or on Stephen Kingâs The Running Man, where desperate victims try to evade killers looking for kicks. But Self Reliance is a much smaller, odder, and more emotionally driven movie, focused on human connection over big set-pieces. Speaking to Polygon ahead of the movieâs premiere, Johnson says he wasnât looking to any of the obvious âpeople hunted for sportâ classics for inspiration.
âTwo movies were an inspiration that I pushed together in my head, even though itâs a strange two to push together,â Johnson says. âI love Jacobâs Ladder. I saw it when I was a kid, and Iâve rewatched it a lot. I love the performances, I love the look, I love the way itâs shot. I love watching Tim Robbins go through this whole journey of trying to figure out whatâs happening.
âAnd then I love [Wes Andersonâs] Bottle Rocket: I love the comedic tone of it, the feeling of it. I love how everything for Dignan [Owen Wilsonâs character] is dead serious. I love that itâs a little sad. I love that he gets hustled, but heâs still optimistic. I love that heâs a little bit of an idiot, but heâs also a little bit right. I love the love story in that; I think the love story with Luke Wilson and the maid is just right, and I donât need any more. So for me, it was trying to push those two movies into one thing. If there was something I was looking toward, it was Can I get it to feel a little bit the way I feel when I watch each of these? What if I watched them at the same time?â
Johnson admits thatâs a strange double feature to turn into a single comedy movie about a life-or-death game. âEven in pitching it, Iâd be like, Youâre not wrong that itâs a weird mix,â he says. âItâs like putting spaghetti with sushi. But I think it tastes good together.â
Part of the point of making Self Reliance, Johnsonâs feature debut, was to make a movie exactly geared to his personal tastes, a film no one else could make. As he puts it, he isnât generally looking to make the leap to directing. âIâm not just looking to make a movie that I know is going to do pretty well with the critics and will do pretty well with the fans, and itâs a pretty safe bet,â he said. âI wanted to make the movie that I really wanted to see, because I might only do one of these.â
âFor those who love it [âŠ] when I hear what they love about it, Iâm like, Thatâs what I love about it too! And for those who donât like it, itâs like, Well, itâs just not your dish. It is weird.â
While some actors making their own movie might have similarly seen the project as a way to design exactly the character they most want to play, Johnson says he didnât consider either the chance to break into a new kind of role or to return to the kind of role his fans expect.
âI gave that zero thought,â he says. âReally. I mean, itâs a good question, itâs the right question, but personally, I give it zero thought. I just thought, What is the story I want to tell?â Part of that, he admits, comes from approaching his career as a writer first, and not thinking about Tommy in connection with any other character heâs played.
âWhen I did Stumptown and I was a bartender in that â I swear to God, I didnât realize that my character was a bartender, and so was Nick Miller [in New Girl], until I did press. [Interviewers are] like, What do you like about playing a bartender? And Iâm like, Nothing? Iâm not making drinks, itâs just a set. So thereâs a whole part of the game that I just donât think about that I probably should. But itâs just not what excites me.â
Another thing that doesnât excite him is the idea of making another movie with these characters. Heâs joked about the movie ending with a cameo where his New Girl co-star Lamorne Morris shows up to invite him into the Self Reliance Universe, Nick Fury style. (Morris isnât in the movie, but did appear in a pretty hilarious promo for it.) But he says that part of the pleasure of making exactly the movie he wanted to make is that he can move on from the story.
âI think itâs done,â he says. âI loved doing this movie, and I love these characters, and I would love to work with these actors again, but I donât want to revisit this. What I love about TV â I love revisiting [characters]. If you build [a story] that way, itâs just the best. And as an actor, I love playing the same character â I love playing Peter B. Parker [in the Spider-Verse movies]. I love knowing that his storyâs not done, and I donât know whatâs going to happen. But when you view [a project] as a one-off â the idea of writing another scene with Tommy? No. Itâs over.â
Self Reliance is streaming on Hulu now.