Fall Movie Preview: ‘Joker’ gets a prestige makeover
LOS ANGELES — The Joker has been around for almost 80 years and there’s no shortage of portrayals. There are even some legendary ones by Jack Nicholson and Heath Ledger. But by most accounts, Joaquin Phoenix’s spin on the quintessential Batman villain is unlike anything audiences have seen.
It’s why “Joker” isn’t being treated like a standard comic book movie release and instead getting the rollout of an Oscar contender with high-profile premieres at the most prestigious fall film festivals — Venice and Toronto — before it hits theatres on Oct. 4. Even Warner Bros., the studio with the keys to the DC Comics universe, largely left writer-director Todd Phillips alone to do what he wanted to do with the character: Make a realistic character study in the vein of Martin Scorsese’ 1970s films about how struggling stand-up comedian Arthur Fleck became the Joker.
“He doesn’t fall into a vat of acid and come out laughing,” Phillips said. “That’s a comic book thing.”
So, Phillips and his co-writer Scott Silver (“8 Mile,” ”The Fighter”) ran all the elements of what we know about the Joker, a character without an origin story, through a “real world filter” — his look, his laugh and his personality. For the most part that meant ditching the source material. Even the comedian element, which actually has some basis in the comics, was kind of accidental.