For those that have seen it, is Joker's overall motivation pretty on par with his character from the comics and tv shows for the most part, or was it not all that plausible?
Nicholson was betrayed by the permanent grin. You can say he was comic accurate but The Joker doesn't smile all the time. What was Burton thinking? I still can't get my head around the stupidity of it.
And yet we get a permanent grin and a magic gun capable of shooting down the Batplane!
He can deliver lines like "Kill the Batman" and not have to worry about looking stupid. But poor Jack Nicholson, remember the whole "Wait til they get a load of me" line? We see his eyes, pure evil and malice. And then, oh wait, he's still smiling.
Bringing age into the question is stupid. I'm against recasting, but to bring up the age thing is just stupid. He looks no older than Heath Ledger did.
Oh, what could have been. This would have looked ten times better and less horror movie cliche. *dodges the flame balls*
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How is the Joker "horror movie cliche"![]()
Reminds me of this:Oh, what could have been. This would have looked ten times better and less horror movie cliche. *dodges the flame balls*
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The fixed grin was an obvious reference to the fact that, for most of the Joker's comic book appearances, he appears to have a...wait for it...FIXED GRIN. This is true of almost any appearance after his first few.
The problem is that Burton claimed he used The Killing Joke as a source of some influence. Did he not see The Joker display a wide range of emtoions in that comic? Or did he not read the first appearance of the character in which he is sitting, tenting his fingers and not smiling at all?
There was no reason for that fixed grin. I honestly wonder if he did it simply to make Nicholson look ridiculous.
Sigh...
People, it's 2008. Can we stop acting "surprised" that The Joker is what he is in this movie? THE DARK KNIGHT features a darker, more sadistic, and frankly, probably more gruesome and scarier version of the character than BATMAN or any version of the character ever has. Great. This was a foregone conclusion the second the tone of BEGINS was apparent. Of course people are going to like it more than the slightly hammy version found in the past. I just find it hilarious that people act like this was unexpected on any level. It's like they want to point fingers and go "See! I told you!", as if anyone with a shred of intelligence actually believed the portrayal would not be somewhat interesting and relevant, and darker.
Yes, we didn't get the Oscar winning acting trick of...wait for it, licking his lips and pursing them.
The fixed grin was an obvious reference to the fact that, for most of the Joker's comic book appearances, he appears to have a...wait for it...FIXED GRIN. This is true of almost any appearance after his first few.
And it works. And works well.
It's an explosive shell. Why do you think the damn thing exploded?
You have got to be kidding me. That's the whole point. The whole point.
I never thought I'd see the day when people complained about the Joker smiling. As if the man somehow failed or was unable to emote because he had a "smile" on his face. Jack Nicholson did more with his eyes and minor use of his lower face in BATMAN than most actors will ever do.
And can I point something out? The "smile" on Ledger's Joker isn't going to help with his emoting much. The fact that he can still use his mouth doesn't change the fact that there's a massive, distracting smile on his face.
89 bashing?
Read my lips: NICHOLSON WAS ROBBED.
Sigh...
People, it's 2008. Can we stop acting "surprised" that The Joker is what he is in this movie? THE DARK KNIGHT features a darker, more sadistic, and frankly, probably more gruesome and scarier version of the character than BATMAN or any version of the character ever has. Great. This was a foregone conclusion the second the tone of BEGINS was apparent. Of course people are going to like it more than the slightly hammy version found in the past. I just find it hilarious that people act like this was unexpected on any level. It's like they want to point fingers and go "See! I told you!", as if anyone with a shred of intelligence actually believed the portrayal would not be somewhat interesting and relevant, and darker.
.