Posted in: Movies, Warner Bros | Tagged: collider, Joaquin Phoenix, The Joker, The Joker movie, todd phillips, Warner Bros, WB
Joaquin Phoenix Talks His "Character Study" Joker Movie
Thrice Oscar-nominated actor Joaquin Phoenix is gearing up to play one of the most infamous villains in comic book history: Batman's main nemesis, The Joker. After circling the WB film, confirmation came just this week that Phoenix would be slipping into the role of the Clown Prince of Crime in a solo film which will reportedly explore a different side of the mastermind of Gotham's repeated peril.
Yes, it'll be the second Joker film we're getting, because apparently that Jared Leto one is still happening, at some point, even though he's going to be playing Morbius the Living Vampire for Sony.
In a recent chat with Collider, Phoenix commented on coming to the project, and how passionate director Todd Phillips is:
"Three or four years ago, I called my agent and said 'Why don't they want to take one of these characters and just make a lower budget film about it, a movie but a character study, and why not take one of the villains?' And I thought, 'You can't do the Joker, because, you know, it's just you can't do that character, it's just been done.' So I was trying to think of other characters, and he said 'I'll set up a general meeting with Warner Bros.' And I said 'I'm not gonna go, I can't go to a general meeting.' So I completely forgot about it, and so then I heard about this idea, I was like, 'Oh that's so exciting, that's the kind of experience I wanted to have, with a movie based on a comic character.' I felt like you could get something on screen.
It's a magnified version of what you deal with as an actor. So, when you get a script, obviously, the writer— usually for me, it's the writer/director, last several years I've worked with a filmmaker that was the writer and director— and they have their expectation, and they've imagined things in their head, and they've imagined different actors, and suddenly you take it on and so there's this moment of anxiety of 'Did I live up to their expectations?'
And at some point you have to just own it and say like, 'I can't consider who they might have thought up before or what the movie was for the 6 months ago, this is what it is now and I have to find my way into it.' And so in some ways it's a very similar experience, right? But it feels magnified because it's not just one person's expectations, but what you're telling me is that there's at least a dozen.
I wouldn't quite classify this as like any genre. I wouldn't say it's a superhero movie, or a studio movie or a … It feels unique, and I think more then anything, and probably the most important thing, is Todd seems very passionate about it and very giving, and so that's exciting. I think, underneath the excitement of these films, and the size of them, there are these incredible characters that are dealing with real life struggles.
And sometimes that is uncovered and exposed, and sometimes it isn't, and so I always felt, like, there were characters in comics that were really interesting and deserve the opportunity to be kind of studied. And so I think that's what Todd sees appealing about this idea.'
Collider goes on to say they'll have their full interview with Phoenix up soon.