A recent picture from this week revealed The Joker donning a very suave suit, with his tattoos peeking out from under the sleeve cuffs and between the jacket lapels. Once more, uproar ensued. "This isn't The Joker!" "I hate his new look!" "The tattoos are terrible! Especially 'damaged' on his forehead!" No, these aren't actual quotes, but this is the gist of how fans are reacting to these few images.
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"Don't you dare damage my 'damaged' tattoo!" |
While it stands true that the new look of The Joker stands apart from his other film predecessors and comic image, let's not forget one thing: this is a film adaptation. The image of an established character may change over time or with the choosing of the director's aesthetics, but it's still the same character. Maybe the tattoos are meant to show how unstable The Joker is as a person? Maybe there's no real reason behind the tattoos at all; maybe it was just something the costuming department thought would set this Joker apart from the others? Who the hell cares?
We've seen the worst that fans have to say about modern changes to their favorite superheroes and film characters, from Superman to Batman to Spider-Man to the X-Men: their origins don't match up to other films or the comics, their story lines change, their costumes are bizarre, too armored, or lacking the right color pattern. Adaptations are meant to reinterpret the text or source whichever way it seems fitting to the time the film takes place in. In a way, film adaptations of books and novels are like visual SparkNotes; they can only contain so much of the original material to fit in a limited time frame. One is obviously not going to get the exact same understanding of the material if one was to take on the abridged or altered version, but the original concept and characterization is still there. With "Suicide Squad", The Joker and Harley Quinn, despite their appearances, will still be the nutty, maniacal couple DC fans know and love. If they were to be anything else, then there's reason to get in a fuss with the film crew.
Retrospectively, the fact that not even pop culture fans can get over the controversial hurdle of change reveals a lot about our culture as a whole. One alteration, reinterpretation, or suggestion with something we as a nation are familiar with greatly offends the masses. Black president? The devil is in the Oval Office. Gay rights? Straight people's rights are infringed upon. Women who are plus-sized? They shouldn't be models because they aren't emaciated. Our nation's inability to accept any kind of positive change keeps throwing us back into the gutter time and again. People take any sort of change so personally, as if their very own existence is threatened by something that isn't status-quo.
I got news for those kinds of people: the world doesn't stay the same. You can see it with the recent earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, rising ocean levels. The world itself doesn't sit still. Hell, our human history has drastically changed. Did we get to where we are by hiding in caves out of fear? Did we not excel, invent, and question ourselves to make our lives better?
One little costume change, and the nerd world erupts in outcry. How about we stay positive for once and see how the film actually is when it comes out a year from now? How about we see the positives in any change that is thrown our way in general? The world is already full of negative distractions; let's make it turn better with more positive reinforcement and belief.