itsthebatman
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You came out of your coffin for that?A dead one.
Keyser's description is spot-on.
As long as he's permawhite.

You came out of your coffin for that?A dead one.
Nice. Joker is essentially Batman's opposite, he stands for anarchy and chaos, while Two-Face is the 'dark' Batman, a man who seeks vengeance, not justice, and steps over the line that Batman doesn't.Nice post, and excellent Birdman reference!
I agree, Joker must live. He's one of the three main points of the story. You have Batman, who is willingly a "freak in a mask," Joker, who can never take his mask off, and Dent/Two-Face, who is essentially the embodiment of the dichotomy of these two characters. That relationship is crucial.
I want Him to be This generations Michael Myers....
I want everyone that talks about him after this movie to say that as a character in a movie...he gives them nightmares
but i dont want him to be a complete nut job...i want him to have jokes...most jokes should be completely crazy and scary more than funny...and with him laughing after saying them...should bring chills
i want him to be smart and near controlling...
...more of Joker in TAS and TKJ
Possibly, but I think it's a visual choice also, to give the idea of a REALLY BIG SMILE, the kind we see in the comics all the time but wouldn't be able tto do on screen (cos no actor has that big a mouth), and they didn't want to give him a Jack-style permasmile.Exactly, he's Batman's ideals with Joker's morals. He even looks the part, with the scarring, etc. I have the feeling that that is a big part of why Nolan went with the scarred face for Joker.
Possibly, but I think it's a visual choice also, to give the idea of a REALLY BIG SMILE, the kind we see in the comics all the time but wouldn't be able tto do on screen (cos no actor has that big a mouth), and they didn't want to give him a Jack-style permasmile.
Heath's natural smile is fine. No one expects a ridiculously large grin, just as much as no one expects a live-action Superman to have a Mr. Olympic body.Possibly, but I think it's a visual choice also, to give the idea of a REALLY BIG SMILE, the kind we see in the comics all the time but wouldn't be able tto do on screen (cos no actor has that big a mouth), and they didn't want to give him a Jack-style permasmile.
Heath's natural smile is fine. No one expects a ridiculously large grin, just as much as no one expects a live-action Superman to have a Mr. Olympic body.
Notice that the hundreds of manips we had of Heath, not many, if at all had scarring. No one complained that Heath's real smile was used.
i agree w/ keyser soze-- he should be a don logan/frank booth sort of character. i've read a lot on the mafia and the joker always struck me as a wiseguy sort-- like jimmy burke or tommy desimone (the robert de niro and joe pesci characters in goodfellas, respectively). both of those guys, and burke in particular, were much more sociopathic in real life than they were depicted onscreen. burke could be your best friend one moment and kill you without compunction the next. he killed women, children-- didn't care. if you got out of line, if you crossed him or another wiseguy, hell, if you bumped into him-- you were ****ed. and he'd laugh about it while doing it and order take-out after digging your grave. joseph pistone ("donnie brasco") wrote that wiseguys would beat someone up for accidentally bumping into their cars. and they'd laugh about it. they got off on violence. that, to me, is what joker is like.
there's this little-known chris walken/sean penn movie called at close range where walken plays one of the most evil characters, i think, ever portrayed in a movie. actually, de niro turned down the part because he thought the character was "too dark." a perfect combination of that sort of darkness and the charisma/bravado/lunacy of a jimmy burke would be the ideal joker, imo. maybe even a little bit of tyler durden in fight club, e.g., when he gets beat up by lou and all tyler can do is egg him on and laugh.
as far as appearance goes, i'm digging what i've seen of ledger so far. i like the gash smile, the panda eyes, etc. i was skeptical of the casting choice at first, but that began to change when i first saw the ibihdt picture. and i was officially stoked when bale called ledger's performance an "anarchic, punk rock" take on the character. but maybe that's because i grew up listening to punk.
I want The Joker to be a darker, more sinister take on a classic villain. I don't want him to be funny, or light-hearted, or endearing. He should be a frightening psychopath, in the vein of a Frank Booth or Don Logan, that sets you on edge whenever he is on screen, because you don't know what he might do, what he is capable of.
I also want the character to be a total mystery. Don't delve into how he got scarred, or why he became The Joker, or who he was before his transformation. He's just The Joker, right from the get-go, and as far as the film is concerned he has no alter ego.
While being utterly insane, he also needs to have the brains to provide a truly worthy challenge for Batman. I want to see The Joker as a master schemer, armed with a plan within a plan within a plan, unfolding like a Chinese puzzle box as the film progresses.
And finally, he needs to do something truly evil, something that deeply hurts Batman, and forever cements his status as Batman's ultimate nemesis in these films. More generally speaking, I want audiences to walk out of "The Dark Knight" thinking they've just witnessed not only the definitive live action Joker, but one of the most evil, most insane villains they've ever seen in a movie.
I want The Joker to be a darker, more sinister take on a classic villain. I don't want him to be funny, or light-hearted, or endearing. He should be a frightening psychopath, in the vein of a Frank Booth or Don Logan, that sets you on edge whenever he is on screen, because you don't know what he might do, what he is capable of.
I also want the character to be a total mystery. Don't delve into how he got scarred, or why he became The Joker, or who he was before his transformation. He's just The Joker, right from the get-go, and as far as the film is concerned he has no alter ego.
While being utterly insane, he also needs to have the brains to provide a truly worthy challenge for Batman. I want to see The Joker as a master schemer, armed with a plan within a plan within a plan, unfolding like a Chinese puzzle box as the film progresses.
And finally, he needs to do something truly evil, something that deeply hurts Batman, and forever cements his status as Batman's ultimate nemesis in these films. More generally speaking, I want audiences to walk out of "The Dark Knight" thinking they've just witnessed not only the definitive live action Joker, but one of the most evil, most insane villains they've ever seen in a movie.
This seems almost futile since Keyser Soze hit the nail on the head in this thread. But my idea Joker for this movie, Nolan's movie, would be Heath Ledger in Jack Nicholson's makeup. Ledger seems to be making the role his own and that's great. Of course, along with Nicholson's makeup would be the same theme, motivation, and exposition of the classic Joker. But ultimately the onus is on Nolan in whatever he does with the character. He just has to make what he does work on screen.
I want The Joker to be a darker, more sinister take on a classic villain. I don't want him to be funny, or light-hearted, or endearing. He should be a frightening psychopath, in the vein of a Frank Booth or Don Logan, that sets you on edge whenever he is on screen, because you don't know what he might do, what he is capable of.
And finally, he needs to do something truly evil, something that deeply hurts Batman, and forever cements his status as Batman's ultimate nemesis in these films. More generally speaking, I want audiences to walk out of "The Dark Knight" thinking they've just witnessed not only the definitive live action Joker, but one of the most evil, most insane villains they've ever seen in a movie.
I want The Joker to be a darker, more sinister take on a classic villain. I don't want him to be funny, or light-hearted, or endearing. He should be a frightening psychopath, in the vein of a Frank Booth or Don Logan, that sets you on edge whenever he is on screen, because you don't know what he might do, what he is capable of.
I also want the character to be a total mystery. Don't delve into how he got scarred, or why he became The Joker, or who he was before his transformation. He's just The Joker, right from the get-go, and as far as the film is concerned he has no alter ego.
While being utterly insane, he also needs to have the brains to provide a truly worthy challenge for Batman. I want to see The Joker as a master schemer, armed with a plan within a plan within a plan, unfolding like a Chinese puzzle box as the film progresses.
And finally, he needs to do something truly evil, something that deeply hurts Batman, and forever cements his status as Batman's ultimate nemesis in these films. More generally speaking, I want audiences to walk out of "The Dark Knight" thinking they've just witnessed not only the definitive live action Joker, but one of the most evil, most insane villains they've ever seen in a movie.