Analyzing Evil: The Joker From The Dark Knight

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  • čas přidán 7. 07. 2021
  • Welcome everyone to the thirty-sixth episode of Analyzing Evil! Our feature villain for this video is The Joker from The Dark Knight. I hope you enjoy, and thanks for watching. If you have any feedback or questions feel free to let me know below!
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    Video Edited by Stujthevamp. Check him out here: / stujthevamp
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    #Joker #DarkKnight #Batman
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Komentáře • 4,1K

  • @haustyl12
    @haustyl12 Před 2 lety +1725

    “It’s not about the money, it’s about sending a message.”
    “Everything burns”

    • @commentcopbadge6665
      @commentcopbadge6665 Před 2 lety +13

      Even water.

    • @jeremybrooks335
      @jeremybrooks335 Před 2 lety +29

      Best quote from the movie. Period.

    • @monsterinhead214
      @monsterinhead214 Před 2 lety +17

      I'm only burning my haff.

    • @originalketchup7498
      @originalketchup7498 Před 2 lety +20

      Does no one ever notice that the joker holds the hammer back with 2 face? He was at no risk, it was just another game.

    • @FaceFamous
      @FaceFamous Před 2 lety +6

      @@originalketchup7498 yea I peep that.👍 He's always ahead of the game

  • @grandadmiralzaarin4962
    @grandadmiralzaarin4962 Před 2 lety +2804

    "If I have to have a backstory...I'd prefer it to be multiple choice."- Joker

    • @Cegorachthelaughinggod
      @Cegorachthelaughinggod Před 2 lety +95

      The Killing Joke

    • @EMG_Iman
      @EMG_Iman Před 2 lety +73

      Shoutout to Mark Hamil

    • @Paul-bi4wj
      @Paul-bi4wj Před 2 lety +22

      Ahhh y e s the one time joker broke the bat... Or so we think.

    • @Cegorachthelaughinggod
      @Cegorachthelaughinggod Před 2 lety +6

      @@Paul-bi4wj Yes-it was left deliciously ambiguous x}

    • @grandadmiralzaarin4962
      @grandadmiralzaarin4962 Před 2 lety +37

      @Peppi Roni Uh...you know this is the Dark Knight Joker in the video and my quote is from the Killing Joke, right? Also, while I didn't care for the latest Joker film myself, it's more of a critique on the failings of society and mental health programs from that era than a comic book film, Phoenix gave an incredible performance regardless of your personal opinions on the film itself, drastically losing weight and sleep for the role.

  • @JoshuaCastillo6309
    @JoshuaCastillo6309 Před rokem +785

    “I believe that what doesn’t kill you makes you… stranger.”
    He’s suffered trauma of some sort.

    • @lukejones0826
      @lukejones0826 Před rokem +104

      Hm yes the floor here is made out of floor

    • @sludgerat666
      @sludgerat666 Před rokem +22

      Great observation

    • @godisdeadist
      @godisdeadist Před 10 měsíci +13

      To be honest, I think that phrase could just as well apply to apathy. Whatever doesn't kill you (or stimulate you in any way) simple makes you .. stranger.

    • @user-mj9lq9vp3w
      @user-mj9lq9vp3w Před 8 měsíci +3

      ​@@lukejones0826I love you 😂

    • @makisjnx007
      @makisjnx007 Před 7 měsíci +2

      Or not… Thats the Joker point

  • @raged_phx6440
    @raged_phx6440 Před 2 lety +1142

    Fun fact: In this movie, joker constantly licking his lips was ledger annoyed by a problem with face prosthetics, but it eventually became part of the character

    • @Senate300
      @Senate300 Před rokem +170

      The constant licking of the lips gave the Joker an animalistic reptilian quality.

    • @swagit4174
      @swagit4174 Před rokem +73

      Not reptilian but more of a dog. Remember what he said like a dog that doesn't know what to do with freedom when he caught one.

    • @vercingetorixavernian8978
      @vercingetorixavernian8978 Před 11 měsíci +70

      It’s actually a long term side-effect of schizophrenia medicine 💊 Ledger did his homework

    • @generalerica4123
      @generalerica4123 Před 10 měsíci +37

      @@vercingetorixavernian8978I always thought he was licking his scars, keeping them moist so that they don’t hurt as much.

    • @jacobcobb731
      @jacobcobb731 Před 9 měsíci +11

      it was to reapply his scaring make up

  • @BingFox
    @BingFox Před 2 lety +4110

    Something that always stood out to me about this version of the Joker is that despite all the horrifying things he does, profanity isn't one of those things.

    • @misanthropicservitorofmars2116
      @misanthropicservitorofmars2116 Před 2 lety +421

      Normal people swear, that’s why.

    • @malikevans2615
      @malikevans2615 Před 2 lety +97

      @@misanthropicservitorofmars2116 ...what? That makes no sense everybody curses sane or not

    • @mc_zittrer8793
      @mc_zittrer8793 Před 2 lety +244

      @@malikevans2615 Not necessarily. Neurosis is weird like that.

    • @malikevans2615
      @malikevans2615 Před 2 lety +17

      @@mc_zittrer8793 ah OK

    • @Mebble
      @Mebble Před 2 lety +375

      @@malikevans2615 I think it's because using curse words is a way for people to use "powerful" words to give greater impact to what you're saying but Joker doesn't need that to say his points or be terrifying

  • @Adrian21
    @Adrian21 Před 2 lety +3843

    "I'm not a monster, I'm just ahead of the curve." ~Joker

  • @6266jamal
    @6266jamal Před 2 lety +1361

    “You’re crazy”
    “I’m not….no I’m not” such an underrated line

    • @dancooke8811
      @dancooke8811 Před rokem +30

      I've literally heard Joker say he was 🤪 in The Killing Joke

    • @reinaldocaraballo4657
      @reinaldocaraballo4657 Před rokem

      The way he says it it is utterly perfectly like he adlibs so much of this performance even Nolan said that it was just him being him being freelancing nuance just adding things body movements characteristics the eyes looking like a cycle looking normal looking angry looking sad he could don't he's so versatile and the way he says it if you look at it the way his eyes change and when they shift over to gamble it's like I hate you I'm going to kill you like it's an insult to tell him that he's crazy how dare you say that I'm crazy I'm not crazy you're crazy like it disgust him to even be identified like that I love that and nice of you to pick that up

    • @JayCity10
      @JayCity10 Před rokem +15

      Let's be honest, I never really cared for them, the innocent or otherwise.
      -Joker Lannister

    • @minnalmurali3102
      @minnalmurali3102 Před rokem +5

      Chicanery

    • @erikpuckett7485
      @erikpuckett7485 Před 11 měsíci +22

      the joker from the killing joke and from the dark knight are two different jokers.

  • @keben5400
    @keben5400 Před 2 lety +1229

    Out of every version of the Joker, this is the only one who hates being called insane.

    • @IncredibleFulk1
      @IncredibleFulk1 Před rokem +120

      My memory can be off but I remember Jack Nicholson’s Joker seemed a bit annoyed at Vikki Vale calling him insane with his reply
      “I thought I was a Pisces” sounding a bit annoyed.
      It’s been a long time though.

    • @BoulderBoulder_
      @BoulderBoulder_ Před rokem +36

      @@IncredibleFulk1 no ur right Heath tried to make his joker similar to Jack’s joker to an extent and mentioned this

    • @ZoeSimza
      @ZoeSimza Před rokem +98

      I think that's done specifically to show how insane he really is. It's always the craziest people who think they're completely sane and rational, and they hate being told that they're deranged.

    • @jamesjoy7547
      @jamesjoy7547 Před rokem +30

      @@ZoeSimza yes, from his point of view, he's the reasonable one. It's everyone else who's crazy

    • @sabir1208
      @sabir1208 Před rokem +11

      ​@@ZoeSimza sounds like my mom

  • @Aaron-mj9ie
    @Aaron-mj9ie Před 2 lety +3696

    Heath ledger did an 11/10 job of this role.

    • @ClassicKrusty
      @ClassicKrusty Před 2 lety +110

      Yup, we lost a TRUE superstar in Heath.😭

    • @gabbyaoquadrado6870
      @gabbyaoquadrado6870 Před 2 lety +110

      1000/10

    • @thetribalist6923
      @thetribalist6923 Před 2 lety +42

      @@gabbyaoquadrado6870 still an understatement.

    • @FriendlyBatDoom
      @FriendlyBatDoom Před 2 lety +30

      1000000/10 let's be honest.

    • @hanashbinasif2586
      @hanashbinasif2586 Před 2 lety +27

      100000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000/10

  • @romanumeralz
    @romanumeralz Před 2 lety +2472

    “If you’re good at something, never do it for FREE.”
    - 🃏

    • @word69420
      @word69420 Před 2 lety +80

      “Oh, Joker. That was so good.”
      “That’ll be $20, Batman”

    • @Nicholas_Chen_
      @Nicholas_Chen_ Před 2 lety +31

      'You are a garbage that kills for money!'

    • @Mackenzie002
      @Mackenzie002 Před 2 lety +39

      @@Nicholas_Chen_ "how about a magic trick?"

    • @frmyt1135
      @frmyt1135 Před 2 lety +8

      Based

    • @ryanm.8720
      @ryanm.8720 Před 2 lety +15

      “If you’re good at something, never do it."
      - [YTP] Batman Is Not the Hero Gotham Deserves

  • @PFCwasted
    @PFCwasted Před 2 lety +2431

    watching this as a veteran with PTSD, ive held the theory he served for awhile. Saying "when soldiers die no one cares" is...rather specific in my opinion. It appears the joker has recieved the heart of darkness, followed every step.

    • @theahearn2658
      @theahearn2658 Před 2 lety +4

      When soldiers die nobody can freaks out because it's all according to plan. If I say a game bangers going to get shot nobody freaks out. But when I say I'm going to kill one Teensy little Mayor everybody lose their mind. People expect soldiers to die or at least come back broken. Which is a sad statement in itself being the son of a veteran. But nobody expects someone actually follow through with killing a Mayor because they know how much trouble that would bring down on their heads. Also, thank you for your service. I'm sure people saying that gets kind of old and stale but it means a lot to some of us.

    • @Khoros-Mythos
      @Khoros-Mythos Před rokem +34

      I don't think so, just look at how poorly he handles firearms. I don't think he correctly uses any weapon in the entire movie.

    • @RafitoOoO
      @RafitoOoO Před rokem +46

      I think it's not specific, he just means soldiers are expected to die for others so that's why no one panics when one does.

    • @charliemcpherson6299
      @charliemcpherson6299 Před rokem +123

      I have a pet theory that he was in Special Forces. Possibly Green Berets, CIA, one of those things the Pentagon wanna keep off the books. Secretive shit, not what they play on CNN or anything. Joker is obviously skilled in urban war tactics, interrogation, explosives and weapons. He might have been sent on a mission expected to perish in execution of that mission, but survived and returned against all odds, only to find he had been erased from the system. Thence comes the Joker, hysterically hell-bent on bringing down the society that had disavowed him.

    • @lazarussolomon3541
      @lazarussolomon3541 Před rokem +2

      @@charliemcpherson6299 that might make sense. Maybe he is one of those CIA handmade psycho terrorists, like the ones from the wars in Latin America. What if the cia or another organization made him this way as someone to cripple the enemy within which is why (as the former commenter put it) while he shows a great deal of knowledge on some militaristic things like tactics and guerrilla warfare He also has a bit of amateur too, like him miss handling firearms. He was likely deemed a failure and so the makers took him out of the system but he managed to escape. And that could be why he is so bitter at society

  • @GhostInPajamas
    @GhostInPajamas Před 2 lety +787

    The most fascinating thing about heaths joker is he doesn’t even seem like a person, he’s like some cosmic entity, an unknowable force of nature. It’s hard to comprehend that beneath the makeup is an actual human that eats, sleeps, and grew up from infancy. I want to see how he acts when he’s alone

    • @jamesjoy7547
      @jamesjoy7547 Před rokem +114

      I imagine when he's alone he sits and stares in silence
      His Joker persona is performative, something he does to prove a point
      Inside, whoever he once was is...gone

    • @mutegamer6823
      @mutegamer6823 Před 11 měsíci +11

      It's just a fucking movie it ain't that deep😂

    • @indio4-215
      @indio4-215 Před 10 měsíci

      ​@@mutegamer6823 In YOUR flimsy opinion, it's "just a fucking movie", but to people with actual braincells who appreciate works of art like the Dark Knight, it's far more than simply a film with real depth to it that makes one contemplate. Now, if you're done posting idiotic, juvenile comments (emojis included) with nothing in the way of substance, see yourself out.

    • @stonedjamie
      @stonedjamie Před 10 měsíci +88

      @@mutegamer6823 there's nothing wrong with theorizing about a movie

    • @jacobjonesofmagna
      @jacobjonesofmagna Před 10 měsíci +27

      ​@@mutegamer6823you're missing out

  • @sevenproxies4255
    @sevenproxies4255 Před 2 lety +2567

    I don't think The Joker himself really knows how he got those scars.
    The problem with insanity is that your own memory can become an unreliable narrator.

    • @naughtybear2187
      @naughtybear2187 Před 2 lety +195

      Ripped that straight out of the killing joke you cheeky bastard.

    • @shhs1227
      @shhs1227 Před 2 lety +94

      @@naughtybear2187 yeah but it's also just true

    • @GoldAk47
      @GoldAk47 Před 2 lety +10

      Sharp hamburger

    • @jont5020
      @jont5020 Před 2 lety +23

      @@shiningfaceofluzon5594 I always thought that was the real story, too. Body language aside, it just seemed more believable.

    • @shiningfaceofluzon5594
      @shiningfaceofluzon5594 Před 2 lety +5

      @@jont5020 there was another guy who came up with this whole other theory that both are true; happening at different points of his life and that he was the comedian from watchmen before taking up the joker persona.

  • @riteshjadhav1382
    @riteshjadhav1382 Před 2 lety +409

    Jack Nicholson's joker: Gangster
    Heath Ledger's joker: Anarchist
    Joaquin Phoenix joker: Broken Man

    • @mstone9364
      @mstone9364 Před 2 lety +134

      Jared Leto’s Joker: A Joke

    • @Chris_Troxler
      @Chris_Troxler Před 2 lety +18

      @@mstone9364 🤣🤣🤣👍🏾

    • @Dagothownsneravar
      @Dagothownsneravar Před 2 lety +41

      Jared leto's joker: 40 year old white mumble rapper E-boy Joker

    • @MrRjh63
      @MrRjh63 Před 2 lety +50

      William Dafoe: The Joker we never got sadly.

    • @Maradala
      @Maradala Před 2 lety +13

      Yea Jared leto's joker reminds me of the rapper 69. Look him up, and you'll understand.
      "I know the squealers when I see them, and...-->"

  • @DashXero
    @DashXero Před 2 lety +1231

    My theory on the Joker's scars is simple: He was lying to everyone. However, I suspect he would have told Batman the truth.

    • @theahearn2658
      @theahearn2658 Před 2 lety +98

      I truly agree with this statement. I think maybe he put some Speckles of Truth in there but not the truth the people seem to think. For instance about the wife getting in deep and she got her face cut up like that so he did it to make her happy. I think his dad did cut his face like that. Because look at how Jagged some of the scars are look how the the tissue where the cuts are is just a weird bubbly groody looking melted mess. It's like his dad took a lighter to his face and did it to cauterize his wound.

    • @lukehobbs3177
      @lukehobbs3177 Před 2 lety +72

      I wonder if he has memory loss and he himself does not even know where the scars come from

    • @thesecondYouTube
      @thesecondYouTube Před 2 lety +1

      He kind of told Harvey Dent the truth.
      'Gangbangers and truck load of soldiers.'
      Edit:This what he might have told Batman.
      He grew up with gangbangers with all it's dangers and got cut in a revenge attack after knocking off a fierce rival gang or something similar.
      Later on in life he is recruited into a special op with the CIA bla bla bla. The other side of his face was injured from being with that truck load of soldiers.

    • @futurestoryteller
      @futurestoryteller Před rokem +75

      I always liked that when he tells Gamble how he got his scars he tells a very plausible story, but he sounds like he's making it up as he goes along, then he tells Dawes a much more unlikely story, but he tells it straight through like he doesn't even need to think about it

    • @BigBeefNCheddar
      @BigBeefNCheddar Před rokem +45

      I disagree. Throughout the entire movie he is attempting to demonstrate that everything is subjective: there is no absolute purity, no objective morality, and no objective truth. If everything is subjective and conditional, the truth is whatever he says it is when he says it. What actually happened to him is meaningless, as he is beyond our notions of objective truth. Something happened to him, but the only truth behind his scars is what he says happened to him at that moment he says it.
      To extrapolate, we continuously recount our warped memories that often differ significantly from the truth. What the Joker is doing is taking this to its extreme-if we are warping our perception and recollection of the past (even if we are only doing so unknowingly), what does it matter if we continuously just create new mythos for ourselves as needed? We are never telling the objective truth.

  • @harrisonmccartney4878
    @harrisonmccartney4878 Před 7 měsíci +30

    5 things stick out to me about this Joker's origin.
    1.) His card reveal at the end of Batman Begins is sorted in evidence by a cop named J. Kerr (Joe Kerr being a known alias of Joker).
    2.) Joker's first line is "I believe that whatever doesn't kill you simply makes you...stranger". This implies that something, at some point, tried to kill him but didn't, and this led to him being the way he is.
    3.) Joker claims in his first origin story that his father was an abusive alcoholic, yet gets mad at a man who says "We're not intimidated by thugs" for reminding him of his father, implying that Joker's dad was probably more of an upstanding citizen than he is willing to admit.
    4.) Joker says in an offhand line during the Harvey Dent truck chase "I like this job, I like it." which is kind of a weird thing for him to say. The themes of the first and last movies are of the League of Shadows trying to destroy Gotham, and this is also the aim of the Joker. By calling his actions here a "job" is it possible that he was a special agent of the League created specifically to fight Batman at his own game after Ra's Al Ghul's death?
    5.) Joker harbors strong opinions about the police and corruption in Gotham ("Their morals, their code, is a bad joke, dropped at the first sign of trouble.") Most of his primary targets are either members of the mob, who control the police, or the police and justice system itself. He's not averse to killing innocent people in the process, but they're only caught in his crossfire. His real targets are law enforcement and the mob. With this knowledge and the fact that Joker's father was apparently the kind of man who would stand up to "thugs" (like an upstanding cop), J. Kerr being the name on the evidence bag, AND Joker's statement about his survival of what didn't kill him making him "stranger", bearing obvious scars from some botched attempt on his life, I think it's likely that Joker is actually a former cop who was genuine about fighting crime at one time, only for his earnestness to nearly cost him his life when he tried to weed out the corrupt elements in Gotham's police force. This explains why he was able to fill out evidence correctly, and he also knows the procedure for the 21 gun salute, and even has a police uniform and knows about the mob's connections within the police. It explains why he targets the mob and Gotham's police indiscriminately, and why he wants Batman to join him. They have the same goals of ridding Gotham of crime, but Batman is still playing by the rules and allies himself with the police, whom the Joker knows better than to trust. In the end, despite sending Harvey Dent into a psychotic break, leaving dead civilians in his wake, and forcing Batman to take the fall for Harvey's crimes, the Joker actually succeeds in eliminating every boss in the mob, and killing most of the corrupt elements in law enforcement. Whatever revenge he was seeking, he apparently got it by the end of the film, as we learn in Dark Knight Rises the Dent Act helped eradicate organized crime.

  • @DirtySouthJR
    @DirtySouthJR Před 2 lety +340

    "Do I look like a man with a plan? I'm like a dog chasing cars, I wouldn't know what to do if I caught it"
    The Joker uses his bizarre appearance and mannerisms to lull people into a sense of thinking he is purely insane and not a clever mastermind.

    • @WallKenshiro
      @WallKenshiro Před 2 lety +20

      The devil is a liar.

    • @Nicholas_Chen_
      @Nicholas_Chen_ Před 2 lety +8

      Batman as Bruce Wayne: No you’re not.

    • @yoshijb9428
      @yoshijb9428 Před 2 lety +20

      But his is completely insane but who's to say that he could also be a brilliant criminal. Insanity is not based on IQ. That's what beautiful about his character. He understands human psychology. So he flexed his wit through his many different "masks" of insanity he may be percieved to "wear."

    • @HoradricGuitar
      @HoradricGuitar Před 2 lety +8

      That may be true. However, if it was, then why did he feel insulted when the criminal called him crazy in the beginning? If appearing crazy was his objective, that is.

    • @carloseduardolugon-moulin2211
      @carloseduardolugon-moulin2211 Před 2 lety +3

      He is insanity incarnate, but being insane does not mean dumb, afterall many genius individuals were insanes take Goebbels as an exemple

  • @tetrapharmakos8868
    @tetrapharmakos8868 Před 2 lety +567

    As Joker says in The Killing Joke, the difference between him, Batman, and the rest of the world is just one bad day.

    • @gamenerd323
      @gamenerd323 Před 2 lety +40

      I like that you brought up ‘one bad day.’ That’s a recurring theme with the joker. The idea that he was a relatively average person but due to hardship, poverty, mental illness, betrayal and trauma (depending on which version of joker) he became a villain. This is what he tried to do with Barbara Gordon and in other depictions, Jason Todd.

    • @seekingabsolution1907
      @seekingabsolution1907 Před 2 lety +11

      Um. The ending of the killing joke was that he was wrong about this. His attempts to break Gordon and Batman didn't ultimately work.

    • @diogenesstudent5585
      @diogenesstudent5585 Před 2 lety +15

      @@seekingabsolution1907 people who start sentences with um are annoying.

    • @jonttopia
      @jonttopia Před 2 lety +4

      But Joker was wrong in the killing joke, one bad day didn't cause Gordon or Batman to become like him.

    • @tetrapharmakos8868
      @tetrapharmakos8868 Před 2 lety +10

      @@jonttopia But one bad day was the impetus for both Batman and The Joker's transformations. Fiction doesn't only have one point, unless it is bad fiction. Good fiction is nuanced and open to interpretation on multiple levels.

  • @aboynamedRufio
    @aboynamedRufio Před rokem +284

    Joker only wants it to SEEM like he’s doing random things, when he’s planned everything out medical meticulously. Case in point: when he goes to see Dent in the hospital and puts the revolver to his head, his thumb is still on the hammer. Even if Harvey pulled the trigger, nothing would have happened. He just needed to have Harvey think he was in control. This is similar to how Harvey uses his coin; only he knows its double headed (besides Rachel). He too gives the illusion of choice

    • @natedawg593
      @natedawg593 Před 9 měsíci +4

      You can’t stop a gun from firing by having your finger on the hammer. There’s too much force behind it if the trigger gets pulled.

    • @billymays__2839
      @billymays__2839 Před 9 měsíci +4

      @@natedawg593 you can, just not in this case, if you wanted to uncock a hammer of a revolver you can by having pressure on the hammer, pulling the trigger so the hammer uncocks and then slowly lowering it down to reset it.

    • @jarnodatema
      @jarnodatema Před 7 měsíci +5

      Also when he’s giving his speech to the ferry’s, he’s reading from a note

    • @cht2162
      @cht2162 Před 4 měsíci

      Joker is fate personified.

    • @afatcatfromsweden
      @afatcatfromsweden Před 3 měsíci +2

      @@natedawg593 you’re wrong. They’re designed so that you’re supposed to be able to stop it with your thumb, that way you can actually uncock it by pulling the trigger.

  • @vincentshadetree
    @vincentshadetree Před 2 lety +1501

    The line where he goes "don't talk like one of them, you're not" it shows the kind of tribalism that the Joker shares with Batman that they are both insane

    • @Rangoon_Dip
      @Rangoon_Dip Před 2 lety +181

      -you’ll be in a padded cell forever
      -oh perhaps we could share one !

    • @shozanhanma2709
      @shozanhanma2709 Před 2 lety +43

      @@Rangoon_Dip PURE! JOKER! LINE!

    • @YourLocalCopiumDealer
      @YourLocalCopiumDealer Před 2 lety +25

      I don't disagree. He dresses up like a giant bat to fight crime. Batsy might not be evil, but he is absolutely insane.

    • @Berserker3624
      @Berserker3624 Před 2 lety +56

      I don't think he's 'insane', I think he's unstable but not crazy since his mind doesn't change the world around to fit how he views it. I think he uses 'batman' as a way for him to let go of his trauma and get Bruce to see that their is justice in the world

    • @jasonvoorheescampblood
      @jasonvoorheescampblood Před 2 lety +6

      @@YourLocalCopiumDealer that doesnt make him insane

  • @Nick-qf7vt
    @Nick-qf7vt Před 2 lety +865

    I think an important note to make about The Joker's kill count is that, he's killed 34 people *that we know of* . It could very easily, and most likely is, many more than that.

    • @gordodelagulfton9800
      @gordodelagulfton9800 Před 2 lety +21

      Does that count the hospital bombing

    • @g.w.7893
      @g.w.7893 Před 2 lety +43

      It's certainly more than that. Do you wanna know how he got those scars?

    • @Nicholas_Chen_
      @Nicholas_Chen_ Před 2 lety +58

      He did ask the police guy: 'How many of your friends have I killed?'
      I think despite he said it to deliberately provoke the police guy so he could break free, but it was also a genuine question cause he lost count of how many people he has killed. It would make total sense he doesn't, as he simply doesn't care about lives.

    • @melissam597
      @melissam597 Před 2 lety +11

      Fatboy Texas I think they got everybody out the hospital before he blew it up

    • @jamesneese7663
      @jamesneese7663 Před 2 lety +19

      @@melissam597 No.....at the very least we know the Joker shot one of the hospital police by Harvey's room plus its' UNLIKELY he got the nurse's uniform from ebay.

  • @cjmurphy7967
    @cjmurphy7967 Před 2 lety +299

    In my opinion the main indicator that he may have been in the military is how he flawlessly preformed in the 21 gun salute. The reason why is because I've learned it myself and its pretty hard to get the hang of and keep in perfect sync, or even understand the corresponding commands, without some reference.

    • @sangbeom6245
      @sangbeom6245 Před rokem

      DoD CAG to CIA SAD to Witness Protection to wipe out his identity and change everything. Nobody would touch him or acknowledge this guy above the county level anywhere. And the local police wouldn't be able to search any database on him either. His entire life after 18 is a ghost and anything prior to 18 is a minor and unaccessible. My guess is he grew up in Gotham and came back after all those years. But why cause so much annihilation with everyone? He went "POSTAL"? But he seems to have prepared for this. He didn't just "SNAP". As for scars? I think it's self-harm. Nobody did this to him but himself.

    • @robirvine6970
      @robirvine6970 Před 10 měsíci +3

      Or, you know, it’s a movie and that means nothing.

    • @CajunReaper95
      @CajunReaper95 Před 10 měsíci +36

      @@robirvine6970let people fantasize over stuff that’s harmless.

    • @casper_b2bmarketer
      @casper_b2bmarketer Před 10 měsíci +9

      @@robirvine6970 or it means everything

    • @user-mj9lq9vp3w
      @user-mj9lq9vp3w Před 8 měsíci +1

      Or he could of just done some research

  • @CLRvision54
    @CLRvision54 Před rokem +193

    I personally believe Joker is a former Special Operator who fell victim to PTSD and snapped. Went completely rogue and went on a killing spree to make himself feel alive back when he was an Operator. The planning and execution of all his plans, the manipulation of indigenous forces (street thugs) to work along side him, the tactical prowess of route planning, demolitions placements and even the bank heist. All of these skills and abilities have to have a "know how" to be able to even plan like that.

    • @sangbeom6245
      @sangbeom6245 Před rokem

      DoD CAG to CIA SAD to Witness Protection to wipe out his identity and change everything. Nobody would touch him or acknowledge this guy above the county level anywhere. And the local police wouldn't be able to search any database on him either. His entire life after 18 is a ghost and anything prior to 18 is a minor and unaccessible. My guess is he grew up in Gotham and came back after all those years. But why cause so much annihilation with everyone? He went "POSTAL"? But he seems to have prepared for this. He didn't just "SNAP". As for scars? I think it's self-harm. Nobody did this to him but himself.

    • @g3nj1
      @g3nj1 Před 7 měsíci +2

      He didn't do it for the sake of killing. He was trying to "send a message". He was probably angry at the system that used and discarded him, and the world that brought that system into practice with no accountability.

  • @concretecountertop
    @concretecountertop Před 2 lety +1086

    I read a theory that the joker actually tailors his stories to his victims to psychologically affect them more. I always thought that was interesting.

    • @idrinkmilk282
      @idrinkmilk282 Před 2 lety +9

      Tryna see how that theory would apply to his story to gamble lmao..

    • @dancooke8811
      @dancooke8811 Před rokem +2

      I don't care Ledger isn't The Joker!
      Best Live Action version was Jack Nicholson.

    • @thedarkestknight8381
      @thedarkestknight8381 Před rokem +41

      @@dancooke8811 😂

    • @thedarkestknight8381
      @thedarkestknight8381 Před rokem +37

      @@dancooke8811 Nicholson is so one dimensional no depth or philosophy behind him

    • @bugvineboom
      @bugvineboom Před rokem +45

      @@dancooke8811 they are both good jokers in their own ways. nicholson made the joker more like how he is in the comics, but ledger made the joker deep and more real.

  • @goroakechi6126
    @goroakechi6126 Před 2 lety +435

    “I’m an agent of chaos”
    *makes years of peace in Gotham*

    • @garank4971
      @garank4971 Před 2 lety +5

      Chaos for who? Thats the question here

    • @user-sf3pg6fi1j
      @user-sf3pg6fi1j Před 2 lety +26

      Inadvertently, may I point out.

    • @goroakechi6126
      @goroakechi6126 Před 2 lety +79

      @@user-sf3pg6fi1j
      Not really. He;
      -bankrupted the Mafia
      -Murdered several dozen corrupt politicians
      -Got the guy in a batsuit provoking vigilantes with guns to mow down criminals to retire
      -Kills the Commissioner to put Gordon in charge
      -And got Dent to become Gotham’s Next Hope when he’s dead
      Gotta respect the hustle

    • @user-sf3pg6fi1j
      @user-sf3pg6fi1j Před 2 lety +30

      @@goroakechi6126 He planned on killing Gordon and succeeded in corrupting Dent as well as breaking Batman’s one big rule. If Ledger didn’t die it would show in part 3 how much damage Joker could inflict.

    • @ryanlash3935
      @ryanlash3935 Před 2 lety +4

      Batman was gone for taking the wrap on Dent and Jokers murders. 7 years there was no Batman. And what Dark Knight Rises delivers vs. What The Dark Knight Returns is. (Talking comic and Animated film.) Is its own take.

  • @TheRoomforImprovement
    @TheRoomforImprovement Před 2 lety +248

    Both Heath Ledger’s and Joaquin Phoenix’s portrayals are both so unique and so distinct that they impact the landscape of film.

    • @spsawyer22
      @spsawyer22 Před 11 měsíci +18

      Phoenix's is relatable.
      Ledger plays him as an enigma, a whimsical malevolence that fits perfect into the Batman (specifically Nolans trilogy) motif. I can't relate to him and he's terrifying.

    • @itz.deerius4152
      @itz.deerius4152 Před 10 měsíci +1

      @@spsawyer22I mean he’s not that relatable, he killed a lot of people

    • @LogicbyDefault
      @LogicbyDefault Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@spsawyer22ledgers joker is very relatable we see it in everyday society, criminals exist for the most simple yet complex reasons. Pain poverty and a sense of isolation is something we all deal with at one point or another be it one or all. The thing about joker in this depiction is he is us just one bad day away from crossing the line Harvey was his example

    • @style_hedgehog
      @style_hedgehog Před 8 měsíci

      Defiantly agree tho, regardless, both did amazing in their roles.

    • @Kiljaedenas
      @Kiljaedenas Před 5 měsíci +1

      Ugh, personally I hated Joaquin's version with a passion. The Joker, for Heath and all previous iterations, is supposed to be a crazy psychopath but also have a genius-level intellect. Heath showed this PERFECTLY.
      Joaquin's version, on the other hand is such an ineffectual inept twat that he's only still alive by the end of the movie by pure dumb luck, and any of the Batman iterations we've seen would have snapped him in half with their eyes closed. He utterly butchered the character.

  • @dekardkain5469
    @dekardkain5469 Před 2 lety +1105

    One thing no one ever seems to bring up, and has been my theory for years: The Joker WANTS Batman to stop him. Consciously or unconsciously, like serial killers that leave clues and bait the police. Deep down, maybe after all the horrible stuff he went through, he NEEDS to believe that good will stop evil - after having witnessed evil get away with it so often in his own life. That's why he'd never reveal his identity, or end him - because then the opportunity for good to stop evil, and prove to him that good really exists? It's gone.

    • @TheBuhrewnoShow
      @TheBuhrewnoShow Před 2 lety +30

      "Very similar to the whole GOD and devil argument. Why continue to allow him to operate? It's the whole can you, will you debate."
      Not sure how you can debate why God would allow the devil to operate. If you're debating God vs the devil, then you have to come from a religious viewpoint. Otherwise you're cherry picking examples to make your own argument work. Strawman logic. If you're a theologist, you would understand exactly WHY God allows the devil to operate lol. If you're not a theologist - use an example you understand :)

    • @TheBuhrewnoShow
      @TheBuhrewnoShow Před 2 lety +17

      @@danlora5599 Not really. I'm just pointing out you're punching above your weight class if you're going to try and turn a debate about comic characters into a theological discussion.

    • @TheBuhrewnoShow
      @TheBuhrewnoShow Před 2 lety +3

      @@all-is-Grass No, he didn't. It made no sense. That's like me, a crane operator, pretending I know how to fly a plane. I'd be talking out of my ass with zero evidence or experience to support my decision. I think I'll stick to what I know as to not make an ass of myself. Kinda like what the other guy failed to do.

    • @ibraheemtemur3469
      @ibraheemtemur3469 Před 2 lety +2

      To be honest, i dont think that there are such things as good and evil, and there definitely isnt karma. Ive met mass murderers living happy, while good people suffer.

    • @Nice-ck7rq
      @Nice-ck7rq Před 2 lety +7

      @@all-is-Grass What are u even talking about damn you crazy. You can't just base a mental illness and personality traits off a basic few comments which clearly show none of that.

  • @SenorGato237
    @SenorGato237 Před 2 lety +796

    The lack of coherent backstory is one of the key points that made this Joker so terrifying, he came from nowhere, and he came from everywhere. He is the chaos and darkness within us all, and lurking around every corner, but impossible to find and root out.

    • @tailanthaiboxing
      @tailanthaiboxing Před 2 lety +13

      Exactly, i dont get why people make up stuff that clearly isnt in the movie... what is there is whats there, and nothing more, thats the point. The joker card, in a lot of card games it can replace any card, thats the reason he is always making some bullshit up, because he doesnt need a backstory, its not important. Its in its core philosophically contradictory to try to invent a backstory when the characters whole essence is based on trying to get as close to an ideal of pure chaos. The character is introduced in the story in the middle of his plan, like if he had appeared before in the movie and we already knew who he was. I think his character is as simple as a character can get, he is the polar oposite of order, he hates institutions, he hates the state, he behaves like an insurrectionist, an anarchist. He is a terrorist not just physically but also philosophically. He hates morality and behaves extramorally, because he does have ethical behaviours, mainly with the batman character. Some people argue that because he has a plan, he is not really that chaotic but id argue otherwise. An essential part of being the ideal anarchist is to make plans, to plan the insurrectional action, to plan the means to break the established order.
      I love the way this character is portraid in this movie because its so subtle, every appearance is so elegant, theres nothing to spare and nothing is missing. Thats exactly why i really dislike when people make stuff up that isnt in the movie; they break that beautiful harmony thats has been, in great detail, carefully created.
      I guess the main problem or flaw in the logic of most analysis is that they morally judge the character when he is beyond that... he is beyond good and evil, he is just there existing, making plans, chasing cars, thats his plan, he just wouldnt know what to do if he caught it.
      You can really tell that Heath Ledger and the script writer spent some good time reading anarchist literature and philosophy... As well as Nietzsche and maybe a tiny bit of Spinoza or other extramoral philosophers in the core of his belief. Unfortunately i see a lot of Plato reflected in the way his character is built in the film. Anyways, ill never get tired of this film. Cheers

    • @yqafree
      @yqafree Před 2 lety +4

      The kind of fear that he is imbued with is on a cosmic horror level. He is more of an entity than just another simple man.

    • @yqafree
      @yqafree Před 2 lety +4

      @@tailanthaiboxing Being good at exegesis is what I'm hearing you say in the first paragraph. That I agree with entirely, fan theories are cool and all, but what about what is read out of context and subtext rather than what one wants to read into the script, aka eisegesis.

    • @lucasrackley250
      @lucasrackley250 Před rokem +3

      I think it’s a reference to how nobody can ever truly explain as to why and how human beings can be capable of such evil.

  • @vrmn8tr
    @vrmn8tr Před 2 lety +217

    there's a line in the animated series that the Joker says:
    "without Batman, crime has no punch-line"

  • @carolynluckas1219
    @carolynluckas1219 Před 9 měsíci +22

    I remember seeing Michael Caine saying that that scene in Wayne Tower almost made him crap his pants he was so scared by Ledger’s Joker.

  • @cartermikovich1369
    @cartermikovich1369 Před rokem +82

    Heath ledger didn’t just portray the joker like we’d never seen before, he portrayed evil like we’d never seen before

  • @n.a.8925
    @n.a.8925 Před 2 lety +640

    We lost such a talent with Ledger’s death. I would have been so curious to have seen what the third Nolan Batman film would have been with him in it.

    • @sandwich496
      @sandwich496 Před 2 lety +73

      I saw a fan comic that shows Bane going to Joker's cell to release him but decides to leave him in his cell because he is too insane and unpredictable.

    • @randywhite3947
      @randywhite3947 Před 2 lety +38

      And I wonder if Nolan and Ledger would have collaborated on non Batman related films.

    • @seymourbuttz2253
      @seymourbuttz2253 Před 2 lety +7

      We really did Natalie. We really did 😞. It's so sad that Heath has been gone for 13 years already. I really was hoping that he would be able to appear as the Joker in the 3rd installment, but it sadly never turned out that way.

    • @shawnd507
      @shawnd507 Před 2 lety +32

      I would've loved to see a Heath Ledger Joker origin movie.
      I enjoyed Phoenix in his Joker movie but damn, imagine what Ledger might have done.

    • @seymourbuttz2253
      @seymourbuttz2253 Před 2 lety

      @@shawnd507 So true bro

  • @valentinolopez8528
    @valentinolopez8528 Před 2 lety +393

    I’ve always felt when joker said “ you wanna know how I got these scars?” He wasn’t necessarily talking about his physical scars

    • @monsterinhead214
      @monsterinhead214 Před 2 lety +16

      I'm only burning my haff.

    • @idrinkmilk282
      @idrinkmilk282 Před 2 lety +9

      He definitely was talking about his physical scars lmao. given that he gestures towards the physical scars and literally gives reasons for them physically being there

    • @monsterinhead214
      @monsterinhead214 Před 2 lety +27

      @@idrinkmilk282 I see it as a clever double-entendre, so he is referring to both the physical scars and the phsycokological stuff at the same time.

    • @idrinkmilk282
      @idrinkmilk282 Před 2 lety +2

      @@monsterinhead214 I can buy that he’s talking about both, but some users here (including the person that made this original post) seem to be suggesting he is not referencing the physical scars at all, but the emotional ones only. I’m not buying that given that it’s just not true.

    • @monsterinhead214
      @monsterinhead214 Před 2 lety +5

      @@idrinkmilk282 Well, it's fiction, so none of it is true. It's all a matter of opinion or conjecture or fantasy.

  • @anonymousperson6119
    @anonymousperson6119 Před 2 lety +342

    “The Joker says he isn’t a man with a plan, but this couldn’t be further from the truth.” Exactly my thinking when I heard that line. The events he brings into play would require a significant amount of planning

    • @nguyen-vuluu3150
      @nguyen-vuluu3150 Před 2 lety +23

      my interpretation of that line is that all his plans amount to absolutely nothing except chaos in society, while everybody else' plans all have very specific goals

    • @kylereese5841
      @kylereese5841 Před 2 lety +18

      @@nguyen-vuluu3150 Creating chaos is a specific goal & he planned turning Harvey specifically. He's He's reading froma script when talking to the people on the ships.

    • @Channel9001
      @Channel9001 Před 2 lety

      He specifically lies to Harvey Dent about not having a plan because he's trying to manipulate Harvey into thinking the world is fundamentally chaotic and unfair. Something Harvey's worldview was centered around denying. Harvey was all about control. Making his own luck, as he put it. But once everything had been taken from him, he lost that illusion of control. Once Harvey stops thinking of the Joker as a thinking, planning man and more as a force of nature brought upon the city by corruption, it's easier for Harvey to blame what he sees as the source of that corruption for all he had lost rather than the Joker.

    • @flaminghell9572
      @flaminghell9572 Před 2 lety +9

      @@kylereese5841 "I'm like a dog chasing cars, I wouldn't know what to do if I caught one"
      This describes exactly what Joker meant when he said he didn't have a plan, zhere actually is a plan but the result of that plan is unknown as chaos by definition is unpredictable.

    • @kylereese5841
      @kylereese5841 Před 2 lety +5

      @@flaminghell9572 He literally planed out Harvey's fall cos he said he needed an ace in the hole and didn't want to leave the fight for gothams soul to chance.

  • @nogunk147
    @nogunk147 Před 2 lety +510

    I always thought the fact that you can't ever truly identify the Jokers past or who he even is was symbolic to his villain name. In a set of playing cards the Joker is its own class and what is referred to as a Wildcard. The wildcard can be anything you want it to be in your set of cards and in the game you play. Similarly to how Joker can get any sane person to believe anything he says about himself or who he is and they'd believe it.

    • @Khoros-Mythos
      @Khoros-Mythos Před rokem +46

      "If I'm going to have a past I'd prefer it to be multiple choice."

    • @thesun5275
      @thesun5275 Před rokem +17

      Considering who he directed his stories to and how it would hit to them, then yeah, it is pretty accurate. He fits those situations.

    • @hebrewyisraeliteyahawadahite
      @hebrewyisraeliteyahawadahite Před rokem +4

      *Not surprisingly, the Joker, Catwoman, Batman, Bane & BILLIONS of others grew-up having daddy issues.*

    • @jamesjoy7547
      @jamesjoy7547 Před rokem +10

      Actually, I'm surprised the term "wild card" hadn't been adopted into the Joker mythos more often

    • @CajunReaper95
      @CajunReaper95 Před 10 měsíci

      @@hebrewyisraeliteyahawadahitesaying bw had daddy issues isn’t correct considering both his parents were murdered.

  • @mojo6112
    @mojo6112 Před 2 lety +3114

    It's still being talked about even after 13 years. A masterpiece it is

    • @mdgcwood
      @mdgcwood Před 2 lety +48

      Yes Yoda it is 😉

    • @mojo6112
      @mojo6112 Před 2 lety +2

      @michela del torre i mean close enough

    • @theluckypepsi3277
      @theluckypepsi3277 Před 2 lety +5

      @michela del torre you sure?

    • @ggeorge6458
      @ggeorge6458 Před 2 lety +12

      Ways of the force I will show you

    • @floatinggoose9197
      @floatinggoose9197 Před 2 lety +12

      He*
      The movies itself sucked, seriously. Heath made the movie, made it everything. When people talk about TDK, They don't talk about about writing or 1000 plot and story holes. They talk about Joker. He, was a masterpiece

  • @nono9543
    @nono9543 Před 2 lety +656

    I really do believe Heath Ledger intended this character to be a former veteran of sorts. With no superpowers really existing in the Nolanverse, it is possible that's where he learned how to fight and dismantle infrastructures/foreign governments. That could also explain why he doesn't have a name show up in the public database, he was a former special ops member. It's scary to think about a veteran using what he learned against the people he was hired to protect, destroying the way of life he was assigned to preserve.

    • @remainprofane7732
      @remainprofane7732 Před 2 lety +93

      He might’ve even been ordered to topple a democracy, by his own democracy. It’d explain his extreme cynicism and his opinion on humanities true nature

    • @Strangelove657
      @Strangelove657 Před 2 lety +62

      I agree, I've heard this "spec ops" veteran theory before and it's very fitting although it's likely not in the script. It certainly explains his skills with firearms, explosives and overall tactics.

    • @nono9543
      @nono9543 Před 2 lety +30

      @@Strangelove657 Yeah. Many Veterans get payed and trained to dismantle foreign powers all the time so I can easily see a character like this using way he knows on American soil.

    • @TCFamas
      @TCFamas Před 2 lety +12

      Like the idea but thinking more of special ops...rather than secret agent.

    • @Nicholas_Chen_
      @Nicholas_Chen_ Před 2 lety +39

      I also stand by the ex-military theory, but more specifically, military intelligence, specialized in counter-terrorism, psychology, interrogation and hand-to-hand combat. I emphasis on the psychology bit, it is proven to be his ultimate strength - he understands too well how to play the mind game and despite he shows that he has no empathy, he knows all the weaknesses of humanity.
      Based on how he handled everything in the film, he could have been a very talented and well-trained military intelligence officer, even most accomplished and honored (may even have lots of medals), that was ultimately abandoned by his own country during a very dangerous mission. He also reacts very strongly to the word 'FREAK', now here is my theory, it is likely he was a very rebellious child and his father was not a drunk, but perhaps well-educated, serious and demanding like the senator he threatened, and whenever he was naughty, his father would call him a 'Freak', this childhood trauma would cause him to react to the word so strongly.
      Now, in order for one to change so drastically, one must be very devoted and firm in their former beliefs.
      Therefore, whoever he was, he must have been extremely devoted and thrown himself in, he may have been in a very high place, so high and admired, for him to fall so far and so low to be the Joker, the ultimate agent of evil and chaos (Reminds us of someone? Harvey Dent).

  • @HiddelS143
    @HiddelS143 Před 2 lety +59

    Joker may have been a CIA spook. That could be where he learned all his skills with guns, avoiding authorities, and interrogation (shown during his interrogation with Batman where he says “don’t start with the head, the victim gets all fuzzy.”)

  • @bengully5076
    @bengully5076 Před 2 lety +214

    “You complete me.” Lol. Never thought I would get lost in the moment with a grown man wearing clown paint and acting as a villain. That’s how great his joker iteration was. Incomparable!

    • @Callebravo
      @Callebravo Před 2 lety

      There is a difference between a joker & a clown

    • @bengully5076
      @bengully5076 Před 2 lety

      @@Callebravo ? What’s the relevance?

    • @Callebravo
      @Callebravo Před 2 lety

      @Ben Gully should be relevant to someone who doesn’t know the difference

    • @bengully5076
      @bengully5076 Před 2 lety +1

      @@Callebravo so he’s not wearing clown paint to become the joker ? 🤔 or you don’t comprehend?

  • @vaclav_fejt
    @vaclav_fejt Před 2 lety +282

    "Do you think I would risk everything on a fistfight with you?"
    - Joker, the schemer.

    • @jasonvoorheescampblood
      @jasonvoorheescampblood Před 2 lety +1

      Did Joker say that in the movie?

    • @vaclav_fejt
      @vaclav_fejt Před 2 lety +7

      @@jasonvoorheescampblood Not exactly, I was quoting from memory, but he said that in his last scene, while hanging upside down.

    • @loonyshots5879
      @loonyshots5879 Před 2 lety

      @@vaclav_fejt "do you think I'd risk gothoms soul in a fistfight with you" is closer and i think that one line tells you everything you need to know but everyone seems to forget about it, the truth is joker is fighting for the city and trying to destroy the corruption, he stops Batman from working making criminals de-escalate, he takes out the biggest mafia in the city, and his actions made it a lot harder for criminals to get out of sentences with corruption and money, then he stopped, he didn't continue even though he could've of he was "trying to cause chaos and destroy the city" like many people say, he's like a dark knight truly fighting for his city just not necessarily doing it in the most morally correct ways

    • @b33fsupe
      @b33fsupe Před 2 lety +39

      @@vaclav_fejt "You didn't think I'd risk losing the battle for Gotham's soul in a fistfight with you?"

    • @specialperson335
      @specialperson335 Před 2 lety +2

      I thought this was brilliant since this is exactly what he does in the Tim Burton batman movie.

  • @Xehanort10
    @Xehanort10 Před 2 lety +165

    3:50 When he talks to Harvey about how nobody panics when a truck full of soldiers is blown up some have theorised that if Joker was a soldier he might have resented the fact that the army saw him and his fellow officers as expendable.

    • @Nicholas_Chen_
      @Nicholas_Chen_ Před 2 lety +28

      Lots of clues in his dialogues there!
      'I just *DO* things.' - This one can EASILY go over people's heads but this one is actually KEY, he emphasized on 'DO things'. Military intelligence, special ops and field agents always carry out questionable and unethical orders from the government. This gives you a lot of clues to what he used to do.
      'Gordons got plans. They are schemers, schemers trying to control their little worlds. I'm not a schemer.' - Connect this to the above quote, he likely was always carrying out orders from the government, his superiors, those 'schemers'
      'I try to show the schemers how pathetic their attempts to control things really are.' - Here it shows as a person who just 'DO things' he grew to despise those schemers.
      ‘Upset the established order, and everything becomes chaos.’ - He has a thing, almost an obsession about upsetting order, he likely was under very strict orders in his previous military service and he didn't like it.
      ‘They need you right now, but when they don’t, they will cast you out. Like a leper. See their morals, their code, is a bad joke. Dropped at the first sign of trouble.’ - They needed him in a military mission, I suspect a confidential and difficult one, so I think he's some sort of military intelligence that deals with counter-terrorism
      'It's all part of the plan.' - I think he's referring to some sort of back-up 'mission abort' plans that the government has in place, i.e abandon the soldiers if the mission goes south
      ‘You remind me of my father, I hated my father.’ - Daddy issues
      There are a lot of other parts, but if you tie them together, it definitely sounds like Joker was a military intelligence officer who was betrayed by the government he tried so had to protect. I might even think his father might be high in the army whom he had a poor relationship with, trained him to be a top class military intelligence officer, and when his mission goes south his father just refused to save him...

    • @DD-ej1hg
      @DD-ej1hg Před 2 lety

      @@Nicholas_Chen_ not a bad theory

  • @maxdavidyermolaev4164
    @maxdavidyermolaev4164 Před rokem +160

    what i really liked about him is that he appeared out of no where and it wasnt even explained who he really is like it didnt matter. not knowing who he is makes him more random and scary

    • @reinaldocaraballo4657
      @reinaldocaraballo4657 Před rokem +6

      Oh my God you're so right like I didn't think about that and how vital it is to the feeling of his character gives out the aura around him but you're so right you know they don't give anything like it starts and there's a group of guys robbing the bank and there's subtle things that are different about one specific person and that's the one holding the mask that you see right away the way he moves and acts and you're like this has to be him but you don't know anything police arrest him they say that there's no no ID no pictures there's nothing to identify him you know nothing no car keys the custom clothing nothing to suggest to the authorities whose job it is to identify people on a daily basis to even suggest you this f****** person is and I love that it works so well showing you that a character doesn't always need an origin you know having it be a mystery makes him more interesting but it also makes him a few more dangerous more volatile the man with no name has no connections and no past and no future that he cares about so he is much more dangerous
      and he can embody chaos at will

    • @jamesjoy7547
      @jamesjoy7547 Před rokem +6

      @@reinaldocaraballo4657 "I am an agent of chaos"
      Could be any one of us. If pushed past our limits...

  • @yaboyed5779
    @yaboyed5779 Před 11 měsíci +40

    Watching the Dark Knight after watching A Knight’s Tale really show how amazing Heath Ledger truly is. Bravo to him and RIP.

  • @danielolortegui8422
    @danielolortegui8422 Před 2 lety +156

    I remember when I took psychology in College. All my essays were about comic book characters and the Joker was a big part of my emotion/motivation paper. My professor fucking loved it. There was the whole intrinsic motivation vs extrinsic motivation debate and even both are intertwined. Nobody knows what makes him do what he does and deep down, we don't want to know. We had to read the DSM-5 very carefully and the Joker did not meet the criteria for anything. It's as if everyone else around him is mentally ill and he's beyond any diagnosis

    • @sangbeom6245
      @sangbeom6245 Před rokem +3

      Just like someone from CIA Case Officers or DoD CAG to CIA SAD.

    • @sabir1208
      @sabir1208 Před rokem +2

      Damn...

    • @Guppy199
      @Guppy199 Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@sangbeom6245 Can you elaborate?, Im intrigued.

    • @sangbeom6245
      @sangbeom6245 Před 11 měsíci +4

      @@Guppy199 CAG is tier 1 black ops. SAD is the paramilitary element of the CIA

    • @user-gl5xl9ny7b
      @user-gl5xl9ny7b Před 9 měsíci +1

      Hey, that sounds very interesting. I know this comment was posted a while ago but is it possible for this paper to be shared? I’m an artist making up stories for characters so I’m very interested in reading this paper.

  • @robertmccrory8876
    @robertmccrory8876 Před 2 lety +224

    “Don't talk like one of them. You're not! Even if you'd like to be. To them, you're just a freak, like me! They need you right now, but when they don't, they'll cast you out, like a leper! You see, their morals, their code, it's a bad joke. Dropped at the first sign of trouble. They're only as good as the world allows them to be. I'll show you. When the chips are down, these... these civilized people, they'll eat each other. See, I'm not a monster. I'm just ahead of the curve.”

    • @QoQabai658
      @QoQabai658 Před 2 lety +21

      And here's what's so funny about that little speech.....if you ever watch this movie called The Road starring Viggo Mortenson, everything Joker said came to fruition. It was the fall of society where most of all the world's animals and plantlife died. People began to starve, so much so that they were literally killing and 'eating' each other. Ahead of the curve indeed.

    • @torachan23
      @torachan23 Před 2 lety +4

      Sounds exactly like government officials

    • @mefit1
      @mefit1 Před 2 lety +2

      So much logic that movie gave with these quotes

    • @ravenfrancis1476
      @ravenfrancis1476 Před 2 lety +5

      Y'all realize the entire point of the movie is that the Joker is *wrong*, right? Like, that's why both boats refuse to blow the other one up.

    • @amirmerrity3048
      @amirmerrity3048 Před 2 lety +8

      @@ravenfrancis1476 But everybody knows that in real life that wouldn't have happened. They just couldn't find the message that the villain was right.

  • @mattgilbert7347
    @mattgilbert7347 Před 2 lety +413

    "Joker is like a miracle. He just appears"
    -Slavoj Zizek

    • @doctorrandomiise2532
      @doctorrandomiise2532 Před 2 lety +51

      *"Cjhokerr ishz likhe a mirakhle. Khe cjhuszt appearszh."

    • @Gamerteamguy
      @Gamerteamguy Před 2 lety +16

      No no no it’s “joker *spit* is like a *spit* miracle. *spit* he just appears *spit*”

    • @TheAmericanPrometheus
      @TheAmericanPrometheus Před 2 lety +10

      "Schschockher *(sniff)* ichsch likche a *(sniff)* mirachcschlsche *(touches nose)* . Khcsche *(sniff)* juschcht appearschshcs." - Slavoj Zizek

    • @demit189
      @demit189 Před 2 lety +9

      I did not expect to see Zizek referenced here

    • @mjolninja9358
      @mjolninja9358 Před 2 lety +4

      Pure ideology

  • @AtlasBlizzard
    @AtlasBlizzard Před 11 měsíci +11

    Joker: "If I'm gonna have a backstory, I prefer it to be multiple choice."

  • @KosMachine2955
    @KosMachine2955 Před rokem +30

    I feel like when the joker talks about his scars he's not talking about the ones on his face for the most part, he's talking about how he became who he is now

  • @thejoker0123
    @thejoker0123 Před 2 lety +759

    so glad you did Heath's Joker now that you covered him and Joaquin Phoenix's Joker let's see you do Jack Nicholson's Joker of Tim Burton's Batman ^^

    • @dying101666
      @dying101666 Před 2 lety +19

      this must happen

    • @BofaDee33
      @BofaDee33 Před 2 lety +34

      A lot of people were scared of the role because they felt like Jack did an awesome job playing the Joker. I remember watching that movie as a kid and seeing Batman kind of finally come to life. It's probably still my favorite Batman movie of all time. Jack's Joker was definitely great he went more for the random kind of acting. No purpose no plan just do things because they are fun. Heath's probably still the best Joker his performance was brilliant.

    • @cloudsombrero
      @cloudsombrero Před 2 lety +2

      What I really want is letos

    • @kristywalton11
      @kristywalton11 Před 2 lety +7

      Absolutely!! As a kid I had nightmares about Jack's joker but now he's my favorite

    • @Saveyourbs
      @Saveyourbs Před 2 lety +1

      He needs to do the Joker of love ❤️

  • @PhantomSavage
    @PhantomSavage Před 2 lety +3158

    Complete fiction based on assumption here, but;
    Joker mentions to Harvey Dent at one point as part of his monologue to explain his ideology is "A truck load of soldiers gets blown up, nobody panics."
    I always thought that was a weirdly specific thing to mention even among this Joker's wild rants. In my mind, I always imagined this is how he was injured in his military service, being the victim and sole survivor of an IED, giving him possibly brain damage as well as a piece of shrapnel that lodged itself into the side of his face which had to be removed later. I also liked to imagine that, given Joker is such a good tactican, he wasn't just a normal soldier either, but possibly more of a spec-op unit like Delta Force, maybe even a unit acting as covert guerilla fighters in enemy territory under a classified operation. This would explain Joker's extreme skill set and knowledge on dismantling established order and authority, as well as his familiarity with military grade firearms and explosive devices.
    It also stands to reason that if Joker were part of some kind of spec-op unit like this, its very possible his identification records are either classified, deleted, or marked deceased upon his recruitment, and this along either a wiped or classified military record would make it nigh impossible for him to get the kind of medical help and treatment a severely traumatized war veteran needs to maintain stability, which could further add to his disillusionment with the system and society. This would also explain why Batman and the Police can't seem to find any identification records in their investigation, they may either no longer exist or be behind a high security clearance, which neither the Police or Batman at this time have access to.
    I also like to believe his wife's face was cut by the mob intentionally to match his own, which has a sense of cruelty about it that seems pretty on-point for the Gotham underworld. For his or her gambling debts (or something else) I don't know, but I feel that when Joker is telling Rachel his scar story there's some truth to it, he sounded quite emotional when he said "She couldn't stand the sight of me!" even though that could just be good acting on his part.
    In his weird, twisted, and PTSD-affected way of processing information I really do think he cut the other side of his face himself to show her "he didn't care about the scars."
    But his show of affection completely backfired, and the grim visage probably only further reminded her that her husband is unhinged and will never be able to give her the stability in her life that she needs, which could lead to her suicide, which Joker immediately reflects off himself and projects it onto the mob, system, and society that allowed all this tragedy to happen. Her death makes him snap, essentially, and he was already a very dangerous and very damaged individual that was being neglected before it.
    Once he snaps, he basically becomes an extremely sophisticated mass shooter... he has no objective other than complete chaos and murder, but this individual in particular has training and experience in disabling structures of power through psychological and guerilla warfare, and he uses these tactics to unleash as much chaos as he possibly can. He doesn't even expect to get that far, but he's so good at what he does and he's so well versed in these kind of tactics, he gets to a point where he's turned an entire city against itself and even the national guard has to come in to help stabilize the region and evacuate the mass exodus of people leaving the city.
    TL:DR: Joker is more violent Jason Bourne that blames the world, not just Treadstone... and also likes clowns.

    • @noblepolygon8694
      @noblepolygon8694 Před 2 lety +199

      This was a great explanation!

    • @DirtySouthJR
      @DirtySouthJR Před 2 lety +221

      I wouldn't mind seeing a movie explore this very idea. C I A operative turned domestic terrorist Joker. Excellent idea for a back story unlike the recent Joker movie which was also really good.
      ** Actually a TV series would be a better.

    • @Nicholas_Chen_
      @Nicholas_Chen_ Před 2 lety +79

      Great theory! Sounds like if John Rambo, Jason Bourne or John Wick turns to the dark side.

    • @doublep1980
      @doublep1980 Před 2 lety +169

      Yes, the theory that the Ledger Joker is a former black ops operative that went insane and then rogue makes sense.
      He clearly is trained in military weapons, explosives & hand-to-hand combat, knows psychological warfare/interrogation techniques, is able to infiltrate highly secured places like the Mafia meeting or the hospital were Dent is. He knows how to manipulate people and everything he does is meticulously planned, down to the smallest detail, even if he tells Dent: ''I don't do plans..''. That's just another one of of his lies.
      Just look at the bank robbery, when the movie starts. That's some Mission Impossible level planning.
      Plus, as mentioned, this theory would explain why they can't identify him.

    • @TempoDrift1480
      @TempoDrift1480 Před 2 lety +9

      Don't tell me I have to watch this now. I don't do movies and I don't do fiction.

  • @jayxtacee5695
    @jayxtacee5695 Před rokem +19

    It's unbelievable how young Heath Ledger was when he played this iconic role

  • @mrbonk3139
    @mrbonk3139 Před rokem +41

    This guy is so well spoken he sounds like the smoothest text to speech ever.

  • @TheDalton98
    @TheDalton98 Před 2 lety +550

    You should do Agent Smith from the Matrix! Even though he is not human, he still has emotion-like feelings and distain for humanity that shows in interesting monologues throughout the series.

    • @JazzyJazzRock
      @JazzyJazzRock Před 2 lety +23

      Big up for Smith

    • @skerrkro2952
      @skerrkro2952 Před 2 lety +20

      Yeah and also Griffith from berserk

    • @kennymason3518
      @kennymason3518 Před 2 lety +29

      WHY MR ANDERSON WHY WHY DO YOU PERSIST?!

    • @skerrkro2952
      @skerrkro2952 Před 2 lety +8

      @@kennymason3518 GRIFFITH FROM BERSERK WHEN. WHERE IS THE HAWK OF LIGHT.

    • @kotoamatsukami.
      @kotoamatsukami. Před 2 lety +9

      Based choices, I agree! Griffith and Agent Smith

  • @Boss-jl4ue
    @Boss-jl4ue Před 2 lety +161

    I love his dog chasing cars line idk why but it's just great.
    "I'm like a dog chasing cars I wouldn't know what to if I caught one"

    • @postsniper-7532
      @postsniper-7532 Před 2 lety +3

      @sv_cheats 1 the dog chases the car because that’s it’s nature

    • @Mr.Heller
      @Mr.Heller Před 2 lety

      @@postsniper-7532 Yeah, all those dogs chasing wild cars for ten thousand years really imprinted car chasing in their genetics.

    • @UnholyWrath3277
      @UnholyWrath3277 Před 2 lety

      @@Mr.Heller no but by being a surrogate for a running animal it activates their hunting instincts to chase.

  • @wv5853
    @wv5853 Před 4 měsíci +8

    Fun fact: Gotham went 10 years without crime cause joker made all the crime bosses bankrupt.

  • @jaxsondav9546
    @jaxsondav9546 Před 2 lety +36

    “Let’s say a truck full of soldiers just blows up, it’s just ‘part of the plan.’” The quote isn’t exact but his breaking point may have been one similar to the one from Joker. Though he did nothing wrong and in fact helped his country, the world ignored his suffering, leading him into finally putting on the makeup and scaring his face after everything that’s happened to him.

  • @timonfischer9679
    @timonfischer9679 Před 2 lety +272

    This trilogy is so good. No superpowers, just a great Script and incredible actors. RIP Heath Ledger

    • @lutfensusshow5397
      @lutfensusshow5397 Před rokem +2

      ra's is immortal so some superpowers

    • @frysurf8218
      @frysurf8218 Před rokem +4

      Dark knight rises was shit. the other two were good

    • @yellowscarlightningscream8347
      @yellowscarlightningscream8347 Před rokem +16

      @@frysurf8218 Dark Knight Rises was not bad at all. It is far better than modern DC movies. It wasn't as good as Dark Knight but it was decent.

    • @lukejones0826
      @lukejones0826 Před rokem +1

      @@yellowscarlightningscream8347if the dark knight rises had come before the dark knight somehow, just fix some continuity or something, then it would be seen as so much better than it is now

    • @joshheralal8758
      @joshheralal8758 Před rokem

      No superpowers is a negative

  • @legofan4409
    @legofan4409 Před 2 lety +121

    I always enjoyed the fact that the movie left us with enough to speculate over the Joker's past, while also making it ambigious enough that none of it may be true, which is very fitting for the Joker.

    • @vksasdgaming9472
      @vksasdgaming9472 Před 2 lety +10

      He did not appear out of nowhere and certainly has a past. He might in a sense mirror Bruce Wayne who was missing for long time and was trained by League Of Shadows during that time. Not much record from that time of him. Joker may be a similar case of a person just gone missing and re-emerging years later as completely different person. There must be a trace of him, but it is so old and muddy that nobody knows how to find it. Missing person over ten years ago with no evidence of crime or soldier without close relatives gone AWOL off-shore.

  • @andrewrivera190
    @andrewrivera190 Před rokem +29

    By the way. Another theory I heard about his scar stories is this:
    His scar stories are completely improvised on the spot. Basically he gets inside his victim’s head. For Gamble he talks about an abusive father, which chance’s are Gamble had which creates a false sense of connection to his victim.
    For Racheal Joker talks about a wife. Which Rachel just had a conversation with Dent about marriage just before Joker barrages into the room with his thugs. Joker even later refers to Rachel as Dent’s “Blushing bride to be.”
    Difficult to say if Joker is just really good at psychoanalyzing people or just due to his connections in a corrupt city he already as information on his victims.
    Anyway, all this to say. Because of how he tells his stories he creates that connection with his victim right before he kills them. I think this was intended because he even states later he uses knives to “savor the little emotions” people have in their final moments. By creating that false connection with the victim it allows him to draw those emotions out.
    As for his actual backstory. Well… it doesn’t technically matter. It is definitely inspired by the “I prefer my backstory to be multiple choice” mentality some of his comic book portrayals used. But ultimately he’s the embodiment of anarchy.

    • @ethanstump
      @ethanstump Před rokem

      There's actually many anarchists that would dispute being anything like the joker, specifically anarcho-pascifists. Further, as anarchists fundamentally believe in a society without rulers, they themselves wouldn't target individual civilians, as they literally have little to do with the hierarchy. Also, his actions wouldn't actually lead to anarchy, as he creates a power vacuum that most likely would be filled by fascists, as they themselves believe in perpetual warfare (rather than peace) rather than giving ordinary people the control over their own lives, as an anarchist would do. Further, there's tons of methods and processes that he uses that simply would be anathema among the anarchist community, such as: as mentioned hurting innocents, manipulating and threatening people's loved ones to get them to do his bidding, instituting a battlefield where innocent's may stumble upon it, using torture, allying with the mob, and probably even more egregious methods that simply will not and cannot lead to anarchy, but will exacerbate fascism instead. This is further explained with the character of bain, which I think fits far more in line with Mussolini than say, Nestor mahkno

  • @Blank-41
    @Blank-41 Před 2 lety +47

    Imagine if Heath Ledger didn't die and got to continue as the Joker for another movie. Like playing in the prequel that Joaquin Phoenix did. He was such a great Joker.

    • @robertbusek30
      @robertbusek30 Před rokem +10

      I really want to know what happened to him in The Dark Knight Rises.

    • @Darklord805n7
      @Darklord805n7 Před 7 měsíci +5

      @@robertbusek30I saw something that said once bane let all the prisoners out of Arkham the joker was left alone in Arkham cus he was too much of a wild card and dangerous to bane or something

    • @robertbusek30
      @robertbusek30 Před 7 měsíci +9

      @@Darklord805n7 That actually makes a lot of sense. Bane’s rule over Gotham had an order to it; throwing the Joker into that would create serious problems, especially if the Joker could turn some of his people…

  • @-Keith-
    @-Keith- Před 2 lety +134

    "Wanna know how I got these scars?"
    Who said he was specifically talking about the physical ones? If his story about his father was about mental scars, all his stories can be true.
    "Whatever doesn't kill you, only makes you... stranger."
    I imagine there's a bit of truth baked into the things he tells people about himself. He's pretty honest about his intentions and motivations.

    • @idrinkmilk282
      @idrinkmilk282 Před 2 lety +18

      The fact he gestures towards his physical scars after saying “do you wanna know how I got these” and then literally goes on to give reasons as to why those scars are physically on his physical face is what gave it away to me

    • @rhollowaybusiness
      @rhollowaybusiness Před 2 lety +2

      Good observation regarding mental scars. We only think of pain as visible, but mental anguish has no face to scar

    • @theahearn2658
      @theahearn2658 Před 2 lety

      Think of it like this, when a joker says something like his backstory of his wife and the scars on his face and that's how he got them there might be some truth in there because he likes to double back what he saying he basically just runs two circles around people confusing them cuz you don't know what the truth is. Did his wife actually Gamble and get in deep? Or did he just do it because he was tired of seeing her sad all the time? And the best example to compare to that is the scene where he tells them where Harvey Dent and Rachel are being held and he gives them the addresses mixed up on purpose to see what they will do and how the reactions from the people will be. All because he had another plan in motion. He has plans on top of his plans on top of his plans. And when he says to Harvey Dent in the hospital " do I really look like a guy with a plan?" He had sell a bull crap story and a lie and a truth on top of another truth and on top of a lie. He's like the Maze of trying to figure out what the truth is because he'll sprinkle some of it in there but he will do it in such an obscure way that it's fascinating. It's like you're trying to figure out a puzzle that has so many layers that you just can't figure it out with 13 years.

  • @doctorbobcat7123
    @doctorbobcat7123 Před 2 lety +166

    "I heavily used my role as the Joker to illustrate the plight of gamers in our modern society" - Heath Leger

  • @tankeater
    @tankeater Před 2 lety +42

    I'm pretty sure he was a Green Beret because of his planning, discipline, and ability to take that interrogation and beating with ease. Like he went to SERE School

    • @tankeater
      @tankeater Před 2 lety +14

      Green hair (green beret) no facial recognition or fingerprints (government has them blocked because of classified missions)

    • @robirvine6970
      @robirvine6970 Před 10 měsíci

      @@tankeater just make shit up a lot do you?

    • @CDN296
      @CDN296 Před 3 měsíci

      ​@@tankeaterthe thing is Batman could easily gain access to those files even if it was redacted heavily the notion itself would prove how capable the joker is .

    • @tankeater
      @tankeater Před 3 měsíci +2

      @@CDN296 I was in the military... Knew SF soldiers... You have zero clue how dark the government gets if you think a civilian would be able to "EASILY GAIN ACCES TO THOSE FILES." 😂🤦‍♂️🙃

  • @commandosolo1266
    @commandosolo1266 Před 7 měsíci +4

    I feel everyone misses one element: the Joker's records are gone. Everyone has a trail: a social security number, dental records, fingerprints, DNA... especially someone who served in the military. Wherever the Joker is from, he had the means to completely erase himself, as if he never existed. He either worked within such a records system, or had contact with someone who did. That is a big clue, there.

  • @slabpanda
    @slabpanda Před 2 lety +61

    6:02 you can see how subtly badass Alfred was because he didn’t flinch when The Joker shot the shotgun off right next to him, while everyone else did.

    • @chrisknepper6894
      @chrisknepper6894 Před 2 lety +22

      I heard that it was Michael Caine's first time seeing Heath as the Joker and was so shocked by his performance he forgot his lines.

    • @Khan.WrathOf
      @Khan.WrathOf Před 2 lety +6

      In the comics, I believe its alluded to that Alfred served in combat. Possibly WW2.

    • @General_Weebus
      @General_Weebus Před 2 lety +19

      @@Khan.WrathOf in the comics Alfred is former SAS. He can and has on multiple occasions dropped criminals with deadly force. To quote him: "Perhaps you relied on my master's vow against using lethal force. Let me assure you that I subscribe to *no* such niceties."

    • @Nicholas_Chen_
      @Nicholas_Chen_ Před 2 lety +5

      Actually Michael Caine forgot his lines. But yeah Alfred was supposed to be ex SAS and caught the man who wanted to watch the world burn in Burma, dude's a total badass.

    • @FaceFamous
      @FaceFamous Před 2 lety +4

      @@Nicholas_Chen_
      Batman- how you catch him
      Alfred- We burned the Forest down
      I'm like ok... Alfred is about that life😁☠💀

  • @aranerem3767
    @aranerem3767 Před 2 lety +97

    "In their last moments, people show you who they really are".

    • @TheConjurersTower
      @TheConjurersTower Před 2 lety +14

      "I don't know who he is, his stuff comes in the mail!" ~ J. Jonah Jameson Jr.

    • @MichaelWilson-io8xq
      @MichaelWilson-io8xq Před 2 lety +1

      Would you like to know which of your friends were cowards? - Knows exactly what to say to make the officer lose his cool and get sloppy, allowing him to get the advantage. Master manipulator, indeed.

  • @bigdaddypiggy
    @bigdaddypiggy Před rokem +43

    He was quite possibly the best Villian (or portrayal of a Villian ) that I’ve ever seen in a movie

  • @trackerjacker5467
    @trackerjacker5467 Před rokem +26

    R.I.P Heath Ledger. You were a phenomenal actor and a true inspiration.

  • @Xehanort10
    @Xehanort10 Před 2 lety +53

    17:07 And if Rachel survived Joker probably would have taunted her about Harvey's death and planted the idea in her head that Batman had let Harvey die so he could have her to himself. It wouldn't be true but it would be something Joker could easily get the traumatised grieving Rachel to believe.

    • @Nicholas_Chen_
      @Nicholas_Chen_ Před 2 lety +7

      Ugh, honestly can't stand Rachel, but a very interesting 'What if' scenario. I think at that point Rachel is done with Bruce Wayne and Batman (total bitch move btw) and she will grow to spite Bruce her childhood friend, and distance herself from him who ironically could bring her safety, this makes her vulnerable, and as an interrogation expert, it wouldn't be too hard for Joker to figure all that out, so, he might trace her down and torture her just like what he did to Babra in the killing joke and use that to taunt Batman. Like he said at the Harvey Dent dinner party, he would 'settle for his loved ones'.

  • @jamess5415
    @jamess5415 Před 2 lety +149

    I hope we never learn Joker’s back story. The mystery adds to the fascination.

    • @Edude117
      @Edude117 Před 2 lety +24

      @Peppi Roni gr8 b8, m8.

    • @leeskuba3241
      @leeskuba3241 Před 2 lety +3

      @Peppi Roni pretty cringe

    • @Ltcoombs1
      @Ltcoombs1 Před 2 lety +6

      @Peppi Roni cringe

    • @criticclips1560
      @criticclips1560 Před 2 lety +2

      @Peppi Roni While i agree with you joker is a great superhero movie compared to the formulaic mcu and the dark depressing dceu.....we should encourage these types of films in the superhero genre

    • @Walamonga1313
      @Walamonga1313 Před 2 lety +3

      Whyre you people replying to the bot lol

  • @cradleofgoth
    @cradleofgoth Před rokem +25

    He's not mad or evil, he showed the people how inadequate the system is at protecting them. Batman is not a part of that system and if not for him Joker would've collapsed the system.

  • @josephlowry4320
    @josephlowry4320 Před rokem +16

    This is why Heath Ledger performance is still legendary since the film's release and proves why the Joker is the best villain of all time.

  • @eagleclaw006
    @eagleclaw006 Před 2 lety +36

    "I want my god damned electric car, Bruce!" -Joker

    • @FrenchJae
      @FrenchJae Před 2 lety +1

      😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂👌🏾

  • @emanueltorres894
    @emanueltorres894 Před 2 lety +247

    Rest in peace mister Leager, you were without question the best Joker.

    • @speedracer2008
      @speedracer2008 Před 2 lety +19

      I wish he had lived to see his performance as the Joker on the big screen. I’m sure he would have been proud of his work as the Joker.

    • @ktbecstasy
      @ktbecstasy Před 2 lety +15

      His death made his role even more iconic

    • @Khoros-Mythos
      @Khoros-Mythos Před rokem +12

      Come on man, you can at least spell his name right.

    • @soxpeewee
      @soxpeewee Před rokem +1

      Sid Caesar begs to differ as does Mark Hamill.

    • @folieadeux0531
      @folieadeux0531 Před rokem

      Good thing is his wife is started to act in movies maybe she can fill his shoes and see how much the actress can grow

  • @Xehanort10
    @Xehanort10 Před 2 lety +16

    The scene where Joker nearly kills the mayor is creepy because unlike many other Jokers Ledger's looked like a normal person apart from the scars and could blend in.

  • @lyudmilapavlichenko7551
    @lyudmilapavlichenko7551 Před 10 měsíci +14

    Jack Nicolson was a great golden age joker.
    The Adam West show had a great silver age joker.
    Heath did a fantastic bronze age joker.

  • @dragonskulle7283
    @dragonskulle7283 Před 2 lety +40

    "what doesn't kill you makes you..stranger"

    • @johnlawful2272
      @johnlawful2272 Před 2 lety +2

      Usually succeed in a second attempt
      -Mr krabs

  • @KennyPagley
    @KennyPagley Před 2 lety +41

    God this was such a good joker, my favorite one actually. Heath did such a good job, putting his ALL into the character.

    • @stephvandykeozzy
      @stephvandykeozzy Před 2 lety +4

      He's my favorite Joker as well. Heath Ledger nailed it on this role.

  • @ozthebeeman
    @ozthebeeman Před rokem +13

    one of the reasons i love the joker so much as a villain is that there are so many different versions of the joker, all with their own unique personality and all bring something different to the table. even the worst joker has some interesting things about his personality. the joker is a perfect character that any director can focus on a different aspect of the character and make an excellent villain

  • @eclipsefeikutsu5260
    @eclipsefeikutsu5260 Před 6 měsíci +4

    One thing I feel was a bit overlooked is the scene where he's going to blow up one of the boats anyway. He says something about giving the people something to really scare them, therefore pushing them over the edge and making them terrible people. That was the point of the boat experiment in the first place, but since that failed he was going to blow up the boat for a reason different than the one described in this video. He was going to blow it up, not simply to scare people, but to make a new experiment from his failed one. Honestly.... pretty scientific.

  • @AxeKick80
    @AxeKick80 Před 2 lety +141

    I would’ve LOVED to see some kind of interaction between Ledge’s Joker and Hardy’s Bane. I’m curious what kind of dynamic they would have had together.

    • @SJRenkola
      @SJRenkola Před rokem +6

      It would have been awesome, but I honestly think had Heath lived, Nolan wouldn't have put him in the movie. Or if he did, it would have only been a cameo appearance; similar to Murphy as Scarecrow. Because with Heath's Joker it would have overshadowed the new "big bad."

    • @odizza1688
      @odizza1688 Před rokem

      Hell yeah

    • @dancooke8811
      @dancooke8811 Před rokem

      None...

    • @dancooke8811
      @dancooke8811 Před rokem

      Liam Neeson would have had them followed by The League...and had their lives "Taken" from them...

    • @nickasaro8789
      @nickasaro8789 Před rokem

      I think I heard somewhere that before Heath passed, Nolan had a plan to put him in Rises. Would have been interesting to have seen that for sure.

  • @VildhjartaFanGurl
    @VildhjartaFanGurl Před 2 lety +67

    I can't even imagine what sort of takes Heath would have on Phoenix's joker. Or what other iconic roles might've been in Heath's future as an artist. Truly a tragic loss on every level.

    • @alexanderalbach468
      @alexanderalbach468 Před 2 lety +1

      Just a thought. Is Phoenix joker possible without ledgers?

    • @shalidor8102
      @shalidor8102 Před 2 lety +8

      @@alexanderalbach468 Most definitely. Ledger's Joker, while iconic, is not the foundation for Phoenix's Joker.
      We can't actually measure these 2 Jokers by the same metrics due to the nature of the films they were in. Dark Knight was written as a superhero blockbuster film, Joker was written as an introspective psychological drama.

    • @stephenheffren4324
      @stephenheffren4324 Před 2 lety +2

      @@shalidor8102 that is an interesting way to think about how things would go in terms of Phoenix's Joker and the film's themes in general(if what happened with/to Ledger didn't happen. )
      Rip Ledger.

    • @alexanderalbach468
      @alexanderalbach468 Před 2 lety

      @@shalidor8102 very Compelling thoughts. Many thanks.
      I see the difference in story telling. But I would like to see Phoenix joker as a evolvement of ledgers joker. Surely different approach but in my eyes a shared core.
      Anyway, both unique and completely clear in total madness.

    • @danielhenderson8316
      @danielhenderson8316 Před 2 lety +2

      Phoenix’s Joker was intentionally based around government changes in the treatment of mental health in the late 70’s/early 80’s (specifically in New York). It could have literally been about anyone, but making him the Joker guaranteed a built in audience and interest. The comics were already exploring a darker and more vile Joker 40 years ago. Ledger’s take brought those elements to a much wider audience for the first time.

  • @christophersermeno8631
    @christophersermeno8631 Před 4 měsíci +3

    When an actor, whom no one initially thought was right for this role, can take a well established cross media character...and trully create an original and iconic performance that is still disseminated and quoted even today....really deserves the oscar....

  • @MrAlcoholicKoala
    @MrAlcoholicKoala Před 2 lety +24

    Much respect for the great shoutout to Heath Ledger. Dude was incredible.

  • @Xehanort10
    @Xehanort10 Před 2 lety +25

    2:35 My thought about Joker's scar stories is that the one he told Gambol was him picking up on the fact that Gambol might have been abused due to his anger issues and the story might have been Joker describing Gambol's life to him as if it was Joker's own to scare him before he killed him. And the one he tells Rachel was to mock her relationship with Harvey and scaring her with the idea that something would happen to her from being involved with Dent which proved true when she died in the 250 52nd street explosion. Even if either his stories were true they wouldn't explain him or justify his actions anyway.

    • @Totallynonplagerizedleatherguy
      @Totallynonplagerizedleatherguy Před 2 lety +2

      Yo! I'd never considered that!
      That'd take his psy ops to a whole different level.

    • @SatanasExMachina
      @SatanasExMachina Před 2 lety +2

      I think you're hypothesis is correct, and for all we know he was psy ops that was captured, given the scars while being tortured for information, and then used his skills to ingratiate himself to a guard and have them aid his escape.....like he did with Harley Quinn.

    • @jesussuperstar3406
      @jesussuperstar3406 Před 2 lety +1

      smart fella

    • @Nicholas_Chen_
      @Nicholas_Chen_ Před 2 lety +2

      He is a chameleon, always adjusting his ways of speaking to different audiences. That's why I think he was an expert in psychology and interrogation, the man knows how to play the mind game with his subjects.

    • @VonJay
      @VonJay Před 2 lety +1

      I think it's simpler than that. He's a sociopath. He lies, manipulates, breaks laws, feigns interest or reason, all while psychologically "splitting" his audience.
      Most cult leaders are sociopaths, they create a huge following with such stories that don't add up. His lies, when not compared to one another, are very very potent and effective modes of persuasion.

  • @vksasdgaming9472
    @vksasdgaming9472 Před 2 lety +136

    Ledger's Joker displays strongly on antisocial personality disorder. Almost inhumanly strongly. Of course some of it might be genuine, but some kind of triggering events may have forced him to cope by adopting a different persona, Joker. Maybe he was intelligence analyst. He has interest on masks, identities and "true self". Most likely family he came from paid close attention to appearances and external signs of success. Exposed to lots of stress and hypocrisy from early age.
    He always had sociopathic tendencies, but they most likely remained under wraps. He is one of those people who have uncanny talent in something and somebody decides to train him to be even better without thinking is it wise move to do? If man is able to plan terrorist attacks just for fun you might not want to teach him how to do them better. Most likely he has encountered some kind of traumatic event which broke his "mask". That is why he is so obsessed with appearances and layers.

    • @swagswagger9644
      @swagswagger9644 Před 2 lety +1

      lol does it really needed to be stated that joker has ASPD? His presentation is like if you took every aspect of the disorder and turned it up to one million.

    • @vksasdgaming9472
      @vksasdgaming9472 Před 2 lety

      @@swagswagger9644 Sheer consistency of his sociopathic traits might mean they are an act he is performing. There are simply no other mental symptoms/traits he shows and that (at least to me) tells that it is learned form of behavior. Who knows?

    • @VonJay
      @VonJay Před 2 lety

      I agree with the diagnosis.
      But I don't think he had a military background, or needed any background. I think he was like most cult leaders, well read, perhaps had a decent education.
      He's a regular sociopath that created a symbol.
      A theme of the trilogy is "to create a symbol that would inspire the creation of other symbols." In Begins, the bat is a fresh symbol on the scene. The dark Knight shows the worst that can happen when new symbols are created. There are multiple batmen in the beginning of the movie taking on crime but using guns. Wayne projects the symbol of the white Knight onto Harvey dent. And then the emergence of the joker, a symbol of a sociopath/aspd. The white Knight and his gf don't survive and aren't bm's equals
      In Rises, Batman is finally joined by his equals in Robbin and Catwoman.
      But back to ASPD, he could have simply been born with a neurological or genetic defect. As the saying goes, I think, at my hospital, "narcissists are made and sociopaths are born."

    • @vksasdgaming9472
      @vksasdgaming9472 Před 2 lety +2

      @@VonJay Sociopathy is in my books similar misconnection of brain like Autistic Spectrum is. Of course enviromental triggers have their own thing to say as clinical sociopath can still be productive member of society and not a psychotic monster.
      But as Joker shows skill in not only planning and organizing and insight about how GCPDs conduct it is possible he is actual native Gothamite. He has quite thorough knowledge about explosives and knows how to operate military equipment so him having formal training in those matters is plausible. He might also have informal training by experimentation like Unabomber had. He is written with very contradictory style so nothing really certain can be said. He is very smart and skilled and utterly sociopathic. Terrorist against causes. I disagree about him being similar to cult leader as he had very little narcissistic and hedonistic traits and also was not about power exerted.

    • @VonJay
      @VonJay Před 2 lety

      @@vksasdgaming9472
      Joker fits Sociopathic/ASPD behavior to the T. A misconception about narcs is that they cross societal boundaries and commit murderous and heinous acts. This misconception may be due to non dsm-v terms as malignant narcissists, which doesn't exist in the dsmv for a reason.
      For instance, ASPD and NPD are of the same cluster, cluster b personality disorders. So a few traits overlap. The extra traits, impulsive manipulation, deception, habitually crossing societal boundaries to where you're imprisoned, is exclusive to ASPD.
      So the cult like following that the joker had in tdk, exhibit characteristics of a cult under the climate of a sociopath.
      The feedback loop to narc behavior is usually attributed to or triggered by an impulse (or attempt) to deflect shame. Narcs lack empathy like ASPDs/sociopaths, yet they have the ability to feel shame, which usually impedes such heinous acts. A sociopath may feign shame, empathy, etc, yet narcs, pure npd's have an inability to even act or ingratiate themselves into another's favor.
      The feedback loop that keeps narcs from healthy interpersonal relations is lack of empathy, inability to control emotions, lack of object constancy and whole object relations. They are constantly aware of their inadequacies and use that loop to stay out of the loop. However, sociopaths have little to no concept of being inadequate or feel any type of shame from any act.

  • @themoviebuff6196
    @themoviebuff6196 Před rokem +9

    Heath Ledger delivered a cinematic performance of a lifetime!! Arguably cinema's greatest villain portrayal. 👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾

  • @andrealcantara1437
    @andrealcantara1437 Před 2 lety +13

    Nowadays I really appreciate that feeling of "Not being sure" inna movie. It instigates a mistery and makes me imagine what is real. I know I'll never be sure, there will always be theories and that's magic.

  • @TheWhiteOcelot
    @TheWhiteOcelot Před 2 lety +124

    Please do Bane. I feel he's very underrated and could deserve his own video.
    Also would suggest Niander Wallace from Blade Runner 2049 and his short film released with it.
    Thanks for the content! I'm absolutely riveted by your analysis, and the only unwatched videos of yours are from films I have not seen yet. Now they're all on my watch list though, so thank you!

    • @Nicholas_Chen_
      @Nicholas_Chen_ Před 2 lety +5

      Yeah Niander Wallace would be an interesting one! A corrupt creator and an absolute narcissist with a god complex. I also suggest another Ridley Scott villain, David 8 the andriod.

    • @DawoudKringle
      @DawoudKringle Před 2 lety

      Excellent suggestions.

    • @VonJay
      @VonJay Před 2 lety

      Bane was pretty straight forward

    • @WunderWaffleman
      @WunderWaffleman Před 2 lety +1

      @@oldatarigamer unfortunate for sure. I didnt care about talias personal revenge story. Bane's terrorism was far more interesting and I wished hed been the sole villian with a more fleshed out motive and ideology. I liked that they turned the league of shadows into a more realistic, extremely well funded terrorist group

    • @teabsaesae9870
      @teabsaesae9870 Před 2 lety

      Na man, do herobrine from. Minecraft

  • @richardtseng9535
    @richardtseng9535 Před 2 lety +227

    I think the real "answer" to the Joker's scars lies in why clowns wear makeup. They do it to enhance and bring attention to the kind of clown they want to portray, sometimes they'll even use it to call attention to physical features that serve the character.
    We see that without the makeup, people either don't notice Joker's scars or intentionally ignore them out of politeness. In the police parade scene, he's able to stand in front of the entire police force and get a shot off on the mayor without anyone guessing he's the guy who killed fake Batman in the video he just released that the whole city saw (it was on the news).
    This is the absurdity that the Joker both exploits and points out: people looking the other way and pretending what's hideous or wrong isn't there so as to maintain the facade that everything's fine and orderly. By applying a little blood-colored makeup, Heath Ledger's Joker makes it impossible to ignore those scars. It's one of the first things he brings up because he knows the question of how he got his defining physical feature is what anyone who meets him wants to ask the most. Painting the scars red is a gambit that forces you to engage. But it's a trick because a clown is no more interested in showing you anything about the person underneath the makeup than a magician is in explaining how his magic actually works. The clown is only interested in the face in the mirror. In who YOU see when you look at that face.
    So why does the Joker ask the question, "Do you want to know how I got these scars?" It's not because he wants you to feel his pain or know who he was, it's because he's trying to push you over the edge. A clown's face portrays what the clown wants you to feel. The Joker is unhinged. His entire MO is to make Gotham see the world the way he sees it. The origin story for his scars is meant to unhinge you. That's why he tells the tale of a messed up father to the head of a crime syndicate: as a leader and killer of men in the underworld, it's likely he's had to be a father figure to his minions and also has daddy issues of his own. It's also why Joker's story for a bride-to-be is about a display of love gone horribly wrong: what's scarier than committing to a man who will betray you is committing to a man whose love you're forced to betray. A person who jokes doesn't want you to know who he is, they want you to appreciate the world from their perspective. The question's a setup and the punchline is what you least want to hear. It's a joke weaponized to weaken the target's psyche, which is why Batman responds by hitting him in the face.
    The truth is there just isn't enough in the movie to answer how he got his physical scars, but his actions suggest an answer to how he got his psychological ones. Remember the movie's tagline, "Why so serious?" As much as we would like to explain away why the Joker is so crazy with a personal story of abuse and hardship, the real answer lies in why we are serious and why he's not: because he stared into the abyss while we pretend to be too busy, righteous, "good", and look away. It's likely Joker worked for or with the military, but it's even more likely he worked in intelligence, possibly the CIA. Whichever arm of the US government is currently tasked with maintaining global order via localized chaos. More than a brilliant tactician, he's an expert at destabilizing democratically elected governments. He uses propaganda to sour the populace on Batman. He wipes out key political and legal figures, then reveals their corruption to assassinate both the person and their character. And the way he gets local thugs, mercenaries, and crazies to do his dirty work is pretty much how handlers treat their assets. The only difference here is that the Joker isn't telling himself he's doing it for "freedom", "democracy", or even "capitalism" nor is he interested in replacing the corrupt power structure with his own lackeys. Instead, he wants to create a void. The kind of abyss that would force Gotham to confront its own corruption. Batman sacrifices himself to uphold the facade of Harvey's incorruptible character and keep Gotham's faith in authority alive. In doing so, Batman at once proves himself a hero while also proving the Joker right: society is maintained through the hoax of willful ignorance.
    Something obviously had to go horribly wrong for the Joker to do what he did. But I doubt "The Dark Knight" Joker's origin story is anything close to Arthur Fleck's "The Joker". Heath Ledger's Joker displays genius-level IQ while Fleck is barely literate. Whatever happened, it so obliterated the last shreds of the former's humanity that all we're left with is this eldritch embodiment of the answer to the question "why so serious?" Answer (according to Joker): Because seriousness is all a morally bankrupt society has left to stave off madness and ruin.

    • @rhollowaybusiness
      @rhollowaybusiness Před 2 lety +13

      Richard I absolutely love your post. The scene where his withou his make up is so bizarre as how was he able to blend in. However most of the cops out there were either crooked or some of his own guys. The analysis of clowns is something I never thought about, but it’s brilliant! Thanks for your post!

    • @npcimknot958
      @npcimknot958 Před 2 lety +7

      there is also a parallel of a man that dresses like a bat and uses theatrics that inspires joker to paint on that face cause “ you and i, we’re the same thing”

    • @standgroundjj
      @standgroundjj Před 2 lety

      To long , don’t care

    • @dontmindme6995
      @dontmindme6995 Před 2 lety +6

      I don't see a reason for the producers and writers of the film to have any sort of backstory for this antagonist. He's clearly noone yet so present, he doesn't want money nor power nor attention, he just wants chaos, he wants to see the world burn. I simply think that the reason for this motivation is made clear fairly easy in "The Joker" as the Gotham there as the Gotham literally in any other version is just fucked up, messy, ignorant and so on. I don't think the writers and producers wanted to give us any hints to his backstory because there simply isn't a significant one.
      What makes the most sence to me is that he created a different backstory for each of his victim to give it a lesson or at least somewhat influence it psychologically. He tells Rachel 'the story of his wife' because it's a significant topic in her current life, to mary Harvey or "stick" with Bruce. He tells the mob guy 'the story of his childhood' because it's probably hitting that guy (or whatever, I'm currently too stupid to figure out something more reasonable).
      He's not telling the audience, he's telling his victims to give himself an advantage. So at least in my eyes he doesn't have any important backstory, he's just making something up to get something out of the situation or have fun seeing other people suffer from stories. But anyway in terms of wanting to find out about his backstory: Why so serious?

    • @richardtseng9535
      @richardtseng9535 Před 2 lety +14

      @@dontmindme6995 I agree 100%.
      The Joker is the go-to villain for Batman because they're actually the most similar. Both are the revenge fantasies of powerless people who want the bullies to feel the pain they're inflicting.
      Batman is the fear and darkness criminals use to do evil turned back in their face. He's so terrifying to thugs because he's the return of their repression. The terror of the unknown that criminals chase away by holding the power of life or death over another in their hands.
      Joker is the hypocrisy and willful ignorance average people use to pretend everything makes sense thrown back in their face. He embodies the unintended consequences and suffering that we don't think about. As long as things are good for us, we don't care about how bad things are for others even though not caring makes us bad people. That's why Joker's story for the mobster involves an alcoholic drug fiend of a dad because those are the kinds of men mobsters employ and sell to. Basically, that story is his way of saying, "you made me."
      Batman's mask is the ugliness men do at night. Joker's face is the ugliness men do during the day.

  • @kotujitzu
    @kotujitzu Před rokem +56

    The Joker is what society is. The Batman is what society is depicted to be.

    • @qui-gonjinn3322
      @qui-gonjinn3322 Před 5 měsíci

      If so, then why are we not living in anarchy? Really dude, don’t try to be philosophical wise c@nt about it.

    • @porklonger4254
      @porklonger4254 Před 3 měsíci +3

      Nah cuz if that was true the people in the boat would've bombed each other but they didn't. Joker is literally insane.

    • @originalSiiiN
      @originalSiiiN Před 3 měsíci

      damn... that's legit 💯

  • @johnrockyryan
    @johnrockyryan Před 4 měsíci +3

    Nah Heath legit gave the performance of a lifetime his Joker is the Shining of movie characters there was so much thought and detail put into this character by the man that it is still being talked about 16 years later HEATH LEDGER WAS A GENIUS ARTIST not just actor ARTIST

  • @dhalanglada841
    @dhalanglada841 Před 2 lety +73

    I would love to see bane, and his philosophy of being a necessary evil.

    • @brandeno919
      @brandeno919 Před 2 lety +10

      You think darkness is your ally…

    • @MP-lc7vy
      @MP-lc7vy Před 2 lety +9

      Rhas Algul would be a better pick. Bane's philosophy isn't any different from his and in the end he is just doing it for him and his daughter. Rhas' obsession with conquering "fear" and trying to utilize it to destroy Gotham was more compelling. To him, he felt that fear was what led Gotham to corruption because the people were too afraid to fight for justice. It's that weakness he despises most. So letting the people tear themselves apart through fear seemed like a fitting punishment for them in his eyes. Just think he is the most underrated villain out of the trilogy.

  • @michellamoureuxm
    @michellamoureuxm Před 2 lety +222

    I'm not going to lie, this is still one of my favorite films of all time. Just watching Heath Ledger just own the show is stunning every time. It's such a gap from every joker we'd ever seen, yet so perfected and flushed out. I'm excited to watch this.

  • @jordangordon2350
    @jordangordon2350 Před 2 lety +9

    That was a good point about the boats. That almost could have been a bit of a redeeming moment but it seems his chaotic insanity overtook any points he may have been trying to make in that instance, cementing him past the point of redemption

  • @williamtobin7282
    @williamtobin7282 Před 2 lety +22

    Heath was the best actor to personify the joker. He had maticulous and madness down to a T. Methodical, psyciopathic behaviour that had the movie goer convinced he was all that he projected to be. God bless you heath, your perfection in character portrayals was a rare gift that im sure you worked very hard to master, and master it, you did. Take care son

    • @ethanstump
      @ethanstump Před rokem

      From my estimation, the fleck character from the joker movie is the most realistic portrayal of the criminally insane, while the heath ledger version is the most criminal. Both are great actors doing great portrayals, but one more focuses on criminality while the other focuses on insanity.

    • @imhim3717
      @imhim3717 Před rokem +1

      @@ethanstump exactly. their legit tied for first . their two perfect portrayals . Heaths is more fun to watch but Phoenix is more realistic

    • @williamtobin7282
      @williamtobin7282 Před 11 měsíci

      @@ethanstump Thats a very educated observation. I appreciate your analogy of the different personality disorders. Pays to know our enemy's. God Bless

    • @ethanstump
      @ethanstump Před 11 měsíci

      @@williamtobin7282 it helps to have a number of diagnoses myself.

  • @Waryfuls2
    @Waryfuls2 Před 2 lety +72

    *_I keep forgetting that he's an actor... can't help it but his role feels so real! sometimes a little too real_*

    • @musicnoonelikes
      @musicnoonelikes Před 2 lety +6

      Watch Taxi Driver, you can really tell when someone is just getting it all out through their character.

    • @Waryfuls2
      @Waryfuls2 Před 2 lety +1

      @@musicnoonelikes 👍🏽👍🏽👍🏽heard a lot about that one

    • @guyfieri148
      @guyfieri148 Před 2 lety +3

      Yeah fun fact, he actually told bale during the interrogation to actually hit him to make the scene more realistic

    • @FaceFamous
      @FaceFamous Před 2 lety +1

      @@guyfieri148 All true

  • @Nicholas_Chen_
    @Nicholas_Chen_ Před 2 lety +96

    Lots of clues are hidden in Joker's dialogues, and if you piece them together, he is very likely a former military intelligence or special ops that got screwed by the government.
    'I just *DO* things.' - This one can EASILY go over people's heads but this one is actually KEY, he emphasized on 'DO things'. Military intelligence, special ops and field agents always carry out questionable and unethical orders from the government. This gives you a lot of clues about what he used to do.
    'Gordon's got plans. They are schemers, schemers trying to control their little worlds. I'm not a schemer.' - Connect this to the above quote, he likely was always carrying out orders from the government, his superiors, those 'schemers', and to them he was only a blunt instrument, a tool
    'I try to show the schemers how pathetic their attempts to control things really are.' - Here it shows as a person who just 'DO things' he grew to view his superiors as schemers
    'You let five people die... Even for a guy like me, that's cold.' - He is no stranger to morally questionable decisions, once again going back to the above points
    ‘Upset the established order, and everything becomes chaos.’ - He has a thing, almost an obsession about upsetting order, so he likely was under very strict orders in his previous military service and he didn't like it.
    ‘They need you right now, but when they don’t, they will cast you out. Like a leper. See their morals, their code, is a bad joke. Dropped at the first sign of trouble.’ - They needed him in a military mission, I suspect a confidential and difficult one, so I think he's some sort of military intelligence that deals with counter-terrorism
    'It's all part of the plan.' - I think he's referring to some sort of back-up 'mission abort' plans that the government has in place, i.e abandon the soldiers if the mission goes south
    ‘You remind me of my father, I hated my father.’ - Daddy issues
    'So I had a wife... She leaves.' - A wife who grew to be disgusted by him post-trauma and either died/walked away from him.
    'Who gambled, and gets in deep with the sharks.' - It can be both about his wife or himself. The latter meaning in his previous missions messed with some dangerous people. One of those encounters may gave him those scars.
    'Why so serious?' - According to Joker his father said this to him when he gave him that scar. You can take a deeper look into this and consider that as an emotional scar. And also he reacts to the word 'FREAK' very strongly. Going back to Joker having daddy issues, what if his father used to call him a 'Freak' and he as a boy would reply to his father with 'Why so serious', yet this only further causes Joker to be more rebellious, which makes him by nature, chaotic and against order.
    There are a lot of other parts scattered in the film, I am only naming the bits I have noticed upon rewatching, but if you tie them together, it definitely sounds like Joker was a military intelligence officer, likely highly talented and most accomplished, has lots of medals, could even be an ex-Green Beret, who was betrayed by the government he tried so had to protect. I might even think his father might be high in the army whom he had a poor relationship with, and always calls him 'FREAK' growing up, and when his mission goes south his father just refused to save him. And when he goes back home, all alone, without an identity and his wife leaves him, well, that's when this once accomplished solder, a keeper of order, becomes the Joker, the agent of chaos.

    • @idrinkmilk282
      @idrinkmilk282 Před 2 lety +5

      Wow you’re stretching with some of this lol

    • @Nicholas_Chen_
      @Nicholas_Chen_ Před 2 lety +14

      @@idrinkmilk282 Overanalysing, that’s what fans do :)

    • @Bhubnipz
      @Bhubnipz Před 2 lety +9

      Wow you placed totally irrational value in the word “do” and then based everything else on top of it

    • @Nick__E2
      @Nick__E2 Před rokem

      Hey dope first name! 🤙 also you put a lot of thought into this theory and I love it 🔥

    • @sangbeom6245
      @sangbeom6245 Před rokem

      DoD CAG to CIA SAD to Ivy League to CIA Case Officer to Witness Protection wiping out his entire background and history and identity totally changed with the gov never acknowledging he existed. Now ad this guy's full ability into Batman's paradigm and the mob's paradigm.

  • @alexhollon7526
    @alexhollon7526 Před rokem +4

    One of my favorite scenes is the interrogation. And that's on both Ledger and Bale. Both of them perform perfectly. Joker is slowly winning this battle of will, with Batman resorting to screaming but being very visibly and audibly scared. Joker came across as both mildly funny but insanly anger inducing. And Batman trying so desperately to be on top and obviously panicking is both impressive and tragic. It's one of only a couple of times we've seen Batman vulnerable in live action. Another being with Pattinson's version as he's trying to reach and save Alfred.

  • @alexjaybrady
    @alexjaybrady Před rokem +5

    It was so perfect how he told lies(?) about his backstory and the origin of his 'smile' in the form of classic Joker jokes... reminds me of the Judge in Blood Meridian, less a human charater than a dark and chaotic trickster force of nature.