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  • Joker, the much-anticipated new take on the DC Comics villain of the same name, weaves

  • such a winding narrative that it leaves behind plenty of fascinating implications, and huge

  • questions, after the credits roll.

  • Spoilers ahead.

  • Let's get this one out of the way first.

  • Arthur Fleck spends a lot of time lost in fantasy.

  • We see this almost immediately in the film, when he's watching Murray Franklin and fantasizes

  • about being an audience member who gets called down in front of the cameras.

  • Later, this goes even further when we realize that Arthur has imagined an entire romantic

  • relationship with his neighbor Sophie.

  • This tendency toward fantasy, coupled with things like the dreamlike way he walks out

  • of the interview room in the final shot of the film, are enough to make us wonder how

  • much of the story takes place in Arthur's head.

  • We know for sure that some elements are imagined, but what else might be?

  • Did he ever actually make it out of that cop car in the middle of the riot?

  • Did he actually kill his therapist?

  • Was he even, perhaps, in the asylum the whole time?

  • It's hard to be certain, but the rest of these questions rely on at least some of these events

  • being true.

  • Arthur Fleck's life is unraveling from pretty much the moment Joker begins, but things only

  • get worse when he learns that his mother Penny believes that Thomas Wayne, her former employer,

  • is Arthur's father.

  • At first, Arthur has no reason to believe his mother is wrong, but when he confronts

  • Wayne about it, the billionaire insists that Penny is just delusional.

  • Later, Arthur recovers paperwork from Arkham State Hospital that apparently confirms that

  • he was adopted, but is that the whole story?

  • Even later in the film, he finds a photograph of his mother that Thomas Wayne apparently

  • inscribed on the back with a comment about Penny's lovely smile... so how much of the

  • Wayne story was really true?

  • Joker is a film that keeps most of its very precise focus on Arthur Fleck and his very

  • small life, but he's accidentally a catalyst for a much larger picture.

  • He tells Murray Franklin that he doesn't consider himself political, but the subway murders

  • he commits spark a sweeping political movement, and by the end of the film, that movement

  • considers him its leader, cheering at his feet in the streets of a burning Gotham.

  • While this de facto Joker Gang was founded on anti-rich sentiment amid worsening conditions

  • for the working class in Gotham City, by the end of the film their protests have turned

  • into full-on riots.

  • This begs the question: are they ever actually able to achieve anything?

  • Does the murder of someone as important as Thomas Wayne drive them back into the shadows...

  • or do they become more active than ever?

  • A key subplot in Joker follows Thomas Wayne's campaign to become mayor of Gotham City, and

  • his criticisms of the demonstrators who revere the subway shooter.

  • Wayne is portrayed in the film as a powerful, blustery man who happens to be sitting atop

  • the powder keg that is Gotham City politics, and he's more than just a little oblivious

  • to the lives of the less fortunate.

  • But no matter how out of touch Thomas Wayne is, why on earth would he take his wife and

  • young son to a movie theater in the middle of Gotham on the night of a planned protest

  • against the rich?

  • And even if he did want to take that risk, why didn't he at least have a driver waiting

  • to escort them out?

  • Whether courageous or just clueless, it seems like a really bad time to go to the movies

  • when you've got a perfectly good mansion to chill in.

  • There have been many similar versions of Batman's origin story, but they all involve the death

  • of Bruce Wayne's parents, whether they're gunned down by a random mugger, or a guy specifically

  • named Joe Chill or Jack Napier.

  • In Joker, the Waynes are killed by a random, clown-masked rioter who happens to have a

  • gun, but there's no way Bruce Wayne won't later learn that the whole ordeal happened

  • because of Arthur Fleck.

  • With that in mind, is Batman's eventual mission to fight crime cast in a different light?

  • It's no longer just "crime" that killed his parents; it's the violent movement surrounding

  • Joker.

  • In this world, does Bruce Wayne still become Batman, or does his mission change?

  • Will he focus on Arthur Fleck exclusively?

  • And if he does become Batman, how does knowing what he knows about Arthur change him?

  • Arthur Fleck is at first reluctant to embrace the violence within him, but by the end of

  • Joker, the dam has clearly broken.

  • "All I have are negative thoughts."

  • Arthur is no longer interested in holding himself back, from killing Murray Franklin

  • on live TV, to murdering the therapist interviewing him at Arkham.

  • As the film ends, Arthur's potential escape is left up in the air.

  • Because he's the Joker now, we can reasonably assume that he did manage to get out of Arkham

  • that day, and is on the loose again after the credits roll.

  • If that happened, what's his purpose now?

  • Who does he go after next?

  • His mother's old abusive boyfriend, or his birth parents?

  • Or will he become like the comic book version of the Joker, and simply act as an agent of

  • chaos, pursuing random bloodshed?

  • Whatever he does, it won't be pretty.

  • Gotham City is a metropolis teetering on the brink even before Arthur Fleck's rampage.

  • It's dirty, covered in graffiti, and mountains of garbage are piling up amid a strike while

  • super rats stalk the darker parts of town.

  • It's a city infested with crime, unemployment, and anger.

  • The rise of Arthur and those who sympathize with him only makes things worse.

  • It all seems to culminate in the murders of Thomas Wayne and Murray Franklin, but surely

  • that's not where it ends.

  • With Thomas Wayne dead, the divide between the privileged and the underprivileged in

  • Gotham could deepen very quickly.

  • The police could crack down even harder on people who don't deserve it, and the Joker

  • Gang could respond with even bigger, more violent riots.

  • The city is on edge, and it won't have Batman to come to the rescue for at least another

  • decade.

  • So what does Gotham do?

  • How does it cope?

  • There's no easy answer.

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Joker, the much-anticipated new take on the DC Comics villain of the same name, weaves

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