Jump to content
Grand Central Mets
  • Create Account

Joker (2019)  

5 members have voted

  1. 1. Joker (2019)

    • None
      0
    • 1/2 *
      0
    • *
      0
    • * 1/2
      0
    • **
      1
    • ** 1/2
      0
    • ***
      2
    • *** 1/2
      0
    • ****
      1
    • **** 1/2
      1
    • *****
      0


Recommended Posts

Posted


FINALLY caught this movie. Or, rather, I caught the version of this movie with this particular title, since it, well, kinda felt like I'd seen this movie before.



What'd you think? Funny ha-ha? Funny observant and resonant? Or funny like week-old-fish smells?


Posted


its not trying to be funny, so evaluating it on that basis seems odd. It's also not animated, nor a civil war drama. There's oh so many things its not. but one of the things that it IS is powerful, timely, gripping and really well made.


Posted


Just being glib-- more of a "joke"-related way to ask the "what'd you think" question without tipping my hand.



For instance, I might have poisoned the well had I asked, "What other movies traversed the same plot beats and/or thematic ground as this stylish but ultimately empty pastiche, but did so first, and far more meaningfully*," or "Was Joaquin Phoenix the best actor in a film this year, or did he just do the MOST acting in a film this year?"



*For my money: TAXI DRIVER (of which this is basically the airplane-plastic-cup version of the same basic cocktail recipe), KING OF COMEDY, YOU WERE NEVER REALLY THERE, and BRONSON. Off the top of my head.


  • 1 month later...
  • 1 month later...
Grand Central Contributor
Posted


caught this one last night (HBO has it). It was. long? fine? It was better if it wasn't a Batman movie. But it hits too many tropes for a villain and really dulls the mystique of Joker. Good/Evil Bad Guy/Villain Batman/Joker. nah. too narrow. The timeline of the movie is a little choppy at times too. And then part of it isn't actually real.



I mean, it was a well made movie. But I didn't turn it on to see a well made movie about how a villain is made, I turned it on to watch Joker do proto-Jokery stuff and it takes mostly all movie for any of that to happen. And also why did this need to take place in the early 20th century? Joaquin Phoenix is 45. I don't know what age Joker was supposed to be but that seems about right. That means Joker, in the future when Batman is Batman, is like a 60ish year old man? That doesn't really seem to track.


Posted


=Ceetar post_id=36953 time=1589743072 user_id=102] And also why did this need to take place in the early 20th century? Joaquin Phoenix is 45. I don't know what age Joker was supposed to be but that seems about right. That means Joker, in the future when Batman is Batman, is like a 60ish year old man? That doesn't really seem to track.

Grand Central Contributor
Posted


early 80s, i see from Google, okay, fine. although time is clearly fungible in this movie. the smoking in hospitals (and everywhere) and the Chaplin movie had me thinking it was maybe much earlier. Though clearly not a real place so they could've played with it some. (I always forget how stupid-recent it was that smoking was banned in places)



I'm not question super heroes aging, they age whenever for plot points, but specifically the referenced age difference between Batman and Joker in the movie. The movie spent a lot of time setting up different visuals and scenes it really wanted to play out, without worrying too much on whether or not it made much sense. That's where it loses me.


Posted


=Ceetar post_id=36953 time=1589743072 user_id=102]
And also why did this need to take place in the early 20th century? Joaquin Phoenix is 45. I don't know what age Joker was supposed to be but that seems about right. That means Joker, in the future when Batman is Batman, is like a 60ish year old man? That doesn't really seem to track.

Grand Central Contributor
Posted




And also why did this need to take place in the early 20th century? Joaquin Phoenix is 45. I don't know what age Joker was supposed to be but that seems about right. That means Joker, in the future when Batman is Batman, is like a 60ish year old man? That doesn't really seem to track.


It is meant to mirror the IRL late 70's-early 80's NYC of Taxi Driver.



In regards to the age difference between Joaquin's character and Bruce Wayne. It can be seen as one of several indicators that this is not The Joker that will be Batman's greatest arch enemy (though this character may have inspired that Joker to come) and/or there is a point after the subway murders that everything that happens is in Arthur's head. Sort of like Robert Pupkin's story in The King of Comedy.


I've never seen Taxi Driver, and yeah that's kind of my point, that it wasn't a Batman movie. They should've just called it/him something else and left out the Wayne stuff and suddenly it's a much better movie.



That it takes place in Gotham, in Batman's world, is undeniable. Hell, that they decide to shoe-horn in the Batman origin story pretty much insinuates that it's real.





Unrelated it'd be interesting to see a NEW movie/comic/hero franchise to take off from the villain standpoint. Like have a Joker movie that's less origin story and more him terrorizing Gotham in the years prior to Batman becoming Batman, in fact, he's the impetus for BECOMING Batman. As Batman emerges he's constantly criticized "stay down, don't you remember what happened to OTHER HERO" and comics being what they are, the hero would have the constant self-doubt as the big bad villain keeps reemerging. "Have I even made a difference? I can't get rid of this guy! He was the whole reason I'm here"


Posted



Unrelated it'd be interesting to see a NEW movie/comic/hero franchise to take off from the villain standpoint. Like have a Joker movie that's less origin story and more him terrorizing Gotham in the years prior to Batman becoming Batman, in fact, he's the impetus for BECOMING Batman....


The Joker had his own comic book, for a brief run in 1975-76 --- the only villain in the DC universe to be given that treatment.



[FIMG=666]https://images-na.ssl-images-amazon.com/images/I/91JJ69oCEnL.jpg[/FIMG]


Old-Timey Member
Posted




Unrelated it'd be interesting to see a NEW movie/comic/hero franchise to take off from the villain standpoint. Like have a Joker movie that's less origin story and more him terrorizing Gotham in the years prior to Batman becoming Batman, in fact, he's the impetus for BECOMING Batman....


The Joker had his own comic book, for a brief run in 1975-76 --- the only villain in the DC universe to be given that treatment.



[FIMG=666]https://images-na.ssl-images-amazon.com/images/I/91JJ69oCEnL.jpg[/FIMG]


… to that point. Post-antihero '90s, everybody got their own books, provided they could be the center of something appropriately "gritty." The '90s were all about that grit. Gritty heroes, gritty antiheroes, gritty parodies. So much grit, you'd think you went to the beach and started woodworking using money you made selling kiddie-pyramid-scheme newspapers.

(Some later Joker series and mini-series were actually damn good.)



Is that Dick Giordano or Neal Adams art? Looks like one of the two.


  • 2 years later...
Guest
This topic is now closed to further replies.
The Grand Central Mets Caretaker Fund
The Grand Central Mets Caretaker Fund

You all care about this site. The next step is caring for it. We’re asking you to caretake this site so it can remain the premier Mets community on the internet.

×
×
  • Create New...