Michael Johnston is suddenly having the kind of breakout moment that makes queer film fans collectively sit up and pay attention.
The openly gay actor, previously known to many viewers from Teen Wolf, is now front and center in the psychological horror film Obsession.
And yes, plenty of people are noticing that he happens to look extremely good while being psychologically tormented on screen.
But the story here is more interesting than simple internet thirst.
In Obsession, Johnston plays Bear, a lonely man whose long-running crush on a woman named Nikki takes a dark supernatural turn after he makes a wish for her to love him (Queerty).
As horror fans can probably predict, that does not end well.
The film leans into the unsettling territory between longing, entitlement, fantasy, and emotional isolation.
That gives Johnston a much messier and more layered role than the standard “attractive guy in danger” horror formula.
What makes this especially interesting is that Johnston himself has spoken about the film in more thoughtful terms (Men’s Health).
Rather than framing the story as a simple horror romance gone wrong, he has described it as an exploration of unhealthy emotional narratives and the darker corners of male loneliness.
That shifts the film from simple genre entertainment into something with sharper social commentary.
For queer audiences, there is also something satisfying about seeing openly gay actors landing genre-leading roles that are not defined by sexuality.
That kind of visibility still matters.
For years, queer actors were often boxed into supporting archetypes or sidelined entirely.
Now audiences increasingly get to see queer performers playing heroes, villains, antiheroes, romantics, and complete disasters.
Johnston’s Bear appears to fall firmly into that last category.
Horror has always had a special relationship with queer audiences.
There is something about outsiders, repression, transformation, fear, survival, and coded emotion that naturally resonates.
So it makes perfect sense that horror fandom would quickly embrace a new face who fits that tradition.
Calling someone a scream king is partly playful, of course.
But it also reflects a very real place within genre fandom.
Actors who can carry tension, vulnerability, panic, and emotional unraveling tend to develop extremely loyal followings.
Johnston appears well positioned for exactly that kind of moment.
Whether Obsession becomes a cult favorite or simply a memorable breakout, it feels like an important step in his career.
And if queer horror fans happen to enjoy the journey a little enthusiastically, that feels entirely understandable.
📸 IG: @themichaeljohnston








