How Arthur Shockingly Mirrors Bruce Wayne in JOKER

Joaquin Phoenix as the Joker

SPOILER WARNING: The following article contains spoilers for JOKER.

“The mirror is my best friend because when I cry it never laughs.”

-Charlie Chaplin

Mirrors become an essential element in the visual storytelling of JOKER. Working as a clown for hire, Arthur (Joaquin Phoenix) repeatedly stares at himself while applying the makeup for the job. Yet, as the opening scene shows, each time he returns to the mirror, a sad and lonely face stares back. Even before the title character fully becomes the famous Batman villain, Arthur is presented as a man searching for help from others but is ultimately left alone to face his own fate. A tired and gaunt face stares back at Arthur, who struggles with his own identity and the dark thoughts that fill his head. It’s not until he assumes a new identity that he’s comfortable in his own battered and bruised skin. Batman lore has always explored the idea that the Dark Knight wouldn’t exist in a world without the Joker, and vice versa. Yet, writer and director Todd Phillips explores their connection in fascinating ways by taking a new approach to the source material and not just saying that they need each other to survive, but that their stories share several dark parallels.

The Internal Darkness Projected Outward 

How JOKER physically manifests mental illness is the most grueling element of the film. Despite talk of its violence, it’s Joaquin Phoenix’s physical performance that causes audiences to squirm in their seats. His gaunt frame becomes a pallet for bruises as the world around him lashes out because of their misunderstanding of his illness. What’s even more excruciating is how the character’s internal madness escapes forth in uncontrollable pain as he tries to stifle his manic laughter. Laughter becomes a coping mechanism when he’s in situations that make him uncomfortable, but it also rears its head at random moments. It becomes Arthur’s worst fear because it’s the one element of his psychosis that he can’t hide from or subdue – he has to face it and learn to accept it.

In the comics, Bruce Wayne eventually turns his greatest fear into his biggest strength. Bruce dons the symbol of the bat because it represents what he was most afraid of as a child. His internal darkness and fear of being alone in a cave are brought forth in his black bat costume. This external release for both characters in order to feel alive is at the center of this version of their origin story. Arthur’s transformation into Joker mirrors the transformation in the comics of Bruce Wayne wearing the cape and cowl. He embraces the laughter by dressing as the one character that consistently causes himself pain and gets him beat up on the street. You have two men, each with multiple personalities that change based on whether they embrace and wear their fear on their sleeve. By accepting what they once saw as their one true weakness, they both head confidently into the night, unafraid of Gotham’s judgment.

We’re Born Alone, We Live Alone, We Die Alone

“For my whole life, I didn’t know I really existed. But I do, and people are starting to notice.” Many have been quick to call out JOKER for speaking to the “angry boy” culture that grew up posting anonymously online and is fueled by Mountain Dew and self-loathing. But lines like the one above aren’t meant to incite fervor in these incels looking to lash out at society who rejected them – it’s meant to mirror the duality of Bruce Wayne and Batman. Bruce Wayne is the billionaire who hides himself away in his large mansion, whose only real friend is the childhood butler who raised him. Even as an adult running Wayne Enterprises, he has always felt alone and never understood by anyone but his childhood guardian. Arthur and the Joker are presented in a similar light in this new origin story. Living and taking care of his mother occupy Arthur’s time when not performing as a clown for hire. Like Alfred, she is the only person he can confide in, even though their relationship often brings out feelings of resentment and mistrust. 

Bruce and Arthur are, essentially, both figures of isolation. Despite the fact that one might have more resources than the other, they both seem destined to die alone. They’ve accepted this, and in turn, learn to reject any notion of love. The irony, of course, is that when they go out into the world as their alter-ego that they attract the attention of the media and legions of fans. Adults and kids watch on TV and read in the papers of these figures and become fascinated by them. While both characters have followers and people that look up to them, these fans are essentially both idolizing a masked vigilante operating outside of the establishment. Yet, as is tradition with the male archetype, these legions of fans can not match the acceptance of that between a father and a son. You can have all the praise in the world, but hearing it from your father will mean more. A central plot point in JOKER is Arthur’s search for his father’s identity. It’s this denial of a father-figure in both Bruce Wayne’s and Arthur’s life that is another new parallel in this version of the story. 

A Mirror Reflects What You See, and a Black Mirror Shows the Dark Side of It

In a pivotal scene in the middle of the film, Arthur comes face to face with a young Bruce Wayne. He captures the attention of young Bruce through a circus act that involves a red nose and a magic trick. And while the two might be separated by the iron gate of Wayne Manor, they see each other. In fact, Arthur reaches out and touches Bruce’s face and makes him smile. He uses his fingers to create the same forced smile that Arthur did to himself as he looked in the mirror with tears in his eyes at the start of the film. It’s the first time that the hero and the villain of this universe see each other, and in turn, see where they came from and what they will soon become. 

This isn’t a gate separating them – it represents the mirror that connects these two lives. In this universe, Batman and Joker aren’t divided into separate sides of the same coin. They are shown to be one, connected by the same fate. This connection is further emphasized if you take into consideration that the Joker’s actions by the end of the film lead to the death of Bruce’s parents. In JOKER, Arthur may have chosen to become the title character – much like Bruce Wayne will eventually choose to become Batman – but despite their personal choices, they will always be linked by a dark parallel destiny and will forever see their nemesis when they look in the mirror.

Joaquin Phoenix Stars In Finals Trailer For JOKER

Warner Bros. Pictures has released the final trailer for director Todd Phillips JOKER.

The film will be in theaters nationwide October 4.

Phillips “Joker” centers around the iconic arch nemesis and is an original, standalone fictional story not seen before on the big screen. Phillips’ exploration of Arthur Fleck, who is indelibly portrayed by Joaquin Phoenix, is of a man struggling to find his way in Gotham’s fractured society. A clown-for-hire by day, he aspires to be a stand-up comic at night…but finds the joke always seems to be on him. Caught in a cyclical existence between apathy and cruelty, Arthur makes one bad decision that brings about a chain reaction of escalating events in this gritty character study.

© 2019 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved
Photo Credit: Niko Tavernise

Three-time Oscar nominee Phoenix (“The Master,” “Walk the Line,” “Gladiator”) stars in the titular role alongside Oscar winner Robert De Niro (“Raging Bull,” “The Godfather: Part II”) as Franklin. The film also stars Zazie Beetz (“Deadpool 2”), Frances Conroy (TV’s “American Horror Story,” Hulu’s “Castle Rock”), Marc Maron (TV’s “Maron,” “GLOW”), Bill Camp (“Red Sparrow,” “Molly’s Game”), Glenn Fleshler (TV’s “Billions,” “Barry”), Shea Whigham (“First Man,” “Kong: Skull Island”), Brett Cullen (“42,” Netflix’s “Narcos”), Douglas Hodge (“Red Sparrow,” TV’s “Penny Dreadful”) and Josh Pais (upcoming “Motherless Brooklyn,” “Going in Style”). Oscar nominee Phillips (“Borat,” “The Hangover” trilogy) directs from a screenplay he co-wrote with Oscar-nominated writer Scott Silver (“The Fighter”), based on characters from DC.

The film is produced by Phillips and Oscar nominee Bradley Cooper (“A Star Is Born,” “American Sniper”) under their Joint Effort banner, and Oscar nominee Emma Tillinger Koskoff (“The Wolf of Wall Street”).

It is executive produced by Michael E. Uslan, Walter Hamada, Aaron L. Gilbert, Joseph Garner, Richard Baratta, and Bruce Berman. Behind the scenes, Phillips is joined by director of photography Lawrence Sher (“Godzilla: King of the Monsters,” “The Hangover” trilogy), production designer Mark Friedberg (“Selma,” “The Amazing Spider-Man 2”), editor Jeff Groth (“War Dogs,” “The Hangover Part III”), and Oscar-winning costume designer Mark Bridges (“Phantom Thread,” “The Artist”).

The music is by Hildur Guðnadóttir (“Sicario: Day of the Soldado”).

Warner Bros. Pictures Presents, in Association with Village Roadshow Pictures, in Association with BRON Creative, a Joint Effort Production, a Film by Todd Phillips, “Joker.”

https://www.joker.movie/

Joaquin Phoenix Is THE JOKER In First Teaser

The DC Extended Universe (DCEU) has been hitting all the right notes as of late with a string of successful audience pleasing films. Super heroes WONDER WOMAN, AQUAMAN and now SHAZAM! have been box office hits and received positive reviews from critics.

Now comes the villains.

Watch Joaquin Phoenix as the JOKER in this first look at the film coming to theaters October 4

https://www.joker.movie/

The Joker has been one of the most iconic villains in comic book lore.

Whether by way of award-winning films like “The Dark Knight,” Emmy-winning animated programs like “Batman: The Animated Series,” video game appearances such as the record-breaking “Batman: Arkham Asylum,” or the countless comics stacking comic book shelves and digital libraries, the Joker stands unquestionably as the most recognizable and popular comic book villain in pop culture history. Unpredictable, violent and incredibly dangerous, he is chaos personified and has taken on everyone from his archenemy Batman to even the Man of Steel.

But Gotham remains his primary home and Batman his biggest adversary, and no hero is perhaps better suited as in many ways, the Joker is the polar opposite of the Dark Knight. Both were created by a great tragedy, but Batman has since vowed to do whatever it takes to prevent similar incidents, the Joker revels in creating chaos and destroying lives, believing that life’s a big joke and psychotically demonstrating that in a moment, it can all change.
Not much is known about his past, but his acts during the present are what define the Joker as one of the greatest threats to our heroes and the people they’ve sworn to protect. He’s killed a Robin, crippled Batgirl, and tortured and murdered countless people throughout the DC Universe—all just for a laugh.

DC Comics
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7tGdyFym9wU&feature=em-uploademail

Warner Bros. Pictures’ Joker stars Oscar nominee Joaquin Phoenix in the title role, alongside Oscar winner Robert De Niro, and is directed, produced and co-written by Oscar nominee Todd Phillips.

Joker centers around the iconic arch nemesis and is an original, standalone story not seen before on the big screen. Phillips’ exploration of Arthur Fleck (Phoenix), a man disregarded by society, is not only a gritty character study, but also a broader cautionary tale.

The film also stars Zazie Beetz (Deadpool 2), Frances Conroy (TV’s American Horror Story, Hulu’s Castle Rock), Marc Maron (TV’s Maron, GLOW), Bill Camp (Red Sparrow, Molly’s Game), Glenn Fleshler (TV’s Billions, Barry), Shea Whigham (First Man, Kong: Skull Island), Brett Cullen (42, Netflix’s Narcos), Douglas Hodge (Red Sparrow, TV’s Penny Dreadful) and Josh Pais (upcoming Motherless Brooklyn, Going in Style).

Phillips (The Hangover trilogy) directs from a screenplay he co-wrote with writer Scott Silver (The Fighter), based on characters from DC. The film is produced by Phillips and Bradley Cooper under their Joint Effort banner, and Emma Tillinger Koskoff. It is executive produced by Michael E. Uslan, Walter Hamada, Aaron L. Gilbert, Joseph Garner, Richard Baratta, and Bruce Berman.

JOKER

Toy Fair 2017: Mezco

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Toy Fair is an annual trade show where hundreds of toy companies get together to showcase their latest innovations for buyers and press. The following is a photo recap from the Mezco booth. To see the rest of our coverage, click HERE.

About 2 ½ years ago Mezco unveiled the One:12 Collective at Comic Con and the line has been rapidly growing ever since. Drawing from comics, film, and pop culture, these 6” scale figures are about the same size as the ones you will find from Hasbro at your local Toys R Us. However, these figures feature real fabric clothing, multiple heads/accessories, extreme articulation, and incredible detail. Basically they take the best qualities from high-end brands such as Hot Toys but shrink them down to half the size for a third of the price. Some of their licenses on display included DC Comics, Marvel, GHOSTBUSTERS, Popeye, EVIL DEAD, and STAR TREK.

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In addition to quickly cornering the 6” scale figure market for adult collectors, Mezco also happens to be one of the leading companies for horror movie merch. They were responsible for the HELLRAISER Lament Configuration Rubiks cube that went viral last fall. Some of the highlights of their latest horror offerings include 15” Chucky & Tiffany figures, a scaled replica of ANNABELLE, an amazing Sam from TRICK R TREAT, and two adorable DAWN OF THE DEAD dolls.

You can find pics of their horror items and One:12 Collective figures below…

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Toy Fair 2017: DC Collectibles

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Toy Fair is an annual trade show where hundreds of toy companies get together to showcase their latest innovations for buyers and press. The following is a photo recap from the DC Collectibles booth. To see the rest of our coverage, click HERE.

It is no surprise that the majority of items featured in the DC Collectibles booth were related to characters appearing in JUSTICE LEAGUE, WONDER WOMAN, and SUICIDE SQUAD. One of the most impressive items was a beautifully sculpted statue depicting Harley Quinn and Batman fighting atop a runaway roller coaster. This piece is notable not only for the extreme detail but also for something it doesn’t include: Mr. J. Sure the Joker’s face appears on the coaster cart but it is quite refreshing to see a statue depicting a showdown just between Bats and Harley, and her pet hyenas Bud and Lou.

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Wonder Woman was also prominently featured, including statues from comics, and her standalone film, as well as from JUSTICE LEAGUE. While I am not a big fan of how Chris Pine’s Steve Trevor looks in statue form, I think Gal Gadot’s Wonder Woman is best represented in that two-piece statue.

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The Batman and Superman statues from JUSTICE LEAGUE are both highly detailed but I do not think either is as dynamic as the set DC Collectibles released for BATMAN v. SUPERMAN. However, if I did not already own the previous statues, I would definitely pick these up since Batman’s new look is fantastic and Superman’s pose is fairly iconic. Unfortunately the same cannot be said about The Flash, as his awkward stance ruins what could have been a great piece.

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On the figure front, the clear standout was a special edition set of Superman Vs. Doomsday, complete with a ton of accessories to recreate the iconic fight. The tattered cape flag and “Krakadoom” onomatopoeia word bubble really put it over the top.

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Other highlights include a pretty spot on SUPERGIRL (TV show) statue, a few more bombshells, a menacingly creepy Killing Joke statue, and a working Bat signal that will surely be at the top of my Christmas list next year.

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SUICIDE SQUAD – Review

SUICIDE SQUAD

It’s fun to root for imperfect people that run amok in an imperfect world. Flaws are what makes characters on-screen appear human, and yet, the greater and more abundant the flaws, the more villainous they are usually perceived. You can’t have a strong hero without an equally matched villain. Thankfully, the DC Comics’ universe is populated by the most colorful and deliciously evil around (sorry Marvel).

Amanda Waller is one of those great villains in a film chock full with hitmen, gangsters, and other villains known as “meta-humans.” As a government operative, she wants to protect the public, but does so at a cost. She manipulates evil to defeat even greater threats through a group nicknamed the “Suicide Squad.” She’s the puppet master pulling the strings of these imprisoned villains while offering reduced sentences for their services. It may sound like a sweet deal, but it is very clear that Waller doesn’t care who gets caught in the crossfire to protect the greater good.

On this squad you have Harley Quinn (Margot Robbie), Deadshot (Will Smith), Killer Croc, Boomerang, Enchantress, Diablo, Slipknot, Katana, and their leader Rick Flag (Joel Kinnaman). There’s no need to fret if some of these names don’t ring a bell. Lengthy intros are presented for most of the Squad, though a few are left on the cutting room floor for some reason, despite Deadshot and Harley both getting intros even before the opening credits… and then given another set of intros from Waller at dinner with her cronies not too long after. The real mission is trying to squeeze everyone in along with a Joker (Jared Leto) as the wild card who occasionally shows up. It becomes evident within the first few scenes that this mission of finding balance is doomed for failure.

SUICIDE SQUAD is as sloppily assembled as any major studio film I’ve seen in a while. The first hour is haphazardly edited together and has no structure or sense of rhythm. It becomes a series of music videos where five minutes can’t go by without a pop song blaring – everything from The Rolling Stones to Eminem to The White Stripes is thrown in. It’s like an ADHD child scanning through the radio dial for almost an hour with no regard that the music is actually overtaking some of the dialogue. After an hour of flashbacks and meetings and skipping around between characters in cells, you are finally given the opportunity to see these loose cannons run wild in this twisted playground. Or so you thought. Try as hard as they may, the talented cast is never really let loose to explore their characters or to bounce off each other. The character moments that made the trailers so darkly whimsical are few and far between. They are a team of misfits, but it never feels like an odd-ball team because of a weak script that doesn’t embrace the quirkiness of each of its members.

The mission has the setup of ESCAPE FROM NEW YORK, complete with injections into their bodies and a mission to save a secret someone that is trapped in a post-apocalyptic landscape. Sound familiar? Like most of David Ayer’s filmography, the second half becomes a standard issue military film where the mission and macho posturing share center stage. When Rick Flag isn’t barking orders at other military guys who tagged along, he’s at odds with Deadshot while the rest of the squad is relegated to the background. This battle of bravado goes on like a merry-go-round until the next action sequence comes about to show off the fetishized gunplay. In between these darkly lit scenes occupied with (literally) faceless enemy thugs, more humor and character beats could have been injected. All of this eventually builds to a nonsensical final battle where there’s a magical swirling portal that has to be closed. You know the routine: there’s flashing lights, banter from the big baddie, and nothing at stake. At this point, you will be wondering more if there’s a mid-credits stinger than if the gang is going to live to tell the tale.

SUICIDE SQUAD is never as weird as it thinks it is. It should feel exciting or downright a little dangerous to enter into a world where you are forced to root for the bad guys; the type of men and women who would kill or do anything to get ahead in life. Yet, we are given repetitive shoot-outs, a derivative villain, and a lackluster final set-piece that undermines the thrill of seeing these great characters on-screen. In a way, you almost wish that Batman or Superman would show up just to rattle the cage a little (even if I’m still washing out the bad taste from this year’s previous film). It’s important to have two sides to a coin – to pit good vs evil. SUICIDE SQUAD attempts to present a new type of comic book movie: evil vs. more evil. However, this is just a thin facade created by a writer/director who doesn’t truly have a firm grasp of the characters and the property. Whether this is because of producers and studio meddling is yet to be confirmed. Yet, one thing is for certain, this time around, it doesn’t feel good being bad.

 

Overall rating: 2 out of 5

SUICIDE SQUAD is in theaters everywhere August 5th

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Blu Monday: April 5, 2011

Your Weekly Source for the Newest Releases to Blu-Ray

Blu-Ray for Tuesday, April 5th, 2011

  1. Steven Spielberg’s A.I. ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE (2001)
  2. An early Al Pacino in …AND JUSTICE FOR ALL (1979)
  3. Dudley Moore is a happy drunk in ARTHUR/ARTHUR 2: ON THE ROCKS (1981/1988)
  4. Cute pork for kids… BABE (1995)
  5. Another dose of the villainous Mark Hamill in BATMAN: RETURN OF THE JOKER (2000)
  6. Forgotten good rom-com with Johnny Depp… BENNY & JOON (1993)
  7. From the late George Hickenlooper, Kevin Spacey is CASINO JACK (2010)
  8. Shocking dolphin documentary THE COVE (2009)
  9. Kevin Kline & Ashley Judd star in DE-LOVELY (2004)
  10. FIDDLER ON THE ROOF: 40th Anniversary Edition, Blu-Ray/DVD Combo (1971)
  11. Jim Carrey & Ewan McGregor star in I LOVE YOU PHILLIP MORRIS (2010)
  12. Rose McGoawn stars in the dark high school comedy JAWBREAKER (1999)
  13. Ryan Gosling stars in LARS AND THE REAL GIRL (2007)
  14. Robert DeNiro & Ben Stiller star in LITTLE FOCKERS (2010)
  15. Romantic comedy, Shakespeare-style with MUCH ADO ABOUT NOTHING (1993)
  16. Julia Roberts & Annabeth Gish star in MYSTIC PIZZA (1988)
  17. Woody Harrelson stars in THE PEOPLE VS. LARRY FLINT (1996)
  18. A most unusual love triangle in THE RULES OF ATTRACTION (2002)
  19. Not as funny sequel… STILL WAITING (2009)
  20. Queen Latifah & Jimmy Fallon star in TAXI (2004)
  21. Robert DeNiro is the TAXI DRIVER (1976)
  22. The original TRON: Special Edition, 2-disc Blu-Ray/DVD Combo (1982)
  23. TRON: LEGACY, 2-disc Blu-Ray/DVD Combo (2010)

DVD for Tuesday, April 5th, 2011

  1. April 4th – YEAR OF THE CARNIVORE (2010)
  2. Kate Hudson & Stuart Townsend star in ABOUT ADAM (2000)
  3. Margot Benacerraf’s gorgeously photographed documentary ARAYA (1959)
  4. AYN RAND: IN HER OWN WORDS (2010)
  5. BEAUTY AND THE BEAST: DARK TALE (2009)
  6. Anne Hathaway stars in BECOMING JANE (2007)
  7. More “made for TV” giant monster fun with BEHEMOTH (2011)
  8. BILL MOYERS: THE LANGUAGE OF LIFE (1995)
  9. Angie Dickinson & Bobby Darin star in CAPTAIN NEWMAN, M.D. (1963)
  10. COME UNDONE [Cosa voglio di piu] (2010)
  11. Shocking dolphin documentary THE COVE (2009)
  12. College students re-enact a family’s murder on web-cam in DEAD ON SITE (2008)
  13. Diana Dors Double Feature: AN ALLIGATOR NAMED DAISY / VALUE FOR MONEY
  14. A new kind of zombie flick… HORRID (2009)
  15. Jim Carrey & Ewan McGregor star in I LOVE YOU PHILLIP MORRIS (2010)
  16. Ben Affleck & Liv Tyler in Kevin Smith’s JERSEY GIRL (2004)
  17. Robert DeNiro & Ben Stiller star in LITTLE FOCKERS (2010)
  18. Spencer Tracy & Robert Wagner star in THE MOUNTAIN (1956)
  19. Peter O’Toole & Omar Sharif star in THE NIGHT OF THE GENERALS (1967)
  20. Roger Corman’s Action-Packed Collection: GEORGIA PEACHES / THE GREAT TEXAS DYNAMITE CHASE / SMOKEY BITES THE DUST
  21. Burt Lancaster & Claude Rains star in ROPE OF SAND (1949)
  22. STRAIGHTMAN: 10th Anniversary Edition (2001)
  23. Muslim punk rock in America… THE TAQWACORES (2010)
  24. Terry Thomas Double Feature: TOO MANY CROOKSMAKE MINE MINK
  25. The original TRON: Special Edition, 2-disc Blu-Ray/DVD Combo (1982)
  26. YOUR LOVE NEVER FAILS (2011)

Who Deserves to be a Potato Head?

The Julienne (from The Dark Spud, sequel to Spudman Begins)

Alright Movie Geeks and Potato Head fans… here’s the newest Potato Head movie character creation. This one was bound to happen sooner or later, but thanks to our awesome reader Jason Stack, who requested we do The Joker from ‘The Dark Knight’, I decided to make him my next creation. This one actually also marks a shift in my technique. Whereas the other Potato Heads I’ve created using Play-Doh, this one I used modeling clay. Wow! It worked much better, easier to use, less frustrating and opens the door to far more detailed possibilities. The one drag is that it leaves a funky residue on your fingers that isn’t easily removed… but, it’s worth it to bring these little dudes (and soon to include dudettes) into creation. Feel free the leave comments and feedback, and definitely send more suggestions my way. I have lots of ideas but have trouble choosing. So, if you make a request I don’t have to choose!

‘The Dark Knight’ begins push for Heath Ledger

WB is starting a push for Heath Ledger and ‘The Dark Knight’ for Best Supporting Actor and Best Picture as you can see from the two below posters. Now I can easily see Ledger for Best Supporting Actor, but ‘The Dark Knight’ as best picture is a stretch and maybe even a big one. Don’t get me wrong, I absolutely loved the movie, but it is not Best Picture worthy. I know that I am going to take a lot of flack from the super geek ‘TDK’ fanboys but those fanboys were also calling for these awards a month out of ‘The Dark Knight’ releasing!

The posters are also very different than the posters/promo items they did for the movie release, these posters are actually almost completely opposite of what they were using to push the movie.

I will get behind Heath Ledger for Best Supporting Actor, but give me a break on the ‘Best Picture’ consideration WB… not going to happen.
THX to Cinematical for the posters.

Discuss: Will ‘The Dark Knight’ live up to the hype?

So what do you guys think? Will ‘The Dark Knight’ live up to all this hype that we have had to endure for the last 8 months? You have all read the early reviews, seen every tv spot, sorted through countless new images..whats it going to be? Will Charles leave the theater crying like a little girl, or will he hide under the seats to catch the next showing of it?

Personally I think that the movie will be better than ‘Batman Begins’ simply because I love the ‘Joker’, and I am excited to see what kind of twist Aaron Eckhart puts on ‘Two Face’ as we have pretty much only seen him in comedy roles. There has already been a negative review from the NY Times..

The Dark Knight is noisy, jumbled, and sadistic. Even its most wondrous vision—Batman’s plunges from skyscrapers, bat-wings snapping open as he glides through the night like a human kite—can’t keep the movie airborne. There’s an anvil attached to that cape.”

That’s only my opinion, everyone chime in below …