What I love abouut Jack Nicholson's The Joker touches on what I love about Michael Keaton's Batman.
Jack's Joker is an artist who happened to be a gangster. His obsession with Batman is a love hate born in this presentation not out of
"queer coding the Joker"(which definitely works, but that's a conversation for another post). But rather he hates Batman for getting in his way and being part of what made him. But at the same time. Batman set him free. He's no longer bound to the mere role of gangster. He's an artist who's going to recast the world into his aesthetic. Gotham City is his canvas and crime is the brush. I think this Joker would definitely kill batman. And I think that its fine and even good for the Joker to want to kill Batman. I appreciate the philosophy that later incarnations of the joker do not want to kill batman, for this that and the other, and I'll accept it as legitimate, however I mostly believe that little bugaboo exists with other incarnations of the joker because of how they're marketed to children, and in later years, the profitability of batman comics going on and the hero cant die etc etc. There's nothing wrong with it, but I wish we had room in the dc world for more stories from Gotham City featuring a dead batman.
But tangets aside, I like that this Joker was an artist a man reinvinting himself as one chapter of his life comes to a close, rather than mourn the loss of his youth and face and looking like a clown in societies eyes. He didnt let other people's expectaions define him nor his work, and that's what makes him a great artist. And you just can't really say that about the other Jokers.
The animated Jokers are in a class by themselves and will be discussed in a later post.
Heath Ledger was a fantastic Joker for the times, but his joker I feel was in potentially some not great ways, too relatable. Too much of a philosopher. The sad clown if you will. I think Heath LEger tapped into an aspect of himself that he couldnt live with. MAy he rest in peace. Still I would classify this Joker as a sign of the times a "fantatical terrorist who didnt care about life" I have a lot of struggles with the Nolan trilogy personally, but it was a sign of the times for certain. I dont think its a coincidence that this joker got used as sort of a rallying cry for disaffected weirdos to cut lose more. But is it life imitating art or art imitating life, or is it all just a flat circle? Jared Leto's Joker...got done dirty. I don't know what Warner Bros was thinking, but I suspect it included: "write a joker the audience won't want the movie to focus on." Which, that's practically impossible these days, but they found as close to that as could be managed in a live action. (perhaps until this newest Joker, but more on that later.)
The Joker that is a curse. This is for Gotham's Jerome and Jeramiah Velaska who may have most perfectly embodied the way I see the Joker. As an idea that lurks in the darker parts of everyone. The idea that a monster lives inside not just an abused child who grows up in the circus, but also inside everyone, and there's all sorts of ways it can manifest, but the Joke is on all of us, because we're all the Joke and the Joker. However, due to Warner Bros's utterly insane merchandising issues, they couldnt call the joker the joker so they ended the series.
Arthur Fleck or the Joker from a parallel world. This movie is an art piece. It was well done, and is just as much a commentary on what the Joker has been to modern society as it is about lonliness and child abuse and lack of mental healthcare. I'd hponeslty like to see other villains get this treatment, but I dont know if any one of them could exist as anything but stand alone movies.
Poor Jared Leto, he needs to study how Daniel Day Lewis takes roles. Poor guy just keeps taking hits in the comic book movie world. I dont think the new guy is gonna have that problem. We're about to get a new Joker who could be the most twisted one portrayed yet, but I still think Jack Napier will always be the king of movie jokers.