Quantcast
Channel: THE JOKER – UPROXX
Viewing all 228 articles
Browse latest View live

Jared Leto’s Joker Has Been Nominated For A Major Award

$
0
0

WB/Photoshop

We’ve had plenty of words about Jared Leto‘s method performance in Suicide Squad. We’ve called him a tWi$t3d Joker, the living embodiment of the HAM horn, Edgy McEdgerton the edgelord, and other terms befitting someone who reportedly sent weird gifts like used condoms to his co-stars and never broke character between scenes.

All that hullabaloo resulted in very little actual screen time, but now Jared Leto can console himself with fancylad coats and praise from MTV, who have nominated him in the “best villain” category of the MTV Movie Awards. “Joker” himself responded to the news via Leto’s Twitter:

Bless his heart. Last year’s MTV Movie Awards debuted a new Suicide Squad trailer, so they’ve been hype on the movie for awhile.

Also nominated for best villain are Jeffrey Dean Morgan as Negan on The Walking Dead, Allison Williams as Rose Armitage in Get Out, Wes Bentley as Ambrose White / Dylan on American Horror Story: Roanoke, and the Demogorgon from Stranger Things.

The joke is on all of us if the Demogorgon wins and Jared Leto mounts the stage to inform us it was he who was playing the Demogorgon all along.

The MTV Movie Awards will air on May 7th, and you can vote for the nominees here.

(Via Bleeding Cool)


Heath Ledger’s Sister Says Playing The Joker Had Nothing To Do With Her Brother’s Death

$
0
0

WARNER BROS.

While speaking at the premiere of I Am Heath Ledger, a new documentary about the Academy Award-winning actor who passed away in 2008 when he was only 28 years old, Ledger’s sister, Kate, clarified that his role in The Dark Knight had nothing to do with his death. For years, there have been rumors that Ledger’s mental and physical transformation into The Joker led to his untimely demise. He locked himself into his motel room, he told the New York Times he “probably slept an average of two hours a night,” and his journal at the time is… chilling. But according to Kate, that’s all they are: rumors.

“I was really shocked, because that was him having fun,” she said. “Every report was coming out that he was depressed and that [the role] was taking this toll on him, and we’re going, honestly, it was the absolute opposite. It couldn’t be more wrong. He had an amazing sense of humor, and I guess maybe only his family and friends knew that, but he was having fun. He wasn’t depressed about the Joker!” Matt Amato, the producer of the Ledger family-approved film, said “I hope it’s an antidote to a lot of the gossip that exists in the world. There are some really terrible things about Heath out there.”

I Am Heath Ledger will screen for one night only, on May 3, in theaters.

(Via Telegraph)

Fans Really Don’t Like The Joker’s Look In ‘Injustice 2,’ But They Can All Agree He Looks Better Than Jared Leto

$
0
0


Injustice 2‘s May 16th release date is fast approaching, and with each passing day, it seems like we’re getting another member of the roster revealed or a cool highlight reel showing off the moves of DC’s massive collection of fighters. The first game from the makers of Mortal Kombat was fantastic. It blended the multi-stage environmental destruction of the MK series with DC’s most popular characters, while wrapped in the narrative of a fantastic story. It was a Win Burrito, and DC, NetherRealm Studios, and Warner Bros. know this. That’s why we’re back for more.

Too bad Joker had a friggin’ hole blown through his chest at the end of the first game (it’s not a spoiler alert if it’s been out for years and years) and now he looks like a guy who is doing a bad job cosplaying as Jared Leto’s take on the Joker in Suicide Squad. Fans aren’t happy.

https://twitter.com/KissMyGoldfish/status/858812439017779203

For the record, there is NOTHING wrong with the following:

Back to our regularly featured haterade:
https://twitter.com/planetofammmar/status/858799227966808064

This might absolve the developers from the cries of “lame” from fans — you can wear Batman’s mask (probably thanks to the multiverse this game takes place in):

So that’s cool, right? Joker’s still cool? He might even be Jason Todd!

Jared Leto Kissed A ‘Suicide Squad’ Co-Star Because Method Acting

$
0
0

Warner

If you thought you were done hearing stories about Jared Leto’s method acting — potentially award-winning method acting — on the set of Suicide Squad, brace yourself for some Hot Topic and HAM horn, ’cause we’re just getting started.

Remember the scene where the Joker (Jared Leto) offers to help Officer Griggs (Ike Barinholtz) settle some gambling debts? If you thought things looked awfully cozy when Leto hopped onto Barinholtz’s lap, you weren’t wrong. It wasn’t in the script, but Leto nonetheless decided to surprise Barinholtz with a kiss during that scene.

Why?

¯\_(ツ)_/¯

Ike Barinholtz told Howard Stern (as transcribed by the New Zealand Herald), “I do this scene with Jared Leto and he’s supposed to be intimidating me. He comes in, he’s the Joker, and he starts squeezing my t*ts. He’s like [panting and moaning] ‘You’re a big guy’. This is while we’re filming. Then he f*cking grabs me and kisses me. On the mouth, full kisses me. Cameras were rolling and none of this was in the script, mind you. I thought, OK, I’m just gonna go with it. But then he’s like, [panting and moaning again] ‘Did someone piss their pants?’ I’m like, now I did because you said I did!”

¯\_(ツ)_/¯

Barinholtz rolled with it all, telling Stern that he though the method acting was “lame” at first (agreed), but decided he liked that Leto stayed in character. Barinholtz has spoken about Edgy McEdgerton’s method acting hijinks before. He was one of the first co-stars to speak out about the weirdness in a previous Howard Stern interview, where he confirmed the stories about Leto giving Margot Robbie a live rat and giving the rest of the squad a dead pig, then he filled in a few more details about the dead pig story.

For some reason, Barinholtz left out the part of that scene where Leto explained just how tWi$teD the Joker is…

(Via the New Zealand Herald, ONTD, and Julian Peppers)

The Inevitable ‘Suicide Squad’ Hot Topic Line Is Coming This Month

$
0
0

13582022_10154358170821979_5460582876253178616_o

Hot Topic

Finally! Something you can wear to your grandma’s funeral! Daily Dot reports that the inevitable Suicide Squad collection is on its way to Hot Topic in all its over-the-top glory. It’s a move that puts us one step closer to a Deadpool fashion line at K-Mart. Make it happen, The Economy™.

The offerings served up by the mall staple range from pretty straightforward fare like Harley Quinn’s “Daddy’s Lil’ Monster” tee to the quasi self-parody that is a purple Joker trench coat. Let’s take a look at some of the Hot Topic models dolled up in Suicide Squad gear, shall we?

A bit light on Killer Croc fashion, gang. You’re leaving money on the table, Hot Topic.

All these photos look like they’re from a very specific prom, don’t they? In addition to clothing, customers can also snap up other products like cotton candy color hair dye, a bottle opener belt and a Deadshot die-cast metal figure. Every bit of merchandise is currently available to pre-order with the collection becoming officially available July 22. You can wear your newly purchased Arkham prisoner sweatpants to the multiplex on August 5 when Suicide Squad is slated to make its debut.

(via Daily Dot)

‘Suicide Squad’ it’s mayhem as pre-sales are launched!

$
0
0

Step right up and get your tickets for Suicide Squad!  Which will go on sale this Friday, July 15.

To promote the presale, Warner Brothers has released a brand new trailer for the David Ayer-directed film, which features some new footage.

Take a look above.

Suicide Squad opens worldwide on August 5, 2016.

‘Batman: The Killing Joke’ Won’t Be The Last Time Mark Hamill Voices The Joker

$
0
0
gammasquadbatmanthekillingjoke3

Warner Bros.

Mark Hamill will always be best-known for playing Luke Skywalker, but for those of us who grew up during the ’90s, his pitch-perfect voicing of The Joker in Batman: The Animated Series and various other projects may be even more beloved. Unfortunately, Hamill has been threatening to retire the voice for years now.

Thankfully, just as Hamill is about to get out, Warner Bros. keeps dragging him back in. After, supposedly, retiring with the Batman: Arkham City video game, he returned for Batman: Arkham Knight, and then once again teamed up with Warner Bros. Animation for Batman: The Killing Joke. But this is it, right? The Killing Joke was always Hamill’s Joker dream project, so now that he’s done it, he’s finally hanging up his purple pants and acid-spraying boutonniere?

Well, not so fast – a fan recently asked Hamill if he was done with the Joker on Twitter, and he gave a pretty clear-cut response

Of course, Hamill could be playing a tricky double-negative game with that tweet, but that kind of jerkiness isn’t really his style. I think we can take the “no” at face value. I wonder if delving back into the Star Wars universe and getting a chance to really embrace the fandom again has convinced Hamill to also keep his beloved Joker going? Whatever Hamill’s motivation, it’s great to know he’s sticking to it.

Batman: The Killing Joke comes out on DVD/Blu-ray July 25.

(Via ComicBookMovie)

The ‘Suicide Squad’ Director Responds To That Crazy Robin And The Joker Theory

$
0
0
gammasquadbatmanvsupermanrobin

Warner Bros.

One of the most popular (and therefore, most insane) theories to come out of the otherwise drab Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice was: What if the Joker didn’t kill Robin, but he actually is the former Robin turned into the Joker? The clues are there — Robin’s “joke’s on you, Batman” outfit; the “you let your family die” note; gunshot hole tattoos, etc. And if nothing else, it would easily connect Zack Snyder’s film to the upcoming Suicide Squad, which actually stars the Joker, played by the equally popular and insane Jared Leto.

It wouldn’t even be the first time a Robin became the Joker. In 2000’s surprisingly violent direct-to-video Batman Beyond: Return of The Joker, Tim Drake — the third man to take on the identity of Robin, after Dick Grayson and Jason Todd — is brainwashed into becoming the Clown Prince of Crime.

But is it true? Unfortunately (for everyone but Batman), no.

WSVN-TV in Miami spoke to Suicide Squad writer and director David Ayer about the craziest fan theory he’s heard. “That the Joker is Jason Todd,” he responded. Okay, but what if…? “It ain’t the case.” How about? “He’s not.”

I guess it’s back to the drawing board for a new theory. Hm, maybe Harley Quinn is actually Joffrey from Batman Begins? Yeah, let’s go with that.


Jared Leto Discussed Filling Heath Ledger’s Shoes As The Joker In ‘Suicide Squad’

$
0
0
Unknown-1

Warner Bros.

Jared Leto’s performance as the Joker in Suicide Squad is already infamous and the movie hasn’t even come out yet. By now, his approach to playing everyone’s favorite sadistic bank robber clown may end up being more notorious than the performance itself. Leto allegedly never broke character, even off set, as evidenced by the weird “gifts” he sent his castmates when they weren’t on set together. While his methods may have been extreme, it’s probably important to remember that he had big shoes to fill. After all, the last man to play the Joker was Heath Ledger in 2008’s The Dark Knight — a performance for which Ledger won an Academy Award. Leto was obviously aware of the standard to which his portrayal would be held against and recently spoke with Rolling Stone about following up Ledger’s performance.

“Heath did an impeccable, perfect performance as the Joker,” Leto said, “It’s one of the best performances ever in cinema.” He didn’t stop with Ledger, though. Leto went on to discuss the effect of playing something of a legacy role had on the way he approached the performance. “The good thing about other people having done this is that you know what direction not to head in.”

It’s cool to hear Leto talk about making the performance his own. When previous performances of any role are iconic as they are, it’s important to do something to distinguish your take from others. It seems that Leto has, at the very least, made the role uniquely his. After all, it’s probably safe to assume that no other Joker actor has almost had a restraining order placed on him by Viola Davis.

(H/T MTV/ Via Rolling Stone)

Jared Leto Walked Around Like A Maniac To Perfect His Joker Laugh

$
0
0

Fans have been hearing about Jared Leto’s method take on the Joker for months now, between his demented gifts and digging into past performances. The time is almost here for his interpretation to finally be revealed, as Suicide Squad will finally be released on August 5. While on the press tour, Leto has talked extensively about the work that went into becoming the Joker, and on Friday’s episode of Good Morning America, Leto explained that he may have freaked out a few passersby in the process. The Joker’s demented cackle has become a true hallmark of the character, and Leto wanted to make sure he got it right.

“I remember wandering the streets of New York and in Toronto where we were shooting, and I would just laugh out loud and see how people would react to it. Every time when I started to hone in on this laugh, I realized it was the one that really, people would turn around and be like, ‘What the hell is that?'”

I’m sure the shock of bright green hair didn’t help his public image either. While he may have left a bad taste in many mouths after his gross gifts, Leto seems to have been humbled to have been a part of bringing the Joker to life. Acting!

“You start to investigate and ask questions and sometimes you don’t find any answers,” he said. “You fail a lot. You stumble around in the dark. But you start to put together the pieces and get a sense of who this character is and, I have to say, it was the role of a lifetime.”

From the sounds of things, this will not be the Joker’s last foray into the ever growing DC cinematic universe, with Leto saying, “I feel like this film is an introduction to the Joker and I’m hopeful that we will see more to come.” If early reviews are anything to go on, that is a very good thing.

(H/T Entertainment Weekly)

Jared Leto Wants To Return As The Joker So He Can Face Off Against Ben Affleck’s Batman

$
0
0
gammasquadsuicidesquadjoker

Warner Bros.

You may be getting tired of hearing about all the strange, antisocial behavior Jared Leto engaged in in order to play The Joker in the upcoming Suicide Squad, but whether you agree with his method acting wackiness or not, there’s no denying Leto put a lot of effort into the role. It would be kind of a shame if the strange gifts, and other bad, bad things Leto has done were all in service of a character that only shows up once.

Well, apparently Leto agrees. In a recent interview, the current Joker says he’d like to return to the role, and even tangle with Batfleck himself…

“I hope Suicide Squad is an introduction and not the end! Because I could easily just play the Joker a couple more times and then retire. Because it’s so fulfilling and so creative and it’s so imaginative. It’s really difficult to think about doing anything else! I think it would be incredible to see Batman and the Joker go head-to-head! This Batman [Ben Affleck] and this Joker. I mean, I don’t know, that might be too much! But that would be fun.”

Batman and The Joker fighting? Whoa, slow down, Jordan Catalano! That’s too much! Seriously, though, as long as Suicide Squad isn’t a catastrophic flop, I’m sure Warner Bros. would be happy to have Leto play The Joker as many times as he wants to do it. Last we heard, Ben Affleck’s solo Bat movie may take place in Arkham Asylum, and both the Arkham Asylum video game and the Grant Morrison-penned graphic novel featured Joker as a sort of ringmaster to the mayhem, so we may see Leto return as Joker sooner than you might think.

Suicide Squad hits theaters this Friday, August 5.

(Via Comics Alliance)

Jared Leto Explains His Gifts To ‘Suicide Squad’ Co-Workers: ‘Human Meat Is Always A Great Gift’

$
0
0

suicide-squad-41_Warner-cropped

Warner

When Suicide Squad director David Ayer wasn’t busy screaming “F*ck Marvel,” he said people “kept their distance” from Jared Leto on the set because he was always in character. The method actor extraordinaire reportedly answered only to “Mr. J” and never broke character between scenes, met with psychopaths, growled at the makeup artists (who would “play back”), and tested the laugh on strangers in public places.

This pageantry extended to giving unsettling gifts, including rumors of sending anal beads to coworkers (Yeesh.), giving Margot Robbie a live rat, leaving a dead pig filled with bullets for the rest of the cast, and giving a live snake to Jimmy Fallon just yesterday. It got so out of hand Viola Davis thought about pepper spraying him.

We’re now hearing stories of Leto’s on-set gifts so often that it’s getting to the point where I eyeroll and think, “Guess I know what I’m writing about again today.”

So guess what I’m writing about again today.

In an interview with Fox 5 DC (video below), Leto clarifies why he chose the gifts he chose:

“The Joker loves to play games, he loves to manipulate, and that was part of the reason to do that. When you do give a gift to someone, even in real life, you think about, ‘What do I get them?,’ you think about who that person is to you, what would they like? So that immediately started to be really good homework for me. What do I give Deadshot? What’s my relationship with Deadshot? I gave Deadshot a briefcase full of bullets. It was kind of a message, it was kind of a threat, it was kind of a reminder. I wrote every character a note — a poem. What it did was that it started me on a journey into thinking what these people are, and it was a lot of fun.” (transcribed by Cinema Blend)

He also clarified that some of the rumors aren’t true, but he won’t debunk anything specific.

“I did give some nice gifts as well, but people don’t talk about that. And by the way, some of the strange ones aren’t even true. I’m not gonna say what’s true or what’s not, but the press love to have fun with it. There were some crazier ones and some nicer ones that I gave. I did give cupcakes.” (transcribed by Cinema Blend)

Don’t eat the cupcakes.

Here’s Fox 5 DC’s full 20-minute interview with the cast, if you’ve got that kind of time and want to hear Jared Leto utter the phrase “Human meat is always a great gift.” No, I’m not giving a context. It’s Jared Leto. There’s your context.

And speaking of gifts, Leto has been gifting fans with something a little more welcome than live animals and alleged used condoms. He’s been posting new pictures of Joker and Harley Quinn on social media:

Instagram Photo

Instagram Photo

Instagram Photo

(Via Cinema Blend, Fox 5 DC, Bleeding Cool, and The Hollywood Reporter)

Review: ‘Suicide Squad’ won’t save the world, but it just might save DC

$
0
0

Suicide Squad is not the darkest mainstream superhero comic book movie ever made, nor is it even the darkest live-action film featuring Batman ever made. However, it is gleefully nihilistic, and it takes a different approach to what has become a fairly familiar story form at this point, right at the moment when it feels like superhero movies either have to evolve or die. It is very much a David Ayer film, but he”s playing with some of the biggest icons of the DC universe in a way that no one else has so far in a feature film. It suggests just how much room there is for filmmakers to think outside the box as they bring these characters to life, in part because of the ways it succeeds and because of the ways it fails.

The film is set directly after the events of Batman v Superman: Dawn Of Justice, but all you really need to know about the previous film is that Superman died at the end of it. This is what pushes Amanda Waller (Viola Davis, who is delightfully cruel here) to try something crazy. She decides to put together a strike team headed by Rick Flag (Joel Kinnaman), made up of metahuman villains who have nothing left to lose. The film”s opening 20 minutes or so is almost entirely made up of introductory sequences for each of the villains (except for one, and I”ll explain what a mistake that is below when we get into more spoilery territory), and it”s some of the most fun stuff in the movie.

We also get to see a few of the big DC superheroes show up, but only as they were seen by the bad guys. There”s something fun about only seeing Batman show up in a story told by Deadshot (Will Smith), or in a revenge fantasy, and I enjoyed seeing Ezra Miller”s version of The Flash show up briefly to hand Boomerang (Jai Courtney) his ass. It”s clear from the build-up that Deadshot and Harley Quinn (Margot Robbie) are the main characters here, if only for sheer screen time, but I was surprised to see how important Diablo (Jay Hernandez) is to the film overall. Hernandez is largely underrated as an actor, and because he”s covered in tattoos here and unrecognizable, this could turn out to be a breakout performance for him. He vanishes into the character, and in doing so, he makes a vivid impression as someone who knows they”ve done great, unforgivable wrong in their lifetime. He”s determined to live a different life now and not do any more harm to anyone in the world.

Easier said than done, of course, and in the perfect version of the film, we”d see all of the characters genuinely struggling with their nature when offered a chance to do some sort of good in the world. That”s not really what David Ayer had in mind, though. Take his version of Harley Quinn, for example, because she is clearly the character that interested Ayer the most. She”s not really interested in reforming her ways at all, and she is still very much the Joker”s moll, and happily so. Her arc in the film has to do with whether or not she”s going to be reunited with Mr. J (Jared Leto) during her time in the field. The structure of the film has more to do with Escape From New York than The Dirty Dozen, and considering the judgment that was just handed down against Luc Besson for Lockdown, aka Escape From Earth, filmmakers should be careful about lifting that whole “You”ve got an explosive bolt we injected into your neck that we can set off any time you act up” device in the future.

Still, it”s the most logical explanation for how Flag is supposed to exert any control at all over his dangerous charges. In addition to Deadshot and Harley and Diablo and Boomerang, they”ve also got Killer Croc (Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje), an actual man-eater, and Slipknot (Adam Beach), whose power is apparently that he “can climb anything.” Flag”s got Katana (Karen Fukuhara) watching his back, and she seems fairly dangerous from the start, with a sword that holds the souls of all of the people who have been killed with the blade, but he”s still outnumbered. That constant tension drives the first 2/3 of the film, and in the best moments, it”s that friction between the various characters that makes the film interesting.

There”s no way to avoid some controversy when you”re dealing with Harley Quinn and The Joker onscreen together, and there”s a lot of pent-up expectations for fans of the characters precisely because we”ve never seen Harley as a real human live-action performance. Created originally for Batman: The Animated Series, Harley has evolved a great deal over the last quarter-century, and there”s an argument to be made that over the last decade in particular, she”s become a much richer and more empowered character as she”s taken steps away from simply being part of The Joker”s storyline. That”s not the version that Ayer used, though. He shows us glimpses of Harleen Quinzel when she was still just a psychiatrist at Arkham Asylum, slowly but surely falling in love with the Joker and his madness. There are three defining moments for her that are clear examples of the Joker crossing a line into pure abuser, but I can”t get overly outraged about it. He”s The Joker. He”s not remotely meant to be heroic or a role model of any kind. This is not a relationship anyone should emulate, and frankly, I don”t want to see a healthy, loving relationship between two brutally damaged sociopaths. Harley”s choice is made before she suffers a single bit of mistreatment at the Joker”s hands, and she leans into the violence, the horror, and the cruelty. She”s not especially funny in the film, because she always seems like she”s moments away from erupting into random carnage. I would never try to defend her costume in the film as something that is empowering or that is designed to do anything but elicit a sexual response, but the Harley that is presented here is someone who is well aware of the impact she has on a room, and the more skin she shows, the more she knows that the men in that room are sloppy and stupid and paying attention to the wrong things. It's not empowering; it's just power, raw and ugly. There”s a flashback to a crazy night out with the Joker and a guest appearance by Common that is like the worst night out with a couple of swingers you can imagine. These two are both rotten, and even in her few decent and human moments in this film, Harley is still driven by her own compulsive nature. She doesn”t need the Joker around to be a horrible human being, but when the two of them are together, they take it to another level.

The film is fairly simple in terms of story structure. Waller puts the team together just in case. One of the original members of the team is an ancient witch spirit named the Enchantress who has taken up residence in the body of archaeologist June Moon (Cara Delevingne), but the Enchantress has no interest in being controlled by anyone. She finds a way to slip free from Amanda Waller”s grasp, and that means Waller has to activate the rest of the team to effect a rescue of a mysterious asset from deep inside Midway City, where the Enchantress and her ancient spirit brother Incubus (Alain Chanoine) have begun to transform the world.

Oh, yes. Brace yourself. There is indeed a glowing doodad.

I”ve written repeatedly now about how worn out I am by this particular trope, and it seems to be getting even worse in blockbuster movies these days. You know what I”m talking about. The bad guys have a thingy. Doesn”t matter what it does. It glows. It sends up lights into the sky. It opens a portal or it sends out a signal or it changes something. But primarily, it glows. And the heroes have to either turn it off or they have to close it or they have to break it or they have to remove some essential piece, and in order to do that, they have to get to the rooftop. Or the basement. Or the moving car. Or the ancient landmark. It is incredibly familiar, and there”s a mechanical reason for that. It”s a very easy way to scatter the cast, giving them all tasks to accomplish, and then ultimately bringing them together again in the same place where the bad guys are making sure the doodad works. Are you in any way worried that the heroes in these movies aren”t going to accomplish these goals? Sure, the main characters in Suicide Squad are the “bad guys,” but they are the heroes in this particular template, and when you”re making something that is ostensibly designed to subvert the form, then you lapse into formula for the entire third act, it feels a lot less subversive.

So, yeah, I sat through a lot of the third act looking at it as a mechanical necessity. Oh, look, Incubus and Enchantress turn people into weird zombie creatures made of ash that die in a way that is safely PG-13 and that allows the movie to “kill” a lot of enemies without becoming too graphic for the audience that Warner Bros. is hoping to build for their DC Films. Oh, look, everyone gets their character epiphanies at the exact moment they”re supposed to in order to keep the movie rolling forward. It”s basically a checklist example of how these films are supposed to work these days.

But that doesn”t really do justice to the full experience of Suicide Squad, and there is enough that is weird and beautiful and vividly absurd that I am willing to shrug off the familiar and the formula. There”s that ferocious Margot Robbie performance, for one thing, and yes, Jared Leto”s work as The Joker is exciting and interesting. Set aside all the ridiculous stories you heard about how crazy he was on the set, though. They”ve spent the last year building up the hype around this performance, and based on everything they said, it sounds like he should show up covered in freshly-peeled human skin wearing a necklace made of faces. That is absolutely not what they did, though. Instead, it”s a human-looking take on The Joker that leans heavily on a fairly classic interpretation of his behavior. He is driven by one single thing in this film: he wants his girlfriend back, and he doesn”t care who he has to kill to make that happen. He hurts Harley repeatedly, and when things get tough, he takes care of himself first and foremost, and in doing so, he reveals just how incapable The Joker is of anything even slightly resembling love. He doesn”t love Harley. He needs her, though, because she is the perfect frame for the picture that he presents to the world. He needs her because he can”t imagine anyone else having her or keeping her from him, and because no one is allowed to tell him no. He is pure impulse, and seedy, and gross, and Leto seems to be delighted to be playing him. Will he make you forget every other Joker we”ve ever seen on film? Nope. And no one ever will. The Joker is one of those roles now that we”ll see dozens of actors take a shot at, and we”ll see dozens of interpretations, and most of them will fall roughly into line with what we expect, and they”ll be just fine. But when you”ve got Mark Hamill”s hundreds of hours of playing the part or Heath Ledger”s iconic eccentric take or Jack Nicholson”s giant hambone movie star energy or Cesar Romero”s cultured rot, you”ve got so many things that you”re already carrying into any new experience with a new actor playing the part. You can”t erase those. You can only build on them and add to them and try to find new colors in the writing and the performing, and Leto certainly accomplishes that.

Viola Davis lays down an interesting foundation here, and if Amanda Waller”s going to continue to show up in the DC universe in other films, it”ll be interesting to see how they use her. She is not DC's Nick Fury. She”s morally corrupted right away, and her decisions here don”t make her a hero. They don”t make her an authority that anyone should respect. Fear? Absolutely. But respect? No. No way. Will Smith is very good playing a guy who is, at heart, fairly rotten. He wants to be better than he is for the sake of his daughter, but he”s not, not really. Shailyn Pierre-Dixon plays his daughter Zoe, and Will Smith is always good onscreen when he”s got a kid to play off of. When you see them together, you understand why Deadshot is starting to regret his choices. He is who he is, though, and even at the end of the film, he”s not a hero now. That”s important, and it”s part of what I like about what Ayer did. One character has a real transformative experience, but he”s not out to redeem everyone.

The film”s got a rotten elegance thanks to the cinematography by Roman Vasyanov, who also did strong work for Ayer on Fury, his WWII film, and Steven Price does really strong work as a composer here, on par with the things he”s done like Gravity or Attack The Block or The World”s End. There”s a pretty ferocious sense of energy to the film”s first 2/3, and the weirder it gets, the better it is. When it starts to falter into something more conventional, it”s disappointing, but there are some strong choices near the end of the movie that suggest that this larger DC universe could be coming into focus.

There”s one giant misstep that I feel may have been handled better in an earlier cut, and it”s a spoiler, but one that ultimately means nothing. Adam Beach is in all of the key art for the film, and they”ve made sure to have Slipknot present in much of the advertising. Almost as soon as the team hits the street, Slipknot tries to make an escape, and Flag sets off the explosive charge, killing Slipknot instantly. All told, Adam Beach is onscreen for less than eight minutes, and while I like the idea of killing one of the members of the team immediately for effect, they screwed it up by cutting any introduction they shot for him. Everyone else gets a full sequence establishing who they are and what they can do, but not Slipknot. As a result, his death is a non-issue. He”s an extra, instead of being a shocking surprise, and I wonder if that was an edit that happened during post-production or if that was always the way it was designed.

Whatever the case, when Suicide Squad gets it right, I like it a lot, and it gets it right often enough that I like a lot of it. It won”t deliver the decisive knockout blow that ends the DC/Marvel rivalry that the most impassioned fans seem to want, but nothing will. What it does is make a case for how much fun this universe can be when the characters are embraced fully and when a filmmaker seems excited by the opportunities afforded by those characters. Lots of superhero films struggle to make us like their heroes even half as much as we end up liking the villains here, and that alone is a pretty canny trick, one that I suspect audiences will enjoy quite a bit.

Suicide Squad is in theaters everywhere this Friday.

Jared Leto Says Playing The Joker Changed Him Forever. Damn, That’s Edgy

$
0
0

suicide-squad-joker.jpg

Warner Bros.

With Suicide Squad opening in just a couple of days (our reviews here and here), we’re winding down on how many times we have to hear about how edgy (so edgy) Jared Leto is as the Joker. But we can’t help returning to that well after reading what Leto said in a black carpet interview with Screen Rant at the film’s premiere.

“Yeah… [the Joker] changed me forever.” (Via)

“This is a character that… has absolutely no rules. You can do whatever the hell you want to [and] there is no good or bad take. There is no right or wrong answer. [That’s] really really rare and intoxicating.” (Via)

SO EDGY.

“The character is completely insane [and a] madman with green hair and a great smile. I think the Joker is so much fun. That is what is infectious about [him]… When I got asked to play the joker I didn’t really have a big gregarious laugh personally, so I was a bit terrified. This is a guy who’s laughing, and is laughing in a way that is very unique. So I worked on it, worked on it, worked on it and came up with something that is… very strange, I have to admit.” (Via)

Interesting.

Did you guys hear? Jared Leto is so method. And so edgy. Total edgelord.

(Via Screen Rant, BuzzFeed, and Fark)

Jared Leto Claims ‘A Lot’ Of ‘Suicide Squad’ Joker Scenes Were Left On The Cutting Room Floor

$
0
0
gammasquadsuicidesquadjoker2

Warner Bros.

Based on the pre-release hype, you’d be forgiven for thinking Jared Leto’s Joker is the star of Suicide Squad. He was all over the trailers, and nobody could shut up about the rather extreme lengths he went to portray the character. The role was so monumental it changed Leto’s life forever! So, it certainly came as a surprise when reviewers revealed Joker barely does anything in Suicide Squad. The role is basically just a glorified cameo.

Well, according to Leto’s interview with the French website Telestar (uncovered by Cosmic Book News), there were plenty of Joker shenanigans left on the cutting room floor:

“Yeah, there are a lot of scenes that didn’t make it to the final film. Hopefully they’ll see the light of day. Who knows.”

Oh, I’m pretty sure I know. If Warner Bros. doesn’t release a Suicide Squad: JOKER CUT on Blu-Ray, I’ll eat Jared Leto’s fedora. In the same interview, Leto also reiterated that he’ll be returning as the Joker, because come on, all the method-y madness wasn’t done for a mere cameo:

“I learned a lot about the Joker the more that I worked on the character, and I think that’s probably going to continue to happen. It’s the most fun I’ve ever had with a character.”

Next time Leto plays the Joker, hopefully Warner Bros. keeps the hype and hyperbole at a slightly more reasonable level. The largely-Jokerless Suicide Squad hits theaters tomorrow.

(Via Cosmic Book News)


Video review: Jared Leto and Margot Robbie in ‘Suicide Squad’

$
0
0

How well do Jared Leto and Margot Robbie take on iconic villains the Joker and Harley Quinn? What sets apart the Suicide Squad Joker from the ones that came before?

In this Fandemonium segment, your host Miri Jedeikin and HitFix critic Drew McWeeny offer their reviews of this depiction of the Clown Prince of Crime and Dr. Harleen Quinzel.

Drew also walks us through how Harley Quinn became a fan-favorite character after her debut in Batman: The Animated Series

Check it out in the view below, then scroll down to the bottom of this post for Drew and Miri”s full video review of Suicide Squad

Follow Miri and Drew on Twitter here:

@mirithejedi 

@DrewAtHitFix

How upset are we that ‘Suicide Squad’ fooled us about its true villain?

$
0
0

Warning: major spoilers about Suicide Squad lie ahead.

Suicide Squad is full of bad guys, but we need to talk about the real bad guy in Suicide Squad.

descriptor

No, it”s not Kevin we need to talk about (who is decidedly more frightening and more memorable than the actual villains in Suicide Squad. And though Kevin”s counterpart, Barry Allen, made a characteristically blink-and-you”ll-miss-it cameo in the movie).

We need to talk about the true antagonists of the latest DC movie, the ones our rogues gallery of anti-heroes must battle.

Enchantress and Incubus.

descriptor
Photo credit: Warner Bros.

Did you know they”d be the antagonists of this movie before walking into the theater? I didn”t.

Warner Bros. kept Enchantress/Dr. June Moone largely out of Suicide Squad“s trailers, and it”s not because of any backlash about the character”s costume. It turns out she”s the antagonist here, along with the help of her brother (or “brother”), Incubus, and that was a secret kept hidden until you were seated in the movie theater (though some folks figured it out ahead of time).

Before seeing the movie, best guess at who the Suicide Squad would be facing off with in their movie? The Joker. He would have been a far more interesting adversary, but, alas, Jared Leto”s take on the Clown Prince of Crime was barely in the film. It”s almost difficult to really assess his performance, let alone compare it to Jack Nicholson”s and Heath Ledger”s as we”re so inclined to do, since Leto had relatively little screen time.

Instead, Enchantress and Incubus are the ones wrecking havoc, and quite frankly, it”s boring. Uninteresting villains is something that”s plagued both Marvel and DC movies throughout their history (with notable exceptions including Loki, The Joker, and Gene Hackman“s Lex Luthor). DC Comics tends to have the edge with the most iconic, recognizable villains to supply from its panels, but it”s up to the screenwriters to deliver a compelling and believable onscreen antagonist.

What Suicide Squad gives us instead is a run-of-the-mill villain who wants to rule the world and is spouting out the typical “join me or die” stuff. Enchantress also has the world threatened, yet again, by a “glowing doodad,” which is all too common a trope in superhero movies, as my colleague Drew McWeeny pointed out. Not helping matters is the fact that Cara Delevingne just isn”t as strong of an actress as most of her co-stars.

At 6,313-year-old Enchantress” side is Incubus, an obscure demon character who possesses a man named Larry Eden in the Suicide Squad comics. This demonic entity pops up in the comics just a few times in DC”s long history. With less history to him, there was more room for David Ayer to play, but the most interesting thing about this monstrous force ended up being how his blasts of destruction appeared to leave walls and aircraft carriers in crystalized pieces (which, yes, looked pretty rad).

Now, the stuff with Rick Flag being torn between helping Moone with this evil trapped inside her and obeying Amanda Waller”s orders – that”s interesting. Enchantress also provided my favorite effect in the film, the moment when Enchantress” hand reaches up and clutches Moone”s, then transforms the young archaeologist into the sorceress with a flip over of her hand. But once we get to the big showdown in the Midway City train station, we”re watching uninteresting, unoriginal villain rehash.

Christopher Nolan gave us much more memorable, sensical, fleshed-out villains in Cillian Murphy”s Scarecrow, Marion Cotillard”s Talia Al Ghul, Aaron Eckhart”s Two-Face, Tom Hardy”s Bane, and, of course, Ledger”s Joker. Zack Snyder has already delivered a compelling villain in his interpretation of Ozymandias in Watchmen. Michael Shannon”s Zod was okay. So we know Snyder”s capable. Warner Bros. and its creative talent need to step it up with their next movies when it comes to villains. Wonder Woman, Justice League, you got this.

In Theory: Is The Joker Really Robin?

$
0
0

Everyone loves a good conspiracy theory, as implausible as it may be. It turns out Suicide Squad is not exempt from this fascination.

There”s a rumor floating out there that The Joker is actually Batman”s one-time sidekick Robin (f.k.a. Jason Todd) returning as a bad guy. Robin was killed by The Joker in the Batman comic “A Death in the Family” in 1988.  

But Suicide Squad director David Ayer dismissed this idea in a July interview with WSVN-TV. He said, “It ain”t the case. He”s not.” But backstories being what they are, you never know.

Check out the video below or above and make up your own mind…

Exclusive: Listen to a track from the ‘Suicide Squad’ Arkham Asylum scene

$
0
0

Queen, The Rolling Stones, Kanye West, and other popular music artists largely define the sound of Suicide Squad. But holding the movie together in between the rock “n” roll and rap is the film”s score, composed by Steven Price.

When Price visited the anti-superhero movie”s Toronto set, director David Ayer talked to his composer about the characters a lot.

“He described them all really strongly, individually, as these outsiders,” Price recalled, talking with HitFix this morning on a phone call from his native U.K.

He created individual character themes that “all relate to the main Squad theme. They would find their home musically as their characters did.”

A lot of the score is rather traditional orchestral movie music that sets itself apart from the radio-friendly tunes of the rest of the movie.

Price didn”t want his score “to feel like it was coming from a different planet” from the rest of the movie”s music, but he also recognized that it “was going to be doing a different job.”

So he brought some electric guitar into the score, playing around with feedback to add in some edgy texture.

“There”s this very high sort of chiming pluck that was associated with the Joker, which is kind of a guitar string tuned way too high to the point of snapping and played really off the fingerboard,” Price explained of his sound for the iconic villain. “It made this sort of really weird, tense noise, which we then processed afterwards. The sound is like this is something that might snap at any moment, which is kind of how the Joker always appeared to us.”

For the Joker and Harley Quinn”s shared themes, Ayer directed Price to capture “this broken, doomed romance,” the composer said.

You can hear some of Price”s sound for the Joker and Harley Quinn, along with the 40-person choir assembled for the score recorded at Warner Bros., in the exclusive track below, titled “Arkham Asylum.” It”s from a scene in the film when Dr. Harleen Quinn meets with the Joker while he”s imprisoned at the famed DC Comics psychiatric hospital.

Listen to the HitFix-exclusive track below.

Suicide Squad is in theaters now. The motion picture score album will be available to download and stream on Monday, August 8.

David Bowie Was Apparently An Inspiration For Jared Leto’s Joker

$
0
0
diagonal-image

RCA/Warner Bros

Noted fashionplate Jared Leto shared that he pulled from one pop culture icon in his bid to portray another. The Thirty Seconds to Mars frontman revealed to NME that his take on The Joker owes a debt to David Bowie.

“I spoke to a writer and we discussed David Bowie a bit, not necessarily the music of David, but his class, his elegance, his timelessness,” explained the Oscar winner. “I don’t wanna say who the guy was, but he’s a famous writer in the world of DC [Comics]. Bowie was definitely one of the people we spoke about.”

This may come as a bit of a shock considering that detractors have likened Leto’s Joker aura to more of a middle tier act at Taste of Chaos stylewise. Members of the pro-Leto camp would probably concede that “Bowie” may not have been the first thing on their mind when being introduced to the DC Comics standard for pure evil.

“I think David Bowie is probably an inspiration for almost anything you could do creatively,” added Leto.

After months and months of promotional buildup, the general public can now form a proper verdict on Jared Leto’s Joker with Suicide Squad finally arriving in a multiplex near you. (They have popcorn there!)

(Via NME)

Viewing all 228 articles
Browse latest View live