• Indie Short Mag TV
  • Free Film Festival Cover Letter Generator
Indie Shorts Mag
  • Home
  • Interviews
  • News
    • Film Festival News
    • Short Film News
  • Reviews
    • Short Film
    • Documentary
    • Web Series
  • Hall of Fame
  • Short Film Festival – 2025Accepting Films
  • Tutorials
    • Pre-Production
    • Post-Production
  • Submit Short Film
    • Submit Short Film for Review
    • Submit Web Series for Review
    • Interview Submission Form
No Result
View All Result
Indie Shorts Mag
  • Home
  • Interviews
  • News
    • Film Festival News
    • Short Film News
  • Reviews
    • Short Film
    • Documentary
    • Web Series
  • Hall of Fame
  • Short Film Festival – 2025Accepting Films
  • Tutorials
    • Pre-Production
    • Post-Production
  • Submit Short Film
    • Submit Short Film for Review
    • Submit Web Series for Review
    • Interview Submission Form
No Result
View All Result
Indie Shorts Mag
No Result
View All Result

Ode to the Whale of Christ: Religion, Art And Humanity

Indie Shorts Mag Team by Indie Shorts Mag Team
in Reviews
0
Ode to the Whale of Christ - Short Film Review - Indie Shorts Mag

Replete with religious imagery, David Matthew Johnson’s Ode to the Whale of Christ is a 30-minute experiment in silence. Bleached of sound and colour, it makes for 30 uncomfortable minutes with nothing but a woman’s lonely struggle in a house empty but for her male companion, who does not move nor speak.

The silence is unbearable for its intensity. There is no white noise, much less music. Jasmyne Johnson plays She, relegated to caring for He (Harleigh McCullum) from bathing and feeding him to actually carrying him around the house over her shoulder. It is a painful process to watch. Soon enough, she is limping after having already struggled with a bad back.

Ode to the Whale of Christ - Short Film Review - Indie Shorts Mag

The imagery and camerawork is usually striking, taking inspiration from religious art. The bareness of it all is hard to erase. In place of dialogue, intertitles populate the film. Their style and usage is rather unconventional. She talks to her unmoving, ‘indifferent’ companion, receiving only silence in reply. When there is someone to talk to, it is not him. The exchanges get increasingly uncomfortable.

Her own deteriorating health, failing body is one of the most disturbing aspects of the film. The viewer is forced to watch her figuratively (and sometimes literally) break her body to care for He, in a daily routine which she treats like a ritual. The relentlessness of a single line, ‘He appears indifferent’ assaults the viewer repeatedly, representing the cruelty of hope that She carries. Like his body that she carries and cares for, this hope is something she is unwilling to give up.

Ode to the Whale of Christ - Short Film Review - Indie Shorts Mag

Ode to the Whale of Christ, minus its explicit religious symbolism, is also an account of everyday human toil, the kind fated to simultaneous perseverance and utter absence of reward. The mercilessness which She subjects herself to is easily a representation of self-harm masked as service. Her care in the absence of his response is easily an account of historical emotional and physical labour in empty marriages.

 A deeply uncomfortable film which was never intended to be enjoyed, Ode to the Whale of Christ demands presence, and sensory suffering, a reflection of her suffering.

Watch Ode to the Whale of Christ Short Film Trailer

Ode to the Whale of Christ: Religion, Art And Humanity
  • Direction
  • Cinematography
  • Screenplay
  • Editing
3.8
Tags: DramaDrama Short Film ReviewPrivateReviewShort Film Reviews
Previous Post

The Trail Beyond Highland Road: Feel-Good Conservationism And Hope

Next Post

Mother in the Mist: The Sting Of Sorrow Amidst Disaster

Indie Shorts Mag Team

Indie Shorts Mag Team

Related Posts

Dear Kevin - Short Film Review - Indie Shorts Mag
Reviews

Dear Kevin: An Experiment in Self-Actualisation

7th July 2025
Fervor - Short Film Review - Indie Shorts Mag
Reviews

Fervor: On Being Dazed With Hatred

5th July 2025
Next Post
Mother in the Mist - Short Film Review - Indie Shorts Mag

Mother in the Mist: The Sting Of Sorrow Amidst Disaster

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *


Sponsored

Featured Post

Announcing Short Of The Year Awards 2023

Announcing Short Of The Year Awards 2023

Latest Podcast

  • Recent Reviews

About Indie Shorts Mag

Indie Shorts Mag is a publishing agency that works within the ‘short film circuit’. We review short films, documentaries, music videos and web series, amongst others. We stand out amongst the short film review sites for being multi-diverse & global in our platform and reach.
Our team works tirelessly to help promote, publicize and market your short films that deserve the shout-out! Besides reviews, we host film festival news as it’s a known fact that the film festival buzz is unmissable and we ensure you aren’t left behind!
We aspire to form a niche for ourselves as the ‘short film magazine’ that remains the hub for filmmakers & their audience.

Popular Topics

  • Announcements
  • Articles
  • Crowdfunding
  • Editorial
  • Film Festival News
  • Film Festivals
  • India Edition
  • Interviews
  • Marketing
  • Marketing
  • News
  • Online Premiere
  • Post-Production
  • Pre-Production
  • Reviews
  • Short Film
  • Short Film Competition
  • Short Film News
  • Tutorials
  • Web Series

Indie Shorts Mag on Instagram

Follow Us On Instagram

  • #ShortFilmReview: Dear Kevin: Goodbye to all those memories.

Read our review and watch the short film. Link in bio.

#ShortFilm #Review #IndieFilmReview #FilmReview #SupportIndieFilm
  • #ShortFilmReview: Fervor: What will you do after you win?

Read our review and watch the short film. Link in bio.

#ShortFilm #Review #IndieFilmReview #FilmReview #SupportIndieFilm
  • #ShortFilmTrailer: Mendo’s Carousel: Growing Past Old Patterns in Drama on the Complicated Nature of Grief. 

Read our review & watch the short, link in bio.

#ShortFilm #ShortFilmReview #SupportindieFilm #Trailer #FilmTrailer #ShortFilms
  • #ShortFilmReview: The Resonance: The night to discover pits, the dawn to sink into them.

Read our review. Link in bio.

#ShortFilm #Review #IndieFilmReview #FilmReview #SupportIndieFilm
  • #ShortFilmTrailer: She Follows: A Haunting For His Own Good. 

Read our review & watch the short, link in bio.

#ShortFilm #ShortFilmReview #SupportindieFilm #Trailer #FilmTrailer #ShortFilms #HorrorShortFilm
  • #ShortFilmReview: Bzrk: Curses sometimes double as blessings.

Read our review. Link in bio.

#ShortFilm #Review #IndieFilmReview #FilmReview #SupportIndieFilm
  • #ShortFilmReview: Garbage Rex: A vigilante walks into Wonderland.

Read our review. Link in bio.

#ShortFilm #Review #IndieFilmReview #FilmReview #SupportIndieFilm
  • #ShortFilmReview: Whispers of Freedom: In search of life beyond the wall.

Read our review. Link in bio.

#ShortFilm #Review #IndieFilmReview #FilmReview #SupportIndieFilm
  • #ShortFilmReview: Mary: There’s always a catch.

Read our review. Link in bio.

#ShortFilm #Review #IndieFilmReview #FilmReview #SupportIndieFilm
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Advertise With Us
  • Contact Us
  • Submit Article
  • Write for Us
  • Terms of Use
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy

© 2015-2025 Indie Shorts Mag.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Interviews
  • News
    • Film Festival News
    • Short Film News
  • Reviews
    • Short Film
    • Documentary
    • Web Series
  • Hall of Fame
  • Short Film Festival – 2025
  • Tutorials
    • Pre-Production
    • Post-Production
  • Submit Short Film
    • Submit Short Film for Review
    • Submit Web Series for Review
    • Interview Submission Form

© 2015-2025 Indie Shorts Mag.