“Us” Decoded: Hidden Meanings & Messages In Jordan Peele’s Blockbuster

“Us” Decoded: Hidden Meanings & Messages In Jordan Peele’s Blockbuster

As Jordan Peele’s latest psychological odyssey of Us concludes, you can feel the range of emotions in the audience. Varied between fascination, terror and complete and utter confoundment, it’s a movie that has been met with a decidedly polarizing response but the one commonality in every viewer’s outlook is that it was anything but boring. Deeply metaphoric and littered with thought-provoking imagery, the comedian-turned-director’s second outing has not only made box office history as the most successful original horror movie of all time but confirms all suspicions about Peele’s abilities as an auteur. In the same way that film buffs describe certain stylistic tropes as “Kubrickian” or “Lynchian,” Us made his storytelling so distinctive that it’ll now be imitated, celebrated and expanded on for decades to come. A dizzying, cerebral assault that places its viewers on the backfoot, the tale of Adelaide Wilson and her family’s duel with their nightmarish, shears-wielding doppelgangers and the larger conspiracy at play is not something that can be passively understood. Instead, it is a film that will be analyzed and speculated on and could be in hot contention for the top honours at next year’s Academy Awards.

Now that the dust has begun to settle, it’s time to unpack the movie’s hidden meanings and references alongside some of the most compelling interpretations that viewers have taken away from it. 

Warning: Spoilers Ahead.


The Voice


Lupita Nyong’o at the “Us” premiere at the MoMA, March 19 2019 – Jamie McCarthy/Getty Images

For all that its violence and masterful use of suspense help to instill fear in the viewer, no one moment in Us is more chilling than when Adelaide’s “tethered” counterpart Red speaks for the first time. Described as “scratchy” in Peele’s original script, his desire to incorporate a “voice that hadn’t been used in years” gave Lupita Nyong’o free reign to craft something truly bloodcurdling. Raspy and atonal, the voice ramps Red’s expositional monologue about “shadows” that reside in a vast network of underground tunnels up to a whole new level of unsettling. A haunting sound that Peele has described as “so creepy,” this voice takes on a new level of significance when you find out Lupita’s rationale behind it. As explained at the Premiere, Nyong’o drew inspiration from the very real condition of spasmodic dysphonia after she heard famous sufferer Robert F Kennedy Jr speak at an event:

“It’s not really understood why it happens, or how it happens, it could be a trauma in your life — someone dying, or a physical assault. It varies. For me, it felt very organic as an inspiration for Red, who’s had this kind of strangled past.”

Now when you consider the shocking twist in the final act, Lupita’s description of how it manifests makes it an ideal choice for the character. When a young Adelaide first encounters her doppelganger in the hall of mirrors, she is choked and subdued by her shadow before being handcuffed to the bed down below. Condemned to a life away from everything she’d known, the abject trauma of her imprisonment ties into the medical community’s understanding of the condition’s origins. Aside from the sound of the voice, it explains why Red is the only one of the tethered that seems capable of communicating beyond primordial grunts and how Adelaide’s parents struggled to understand her sudden muteness after she wandered away.

Teamed with the escapee’s inability to stay on beat– despite Adelaide apparently being a classically trained dancer– and her admission that she “struggles with just talking,” it turns out that Peele had left a trail of seemingly innocuous breadcrumbs that signposted to the big twist on the horizon.


Duality

Jordan Peele onstage during “Us” official screening at the MoMA Celeste Bartos Theater, March 18, 2019  – Lars Niki/Getty Images 

From the minute that the first trailer dropped, it was clear that the warring sides of the human condition would play a pivotal role in Us. Inspired by Peele’s belief that “we are our own worst enemies,” this idea of an inner dichotomy went way beyond the archetypal battle between good and evil to become a more revelatory theme. From the prevalence of Luniz’ stoner-rap anthem “I Got 5 On It”– “partner, let’s go half on a sack”– to Peele’s belief that the adorability of bunnies belies a deviousness within, this obsession with the two-pronged runs all the way through the film. In fact, it informed the tethered’s weapon of choice and proved that nothing in Us is inconsequential:

“There’s a duality to scissors — a whole made up of two parts but also they lie in this territory between the mundane and the absolutely terrifying.” In timely fashion, the film’s numerous references to Michael Jackson were a direct by-product of this thematic concern.

On top of the tethered’s red jumpsuits and singular gloves, the young Adelaide is also decked out in a Thriller t-shirt when she encounters her subterranean shadow. For Peele, these nods were due to the space that Jackson occupies in pop culture:

“Michael Jackson is probably the patron saint of duality. The movie starts in the ’80s — the duality with which I experienced him [Jackson] in that time was both as the guy that presented this outward positivity, but also the “Thriller” video which scared me to death.” Considering that the iconic “Thiller” video ends with ambiguity over whether or not he’s really a werewolf, these homages to MJ attest to how the film’s imagery was meticulously orchestrated and take on an even greater relevancy in this post-Leaving Neverland world.


11:11

Lupita Nyong’o, Evan Alex, Shahadi Wright Joseph and Winston Duke attend the “Us,” March 19, 2019 – Jamie McCarthy/Getty Images

Throughout the film’s duration, the number 11:11 crops up in a variety of ways. Just prior to Red and her family’s siege of the Wilson home, Adelaide and her son Jason acknowledge the time on an alarm clock, it’s the running score in the football highlights that Gabe is watching and the psalm Jeremiah 11:11 is seen on a homeless man’s placard way back in 1986. Taken from the King James edition of the Bible, the verse harbours a foreboding deeper meaning in the wider context of the film:

“Therefore thus saith the Lord, Behold, I will bring evil upon them, which they shall not be able to escape; and though they shall cry unto me, I will not hearken unto them.” Decreed as a warning to Babylonian Jews for the sin of idolatry, this notion of righteous vengeance for trespasses would resonate with Red after her place in the world was snatched away by her tethered imposter.


The Haves & Have Nots

Winston Duke, Lupita Nyong’o and Jordan Peele attend UK screening of “Us,” March 14, 2019 – Jeff Spicer/Getty Images for Universal

Allegorical by design, every facet of Us is intended to shed light on the complexities of human nature and our society at large. Rather than stopping at symbolism or clever easter eggs, this multi-layered approach intersects everything right down to the film’s title. Constructed with polarity in mind, it’s no coincidence that the film’s title is also accepted shorthand for the United States Of America. In an interview with GoldenGlobes.Com, Peele explained that the film’s premise was derived from our tendency to search for scapegoats and patsies rather than broaching societal issues head-on:

“One of the main problems with certainly the United States and many other countries in the world right now is that there is lasting and emboldened xenophobia. There is a fear of the outsider, of the invader, and of the other. This movie is about the fact that the true enemy has our faces.”

Via this lens, the tethered cease to be an invading horde of merciless killers but a disgruntled underclass that seek reparations for the historical hardship that they’ve endured. Left to fend for themselves and subsist on raw rabbit, they represent those who’ve been vilified and cast out by society. In the modern era, this could come to represent the millions of Americans that live below the breadline or the immigrants who’ve been wrongfully labeled as a plague upon the country by the far-right media. From a visual standpoint, this can be seen in Gabe’s doppelganger Abraham’s decision to requisition his glasses or how Kitty Tyler’s mirror image Dahlia relishes the chance to put her wealthy twin’s expensive lipstick on. Most hauntingly of all, this concept rears its head when Gabe asks Red who the family are. With a knowing smile on her face, she succinctly says “Americans.”


Easter Eggs

Jordan Peele and Lupita Nyong’o discuss “Us” during SXSW, March 8, 2019 – Robin Marchant/Getty Images for Twitter

Given Peele’s fanatical appreciation of pop culture, it should come as no surprise that this film is littered with references. From the Tyler twins resembling the Grady’s from The Shining to Jason eating a bowl of dry fruit loops in the same vein as Rose from Get Out, there are no shortage of wry nods to other films throughout its duration. However, the more revelatory references in the film come in the form of the tethered’s names. Steeped in Roman, Greek and Slavic mythology to name a few, the monikers of the Wilson family’s carbon copies were clearly not doled out haphazardly.

To begin, we have Jason and his alter-ego of Pluto. In Roman lore, he was known as “The King Of The Underworld” but was the inspiration behind one of Disney’s most famous dogs. With the masked and badly burned Pluto prone to scuttling around on all fours, it’s safe to say that the name is deep-rooted in the character. Elsewhere, The Wilson’s daughter Zora is mirrored by her devilish twin Umbrae. Whilst the non-tethered version’s name is extracted from the Slavic word for dawn, Umbrae is a Latin phrase that means “shadow.” In typical Jordan Peele fashion, he’s ensured that duality is even expressed through his character’s names. In a more darkly comic note, the film’s equivalent of Alexa is known as Ophelia. How is this funny you ask? Well, Ophelia is formulated from the Greek word ophéleia, which roughly translates to “help.” Yet when Kitty Tyler calls on the device to phone the police it uselessly plays N.W.A’s subversive classic “F**k The Police” and leaves her to meet her demise.

No matter where he goes from here, Us brought inventiveness back to a genre that often falls victim to formulaic complacency and marks out Jordan Peele as one of the most essential filmmakers of his generation. 

What did you think of Us? Did you love it or hate it? Sound off in the comments below.