Mercury (Hobart)

This portrayal is no joke

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AN AIR of menace and a cloud of controvers­y accompany the arrival of Todd Phillips’ Joker like a thick perfume. That, in itself, could be something to celebrate. Danger isn’t a quality often found in the sanitised corporate-made movies of today, least of all in the safe, fan-friendly world of comic-book films.

Joker, though, is a calculated­ly combustibl­e concoction, designed — like its chaos-creating character — to cause a stir. To provoke and distort. I wish it was as radical as it thinks it is.

Instead, Joker is a mesmerisin­g, misjudged attempt to marry the madness of a disturbed individual to today’s violent and clownish times. It’s a shallow, underexami­ned movie that renders the dark descent of a troubled man with an operatic fervor.

That this feels so familiar, like the backstorie­s of countless unhinged gunmen in the real world, could be seen as a powerful and grim reflection of today. Since the film has already so stuck a nerve, perhaps it is. But conjuring psychosis for the sake of a predetermi­ned origin story, makes Joker feel cavalier and opportunis­tic. Its danger, really, is no deeper than a clown’s make-up.

The template of Joker isn’t anything from the comics (Phillips wrote the film with Scott Silver) but a pair of Martin Scorsese films about twisted loners: Taxi Driver and

The King of Comedy. To make the point, Phillips has cast Robert De Niro, the star of both of those films, as a latenight host whose show Arthur Fleck (Joaquin Phoenix), our Joker-to-be, dreams of making an appearance on.

Phillips, the maker of male comedies about clung-to adolescenc­e ( Road Trip, Old

School, The Hangover) has elevated the Joker from DC Comics villain to 1970s-movie anti-hero.

The Arthur we meet is a clown-for-hire and a wannabe stand-up. In the opening scene, he’s caking his face with makeup in front of a mirror. His smile already has a plainly forced, unnatural form. It’s the crooked outward manifestat­ion of Arthur’s anguish. Laughter is the symptom of his heavily medicated disturbia (“All I have is negative thoughts,” he tells his social-services case worker), a product, we learn, of a childhood of abuse. To those who look at him strangely he hands a card informing them that he laughs inappropri­ately, like a condition of Tourette’s.

We are, immediatel­y, in a realm very far from the spandexed world of superhero movies. Where there is usually superficia­l shine, in the human-sized, adult-oriented

Joker there is grit and grime. It’s 1981 in Gotham, but the fictional city has never been so unmistakab­ly New York, home also to Scorsese’s Travis Bickle and Rupert Pupkin. Due to a strike, garbage has piled up on the sidewalks. Reports of “super rats” have hit the tabloids. While twirling a sign on the sidewalk — “Everything Must Go” — Arthur is harassed by a group of teenagers and then beaten and mugged in a nearby alleyway.

For Arthur, everything has already gone. His life is pitiful and unrelentin­gly bleak. Athur lives with his mother (Frances Conroy). His tenuous grip on employment slips away when a gun, given to him by a coworker after the mugging, slides out of his pants while entertaini­ng children at a hospital.

Phoenix, among the finest actors working, is dramatical­ly thinner here, turning him sinewy and sinister. His face and movement holds the movie together. It’s impossible to look away from an actor so fully, so hypnotical­ly throwing himself into a character, even if there’s an acting-class selfconsci­ousness to the whole production — one indebted in spirit to Heath Ledger’s whole-body transforma­tion in The Dark Knight.

But Phoenix has also been better with similarly broken souls in films like The Master and The Immigrant. In closeup, Phoenix’s smiles are ghastly. He chokes on his laughter. He’s been raised to smile through pain, tragically divorcing himself from expressing his emotions.

Joker is driven not by any outside force but the ominous sense of something bad welling up in the unloved Arthur. Having won our sympathy through endless indignitie­s, we begin to almost root for him to lash out. When he does, one night on a nearly empty subway Arthur has, in a troubling way, self-actualised.

This is, of course, who he’s meant to be. And it’s that leap, from self-pity wallowing to wanton revenge meted out on a sick society, that has made

Joker rightfully debated. Rather than surround Arthur’s horrifying transforma­tion with context, alternativ­es or rays of light — whether they fall on him or not — Joker simply hitches a ride on his freefall in mania.

There’s a moment when the film could have charted a different path towards a deeper character study. Instead, it gets on with what needs to happen, the chaos necessary to unlock, with a cold-blooded smothering and point-blank shooting. Arthur’s pain and psychosis has been offered up, in the end, not to lead to any understand­ing of his condition, but for its violent release, and to link to the required comic-book architectu­re.

It’s a testament to the potency of Phillips’ vision that

Joker has already become such a talking point. Phillips and Phoenix have made something to reckon with, certainly, and that alone makes it a bold exception in a frustratin­gly safe genre. But its biggest danger is in not illustrati­ng but catering to a world gone mad. You have to ask, in the end, why so serious?

Joker (MA15+) is now showing.

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