JOKER Director Todd Phillips Hits Back At Those Linking The DC Comics Movie To Real-Life Violence

JOKER Director Todd Phillips Hits Back At Those Linking The DC Comics Movie To Real-Life Violence

In a new interview, Joker director Todd Phillips has hit back at those linking the movie to real-life violence when many moviegoers go to the theater to cheer on someone like John Wick, who kills hundreds.

By JoshWilding - Sep 25, 2019 03:09 AM EST
Filed Under: Joker
There's a little over a week to go before Joker arrives in theaters, and, as we've now told you on multiple occasions, there's a lot of controversy surrounding the DC Comics adaptation. There are concerns that the movie not only glorifies the villain, but also the violence he carries out on those he believes have wronged him. 

Now, director Todd Phillips has once again weighed in on the backlash, and after acknowledging the concerns of those who were affected by the Aurora shootings, the filmmaker made it clear that he doesn't believe Joker is any more concerning that something like John Wick (which features the lead character gunning down hundreds of people over the course of two hours).
 
"I mean, I think that Aurora is obviously a horrible, horrible situation but even that is not something you blame on the movie. Quite frankly, if you do your own research about Aurora that gentleman wasn't even going in as Joker, That was misreported, his hair was dyed red he was having, obviously, a mental breakdown and there's something horrifying about that but it wasn't related to it outside of the fact that it happened at a movie theater. This is not the thing that the movie is trying to represent.

"The movie still takes place in a fictional world. It can have real-world invocations, options, but it's a fictional character in a fictional world that's been around for 80 years. The one that bugs me more is the toxic white male thing when you go, oh I just saw John Wick 3. He's a white male who kills 300 people and everybody's laughing and hooting and hollering. Why does this movie get held to different standards? It honestly doesn't make sense to me."

It's an interesting argument, but one that doesn't really add up in some ways. John Wick is obviously a very violent movie, but its lead is a hitman and not a dangerous sociopath who is looking to take out his frustrations on a society he believes has wronged him. 
 
Right now, no one really seems to know what the right answer is or whether it's unfair that Joker is being targeted. If, God forbid, something does happen, it's also hard to say what the solution would be; should The Joker be banned? Should movies featuring disturbed main characters not be allowed? Or should there be a committee who decides what we can and can't watch in theaters?

It's a complicated situation, and you can hear Phillips' comments in the player below:

RUMOR: Marvel Studios Wants JOKER: FOLIE À DEUX Star Lady Gaga To Play Dazzler
Related:

RUMOR: Marvel Studios Wants JOKER: FOLIE À DEUX Star Lady Gaga To Play Dazzler

Everyone Is Missing The Message Behind JOKER: FOLIE A DEUX
Recommended For You:

Everyone Is Missing The Message Behind JOKER: FOLIE A DEUX

DISCLAIMER: As a user generated site and platform, ComicBookMovie.com is protected under the DMCA (Digital Millenium Copyright Act) and "Safe Harbor" provisions.

This post was submitted by a user who has agreed to our Terms of Service and Community Guidelines. ComicBookMovie.com will disable users who knowingly commit plagiarism, piracy, trademark or copyright infringement. Please CONTACT US for expeditious removal of copyrighted/trademarked content. CLICK HERE to learn more about our copyright and trademark policies.

Note that ComicBookMovie.com, and/or the user who contributed this post, may earn commissions or revenue through clicks or purchases made through any third-party links contained within the content above.

1 2 3 4
OmegaDaGrodd
OmegaDaGrodd - 9/25/2019, 4:09 AM
"The one that bugs me more is the toxic white male thing when you go, oh I just saw John Wick 3. He's a white male who kills 300 people and everybody's laughing and hooting and hollering. Why does this movie get held to different standards? It honestly doesn't make sense to me."

OmegaDaGrodd
OmegaDaGrodd - 9/25/2019, 4:27 AM
@MadKingCipher - In all fairness, there are definitely some laugh out loud moments in JW, especially part 3, but it's John [frick]ing Wick.
Matador
Matador - 9/25/2019, 5:40 AM
@OmegaDaGrodd - Just saying;

"That was misreported, his hair was dyed red he was having, obviously, a mental breakdown and there's something horrifying about that but it wasn't related to it outside of the fact that it happened at a movie theater."

A gritty character study of Arthur Fleck, a man disregarded by society. So his character brings violence not due to a mental breakdown either?




dragon316
dragon316 - 9/25/2019, 5:45 AM
@OmegaDaGrodd - and purge series saw series get no mention that shit pisses me off idiots want something to blame, what about winter soldier
Tonic24k
Tonic24k - 9/25/2019, 6:05 AM
@dragon316 - and punctuation run-on sentences get no mention that shit pisses me off idiots want something to blame, what about capitalization
Battabing
Battabing - 9/25/2019, 9:57 AM
@MadKingCipher - How does John Wick respect death? He practically burns his whole neighborhood down because one person killed his dog.

He's not all that rational.

Yet, here we are holding a villain like the Joker up to moral standards. Okay, are we aware that Joker killed a guy on live television and went on to turn the studio into a gas chamber that killed the audience?

Do y'all know who the Joker is?
dracula
dracula - 9/25/2019, 4:10 AM
Well
dracula
dracula - 9/25/2019, 4:10 AM
Seriously this is getting as bad as the drama around Captain Marvel
OptionFour
OptionFour - 9/25/2019, 4:12 AM
"John Wick is obviously a very violent movie but its lead is a hitman and not a dangerous sociopath who is looking to take out his frustrations on a society they believe has wronged them."
Really though?
The guy kills hundreds of men over a dog. His job title being 'Hitman' (and actually, retired, former Hitman) doesn't make him not a sociopath. If anything, quite the opposite. Either way, he ends up killing a vast quantity of humans who are not responsible for the wrongs that have happened to him.
So yeah.
He's a sociopath who takes out his anger and frustrations on a group of unrelated people he thinks have wronged him. To a tee.

The real issue of course is that movies don't cause these things anymore than video games, rock/rap music, or - if any of you are old enough to remember the eighties - dungeons & dragons did. Its all just excuses.
BaneDoomsday
BaneDoomsday - 9/25/2019, 4:12 AM
John Wick is a unrealistic action movie. Yeah it's violent but it doesn't take itself seriously.

This Joker movie which nobody asked for is taking itself seriously. It's trying to pass itself off as some kind of deep study about mental health issues.
Battabing
Battabing - 9/25/2019, 9:59 AM
@BaneDoomsday -

Wow, you just said the dumbest thing in this thread.
Nimrod
Nimrod - 9/25/2019, 12:00 PM
@Battabing - What he says makes sense. It sounds dumb to you, cos you're dumb and you generally make up dumb arguments to defend DC at any cost.
Webheaded225
Webheaded225 - 9/25/2019, 4:14 AM
I don't know if you guys noticed, but this super outraged response has been mainly from the people of the US. No one is planning on putting any restrictions on the release of the film and there's very little on how someone can murder someone because of it on other countries. Maybe that says more about the state of the United States than it says about the film. You people need to address the problems where they are, i think is unfair to really put everything at the feet of filmmakers.

Radders
Radders - 9/25/2019, 4:41 AM
@Webheaded225 - This is a fantastic clip and shows the eloquence of the man - he was one of the few people who actually made sense and I often quote his "I'd listen to them" line
CWBNGAJEEPGUY85
CWBNGAJEEPGUY85 - 9/25/2019, 6:03 AM
@Radders - he's a very intelligent man. Had I not watched that, I would have never guessed that was him. I'm not into his music, but he makes a valid point. Back then he was the Poster Boy for fear. it's a shame the public crucified him for Columbine
tmp3
tmp3 - 9/25/2019, 4:17 AM
The real issue isn't violent movies or video games, it's the fact that gun control is abysmal in the US. Walmart banning violent video games while still stocking ammunition is the perfect portrait of how bad the priorities are when it comes to resolving these issues. Why ban movies if you're not even going to try to do anything about the assault rifles?
1 2 3 4
View Recorder