The climactic scene on the Murray Franklin Show crystallizes this. Arthur walks on stage not as a victim, but as a performer finally in control. He doesn’t rant about politics; he confesses. “You get what you fucking deserve,” he says before the act of violence. This is not a political slogan; it is a wounded man’s final rejection of a society that laughed at him, never with him. The tragedy is that the audience—both the live studio audience and us—understands his rage, even as we recoil from his actions.
Joker is not a glorification of violence; it is an indictment of the conditions that make violence feel inevitable to the lost. The film’s final image—Arthur standing on a cop car, smearing blood into a smile, dancing for an ecstatic crowd—is chilling precisely because it feels earned. We watched the system break him, piece by piece. The film’s power lies in its uncomfortable question: In a society that has replaced empathy with cruelty and community with chaos, how many Jokers are we creating right now? joker 2019 archive.org
Todd Phillips’s Joker (2019) arrived in a firestorm of controversy. Critics feared it would serve as a dangerous incel manifesto; audiences flocked to see Joaquin Phoenix’s metamorphosis. More than a comic-book origin story, Joker functions as a brutal case study in social neglect, mental illness, and the terrifying ease with which a broken man can become a symbol for a broken society. By stripping away the campy gadgets of Gotham and grounding the story in a grimy, late-70s New York aesthetic, Phillips forces us to look not at a supervillain, but at a mirror. The climactic scene on the Murray Franklin Show
One of the film’s smartest choices is its narrative instability. Did Arthur actually have a romance with his neighbor, or was that a hallucination? Was he really a child of abuse, or is he performing that memory for his mother’s hospital room? By leaving these questions open, Phillips denies us the comfort of a simple diagnosis. We cannot fully exonerate Arthur as "just sick," nor can we fully condemn him as "just evil." He is a creature of ambiguity. “You get what you fucking deserve,” he says