Joker: Folie à Deux director Todd Phillips has explained the film’s ending, Arthur Fleck’s confession ... Phillips stated, “The sad thing is, he’s Arthur, and nobody cares about Arthur.” ...
In a previous post, I discussed how Arthur Fleck's childhood led to his adulthood ... even when both joyous and sad music are intertwined with each other. Arthur is still expected to play the ...
Arthur Fleck, aka the Joker ... He had shown that he was guilty of the killings on which he was being tried and confessed that he had never had a separate identity known as the Joker but always ...
In some ways, he's accepted the fact that he's always been Arthur Fleck," Todd Phillips said, adding, "the sad thing is, he's Arthur, and nobody cares about Arthur." This clarification is expected ...
The picture has so little energy that it sags off the screen—it’s as droopy as the sad, psychiatric-prison underpants worn by ...
The film picks up immediately following the end of the original, with Phoenix’s Arthur Fleck being imprisoned and undergoing psychiatric evaluation for his impending trial for the murder of ...
At the end of Todd Phillips' highly divisive sequel, Arthur Fleck meets a shocking (yet perhaps ... "I like to think he died at peace in a way being himself. The kid says to him, 'You want ...
Joker and its sequel also set up another murderous sad clown with Arthur Fleck, whose rise to villainy ... tumbling over himself to avoid being the person Lee fell for, and to return to his ...