Well, he's got green hair and a grin, he must be the joker, right? Guys?
Yeah, not like this poser, he doesn't even have a grin.
Well, he's got green hair and a grin, he must be the joker, right? Guys?
where the hell are they going with this? all around terrible design smh
where the hell are they going with this? all around terrible design smh
ROFLI fully expect him to be wearing this shirt at some point in the film:
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Urghhhh...that looks terrible. Or maybe I'm just not Marilyn Manson fan.
The costume design in this movie is the worst in recent memory and this pretty much confirms it along Deadshot's hockey pads.
Well, he's got green hair and a grin, he must be the joker, right? Guys?
You need to come take a walk down Brick Lane, London sometime.Well, you'd have to be damaged or have bad taste to wear something like that!
The costume design in this movie is the worst in recent memory and this pretty much confirms it along Deadshot's hockey pads.
Yeah. it's utterly bizarre that they went with the costume design that they did, given that this film inhabits the same world as the larger DCCU (MoS/BvS). The "everything has tattoos/all the costumes and props have stupid writing on them" aesthetic being greenlighted is a truly baffling decision. Like I could even maybe understand if just Joker and Harley were done that way, but like even Deadshot's costume and gun have shit written on them. It's way overdone. Hopefully they tone it down a bit in future films.
Either that or the guy from Prodigy.
Holy shit that's terrible.
It's like the Joker decided to become a pimp.
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Looks sickening. Hopefully we get good info about him on Empire this month.
They're prison issued pants. They say Arkham on the side, they're what he was wearing in the trailer. I would assume they're what he wears when he breaks out of prison and a lackey would bring the coat, bit hard to change trousers in the middle of an escape. But idk that's just what it seems to me.![]()
Easily the worst rendition of The Joker I've ever seen. The fuck is up with those trousers? Looks like something you'd see a chav wearing back in 2005 or some shit. Ugh.
Well, supposedly they're giving a lot of freedom to each director, rather than attempting to make everything feel like part of the same "series" like Marvel's movies.
ITT: people don't trust David Ayer's design choices.
Seriously people - he's got this!
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I watched this film the other night and liked it a lot. I also liked End of Watch.
Is this a sincere post? If not, is the gif meant to indicate something? Because that's some pretty fucking good framing, from where I'm sitting.
You're talking a lot, but you're not saying anything.Qu'est-ce que c'est?
Fafafa fafafafa fa fa
Nah. Still not digging him, looks way too desperate. Unless he is.(I don't know why I even spoiler tag a speculation).Jason Todd
Right... that's why I said it's baffling; perhaps the next director won't want a character to have, say, permanent facial tattoos, but... the character already has them. So one director's influence carries on into other people's vision. It's... not ideal.
I'd be shocked if they didn't. Korn used to rock that style in the 90's, and that era of nu metal douchbaggery seems to be exactly what they're pulling from with Joker and Harley.
...
The actor is of course very familiar with what goes on in the head of the Clown Prince of Crime, especially as he never broke character during the shoot, something which led to him tormenting his fellow cast members in unique ways. For Jim Parrack (who plays The Joker's henchman, Jonny Frost) that included random calls throughout the day, with orders to spray paint roses black and filling a backpack with nine inch nails. "There was definitely a period of...detachment," Leto explains. "I took a pretty deep dive. But this was a unique opportunity and I couldn't imagine doing it another way. It was fun, playing those psychological games. But at the same time it was very painful, like giving birth out of my prick hole."
Revealing that he listened to 1920s gospel music and read literature on shamans while playing The Joker, Leto offered some interesting insight into this take on the villain when he said, "I always get the sense that The Joker may be much older than people think. It's something different. If you don't break rules, you're not going to strike new ground. I think I'll be cooling down for the rest of my life." Suicide Squad producer Charles Roven also chimed in by revealing that the villain's dress sense has been inspired by Mexican cartels, while he's now, "More social...a very successful and smart businessman besides being a sociopath." Director David Ayer meanwhile had this to say about how Leto's take on the villain will differ to what's come before on the big screen. "The Joker is the third rail of comic book movies. There's a power to that character, and by some freaking miracle, through the incredible things Jared has done and the photography and all the other millions of things that went into it, we've cooked up something transcendent. He's scary."