With the 11 Oscar nominations announced today, “Joker” hardly needs endorsement from me. As an undemanding
Batman fan, when I entered the cinema on 11th October to watch, the
outcome was pre-determined. I went in wanting to be blown away and things went
to plan.
It wasn’t very
long ago that even the thought of a serious superhero movie would be laughed at.
That was before Christopher Nolan lent his edginess to the genre. “Joker”, though
not a Nolan movie, descended further into that well of darkness.
The tone of the
movie was consistently dismal, damp houses, rainy days and cruel characters not
even offering any relief by way of humour. No real attempt at empathy with the
mentally ill is made either. If anything, it will only add to the many
misconceptions that the general audience have about mental health and stereotype those afflicted as unpredictably dangerous.
Put that together
with a plotline that holds zero surprises – terrible things happen to a quiet
guy, whom the audience already knows to be Arthur Fleck a.k.a. the future Joker,
after which he goes on to become the clown prince of crime – and
the rave reviews do seem like overkill. Therein lay the Director,
Todd Phillips and Joaquin Phoenix’s rare achievement.
“Joker” is testimony
to the power that clichés still have, at least on me, no matter how much the critics hate them.
With a potent mix of music, lights and emotions, the Director successfully manipulated
me into cheering for Arthur’s transformation from wimp to monster. I would have
never thought that I had it in me to cheer for a character who was dancing down
the stairs after stabbing a man through his eye… but there I was doing exactly
that!
As the Joker stepped onto the hood of a car, surrounded by adoring rioters and
put on the famous blood drawn smile, my mind flashed away to a dark
caped figure poised on the gargoyle of a distant skyscraper, even though in the movie’s
world, he was still a small boy weeping in an alley. By existing in all his psychotic
glory, the Joker ensured that the Batman had a purpose.
It was then that
the message hit home. Much as we may try to do away with what we define as
evil, its primary purpose is to give the good something to be busy with.
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