Call & Times

Movie theaters ban masks, costumes at ‘Joker’ screenings

- By TAYLOR TELFORD

A week before “Joker” hits the big screen, movie theaters around the country are banning masks and costumes at showings amid concerns about its violent theme and after the families of those killed in a 2012 mass shooting at a Colorado theater expressed alarm.

Landmark Theaters, a Los Angeles-based chain with more than 50 venues nationwide, told Reuters that “no masks, painted faces or costumes” will be allowed in its theaters. Earlier this week, AMC Theatres, the biggest movie-theater chain in the country, issued a reminder that it will not allow customers to obscure their faces, though they are free to wear costumes.

“Guests are welcome to come dressed in costume, but we do not permit masks, face paint or any object that conceals the face,” the Kansas-based company said in a widely reported statement this week. “AMC does not permit weapons or items that would make other guests feel uncomforta­ble or detract from the moviegoing experience.”

The film starring Joaquin Phoenix has been both heralded and criticized for its portrayal of a failing clown who unravels, becoming a mass murderer and a sort of dark folk hero. Some see it as a close examinatio­n of the forces that can push a person to commit such atrocities; others say it lionizes the mass violence that’s become increasing­ly common in recent years.

In 2012, a heavily armed man murdered 12 people and wounded 70 during a screening of “The Dark Knight Rises” in Aurora, Colo., where many audience members were in costume. Police said James Holmes had dyed his hair orange-red so he would look like the Joker, the Batman villain He was later convicted on 165 charges and is serving a life sentence.

The Century 16 Theater where the attack occurred will not be screening “Joker,” and earlier this week, relatives of the massacre’s victims raised concerns about the film in a letter to the studio behind it, Warner Bros.

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