Joker: Folie à Deux (2024)

Started by The Joker, Thu, 4 Aug 2022, 23:11

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I'm wondering how much of this is sincere and how much of it goes back to It's The Current Year nonsense.

At this point, nothing will stand between me and this movie's opening weekend. But the mixed reception is a little intriguing.

Much like the Burton duology, I honestly don't think some people 'get' what JOKER is all about at the core. I've skimmed some of the reviews and a common thread is them not liking that Folie A Deux is predominantly set inside Arkham and a courtroom. Given how the original ended, those locations seem perfectly logical to me. I long suspected a lot of the musical component was Arthur's mental escapism. I may feel differently when I actually see the film, it could be monotonous, but right now I don't have a problem with this angle in theory.

I'm confident in my assumptions in how the film ends, too. It will depend on how it's done, but I can easily fight a case for it. Again, it will be down to the execution. Underscoring all this is the fact I never took Arthur to be the literal comic book character of 'The Joker' but rather how a 'real world person' with similar traits would be. I remain unintimidated by this initial critical feedback. I see a lot of people saying they thought the original was overrated, and that's when I decide to tune out listening to them. Bring on October.

Some sites are reporting that the budget of Folie à Deux is $200 million. For comparison, Wikipedia lists the first film's budget as $55 million. I wonder why the new film cost almost four times as much.

Mu understanding is that Phoenix was only contracted for the one movie. Plus, Lady Gaga's salary is probably several million dollars above minimum wage.

I can't blame everything on sheer payroll bloat. But if it came out that WB laid out at least $50 million to get Phoenix and Gaga aboard, yeah, that would add up.

I'm continuing my skim through some of the reviews and I'm picking up a theme. Folie A Deux is going to create conversations about who the character is and his motivations. From my point of view Arthur is just a guy. He's someone who suffered an individual experience of misery and lashed out on television, thus becoming a public commodity. If he inspired people that's on them. That goes for any killer. We as the public project our own imaginations onto subjects, and those may not match our expectations in reality.

In the first movie Arthur doesn't have much of anything to do with the movement other than just living his own life. In the sequel he's on the inside and they're on the outside. I guess he'd be thankful for the support he's getting but does he want to be their leader even if he could be? Seems to me it's really about the spirit of rebellion that Arthur demonstrated against Murray that the followers are excited by. But when the makeup comes off Joker's seemingly back to being angsty self doubting Arthur. I don't think Joker and Arthur are seperate entities per se, but Joker instead being something that activates within him under the right conditions.



Avoiding reviews. Doesn't seem like I'll be able to see the movie opening weekend for a variety of reasons. So, I'll probably have to drop out of this thread for a while.

Still, it looks like they're delivering the goods. If the critics are rebelling, the reason isn't apparent in the trailers released so far.

Today at 11:34 #67 Last Edit: Today at 11:40 by The Dark Knight
Quote from: thecolorsblend on Yesterday at 19:41Still, it looks like they're delivering the goods. If the critics are rebelling, the reason isn't apparent in the trailers released so far.
The critics don't have a clue and can get f***ed. All the footage I've seen has spunk and screams at the top of its lungs THIS IS A GENUINE SEQUEL. For example I love seeing Garry returning and sitting in the witness box, and Phoenix's mock British accent is both funny and unnerving. You can feel the tension. I don't see how anyone who is a real fan of the first film watches any trailer and doesn't get their blood pumping. I'd dig it if Arthur declined the insanity plea because like Bundy he wants to fight a label he thinks is undeserving of him, while also wanting the limelight/opportunity to confront his tormentors. Choosing that option even though it likely means the death penalty because he cannot bring himself to give them any satisfaction in rolling over. I'll be finding out on opening day with a wheelbarrow of popcorn and crowbar by my side.