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2019.09.02 13:00 GMT+8

Villain in Venice: Joaquin Phoenix goes from tragic to comic in 'Joker'

Updated 2019.09.02 13:00 GMT+8
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Joaquin Phoenix (C) attends the "Joker" screening during the 76th Venice Film Festival at Sala Grande in Venice, Italy, August 31, 2019. /VCG Photo

One of Gotham’s most famous villains arrived at the Venice Film Festival on Saturday, in a standalone dark story telling the origins of the Joker.

Joaquin Phoenix follows in the footsteps of Jack Nicholson, the late Heath Ledger and most recently Jared Leto to play Batman’s nemesis in "Joker," turning him from a vulnerable beaten down loner into the confident, makeup wearing baddie.

Set in the early 1980s, when Bruce Wayne is still a child and years away from becoming the DC Comics superhero, the movie, which premiered at the festival, begins with Gotham in turmoil with rubbish piling up on the streets.

Joaquin Phoenix signs autographs ahead of the "Joker" screening during the 76th Venice Film Festival at Sala Grande in Venice, Italy, August 31, 2019. /VCG Photo

The actor spent eight months exploring how a struggling stand-up comedian named Arthur Fleck becomes Batman’s antagonist, the villain with a chilling laugh and a love of chaos. 

Preparing for the role involved losing quite a bit of weight, studying personality disorders and practicing the laugh over and over again.

"(It's) very difficult to distill into a soundbite," Phoenix said Saturday in advance of the world premiere of "Joker" at the Venice International Film Festival.

Rooney Mara walks the red carpet ahead of the "Joker" screening during the 76th Venice Film Festival at Sala Grande in Venice, Italy, August 31, 2019. /VCG Photo

Phoenix's Arthur Fleck works as a clown, swinging banners on the street or performing for sick children in hospital. He wants to be a stand up comedian, mimicking others to learn how to do so, but ends up being the butt of jokes himself.

Nicknamed Happy by his mother, with whom he lives, Fleck is anything but. He has an uncontrollable, and at times misplaced laughter, that is often misunderstood and sees him taunted by bullies.

Alienated and fragile, he begins to morph into Joker, unwillingly inspiring others in a fractured and violent Gotham.

Cate Blanchett walks the red carpet ahead of the "Joker" screening during the 76th Venice Film Festival at Sala Grande in Venice, Italy, August 31, 2019. /VCG Photo

"The attraction to make this film and this character was that we were going to approach it in our own way so for me I didn’t refer to any past creations of the character," Phoenix told a news conference.

"I did identify Arthur as a particular personality but then I also wanted the freedom to create something that wasn't identifiable. This is a fictional character and I didn't want a psychiatrist to be able to identify the kind of person he was."

Oscar buzz

Director Todd Phillips (L) and Joaquin Phoenix walk the red carpet ahead of the "Joker" screening during the 76th Venice Film Festival at Sala Grande in Venice, Italy, August 31, 2019. /VCG Photo

With somber lighting and music, a dark mood persists throughout the film, heavily differentiating it from typical DC or Marvel superhero movies.

Director Todd Phillips, known for “"he Hangover" films and "War Dog," said he took inspiration from character study movies from the 1970s.

"We just thought it could be an exciting approach to this genre, I am not sure what it means to DC or Marvel how they will change the way they do it," he said.

(L-R) Zazie Beetz, Joaquin Phoenix and Director Todd Phillips walk the red carpet ahead of the "Joker" screening during the 76th Venice Film Festival at Sala Grande in Venice, Italy, August 31, 2019. /VCG Photo

"It was a hard movie for us to get made and to convince DC and the studio at first but we kind of just kept pushing as we felt it could be really special."

Asked if a lack of empathy was a key subject in the film, for which writing began in 2017, Phillips said: "It's a big part of what the movie's about."

"It's about the lack of empathy that we are seeing in the world at the time we wrote it that probably still exists."

Joaquin Phoenix attends a "Joker" photocall during the 76th Venice Film Festival at Sala Grande in Venice, Italy, August 31, 2019. /VCG Photo

The premiere of the standalone film obtained an eight-minute standing ovation at the prestigious film festival. 

Phoenix's performance is generating awards talk with many expecting him to be headed for Oscar glory.

The film currently enjoys an average rating of 9.05 out of 10 points on Rotten Tomatoes with a score of 9.7 on IMDb.

Joaquin Phoenix (Front-L) and his wife Rooney Mara (Back-R) attend the "Joker" screening during the 76th Venice Film Festival at Sala Grande in Venice, Italy, August 31, 2019. /VCG Photo

"Joker," one of the most-eagerly awaited by critics at the festival, is one of 21 films competing for the Golden Lion prize.

"It's really exciting because it's one of the first from DC that's not your typical superhero super villain movie, it's really much more of a character study," Ariston Anderson, international correspondent at the Hollywood Reporter, said.

"It’s very smart ... to launch it at a festival ... I think there is already Oscar buzz around it."

(With input from Reuters, AP)

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