Joker
Came out; 2049
Time; 2 hours 2 min
Watched: Hulu
Rated: R for strong bloody violence, disturbing behavior, language and brief sexual images
IMDB Rating; 8.4/10
Caution; Spoiler Alert
Staring.
Joaquin Phoenix as Arthur Fleck
Robert De Niro as Murry Franklin
Zazie Beetz as Sophie Dumond
Frances Conroy as Penny Fleck
Brett Cullen as Thomas Wayne
Shea Whigham as Detective Burke
Story Line.
A socially inept clown for hire - Arthur Fleck aspires to be a standup comedian among his small job working dressed as a clown holding a sign for advertising. He takes care of his mother, Penny Fleck, and as he learns more about his mental illness, he learns more about his past. Dealing with all the negativity and bullying from society, he heads downwards on a spiral, in turn showing how his alter ego, "Joker," came to be
Thoughts:
Clearly there's more people in this movie than what I listed above, however I listed all the people who are in most of the movie.
We were trying to figure out why we never watched this, it came out some time ago, yet we forgot all about it. It may be due to Suicide Squad's version of the Joker and how no one can compare to Heath Ledger.
This movie certainly showed a totally different version of the Joker. It showed a person spiraling out of control with mental health issues. It wasn't as violent as the reviews made it out to be.
I had a hard time figuring out what was a hallucination and what he was actually seeing. In the end, it all came together to make a very good movie.
Joaquin Phoenix had some pretty big shoes to fill, and he filled it.
CAUTION; Major Spoiler Alert
The
story takes place in Gotham City, 1981.
Arthur Fleck (Joaquin
Phoenix) works as a clown-for-hire for a company called Ha-Ha's. He
struggles with severe depression personally but finds some form of
optimism in performing for others and trying to make people laugh. He
is tasked with advertising a store by dancing and waving a sign
around. On one such occasion, the sign gets snatched by a group of
punk teens, forcing Arthur to chase them into an alley. They smash
the sign against his face and proceed to mercilessly kick him while
he's down.
In this era, Gotham is struggling with crime,
unemployment, and poverty. Arthur visits a social worker for his
medication, as well as his ongoing mental health issues. On the bus
ride home, a small child looks at Arthur. He makes silly faces that
amuse the boy, but his mother tells Arthur to leave him alone. Arthur
begins to laugh hysterically and uncontrollably. When the mother
questions him, he hands her a card that explains that he has a mental
condition that causes him to laugh the way that he does.
Arthur
returns home to a high-rise apartment project, where he lives with
his ailing mother, Penny (Frances Conroy). After dinner, they sit and
watch a TV talk show with host Murray Franklin (Robert DeNiro).
Arthur imagines himself being on the show and getting Murray's
attention. In his fantasy, Arthur charms the audience and Murray by
telling them that he takes care of his mother. Murray relates to
Arthur and invites him up on stage in front of everyone, where they
share a familial embrace. It is revealed that Penny used to work for
Thomas Wayne (Brett Cullen) and is obsessed with the millionaire and
has been currently writing to him to try and better their living
situation.
At Ha-Ha's, Arthur is given a gun for protection by
his co-worker Randall (Glenn Fleschler) after he hears about the
mugging incident. Arthur is both reluctant and relieved to receive
such a gift as firearms are outlawed at work but soon finds his
confidence growing after receiving the weapon. However, soon after
this, he is confronted by his cold and unfeeling boss, who reprimands
him for losing the sign and takes the cost of it out of his pay.
Arthur responds only by smiling bitterly.
Arthur meets and
becomes infatuated with one of his neighbors, a single mother named
Sophie Dumond (Zazie Beetz). She speaks to him politely about
relating issues that he can relate to. However, while trying to make
an impression with her, he appears awkward and weird around her. At
one point, he spends his day following her. Later, she comes by his
apartment and asks if he was following her, and he admits that he
was, but she doesn't seem put off by it. He invites her to a stand-up
comedy show that he is performing at. She is hesitant but is won over
by his charm and sense of humor. Arthur watches comedians perform to
help him gain some insight into the craft, but feels more awkward and
out of place as his over-the-top laughter is not genuine.
Arthur
goes to the comedy club for his performance. His nervousness consumes
him and, as a coping mechanism, unintentionally finds himself
laughing so hard that he can barely speak. He then begins going off
into his routine, which isn't very funny. Sophie appears to be in the
audience... the only person who is laughing at Arthur's jokes. This
gives him the comfort he needs to continue to joke despite his inner
torment and turmoil.
Arthur later goes to a children's
hospital to entertain them as a clown. He brought his gun with him,
and it falls out on the floor. Arthur's boss later chews him out for
this. Arthur pleads for a second chance, but his boss refuses and
fires him on the spot. To top things off, Randall throws Arthur under
the bus by claiming that Arthur got the gun himself. On the subway
train ride home from Ha-Ha's in full clown getup, Arthur spots three
drunk young Wall Street types working for Wayne Enterprises harassing
a woman. Arthur starts laughing unintentionally and draws the
attention of the men, while the woman wisely flees from that car. The
men approach Arthur and mock him and his laughter before they start
to beat him. Arthur fights back in self-defense, but they team up,
and relentlessly beat him to the floor. Having had enough, Arthur
then pulls out his gun and shoots two of them dead in self-defense
before following the last guy out of the train and murdering him on
the stairs.
In shock over what he just did, Arthur retreats
into a nearby public men's room. After a moment of frantic
contemplation, he finds a force rising within him, and he begins to
dance by himself. At this moment, he sees himself in the dirty mirror
as a battered and smeared and yet powerful clown and begins to
embrace it. He hides the gun and then returns to the apartment
building where he meets and kisses Sophie for the first time.
The
news of the three murders spreads, with some seeing it as an attack
on the wealthy, while others support the act. Thomas Wayne speaks out
and condemns it, labeling the lower class as "clowns,"
which becomes a symbol they readily embrace. The next day, Arthur
cleans out his locker at Ha Ha's but not before confronting Randall
about betraying him and breaking the time punching machine. He then
leaves, feeling high-spirited and free. News reports show clown
rioters protesting through the city and wreaking trouble, condemning
the higher privileged. Arthur sees that he has inadvertently caused
this and begins to see his true potential, which makes him genuinely
delighted.
Arthur later finds one of Penny's letters to
Thomas, which indicates that Arthur is Thomas' son. Arthur goes to
Wayne Manor, where he meets young Bruce Wayne (Dante Pereira-Olson).
After performing a magic trick for Bruce, he sticks his hands through
the gate and forces Bruce to smile, realizing deep within that they
may or may not be brothers. However, Alfred (Douglas Hodge) comes to
intervene and tell Arthur to leave. Arthur mentions his mother and
her involvement with Thomas. Alfred says he remembers Penny, but that
she was lying to him. Arthur attacks and nearly strangles Alfred
through the bars but then notices that Bruce is watching. Arthur then
gets hold of himself and flees the Wayne premises.
That
evening, Arthur finds Thomas at a public art theater event. Arthur
infiltrates the theater by impersonating an usher. He follows Thomas
Wayne into a men's room and tries to confront him with the potential
of him being his father. Arthur mentions Penny, whom Thomas also
remembers. While Thomas also acknowledges that Penny used to work for
him as part of his housekeeping staff, he says that she was
delusional and that there's no way Arthur could be his son. Thomas
also explains that Penny never told Arthur that he was adopted, which
Arthur strongly rejects before uncontrollably laughing in Thomas's
face. Thomas, unaware of Arthur's condition, becomes defensive and
punches Arthur in the face before having him thrown out of the
building. Arthur returns home, where he tortures himself by slamming
his head on the refrigerator in a fit of depression and longing.
The
next day, two police detectives, Burke (Shea Wigham) and Garrity
(Bill Camp), go to Arthur's apartment to question him on the subway
murders due to the word that the suspect was wearing clown make-up,
and they know Arthur lost his job earlier that day. Arthur denies any
involvement and gets the detectives to leave. Not long after, Penny
falls ill and is hospitalized. Sophie sits by Arthur as he tends to
his mother. In the hospital, Arthur sees that Murray's TV show is
playing a clip from his stand-up routine, but he is hurt to see that
Murray only played it to mock Arthur.
Arthur later receives a
phone call from a rep for Murray's show. He is invited to appear as a
guest, which Arthur reluctantly accepts. After studying other
interviews on the comedy show, Arthur decides to commit suicide in
front of the live audience, thinking it will make them
laugh.
Seeking hard proof, Arthur goes to Arkham Asylum and
speaks to a clerk, named Carl (Brian Tyree Henry), who has a file on
Penny. When Carl says he can't give Arthur the info he wants, Arthur
snatches the file and runs away to read it. Once away and hidden in a
stairwell, Arthur opens the documents and reads them, finding that
Thomas was telling the truth... according to the documents. The
reality is that Penny adopted Arthur after he was found abandoned as
a baby, and she abused him, tying him to a radiator and beating him
alongside her abusive boyfriend. One part of the file mentions Arthur
having a head injury, which is most likely what caused his laughing
condition. Arthur returns to the hospital and tells Penny that he
thought his life was a tragedy, but he sees it's a "fucking
comedy." With that, he smothers Penny to death.
Arthur
goes back home and breaks into Sophie's apartment. She sees him and
is terrified, asking him to leave for the sake of her daughter.
Arthur asks her if she has ever had "a really bad day," to
which she replies that she doesn't even know him. Through this, it is
revealed that every other moment featuring Sophie was just in
Arthur's head. A broken and frustrated Arthur apologizes for his
intrusion and leaves Sophie alone, storming out of her
apartment.
Arthur starts to get ready for his appearance on
Murray's show and paints his face white. He is visited in his
apartment by Randall and another former co-worker, a dwarf named Gary
(Leigh Gill). They offer condolences after they hear about Penny's
death, but then Randall begins mentioning Burke and Garrity going to
their apartments to question them about the subway murders. Arthur
realizes that Randall is only seeking a way to use Arthur in order to
cover his own butt and then snaps, brutally stabbing Randall twice in
the face before smashing his head against the wall. A terrified Gary
questions Arthur's deeds and begs to be let go. Arthur agrees to
before playfully scaring him as a prank. Gary tries to undo the lock
on Arthur's door but is unable to due to his height. He asks Arthur
to open the door for him to which Arthur immediately agrees, pausing
once to thank Gary for being the only person in his life who was nice
to him. Arthur kisses Gary on the forehead and lets him go.
Arthur
then dyes his hair green, puts on full clown make-up, and dons a
burgundy suit. He then dances down the stairways, fully embracing his
insanity and carefree life. Burke and Garrity find Arthur dancing in
the street and move in to arrest him. Arthur runs, and they chase him
into the subway train where dozens of other Gotham citizens are
dressed like clowns after being inspired by the murders. Arthur hides
his face with a clown mask, which he steals from a protester and
inadvertently starts a brawl in the train cars. As the detectives
pursue Arthur, one clown gets in the way, and Burke accidentally
shoots him dead when they struggle with his gun. The clowns pull the
detectives out of the subway and start beating them relentlessly,
allowing Arthur to get away, moving smoothly through the police
forces which swarm the area.
At the TV station, Arthur meets
Murray and his agent Gene (Marc Maron). Before he goes on, Arthur
asks Murray to introduce him as "Joker," since Murray
referred to him as such when playing his clip. Murray asks Arthur if
his clown make-up has political agendas behind it to which Arthur
replies, "I don't believe in that. I don't believe in anything."
While waiting to be introduced, Arthur sees Murray broadcasting a
clip of a struggling Arthur trying to tell a joke. This causes
Arthur's mind and plans to change, and then he dances out into the
spotlight.
Arthur goes out as the show begins. He awkwardly
tells Murray a joke, which he finds funny for its dark humor though
nobody else does. After being confronted with this, Arthur continues
by admitting to the subway murders. Murray and the audience slowly
realize that Arthur is serious. Arthur argues that the audience only
cares for the victims because Thomas Wayne spoke for them, but anyone
else like Arthur would be ignored and walked over. Murray and the
audience grow angrier with Arthur, but so does he. Murray scolds
Arthur, which escalates into Arthur snapping and telling another
joke, grinning giddily. "What do you get when you cross a
mentally ill loner with a society that abandons him and treats him
like trash?!" he asks, only for Murray to try shutting him off
before calling for the police. An enraged Arthur then screams, "You
get what you fucking' deserve!" before blowing Murray's brains
out in front of everyone. The audience runs away in terror, and the
news of the murder immediately hits the airwaves. Arthur then laughs
genuinely for the first time in his life.
Gotham is now
overrun by rioting citizens dressed as clowns after hearing about
what Arthur did. The Waynes leaves a movie theater to find the chaos
in the streets. Thomas takes his wife Martha (Carrie Louise Putrello)
and Bruce into an alley, but one clown follows them and tells Thomas
he is getting what he deserves using the punchline that Arthur used
on the Murray Franklin show. With that, he shoots Thomas and Martha
dead in front of Bruce.
Meanwhile, Arthur has been arrested
and is being taken by the police. Arthur looks out the window and
laughs gleefully as he sees the destruction and chaos he has caused.
Just then, the clowns in an ambulance run into the car, killing the
cops and freeing Arthur, who is injured and unconscious. When he
awakes, Arthur finds himself surrounded by a mob of cheering mobsters
in clown masks. The rioters then cheer Arthur on as he stands on a
car and embraces their admiration, now that he has gotten the
recognition, he has long desired. He dances to their cheering and then
pauses, finding that his nose is bleeding profusely. He then spreads
the blood across his upper lip and grins before standing before them,
elevated like a god.
Sometime later, Arthur is locked up in
Arkham Asylum. He laughs after telling this story and visualizes a
young Bruce standing over his parents in the alley. Realizing that he
has, in a way, turned Bruce into himself, Arthur laughs some more,
finding this genuinely hilarious. He meets a new social worker (April
Grace) and says he wants to tell her a joke, but she wouldn't get it.
A few minutes later, Arthur then steps out of the room, leaving a
trail of bloody footprints behind before he is chased around by
orderlies.
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