Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Oct 4, 2019 · Despite Captain America: Civil War (AKA Avengers 2.5) featuring Iron Man, Black Widow, and Ant-Man (as well as introducing Black Panther and Spider-Man), the film remains first and foremost...

    • Robert De Niro

      Robert De Niro attends closing arguments in civil trial over...

    • Christopher Nolan

      The latest breaking news, comment and features from The...

  2. Jan 6, 2024 · From Wikipedia: The Joker originated in the United States during the Civil War, and was created as a trump card for the game of Euchre. It has since been adopted into many other card games, where it often acts as a wild card…

  3. Joker personifies our society, showing us what happens when a person pushed to the brink can become. While Joker lashes out and seeks to become a bully for fun, he unintentionally becomes a rallying point for the disillusioned lower class of society that is fed up with the status quo.

  4. Aug 31, 2019 · As Gotham begins to burn (the civil unrest starts with a garbage strike), Fleck, who has been taken as a vigilante by much of the city’s 99%, doesn’t quite know what to make of his underground cult stardom.

  5. www.ign.com › articles › 2019/08/31Joker Review - IGN

    • No joke -- this DC movie is amazing.
    • Joker Movie Influences
    • The Many Origin Stories of the Joker
    • Verdict
    • Joker Review
    • More Reviews by Jim Vejvoda
    • IGN Recommends

    By Jim Vejvoda

    Updated: Apr 21, 2020 12:30 pm

    Posted: Aug 31, 2019 5:15 pm

    This is an advance review tied to the Venice Film Festival. Joker opens in the US and UK on Oct. 4 and in Australia on Oct. 3.

    You can watch our video review for Joker in the player above.

    Featuring a riveting, fully realized, and Oscar-worthy performance by Joaquin Phoenix, Joker would work just as well as an engrossing character study without any of its DC Comics trappings; that it just so happens to be a brilliant Batman-universe movie is icing on the Batfan cake. You will likely leave Joker feeling like I did: unsettled and ready to debate the film for years to come.

    Joker’s setting (roughly 1981) not only allows the film to be a comic book version of classic Martin Scorsese or Sidney Lumet films, it also strips away the technology that nowadays would help catch such a madman sooner rather than later. This is a time when people smoked everywhere (including hospitals), security cameras and metal detectors weren’t ubiquitous, and no one wore seat belts while driving. Times were bad but they could get even worse. Joker the character acts as the symbolic match to that waiting dynamite.

    Unnervingly played by Joaquin Phoenix, the mentally ill Arthur Fleck is a struggling, overlooked schlepp trapped on the margins of society. Arthur is a man who has never had a good break or happy day in his life. The less said about how and why Arthur embraces the Joker persona and finds his liberation and joyful empowerment the better — this is a film meant to be experienced with an open mind and sans spoilers — but suffice it to say this Joker is the end result of a society far too comfortable with its casual cruelties and lack of empathy. We create the monsters we deserve.

    Watch Joaquin Phoenix and director Todd Phillips respond to the criticism that Joker is a "dangerous" movie:

    Joker is an indictment of a society’s collective disregard for the well-being of its citizens rather than necessarily critiquing any one type of individual or class. As much as you sympathize with their plight, Gotham’s downtrodden can be as callous and vicious as the rich and powerful. Arthur is at one point or another injured emotionally or physically by individuals at every level, as well as by the institutions they populate. If Taxi Driver’s Travis Bickle called himself “God’s lonely man” then Arthur Fleck is certainly Gotham’s lonely man. Arthur is ultimately seeking human connection, something he tragically won’t find until he puts on a happy face and violently exposes the city’s own hypocrisies and inhumanity.

    The key to that careful calibration is not only Todd Phillips’ sharp direction and clear vision but also Joaquin Phoenix’s indelible performance. Arthur’s uncontrollable laughter looks as though it physically pains him; his body is rail-thin and battered, his misery is etched on his deeply creased face. He looks healthier and livelier -- dare I say happier -- as he transforms into Joker than he ever does as Arthur. Phoenix captures all these tiny nuances in Arthur and his interactions with others that reveal so much about this disturbed individual’s inner life.

    The camerawork is often claustrophobically tight on Phoenix, who’s in nearly every scene, all of which adds to the film never making me feel like I was anywhere but in Arthur’s tortured headspace. As solid as Robert De Niro, Zazie Beetz and Frances Conroy are in their small roles here, this is Phoenix’s film and he delivers a tour de force.

    Watch director Todd Phillips explain how Scorsese helped out Joker in the video below:

    Considering the comic book Joker infamously once said he preferred his origin to be multiple choice, this movie wisely embraces the ambiguity of its title character, despite this seemingly being an origin story. Arthur’s increasingly unstable mental state is reflected in the film as things grow progressively more dreamlike -- okay, nightmarish -- and violent in the homestretch.

    Joker isn’t just an awesome comic book movie, it’s an awesome movie, period. It offers no easy answers to the unsettling questions it raises about a cruel society in decline. Joaquin Phoenix’s fully committed performance and Todd Phillips’ masterful albeit loose reinvention of the DC source material make Joker a film that should leave comic book fa...

    Review scoring

    masterpiece

    Starring a captivating Joaquin Phoenix, The Clown Prince of Crime gets a standalone film for the ages with Joker.

    Jim Vejvoda

    Agent Elvis: Season 1 Review

    The Crown, Season 5 Review

  6. Aug 31, 2019 · Joaquin Phoenix boldly reinvents Batman's cackling archnemesis in 'Joker,' Todd Phillips' dark new vision of the supervillain origin story, also starring Robert De Niro.

  7. People also ask

  8. Aug 31, 2019 · Reviews are in for Todd Phillips’ standalone origin story Joker, which stars Joaquin Phoenix as the iconic villain. The film, written by Phillips and Scott Silver, is described as a gritty...

  1. People also search for