Nothing of this is true. She wasn't meant for anything. She's just yet another toy of his, he has her heart and she proves useful from time to time. But mostly he doesn't give a damn about her, he isn't even interested in her whereabouts.
That description is based on after he jumped into the chemical bath to retrieve her. Since then, he's been keeping in touch via her phone and kept trying to rescue her = "lovesick"Sorry, I mean in the SUICIDE SQUAD film.
"Lovesick: in love, or missing the person one loves, so much that one is unable to act normally."
Don't see how that's far off the mark.
That was hilarious when he's looking at the audition line up for new henchgirls.
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And well said, Boom![]()
Yet he still seems stuck on REPLACING her. Filling the void left by her, but more specifically, he's striking out at her to get under her skin. This is still all about her.
And yes, "He uses her for his own gains, but has shown time and time again that he's willing to throw her to the wayside." Absolutely, this is ALSO true. These are not mutually exclusive notions, especially for the Joker.
It is entirely at his whim. WHEN he wants her, no one else can have her.
When HE rejects her, then we see him going after the good she stole. However, even this shows his inability to let her go.
He cannot let her be successful on her own, hence why he goes after her and Ivy to take their stolen goods. Why on Earth did he target THEM for this? Why not just steal the goods from any other thieves, or any other plan of his own he could preoccupy himself with?
Because he ultimately can't.
Hell, even when he's tries to kill her, he's quite often making it about HER. Hell, he killed dozens of random people, chained them up, allowed them to rot to varying degrees, just to try and "convince" Harley she was NOT the only one. Obviously he's trying to convince himself of her insignificance.
No one goes that far out of their way to convince someone they do NOT mean something to them, if they really don't.
Similarly, when he locked her in a rocket, he speaks to her about the feelings he's starting to have, and the twist being that he "hates" those feelings. Now, this does not show that he actually "loves" her, but rather that she has gotten under his skin in a way that he's not familiar with, and is, ultimately, uncomfortable with. Hence why he's literally trying to launch his "problem" into space.
She affects him, and in a way he is not used to experiencing. Batman is the only one who really affects him prior to her, and his constant pushing her away, and puling her back in, is his constant struggle with this, and his attempt to control it.
Batman he is familiar with, and their relationship is something he's always been full aware of, whereas everything with Harley ultimately snuck up on him while he thought he was just having fun, messing with another toy.
Ultimately what he "feels" for Harley, and what she "means" to him is nothing like any of the ways we relate to other people. It is not something we can genuinely relate to based on any of our relationships with others.
She is, like all people, essentially an "object" to him. She's become that object he can't seem to truly let go of.
Again, all of this is about the Joker and Harley of the books, and how they, apparently, ORIGINALLY shot their relationship for the film. This is NOT describing the relationship portrayed in the theatrical cut of Suicide Squad.
You're making a HUGE mistake with presuming Joker is always acting fully consciously. One of the biggest factors of Joker's side of their relationship is his denial. If he really didn't care about her, he would never have wasted SO DAMN MUCH time trying to convince "her" that he doesn't.
You simply don't dwell on convincing people you don't care about them if you really don't care about them.
When he's stealing her loot, it's not about trying to steal her back; it's that he can't let her go. Again, hence why he's stealing HER loot. It's about injecting himself into her life, but specifically on HIS terms, and in a way that is clearly trying to make a point of how much he does "not" care about her.
Him ultimately going after her loot is NOT to show US how little he cares about her, it's to CONVINCE her, and himself, of how little he cares, or needs, her. He's peacocking saying 'See, I don't need YOU. I'm just taking your stuff.'
It's like when someone breaks up with a person, then can't stand to see that other person move on. Even striking out to sabotage them or their future relationships. That's PRECISELY what Joker is doing, constantly with her.
They are not taking any action to directly get them back, but they can not let them go. This IS him going after her because he can't let her be happy, or successful, without him.
Again, with the hired help, it has nothing to do with it being cheaper. That's certainly something Joker would say as part of his own rationalisation, to convince himself, or as part of his effort to torment her. Either way, it's still about HER.
If it weren't they wouldn't all be dressed like her. He wouldn't go out of his way to rub her face in it.
If it had anything to do with hiring help, then he would not have wasted the hours, days, even months, to set up the pit of rotting "others" just to torment HER.
As for what Batman says to her in Mad Love, yeah, at that point, and especially her time as Harleen, which is largely what Batman references, it's absolutely true. She was nothing more than something to pass the time, and a means to an end, AT FIRST.
At this point, Batman probably hadn't even seen it, as it had only just begun. Also, Batman's ****ing playing her. While there's truth in his words (hence why they're so effective) he's deliberately player her, and plucking very specific strings. It's another beautifully played mirroring of Batman and Joker in the story, despite the difference in motives, and degree.
This is still only the beginning of her story (and her relationship with the Joker.) It is only after Joker FIRST rejects her that we get to see how much she has gotten under his skin.
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Yeah, clearly, he doesn't care at all that she's moved on without him.
He doesn't care for her. She's stealing his spotlight and his money. Not to mention, she didn't clean up the mess in his hideout.[YT]EtJNYXFHn4k[/YT]
Yeah, clearly, he doesn't care at all that she's moved on without him.
They don't. And even if they did, they don't show us WHY he would care so much. That's the point really. If you're going to change the character so much and make him love Harley, then show why he loves her. Same with Harley loving Joker. They don't really show you why she loves him. So when Ayer is trying to make the audience feel bad for Harley or laugh with her, care about her in a weird way...we don't feel a thing when she's missing Mistah J.
No matter what it's just poorly done. They spent too much time...WASTING their time with Harley moments that don't matter or Suicide Squad moments that don't matter, instead of building the Joker and Harley relationship, and going deeper into their past. The flashbacks come down to "i love you Joker! why don't you love me!?" and you don't learn a single thing about WHY she feels this way.
And since when does the word "need" equal "love"?
Never said him making grand shows of things was out of character. It's the fact that he's REPEATEDLY shown trying to make this same point over and over again. If he didn't care, he'd move on from Harley. He clearly can't, not permanently. That is my point, not the overly theatrical nature of his actions.
Why doesn't he go after her every single time? Already answered that: This is all according to when it suits him. It's about control.
Regarding replacements, again, if it wasn't about her, why not go back to exactly what it was like before her? No, instead, he's specifically seeking another "henchGIRL," AND one who looks exactly like her. He even calls her "Fake Harley." But of course, "she is totally irrelevant here," and this is not at all about Harley. Has nothing to do with here what so ever. Sure.
And why on Earth would you take HIS word about why he doesn't just spring her? Claiming he doesn't care about her, while literally walking along a line of look-a-likes, and settling on the one that is a near mirror for Harley.
They are literally spelling it out for you with a blatant cliched tv trope, and you're still denying it?
As for stuff like this, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qkcvRI-J8hw&t=0m15s , same as every other single time he's tried to kill her.
You seem to be under the mistaken impression that he can't "care" about her, and kill her. If this is still ringing as a contradiction for you, then we've nailed the root of things here. It's only a contradiction if you're projecting your preconceived "norms."
Anyhow, there's obviously a fundamental disagreement, or disconnect, that is not going to change, so, I'm done.
Never said him making grand shows of things was out of character. It's the fact that he's REPEATEDLY shown trying to make this same point over and over again. If he didn't care, he'd move on from Harley. He clearly can't, not permanently. That is my point, not the overly theatrical nature of his actions.
Why doesn't he go after her every single time? Already answered that: This is all according to when it suits him. It's about control.
Regarding replacements, again, if it wasn't about her, why not go back to exactly what it was like before her? No, instead, he's specifically seeking another "henchGIRL," AND one who looks exactly like her. He even calls her "Fake Harley." But of course, "she is totally irrelevant here," and this is not at all about Harley. Has nothing to do with here what so ever. Sure.
And why on Earth would you take HIS word about why he doesn't just spring her? Claiming he doesn't care about her, while literally walking along a line of look-a-likes, and settling on the one that is a near mirror for Harley.
They are literally spelling it out for you with a blatant cliched tv trope, and you're still denying it?
As for stuff like this, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qkcvRI-J8hw&t=0m15s , same as every other single time he's tried to kill her.
You seem to be under the mistaken impression that he can't "care" about her, and kill her. If this is still ringing as a contradiction for you, then we've nailed the root of things here. It's only a contradiction if you're projecting your preconceived "norms."
Anyhow, there's obviously a fundamental disagreement, or disconnect, that is not going to change, so, I'm done.
They don't. And even if they did, they don't show us WHY he would care so much. That's the point really. If you're going to change the character so much and make him love Harley, then show why he loves her. Same with Harley loving Joker. They don't really show you why she loves him. So when Ayer is trying to make the audience feel bad for Harley or laugh with her, care about her in a weird way...we don't feel a thing when she's missing Mistah J.
No matter what it's just poorly done. They spent too much time...WASTING their time with Harley moments that don't matter or Suicide Squad moments that don't matter, instead of building the Joker and Harley relationship, and going deeper into their past. The flashbacks come down to "i love you Joker! why don't you love me!?" and you don't learn a single thing about WHY she feels this way.
And since when does the word "need" equal "love"?
He doesn't care for her. She's stealing his spotlight and his money. Not to mention, she didn't clean up the mess in his hideout.
I hope one day, maybe in like 20-30 years, I'll see proper respect for Mad Love origin story of Harley Quinn. Yes, I'm an optimist.
Absolutely. There's another page from the book, where Harleen talks to another doctor on her first day in the asylum and discusses the contingent. How she's attracted to extreme personalities, how they're exciting and so on. In her heart, she liked bad guys and their glamorous "rock-star" status. She liked them for what they are. And her imagining a normal married life as normal people is total rubbish (especially considering their criminal history together). Of course the page above is made as a comedic insight into Harley's mind, but I think if they wanted to adapt it into live action, they had to do it some other way.Ditto.
Another aspect of Mad Love they made a total mess of was when Harley was fantasizing about married life with the Joker. She was imagining being normal herself, with normal looking Jared Leto, in a normal house with normal kids. That was bull crap. When Harley fantasizes about married life with the Joker she imagines it as crazy as the love she thinks they have for each other;
Imagining him as normal implies she doesn't love him just the way he is, and would rather have a normal life. Just another important element of the Joker/Harley story they messed up.
Are you kidding? Joker is all about repetition. How many times has he tried to kill Gotham? How many times has he pulled a crime just to get Batman's attention? Repeatedly trying to kill Harley is not a sign that he cares lol. It's the total opposite.
Does he care about Robin, Nightwing, and Batgirl, too, because he's tried to kill them lots of times lol?
That's a cop out answer. Saying he only acts a certain way when it suits him. You could use such a flimsy excuse for any out of character behavior. You have nothing to substantiate that. Either he feels like he owns her, or he doesn't.
Because he likes having the hired help of a henchgirl that's why. Doesn't matter who it is in the costume as long as he has one. That's why he hires the first pretty lookalike with the IQ of a slug. If it was about Harley he'd try and hire someone who was exactly like her rather than a superficial imitation that is literally in name only.