Superhobo
Superhero
- Joined
- Jun 29, 2004
- Messages
- 6,254
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- Points
- 31
Truthfully it never bothered me, because the acting was always more important than the bleaching. Would I have liked to see him permanently white? Sure, it wouldn't have detracted from the character in any way whatsoever.
But, when you introduce the bleaching you get the baggage. In this case The Red Hood. Give me some ambiguity about how he got like that and I'll feel more favourably about it.
But as long as you have this evil force of nature starting off as a guy in a penis hat I will always be in favour of the make-up look.
In fact, unless they were to remove the Red Hood nonsense entirely I would be in favour of introducing the Hoboker into the comic continuity.
I mean, Nolan got it. He realy got it. A guy as dangerous as The Joker is infinitely more powerful with no origin. He came from nothing and you've got nothing to scare him with because he has seperated himself from all humanity. It works on so many levels.
But I'm still not sure that we ever saw The Joker out of his make-up. Did you see his face during the cop scene? It looked unnatural. Like a mask.
And did they alter his voice digitally? When he was screaming at the Fake Batman his voice barely sounded human. Superb acting or technical trickery?
I'll tend to disagree with this - while they also could've simply had the Joker appear out of nowhere with bleached skin (and thus further elaborating on their portrayal of the Joker as this force of nature), the Red Hood origin, as written by Moore and Brubaker, has some depth that has yet to be mined. While I'm perfectly, perfectly content with what was presented, there's an odd subtext in that the one who would become Batman's antithesis started out similarly in a mask and cape, among other things. And, even if you're not happy with it, there've been several attempts at a backstory that have excised that element - "Lovers and Madmen" which, while I didn't enjoy it too much myself, did present a couple of intriguing ideas.
But, the approach they went with in the film worked perfectly - I have no complaints, but I still have my thoughts on how bleached skin could've been portrayed. But really, there have been so many variables with his look throughout his history - he's been presented as both using lipstick and having dyed red lips, as having dyed his hair manually and having it dyed along with his skin - that it all works, as long as it's presented well within the context of their individual portrayals.

