This is a
difficult film to assess because it’s not clear what it is trying to achieve.
Is it a study of mental decline and how there are never enough resources to
deal with it? Is it an origin story for a well -known comic book character? Is
it a serious art film sneaking into the mainstream under a populist masthead?
Is it a gratuitously violent movie with little soul? Is it a vehicle for a
performance which tilts knowingly for Oscar glory? Well it is all of these
things at various points but never really coalesces into a particular
direction. As for just being entertainment it is simply not a film anyone could
surely enjoy in that way. In case you hadn’t twigged the title is ironic-
there’s not a single laugh in it.
Spoilers past
this point
It’s the early
1980s and Gotham has been hit badly by the economic downturn with mass unemployment
and tension bubbling on the streets as the many watch the relatively few earn
stupendous amounts of money and are starting to resent it. Arthur Fleck lives
in a dingy apartment, cares for his mentally ill mother and works as a clown
for hire. He also has a condition that causes him to laugh inappropriately like
a hyena at moments of stress. At one point he states that he’s never had a
happy day in his life. The only think he does seem to like is a late night chat
show hosted by Murray Franklin which he imagines he might be on one day
The early
section promises much. After Arthur is mugged by some kids and then set up by
his boss it sparks a violent reaction to the sight of three young city traders
harassing people on a late night subway train. The implications of this
incident run through the film like water flooding a building as the murders
become a cause celebre for both sides of the rich versus poor divisions in the
city. This would be a strong enough premise to build a film on and each time it
comes to the surface Joker works a
treat. Arthur’s disassociation from his own crimes- which mount as the film
progresses- combined with the febrile atmosphere that threatens riots and
inspires a tilt for mayor by a prominent businessman determined to clean up the
place could have made a fantastic movie.
Joker is not that movie. Instead it is more interested in Arthur’s
increasingly dangerous behaviour than in filling out supporting roles. Most of
the other characters are sketches only and they offer little insight into a
subject full of potential. Arthur’s ability to get away with so much without
more than cursory police attention doesn’t seem convincing especially as the
original murders are all over the papers. I’m also not sure that a popular
tv show would really invite him to appear and it feels like a forced plot
device to enable a shocking final act. In fact we are told so many unfortunate
circumstances that befall or have befallen Arthur that it becomes unbelievable
by the end and the more there are the less plausible the whole thing becomes,
That said there
are some individual parts that impress- at one point Arthur empties out his
freezer and climbs into it, a strand involving a neighbour has a surprising
resolution and there’s a real movie moment when the face painted Joker dances
down the same high flight of steps we’ve seen him trudge wearily up several
times before. The nods to the wider known story are also well placed without
intruding too much.
There is no
doubt that Joaquin Phoenix gives his all for this role and such a committed
performance deserves appreciation. The way he uses his body to convey Arthur’s
awkward persona works particularly well. There’s quite a contrast too between
the light yet eccentric dance we sometimes see and the hard brutality he dishes out
at other times. I do think that the film concentrating so closely on him is
sometimes to the detriment of the wider story though.
In terms of the
violence this is in your face and on some occasions uncomfortable to watch
because Arthur doesn’t really communicate much motivation for a lot of it
unlike the initial crime. This leaves you with the impression it’s there to
deliberately shock the viewer. Placing this sort of depiction of mental health
issues on screen also sits uncomfortably with reality. I know it is period set
and there probably weren’t the services available back then that we have now
but what rankles more is the idea that Arthur’s actions can be excused by his
background and what happens to him. Are we supposed to root for him because of
those things? There are times, especially at the end, when the film comes very
close to presenting him as an anti- hero with no balance to suggest otherwise.
The way it ends
raises the possibility that very little of what we see actually happened with
most of it contained in Arthur’s imagination which would certainly explain
some of the anomalies but I’m not sure. Also you have Robert De Nor’s role as Franklin
being almost the opposite to his part in The
King of Comedy. Some people have also pointed out Arthur’s name shortened
is A Fleck as in Affleck referencing the last actor to play Batman.
Coincidence? Well the last line is “You wouldn’t get it” so maybe with a name
like Joker the whole movie is one big
joke albeit an unfunny one. So this is a film as awkward as its main character that
falls short of the potential its foundations suggest. Its not all bad but it
could have been much better. I want to like it more but somehow I can't. Perhaps I just don’t get the joke?
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