Shatner does a mean cover of "Mister...Tambourine Man".
While I would have preferred to see the Joker in TDK have white skin like his comic counterpart, I really can't complain about the way he was depicted. The character incorporated enough of my favorite elements to retain some familiarity and was entertaining as all hell. My knee-jerk reaction is that he was one of my favorite movie villains ever. (Only time, and repeated viewings, will see if that holds up).
In a perfect Dirt-world, Harvey would have been scarred in a courtroom and Joker would have had white skin. In Nolan's world, neither thing happened. But the rest of the movie was so good, and so well-done that I'm not bothered by either omission.
Not really. And simply because we're given no definitive reasoning for the scars. The scars could have drove him nuts(like a drop into a chemical bath), but we don't know. Equally, he could have been insane and given himself the scars because he thought they looked pretty.
Guard is right, the makeup and scars might possibly hold a significance to this Joker. But those elements don't hold a significance in this film, they're simply there with no explanation. I look at it this way, the comic book Joker is a guy who became insane and completely nuts after an accidental skin disfigure. The Dark Knight Joker is an insane maniac whose scars may or may not hold a significance to his insanity.
By not giving any explanations as to how or why this man is here, Nolan has created the most mysterious Joker to date. It would be nearly impossible to analyze that man.
Does one really have to be superior? That's really what this all boils down to. Just because the Joker has always been perma-white, doesn't mean that a painted Joker cannot be just as good. If not better. If Nolan had chosen to do the Joker as he's always been done, people would be screaming from the rooftops that it isn't original and would demand Nolan's head on a platter.
But he didn't do that. He instead, chose to give us a new interpretation. (Which is what all of us really wanted, or claimed to want.) But the new version of the Joker isn't good enough either because it isn't the way he is supposed to be.
Jack Nicholson gave us an iconic Joker.
Heath Ledger gave us an iconic Joker.
I think we should appreciate them both. It may be a very long time before we see either take on the character done this well.
Probably not.![]()
Just because the concept has been done before, doesn't mean it can't be done again, in another, original, way. Most of the original concept art that we've seen thus far has the Joker with something akin to bleached skin, so it was obviously considered.
Who said that? I've heard nothing but praise for Ledger's Joker on these boards.
Would I be correct in assuming that your knowledge of the character extends mainly to the two interpretations done in the last twenty years on film?
Ahh jeez is this thread still going?
That's really what this all boils down to. Just because the Joker has always been perma-white, doesn't mean that a painted Joker cannot be just as good. If not better. If Nolan had chosen to do the Joker as he's always been done, people would be screaming from the rooftops that it isn't original and would demand Nolan's head on a platter.
Jack Nicholson gave us an iconic Joker.
Heath Ledger gave us an iconic Joker.
I think we should appreciate them both. It may be a very long time before we see either take on the character done this well.
Ahh jeez is this thread still going?
I disapprove of recasting. No actor would be interested in in replicating Ledger's performance (whether they are able or not), and frankly, I am wary of seeing a different sort of Joker in Nolan's films--Ledger's performance was sufficiently awesome that it is burned into my brain as the Joker of these films, and anything different would seem out of place.
Welcome to the boards FoJacob!![]()
I disapprove of recasting. No actor would be interested in in replicating Ledger's performance (whether they are able or not), and frankly, I am wary of seeing a different sort of Joker in Nolan's films--Ledger's performance was sufficiently awesome that it is burned into my brain as the Joker of these films, and anything different would seem out of place.
That said, if there is a way to make it work... cool. I just don't see it. Perhaps a Morissona (yes, that's right: Morissona) approach would work, where the Joker's tendency to completely reinvent himself is suggested.
But knowing that there is an actual man (however twisted and scarred he may be) underneath that make-up adds NOTHING to the legend of the Joker as far as character design.
Hey, thanks! I'm very glad to be here! I haven't been this thrilled and excited about a movie in a very long time. It's nice to chat with other fans.![]()
I have a question about this statement. Now if he had makeup or is permawhite it's still an actual man underneath. How does the above statement make any sense? Either way scars or permawhite the situation would have been the same within the movies he just would have told stories about how he is permawhite instead of scarred.
The perma-white makes him more than just a man...it makes him an ideal.
Batman is a legend. The Joker is a legend. The only difference is that Batman is human, Joker is not. Batman is the ONLY normal human with the capabilities to become more than just a man. The Joker may have been a human at one point or another or he could just be the personification of chaos and evil. We do know that no human can replicate the comic-book Joker's look no matter how hard they try because his make-up can't come off. He is a clown, not a human with clown make-up.
I really have to disagree with that. To me its like why monster movies are fun and why serial killer movies freak me out. Seeing him more as a psychological freak more than anything else makes him so much more scarier and interesting.The attitude and personality of the Joker was PERFECT. I'll say that right now. But the look was not. If it had been a perma-white Joker with irregular patterns concerning the burns, I could've lived with that. But knowing that there is an actual man (however twisted and scarred he may be) underneath that make-up adds NOTHING to the legend of the Joker as far as character design. The character in itself DID add to the legend of the Joker, the design didn't. If he was indeed perma-white (with scars or without), Ledger would've been the definitive Joker.