JOKER Officially Begins Its Oscar Campaign - Can It Secure Joaquin Phoenix His First Academy Award?

JOKER Officially Begins Its Oscar Campaign - Can It Secure Joaquin Phoenix His First Academy Award?

Joker is now the highest-grossing R-rated movie of all time, and Warner Bros. will be hoping to capitalize on the film's success and the buzz surrounding star Joaquin Phoenix's performance come Oscar time.

By MarkCassidy - Oct 30, 2019 04:10 AM EST
Filed Under: Joker
Joker recently passed Deadpool 2 at worldwide box office to become the highest-grossing R-rated movie of all time, and Warner Bros. has now turned its attention to the Academy Awards.

The studio is hoping for Oscar recognition in all major categories, including, of course, a Best Actor nomination for star Joaquin Phoenix.

The campaign is now officially underway, and you can check out a pair of posters below.





A nom for Phoenix would seem like a safe bet after the amount of buzz his performance has received, but the Academy is notoriously stuffy when it comes to comic book movies, and Todd Philips' film has also come in for quite a bit of negative backlash due to its violent content and perceived "irresponsible" depiction of a damaged man lashing out at society.

Do you guys think Joker has a chance at picking up some Oscar gold? Let us know in the comments, and check out out spoiler breakdown below.

Simply click on the VIEW LIST (ONE PAGE) button below!

Meet Arthur Fleck

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We are introduced to Arthur Fleck (Joaquin Phoenix) almost immediately, and it's clear from the start that this guy has some serious issues.

Arthur suffers from an unspecified mental illness, along with a condition that forces him to burst into fits of laughter in stressful situations. Living and caring for his mother (Frances Conroy), he gets by on medication, weekly therapy sessions and focusing on his job as a street clown. But a violent assault from a gang of kids that steal his sign kicks off a series of events that will take Arthur down a very dark path.

The Neighbor Who Wasn't There

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Arthur meets a sympathetic single mother named Sophie Dummond (Zazie Beetz) who lives in his apartment building. The two seem to hit it off and actually embark on a romantic relationship, but something about it always seems a bit off (she's fine with him stalking her for a start), and we eventually find out why.

We're jumping ahead here, but towards the end it's revealed that Arthur was actually imagining all of his dates with Sophie and embracing the delusion of companionship. This is fully confirmed when he walks into her apartment and she reacts with fear, barely recalling his name.

One Bad Day...

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Okay, so it's a lot more than one bad day in Arthur's case, but a certain series of events in close succession do ultimately tip him over the edge.

A seemingly altruistic clown colleague gives Fleck a gun when he hears about the assault, but when it falls out of his pocked during a visit to a children's hospital, Arthur is fired.

His boss also tells him that the same workmate that gave him the gun denied all knowledge, and actually said Arthur tried to sell it to him.

The First Kills

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On the way home on the subway, Arthur is mocked and assaulted by three wall-street jocks who had been hassling a woman on the seat across from them. When Fleck begins to laugh uncontrollably, they target him.

Not a good idea, boys.

Arthur guns two of them down and chases the third outside where he mercilessly executes him on the steps to the street above. Afterwards, we're treated to a haunting scene of Arthur dancing slowly in the bathroom, preparing to fully embrace a whole new persona.

Thomas Wayne

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Arthur's mother is obsessed with Mayoral candidate Thomas Wayne, who used to employ her. She writes him multiple letters, none of which are ever responded to.

After the subway murders, Arthur decides to read her latest letter and discovers that Wayne is actually his real father. Upon confronting his mother about it, he decides to go to Wayne Manor and winds up running into a young Bruce Wayne. 

The future Batman seems unimpressed with Arthur's magic tricks, and a butler-type (could be Alfred, but seems unlikely) steps in. He tells Fleck that his mother is crazy and gets a near-throttling for his trouble.

"You Think This Is Funny?"

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Arthur decides to get answers from Wayne (Brett Cullen) himself, and poses as a bellboy (a little nod to his comic book counterpart's penchant for disguises, perhaps?) at the opera in order to confront him in the bathroom.

Things do not go well, as the ruthless Wayne denies being Fleck's father and reveals that he never even slept with his former employee, who spent time in Arkham Psychiatric Hospital back when he knew her. When Arthur begins to laugh maniacally and grows angry, Wayne punches him and returns to his seat.

Disturbing Revelations

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Still not convinced, Arthur goes to Arkham to check his mother's records. The orderly (Brian Tyree Henry) tells him that he can't reveal any details, so Arthur steals the file and uncovers the shocking truth.

The mentally ill woman Arthur believed to be his mother actually adopted him, and a police report reveals that she allowed one of her boyfriends to sexually abuse him as a child.

Arthur then suffocates Penny Fleck with a pillow, telling her that he now views his life as a comedy.

Scissors

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A representative for popular talk-show host Murray Franklin (Robert De Niro) calls Arthur and asks him to come on the show to discuss a video of his excruciating stand-up act that Murray mocked earlier in the movie.

As Fleck prepares by putting on his makeup and holding a gun to his head, two former colleagues - one of whom gave him the gun drop by to make sure Arthur never said anything to the police. Arthur erupts in violence, brutally stabbing the bigger man to death with a scissors.

He shows a glimmer of humanity and allows the other to live, telling him he was "the only one who was ever nice."

Joker

Image result for joker murray franklin


Arthur arrives for his Murray Franklin appearance, asking the host to introduce him as Joker. He begins by telling a few off color jokes before admitting that he killed the men on the subway. Franklin soon realizes he's not joking, but continues to antagonize his clearly unstable guest.

Although it initially seemed as if Arthur intended to kill himself live on air, he decides to tell one final joke ("What do you get when you cross a mentally ill loner with a society that abandons him and treats him like trash? I'll tell you what you get. You get what you [frick]ing deserve!") and shoots Murray instead.

Put On A Happy Face

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Inspired by Fleck's actions and Wayne referring to Gotham's underprivileged as "clowns," a large number of Gotham citizens stage violent riots across the city. As Arthur is being taken to prison, an ambulance crashes into the side of the car and a pair of mask-wearing rioters free him from the back.

Arthur dances on the bonnet of the car while the city erupts in chaos around him. As he paints a smile on his face using his own blood, we see Thomas and Martha Wayne being gunned down in an alley in front of their son, Bruce.

"You Wouldn't Get It"

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There's no post-credits scene, but we do get an epilogue of sorts which finds Joker at a therapy session in Arkham.

As he begins to laugh we briefly cut to Bruce Wayne standing in shock as his parents lay dead at his feet.

The therapist asks Fleck what he find so funny, and he tells her he thought of a joke, but she wouldn't get it. We then see Arthur leaving the room in slow-motion, leaving bloody footprints. This clearly implies that he murdered his therapist, fully giving himself over to the the monstrous Joker persona.
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SuperCat
SuperCat - 10/30/2019, 4:59 AM
>>>>>>>>>>>

Archgoat
Archgoat - 10/30/2019, 5:08 AM
Nomination for Phoenix is possible but I'm not sure he will win, Joker is way too controversial. I saw an article about Oscar academy voters, many of them refused to even watch it because it's "pro-incel" and "glorifying mass shooters".
QuietStorm
QuietStorm - 10/30/2019, 5:08 AM
When he wins...
connorblaze
connorblaze - 10/30/2019, 5:12 AM
Definitely deserves one for the score. Music enhanced this movie so much.

Phoenix deserves one.

Deserves to be in the race for best picture. It affected most people pretty deeply in some way, it started conversations and was thematically rich, the direction and acting and music were incredible, as was the cinematography.

Only thing that let it down at times was the screenplay.

Amazing movie. That moment where he stands in front of his ‘fans’ and draws the smile on... haunting.
Typobutcorrect
Typobutcorrect - 10/30/2019, 5:17 AM
Yes...
WakandanQueen
WakandanQueen - 10/30/2019, 5:19 AM
Phoenix and Hildur Guðnadóttir should be frontrunners. It's a well crafted film, so I wouldn't be surprised if it managed to grab a few more noms (cinematography, production design, editing etc.). It will more likely than not get a Best Picture nomination as well.

But, as CBM users love to say, the script isn't "Oscar-worthy".
TunkyBoy52
TunkyBoy52 - 10/30/2019, 5:20 AM
I hope it wins. Honestly. But, unfortunately, I don't think it will. Its to controversial for them, which is honestly sad, considering how good this movie was.
regularmovieguy
regularmovieguy - 10/30/2019, 5:21 AM
Wait....is best ensemble an Oscar now?? Or is that maybe only for the SAG awards?
WakandanQueen
WakandanQueen - 10/30/2019, 5:24 AM
@regularmovieguy - Only for SAG. Parasite should get that one imo.
regularmovieguy
regularmovieguy - 10/30/2019, 5:36 AM
@WakandanQueen

Seeing that and The Lighthouse on Sunday - making it a double feature
IronGenesis
IronGenesis - 10/30/2019, 5:22 AM
You know if the Academy did it ONCE...then they could say they did it and go back to be prickly.

Unless they feel they can ride the Black Panther Nom for a few more years.

🤷‍♂️
Spidey91
Spidey91 - 10/30/2019, 5:27 AM
@IronGenesis - middle road solution: nominate Joker but not actually give it the award, so that way they can ride BOTH noms for a few years :p
Spidey91
Spidey91 - 10/30/2019, 5:25 AM
Won't probably win best picture (not if the competition is as fierce as it seems with Scorsese, Tarantino, Bong Joon-ho and maybe even Taika having a chance at the nom), but it's definitely locked for Phoenix's performance.
Kumkani
Kumkani - 10/30/2019, 5:30 AM
I actually think Joker should win Best Picture.

A lot of people seem to always associate that title with a film being the objectively best but I don't really think so. It seems to mean mostly (from what I gather) the best cinematic achievement of the year, and I'd argue that's Joker right now. The film has acclaim (even though reception is a bit mixed), has already won prestigious awards, and is INSANELY POPULAR. There's no other film out right now that has all three of those in the bag.

I'd also argue Phoenix should win Best Actor too. Again, not because it's his best performance or the objectively best performance of the year (apparently that's Robert Pattinson) but because it's a damn good, highly talked about and provocative performance that is inspiring people.

Really these are the two I think Joker should win. The score is great as well. Best of luck to them!
JohnnyTBP
JohnnyTBP - 10/30/2019, 5:31 AM
I really hope he wins Best Actor
Se4M4NSt4ine
Se4M4NSt4ine - 10/30/2019, 5:53 AM
Bradley Cooper produced this? Well I’ll be damned, that guys really becoming an influence in Hollywood.
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