The Norwalk Hour

Some unsettled after ‘Joker’ screening in Manhattan

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Extra layers of security, intense onscreen action and a frightenin­g incident inside a New York theater combined to create an unsettling experience for some moviegoers who went to see “Joker” on its opening weekend.

A young man who was loudly cheering and applauding onscreen murders sent some people heading toward exits in a crowded theater in Manhattan’s Times Square on Friday night. Other patrons yelled at the man, who spit on them as they left early, said Nathanael Hood, who was in the theater.

“I was scared. I’m sure a lot of other people were,” Hood said in an interview conducted by private messages.

Social media users posted photos of police, security sweeps and safety notices at theaters in California and Florida. And in Tennessee, a drivein theater banned moviegoers from wearing costumes to a screening of the Rrated “Joker,” which scored an October boxoffice record with $13.3 million in earnings.

The Warner Bros. film, directed by Todd Phillips, presents the backstory of the man who becomes Batman’s classic foe. Starring Joaquin Phoenix, it probes the journey of a disturbed man with a penetratin­g laugh into a killer.

While Phillips has said he hopes the film inspires discussion­s about guns, violence and the treatment of people with mental illness, some feared the movie could inspire violence, particular­ly after a mass shooting killed 12 at a Colorado theater during a screening of another Batman movie in 2012.

Hood, who attended an afternoon viewing of “Joker” at AMC Empire 25 in Times Square, said a disruption began in the seats when the action on the screen grew intense.

“About halfway through when Joker started killing people and monologuin­g about how society is evil he started clapping really loudly and incessantl­y for a good minute. People started yelling for him to shut up, but he kept clapping and cheering like mad,” Hood said.

The man started clapping and cheering again “really loudly” during a climatic gunfight, he said, and got “belligeren­t” when people told him to quit.

“Finally security came and got him. He was still being interrogat­ed outside the theater when we came out,” said Hood. Plenty of police were around the theater, he said.

A spokesman for the Kansasbase­d AMC Entertainm­ent Holdings Inc., which operates AMC Theatres, did not immediatel­y return an email seeking comment.

The FBI told local police agencies to monitor potentiall­y threatenin­g online posts related to the film.

 ?? Mario Tama / Getty Images ?? A billboard is displayed for the new film “Joker” last week in West Hollywood, Calif. Security measures have been tightened in some cities around the film’s opening weekend following concerns of potential violence at theaters.
Mario Tama / Getty Images A billboard is displayed for the new film “Joker” last week in West Hollywood, Calif. Security measures have been tightened in some cities around the film’s opening weekend following concerns of potential violence at theaters.

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