Joker: The Joker, Fool or Jester is a mysterious figure. He is found in the Tarot, where his number is zero, and symbolizes all the ending and beginnings that make up the intricate journey of life. He is truly a 'wild card', and it is up to you whether you use him in your readings.
He proved this by killing Rachel.
- Don't look like A Man with a Plan. But have one. Also be an Agent of Chaos. Look at chaos as relieving and liberating. Have a Plan. Always.
- Don't look like A Man with a Plan. But have one. Also be an Agent of Chaos. Look at chaos as relieving and liberating. Have a Plan. Always.
To think like Joker , you need to think Light Years ahead of the box , Joker's perception of things very different than that of us . And Joker himself admits that he does not know what to do , he is not a guy with a plan . Think like no body does , be the unexpected , be the evil which is beneath you .
Anyone who has grown tired of Batman's endless struggle with his arch-nemesis would agree— since Joker escapes from whatever prison he's thrown into, and (virtually) never changes his ways, it makes more sense from a utilitarian standpoint to end him.
Use bright red lipstick to create an exaggerated smile around your lips. You can pick up grease paint at costume shops. Be careful not to get paint in your eyes as you apply it! If you want to look like Heath Ledger's Joker, smear the lipstick a little and apply the makeup sloppily.
The short answer: No. The superhero Batman does not appear, nor is the name Batman ever once uttered or alluded to, in “Joker.” Much later in “Joker,” Arthur confronts Thomas directly, only to be coldly told that his mother is delusional, that she was fired for, essentially, stalking Thomas, and that Arthur is adopted.
However, the Joker has never been one for keeping decorum. For his entire supervillain career, he's favored the bright color purple, sometimes accented with green and sometimes with orange. This deep shade showcases his dark hair, chalk-white skins and the red of his permanent grin.
It seems the underlying charge is that Joker is “dangerous, irresponsible and morally bankrupt”. On the contrary, this is a deeply moral movie about the power of kindness.
That's right: Batman and Joker are half-brothers, at least according to Penny. The movie never explicitly makes clear whether that's true or not. Arthur, donning a red clown nose, pays a visit to Wayne Manor and performs an impromptu magic show for an enthralled young Bruce Wayne (played by Dante Pereira-Olson).
“Schizotypal personality disorder is like a watered-down version of schizophrenia,” said Raine.
Possibly one of the most disturbing and heart-wrenching messages of Dark Knight is that, in a world without justice, there is no way to fight the system without falling into corruption, apathy, or worse. We see Gotham City's three pathways to power quite starkly in Dark Knight.
When you see letter from Penny (Arther's Mother), it says “your son” not our son. May be Thomas is father, but Penny is not mother. She adopted Thomas's abdoned son (may be Thomas/Alfred asked her to do so).
He dances when he feels good about himself and is totally comfortable with embracing who he is; when he brings that out into the real world, his dancing becomes not only a form of self-expression, but also a way to make himself a more menacing public figure.
According to the Joker, his wife – who used to tell him he needed to “smile more” – got into trouble with gambling sharks who “carved her face”. And given this chaotic nature of his, it's also fairly possible that he gave himself the scars simply because he could, and not because he had a wife with a disfigured face.
In Detective Comics #678, a "Zero Hour" crossover story, Batman finds himself in an alternate timeline where, instead of his parents, he was killed by a mugger. Investigating the crime, he discovers that Chill, at least in this timeline, did not commit the murder.
Batman: The Killing Joke (1988) built on the Joker's 1951 origin story, portraying him as a failed comedian pressured into committing crime as the Red Hood to support his pregnant wife. This, combined with the trauma of his wife's earlier accidental death, causes him to go insane and become the Joker.
You don't see the Joker fall into a vat of acid. Phillips, Phoenix and other members of the creative team used a "realistic lens" to devise the story. Fleck has PBA, a condition with uncontrollable laughing and crying outbursts. His sickly thin body is the result of the medication he takes.
He kills his mother, suffocating her with a pillow, then fully descends into madness, no longer tethered to any friends or family.
Parents need to know that Joker is an intense, complex, powerful thriller starring Joaquin Phoenix as the famous Batman villain. It's far darker and more violent than other takes on the character. Expect extremely graphic killings and blood spatters/sprays, guns and shooting, and stabbing.
The supremely dark new movie “Joker” is the type of flick that offers itself up to many interpretations – both positive and negative. But one aspect can't be argued: It is disturbing and shocking in a way that a major studio film hasn't been in years.
Critics who saw Joker during its run at the Venice and Toronto film festivals in late August and early September, respectively, have called it “dangerous”, “deeply troubling” and “a toxic rallying cry for self-pitying incels.” In a review that prompted a flood of angry reactions from the movie's defenders, TIME's film
From there onward, “Joker” at times blurs the line between gritty realism and fantasy, with certain moments and even entire story lines, such as Fleck's budding romance with an empathetic neighbor (Zazie Beetz), revealed to be apparent delusions sprung from his increasingly disturbed mind.
"Joker" has so far made $259 million in the US.