FCEEVIPER
Rubber bullets. Honest
- Joined
- Jul 20, 2004
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I agree.stop with these joker threads![]()
This is the Joker guys, like it or not, that's the version we are getting for TDK.
I agree.stop with these joker threads![]()
This poll is completely useless without an option for both.
This poll is completely useless without an option for both.
I posed that question, and I started this thread. As I said in my initial post, the point is not "Which Joker is best?" Or "Which should be in the film?" The point is, a lot of people are saying that IF Joker just applies make-up, it will ruin the character. Having an option for both would actually RUIN the point, because we all know that EVERYONE would vote for "both." I made the poll to illustrate a point: clothes do not make the man. While it may be dissapointing, it shouldn't ruin the movie, or the performance. When you get in the theater, you'll see the Joker, one way or another, and, seeing as how none of us really know what will and won't be in the film, there's not a lot of purpose sitting around complaining that "what we've seen is not the Joker."
Clothes may not make the man, but the events that caused The Joker to have his bleached skin made him who he is and brought about the character dynamics that are vital to the character. So, it's not the clothes don't make the man, it's more of why the man is wearing those clothes. That makes all the difference.
Well, that's kind of my point. We don't know who the Joker was before he got doused in chemicals. Whether or not that is the event that defined his personality is up in the air, even in the comics. The latest Joker origin story characterizes him as a sociopathic master thief with a death wish before he becomes the Joker. Nolan's Joker may (and undoubtedly does) have different motivations and origins to be psychotic. You can't count on the "acid bath" origin, and you can't count on the acid bath as being the event that makes him who he is.
Well said. I think most people are just worried about potentially seeing Joker with a normal face, it would be pretty disappointing
Well, that's kind of my point. We don't know who the Joker was before he got doused in chemicals. Whether or not that is the event that defined his personality is up in the air, even in the comics. The latest Joker origin story characterizes him as a sociopathic master thief with a death wish before he becomes the Joker. Nolan's Joker may (and undoubtedly does) have different motivations and origins to be psychotic. You can't count on the "acid bath" origin, and you can't count on the acid bath as being the event that makes him who he is.
I don't think whether that was the event that defined his personality is in question. Origins and such really matter little in the grand scheme of things with regards to The Joker. Take Batman confidential #7's origin, for instance. Say he didn't get his face bleached. What would he be? Just like the guy from that comic? It doesn't matter, I think it's obvious that his accident turned him into a whole different person. It's like this. Say, someone made a movie where Bruce Wayne's parents aren't killed, nothing happens to them except they live normal lives. That's the key to what made Bruce turn into Batman. What's the point of the character if he didn't have that catalyst to turn him into Batman? Just like, what's the point of a guy who's a regular killer who puts on clown makeup? The character really has no meaning anymore, or at the very least the meaning is diluted.