JOKER Box Office Tracking Points To Record-Breaking $90 Million Opening Weekend

JOKER Box Office Tracking Points To Record-Breaking $90 Million Opening Weekend

Todd Philips' Joker movie arrived on tracking this morning, and if early predictions prove to be accurate, the controversial DC film could set a new opening weekend record for the month of October...

By MarkCassidy - Sep 12, 2019 08:09 AM EST
Filed Under: Joker
Source: Deadline
The latest round of reviews for Warner Bros. and director Todd Philips' Joker may not have been quite as positive as the first critical reactions, but the standalone DC film still looks to be on track for a pretty great opening weekend.

According to early tracking projections, the controversial Joaquin Phoenix-starrer could make as much as $90 million domestically when it hits theaters next month. If accurate, this would give the movie the opening weekend record for the month of October, beating Sony Pictures' Venom ($80.2M). Take the fact that Joker is an R-rated release into account, and this would be an even more impressive feat.

It remains to be seen if Joker can accomplish this, of course, but it certainly looks like the majority of fans are fully on board with Philips' take on the iconic Batman villain, and are very curious to see what all the fuss is about. Oscar buzz for Phoenix probably doesn't hurt, either.

Let us know if you plan on seeing Joker in theaters opening weekend in the comments, and if you fancy a look at some of the reviews (updated with several of the more negative TIFF reactions), click the "view list" button below.

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This is a truly nightmarish vision of late-era capitalism – arguably the best social horror film since ‘Get Out’ – and Phoenix is magnetic in it. He runs Heath Ledger cigarette-paper close as the finest screen Joker.

SOURCE: Time Out

Having brazenly plundered the films of Scorsese, Phillips fashions stolen ingredients into something new, so that what began as a gleeful cosplay session turns progressively more dangerous – and somehow more relevant, too. Gotham City is aflame and they’re rioting on the streets. And a rough beast is slouching towards the TV studio to be born.

SOURCE: Guardian

It will be tempting for some to declare this the first art film based on a DC or Marvel property, but while it certainly represents a bit of a departure and something of a risk, “Joker” is ultimately grim-and-gritty comic book nihilism jacked up to the nth degree, wrapped up in a convincing but ultimately hollow simulacra of better, smarter movies.

SOURCE: The Wrap
 
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In Joker — playing in competition here at the Venice Film Festival — Phoenix is acting so hard you can feel the desperation throbbing in his veins. He leaves you wanting to start him a GoFundMe, so he won’t have to pour so much sweat into his job again. But the aggressive terribleness of his performance isn’t completely his fault. (He has often been, and generally remains, a superb actor. Just not here.)

SOURCE: Time

As social commentary, “Joker” is pernicious garbage. But besides the wacky pleasures of Phoenix’s performance, it also displays some major movie studio core competencies, in a not dissimilar way to what “A Star Is Born” presented last year. (Bradley Cooper is a producer.) The supporting players, including Glenn Fleshler and Brian Tyree Henry, bring added value to their scenes, and the whole thing feels like a movie.

SOURCE: RogerEbert.com
 
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"Joker" achieves two contradictory goals simultaneously, delivering a blockbuster that highlights what is eternally captivating about the character, while at the same time offering a sobering critique of the nihilism that has long been the Joker's M.O.

SOURCE: Screen International

Phoenix is all in and then some, a performance so dazzling risky and original you might as well start engraving his name on the Oscar right now. No joke, this is a movie — premiering today at the Venice Film Festival — unlike any other from the DC universe, and you will find it impossible to shake off. At least I did.

SOURCE: Deadline

In amongst “Joker’s” fire and blood and chaos and its blackest of blackhearted laughter, there is the sense of a grotesque, green-haired genie being let out of a bottle, and whether it wreaks havoc or not, we’re not going to be able to put it back in.

SOURCE: The Playlist
 

With the combination of talented actors, a well fleshed out script, and excellent direction, the audience doesn’t quite know who to root for. It’s traumatizing in a way because it causes a kind of morality battle. That sort of intensity weighs in on you once the film is over. It makes you think. The “funny” moments of the film are so strategic that they cause uncomfortable laughter.

SOURCE: Black Girl Nerds

In fact, that sympathy is where much of the film’s fear comes from. This is the Joker. We should not like this person. And yet, the movie tricks us into doing that time and time again. We frequently see things happening that aren’t actually happening. Information is given that isn’t quite accurate. Arthur’s point of view is mostly unreliable. And so the film swings you between sympathy and pity or humor and awkwardness, sometimes in a single shot. Not knowing what to believe and how to feel is one of the film’s most interesting and strongest assets.

SOURCE: i09

As the film goes on, it becomes increasingly a horror movie and the violence – although limited to a very few incidents – is portrayed as shockingly real. There are also moments of humour – as you’d expect from the director of The Hangover – but the “funny ha-ha” is definitely mixed in with funny peculiar so it’s impossible to say where one ends and the other begins. What it doesn’t feel like is a comic book movie.

SOURCE: CineVue
 
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The first big problem is that the film cannot decide whether it wants to keep its powder dry in terms of its relationship to the wider world of superhero lore. It opens on a classic 1970s Warner Bros logo in a misguided attempt to connect itself to one of cinema’s golden eras – making it appear even worse by comparison. It tries desperately hard to come across as edgy, but coldly refuses to swerve from the hard-painted lanes of templated Hollywood filmmaking. It ends up resembling nothing more than a Suicide Squad spin-off movie. Yet it’s ambitions are certainly more lofty.

SOURCE: Little White Lies

Superhero blockbuster this is not: a playful fireman's-pole-based homage to the old Batman television series is one of a very few lighthearted moments in an otherwise oppressively downbeat and reality-grounded urban thriller.

SOURCE: Telegraph UK
 
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Bold, devastating and utterly beautiful, Todd Phillips and Joaquin Phoenix have not just reimagined one of the most iconic villains in cinema history, but reimagined the comic book movie itself.

SOURCE: Empire

Joaquin Phoenix's fully committed performance and Todd Phillips' masterful albeit loose reinvention of the DC source material make Joker a film that should leave comic book fans and non-fans alike disturbed and moved in all the right ways.

SOURCE: IGN
 

 
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As Hannah Arendt saw banality in the supposed evil of the Nazi Adolf Eichmann, I see in Joker an attempt to elevate nerdy revenge to the plane of myth. That's scary on a lot of different levels.

SOURCE: Vulture

A movie with the message this one hammers home again and again... feels too volatile, and frankly too scary, to separate from the very real violence committed by young men like Joaquin Phoenix's Arthur Fleck in America almost every day.

SOURCE: EW
 
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This predictable brand of cold-hearted cynicism is not worth your time. Seriously.

SOURCE: Us Weekly

JOKER looks for human decency rather than anarchic wish fulfillment.

SOURCE: Fresh Fiction
 
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WakandanQueen
WakandanQueen - 9/12/2019, 8:28 AM
It's looking more and more likely that it will open to $100 million-plus.
mastakilla39
mastakilla39 - 9/12/2019, 9:37 AM
@WakandanQueen - tracking doesn't mean anything. Films can over or under perform anytime. I have no doubt this movie will do well but 100 million opening? Not sure because Logan didn't even open that big and IT Chapter 2 fell a bit below its initial tracking, so anything can happen.

I'm just glad it's not a 3 hr movie.
tmp3
tmp3 - 9/12/2019, 8:36 AM
Over $100m I think. Maybe like $120m, I think there's so much interest for this movie
tmp3
tmp3 - 9/12/2019, 8:39 AM
The violence in this movie is so [frick]ing grotesque though, based on one of the leaked clips I saw (not the talk show one). Wonder if that'll harm legs, this isn't like It or Logan or Deadpool - the violence here doesn't glorified or palatable, but intentionally horrific.
Battabing
Battabing - 9/12/2019, 9:58 AM
@tmp3 - Really? More grotesque than John Wick or Punisher?

C'mon.

Also, it's the [frick]ing Joker. He's done heinous things in comic books.
tmp3
tmp3 - 9/12/2019, 10:18 AM
@Battabing - In no world is John Wick's violence grotesque, the gun-fu and gore isn't disgusting to look at, and it's framed in a way where Wick looks like a bad-ass.
This Joker stuff is shot and framed realistically, it's very intentionally meant to unnerve you. The Joker's not a "bad-ass" like Punisher or Wolverine, he's an outright monster.
Elle79
Elle79 - 9/12/2019, 2:58 PM
@tmp3 - I've seen much worse in film over the past 10 years. Yes, it's violent, but not dramatically moreso than most R-rated movies. It may seem more "shocking" due to the movie's realism, but that's a testament to the filmmaking. Note sure why you're so deadset on singling this movie out.
Philvis
Philvis - 9/12/2019, 8:42 AM
When this movie was announced, I had zero interest. With the teaser trailer my tune changed. With the last trailer, I cannot wait to see it. I resisted and didn't watch that bootleg video clip that posted a couple days back. This is probably my most anticipated film of the year. I think the caveat with this film is going to be you either love it or hate it, based on the reviews I've seen. Very interesting indeed.
Elle79
Elle79 - 9/12/2019, 3:01 PM
@Philvis - If you're independent-minded, you'll probably like it.
David78B
David78B - 9/12/2019, 8:51 AM
Won't be getting my money.
FleischerSupes
FleischerSupes - 9/12/2019, 8:56 AM
The more I think on it the more I wish Pattinson's Batman could have been connected wit this. I don't need everything to be "in-universe" but Batman probably needs to share a universe with the Joker, and we're already drowning in Jokers so this probably should have been his. Plus I'd love to see a Batman that matches the design choices in this 70's early 80's version of Gotham.
LongMayHeReign
LongMayHeReign - 9/12/2019, 8:58 AM
So is this WB's last chance to get a $100M opener this year? Would be nuts if they go an entire year without one, hopefully that's not the case
Kyos
Kyos - 9/12/2019, 9:02 AM
Good for everyone involved. It does make me a bit sad that this'll probably end up doubling what Shazam! made opening weekend, but it is what it is.
Kyos
Kyos - 9/12/2019, 9:11 AM
It might've passed Shazam's domestic total by its second weekend. 😯
knocturnalzen10
knocturnalzen10 - 9/12/2019, 9:09 AM
@thedoctor1225 lol lol this will be an all purpose GIF lmfao lol lol
Feralwookiee
Feralwookiee - 9/12/2019, 9:11 AM
It's kind of depressing to me that it's like the ENTIRE output of WB's DC movies seem to be elseworld tales. It seems like they are embarassed of their characters histories and/or aren't interested in adapting them even remotely accurately. I think they just use these IPs knowing it's guarenteed revenue regardless of accuracy or quality. Just my .02 cents.
Reeds2Much
Reeds2Much - 9/12/2019, 9:59 AM
@Feralwookiee - It's kind of depressing to me that it's like the ENTIRE output of WB's DC movies seem to be elseworld tales.

Realistically the MCU's output has also been entirely Elseworlds. It's just that, for "whatever reason," one is acceptable and the other isn't.
Battabing
Battabing - 9/12/2019, 10:01 AM
@Feralwookiee - Why, because they're not adapting stories you've read or watched as cartoons (which they are, by the way)?

Feralwookiee
Feralwookiee - 9/12/2019, 1:12 PM
@Battabing - No. It's because they've given us a moody, mopey, miserable Superman, a Batman who brands criminals with a hot iron and straight up murders people, an anorexic Wonder Woman, surferdudebroguy Aquaman, a Lex Luthor who's a goofy cross between the Joker and the Riddler, and a Joker with a name and a backstory. Imo, these characters deviate TOO FAR from their comics personalities.
Battabing
Battabing - 9/12/2019, 2:59 PM
@Feralwookiee - Nonsense.
Feralwookiee
Feralwookiee - 9/12/2019, 4:18 PM
@Battabing - I agree. Their approach to adapting these characters has been nonsense.
tmp3
tmp3 - 9/12/2019, 9:15 AM
@Feralwookiee - Yeah, I can't believe how different Shazam! and Wonder Woman felt from their comic book counterparts. Like, not recognizable at all.
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