The Philippine Star

JOAQUIN’S JOKER IS NO LAUGHING MATTER

-

and De Niro’s role in the Scorsese movie Taxi Driver.)

Though director Phillips shifts convincing­ly here from Hangover bro comedies to crafting what is easily the darkest DC entry yet, the play of light and heavy in Joker is way out of balance, and the tone of the film suffers. There are a few sight gags, meant to show that Fleck is inadverten­tly amusing, whether it’s the way he schleps around in Chaplinesq­ue clown shoes when chasing after his teen attackers, or the sight of his lapel flower bursting with red fluid as he’s lying, beat-up, in an alleyway. But this is grim going at times; the only real laugh I encountere­d was when Fleck’s dwarf co-worker, eager to escape an apartment where something bad has just happened, asks for Fleck’s aid in opening the chain lock to let him flee. Joker could have used more ironically funny moments like that.

Because, let’s face it, residing inside Arthur Fleck’s mind for two hours is no picnic. He needs proper medical care, not the perfunctor­y social services of a cash-starved city like Gotham. And, as we know from the DC universe, Arkham Asylum is not the place where minds are cured, but rather a hotbed for criminally insane plotting.

Starting as a detailed, often unpleasant character study, Joker hovers, for the first 40 minutes or so, on the precipice of despair and deep discomfort — then it almost becomes something else. As Fleck lashes out, he begins to embrace his inner evil clown, and the whole thing promises to shift into something transcende­nt. The moment when Phoenix stands bloodspatt­ered in clown makeup before a bathroom mirror after a subway attack, raising his head to the heavens, weaving his limbs in a sinewy ballet of righteous payback, is perhaps the most disturbing, yet beautiful, image in the movie. Later, we see him as the Joker, dancing down a stairwell, cigarette a-puffing: this is what joy feels like.

And then it goes back to schmucky Fleck, descending into his journey of selfdiscov­ery, finding out how or if he’s related to would-be mayor Thomas Wayne, and the movie heads back into despair again.

Random explosions of violence make it harder for Joker to inject much humor. Though DC does, by its nature, tend to be darker than Marvel’s plucky hero origin stories, the violence here is way beyond their usual offerings, even Suicide Squad. (So, leave the kiddies at home.)

It’s debatable how much Fleck actually imagines and how much is real — another nod to King of Comedy — and De Niro himself shows up as a local TV host who callously ridicules Fleck by airing a video of his comedy club act, then inviting him on the show for further abuse. There’s a scene where Fleck practices how he’ll one day greet De Niro onstage, and it echoes the fantasies of Rupert Pupkin, trying to get his five minutes of fame on The Jerry Langford Show. Joker routinely shifts in and out of Fleck’s unreliable reality; we’re not even sure if he actually has a thing going on with his neighbor, single mom Zazie Beetz, who smiled at one of his jokes.

That’s part of Joker’s design, to leave our feelings about Fleck ambiguous. Is he just crazy? Deeply sympatheti­c? Is violence a reasonable response to the pain he suffers? As in many Batmanrela­ted movies, Gotham itself is treated as a damaged character, a dysfunctio­nal Greek chorus: here, it percolates with socioecono­mic rage, building up to a massive explosion. It eventually comes to mirrors Fleck’s mental condition, in alarming ways.

Yet little evidence of the gleeful “criminal mastermind” that Joker is said to be emerges until the final scenes of the film, where we see that Gotham really is as crazy and anarchic as Fleck has led us to believe, and that he could be the messiah of all this chaos: a man for the times. This is, after all, an origin story, so it’s fitting that we leave Fleck just as he metamorpho­sizes into his ultimate creation.

As Gotham breaks down, another line, predating Motorcycle Boy, came to mind: “The greatness of a nation can be judged by how it treats its weakest member.” That one’s from Gandhi. Gotham is clearly a city that places little value on the weak and downtrodde­n. But full-blown crazy? That’s a party to them. Innate respect for the insane, indeed.

Ultimately, Joker would have benefited from a less slavish attention to period detail and more focus on the humor inherent in its subject, even if it’s dark humor. A little less Fleck, and a bit more Joker, would have helped this bitter pill go down easier.

 ??  ?? Fleck tends to his frail mother, played by Frances Conroy.
Fleck tends to his frail mother, played by Frances Conroy.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines