Guys what do you think of this....
Imagine if you were in Nolan's shoes, whereby you're making a film about a subject engrained in popular culture... TDK has two of arguably the most famous comic book villains, at definitely the two best in the batman mythology.
Two face is a character created when a man gets completely transformed by an acid disfigurement.
Joker is a character who gets completely transformed (in the comics) by an acid/chemical disfigurement.
As a director, it would be cinematically imprudent to have the two main villains in your film follow the exact same plot device.
I think Nolan decided that dent's disfigurement can't be explained by any means other than an acid attack, but that joker's white skin wasn't necessitated by an acid bath.
He had to make a decision, and I think he made the right one. It's the price we have to pay to see the introduction of two face and joker in the same film!
It's not like the two are that thematically the same. The Joker was the product of a vat of unknown chemicals, resulting in him having the appearance of a clown.
Harvey Dent had acid thrown at his face.
Do the scenarios really sound that similar?
That's another point, I'm quite well aware that "the joker is an absolute" in TDK, but in nolan's "reality" you can't really have someone walking around Gotham like the bastard child of Marcel Macreau and a tin of whitewash. For someone to be that white, you'd need an origin story, which nolan doesn't want to do.
Not necessarily. You don't need to show an origin. All you need is a few brief, vague comments and speculations from various characters in the film, as well as maybe one or two more "Whatever doesn't kill you"-type hints from the Joker, and you could get an audience to buy permawhite. And, because you've kept it vague, your audience gets to think "I wonder what
really happened", and can form the rest in their imgainations.
So, (and i'm not saying you specifically said this) why does the catalyst have to be him becoming permawhite? I love the idea of his scar being the catalyst, and his persona becomes his reaction to that.
I think it's because, for some, the scars simply don't match up to permawhite. As I put it before, permawhite, you would see from across the room, you would notice it in a crowd. It's visually striking, as well as a full-body affliction, and they're totally unique. A man with the complexion of a corpse would surely stand out. It's the type of thing you'd see in Ripley's Believe it Or Not.
Would you be able to notice the scars without coming very close to him? They're not like Two-Face's burns, which encompass half of his head. I think the fact that he's able to stand in a crowd of police without even being noticed says something.
Plus, the nature of the scars is not really unique. Not necessarily in the shape of them, but that same sort of scar tissue isn't uncommon.
Also, where the scars are sort of down-to-earth, permawhite is something that's so weird and out there, it seems illogical. It's weird, it's visually jarring, and it seems impossible, but here he is, the Joker, a walking testament to the absurd nature of the Universe. In that respect, I find it fits the Joker better as a deformity.