Relatives of people killed in the 2012 shooting at a theater in Aurora, Colorado, during a Batman movie sent a letter to Warner Bros. expressing unease about “Joker,” an upcoming film that has divided critics with its lurid, violent take on the comic book villain.
“When we learned that Warner Bros. was releasing a movie … that presents the character as a protagonist with a sympathetic origin story, it gave us pause,” the five family members say in the letter, according to a copy shared with NBC News on Tuesday by the group Guns Down America.
“We want to be clear that we support your right to free speech and free expression. But as anyone who has ever seen a comic book movie can tell you: with great power comes great responsibility,” they add, quoting a line from “Spider-Man.”
The families ask the AT&T-owned studio to end contributions to political candidates who accept money from the National Rifle Association, to lobby for gun reforms in Congress and to donate to organizations that help survivors of gun violence.
“We are calling on you to be a part of the growing chorus of corporate leaders who understand that they have a social responsibility to keep us all safe,” the letter says.
The letter, addressed to Warner Bros. CEO Ann Sarnoff, stops short of calling on Warner Bros. to cancel plans to release “Joker,” which stars Oscar-nominated actor Joaquin Phoenix as a troubled, twisted stand-up comedian who turns to brutal violence in Gotham City, eventually becoming Batman’s arch-nemesis.
The letter was signed by:
- Sandy and Lonnie Phillips, whose 24-year-old daughter, Jessica Ghawi, was killed in the shooting.
- Theresa Hoover, whose 18-year-old son, Alexander J. Boik, was killed.
- Heather Dearman, whose cousin, Ashley Moser, lost a 6-year-old daughter and unborn child.
- Tina Coon, whose son was a witness to the massacre.
In a statement to NBC News, Warner Bros. said it believed gun violence is a major issue and extended condolences to families touched by tragedy. The company said it had “a long history of donating to victims of violence, including Aurora.”
“At the same time, Warner Bros. believes that one of the functions of storytelling is to provoke difficult conversations around complex issues,” the studio added. “Make no mistake: neither the fictional character Joker, nor the film, is an endorsement of real-world violence of any kind. It is not the intention of the film, the filmmakers or the studio to hold this character up as a hero.”
Todd Phillips — best known for raunchy comedies like “The Hangover” trilogy — did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Tuesday. In a recent interview with the Associated Press, however, Phillips said it was not fair to link his film to real-world violence: “It’s a fictional character in a fictional world that’s been around for 80 years.”
The news of the letter was first reported by The Hollywood Reporter.
“Joker,” slated for theatrical release on Oct. 4, stirred debate after it won the top prize at the Venice International Film Festival in August, drawing plaudits for Phoenix’s performance as the sadistic antihero and denunciation for its gritty depiction of his descent into madness.
Review: "Joker" wants to be a movie about the emptiness of our culture. Instead, it’s a prime — and dangerous — example of it https://t.co/utLLXFucrq
— TIME (@TIME) September 19, 2019
The trailers for “Joker” contain clear allusions to the Martin Scorsese classics “Taxi Driver” and “The King of Comedy,” two films in which Robert De Niro — who plays a supporting role in “Joker” — portrayed alienated social outcasts driven to violence.
In a review published Aug. 31, Indiewire film critic David Ehrlich called the the R-rated project “a true original that’s sure to be remembered as one of the most transgressive studio blockbusters of the 21st Century.”
Ehrlich then expressed concern about the film’s real-world implications, writing that it was “a toxic rallying cry for self-pitying incels,” shorthand for the online community of misogynists who identify as involuntary celibates.
Phoenix, who could earn his fourth Academy Award nomination for his raw performance, reportedly walked out of a recent interview after he was asked by a journalist if he felt “Joker” might inspire real acts of violence. He returned an hour later after speaking with a publicist and said that he previously had never considered the question.
The film comes as major Hollywood studios, keen to put fresh spins on familiar characters and long-running franchises, experiment with hard-edged visual styles and more mature themes, such as in the R-rated X-Men thriller “Logan” and the somber action drama “War for the Planet of the Apes.”
The shooting in Aurora killed 12 people and wounded 70 others, including 58 from gunfire. The gunman, James Holmes, carried out the attack during a midnight showing of Christopher Nolan’s “The Dark Knight Rises,” part of a trilogy that was itself a gritty reboot of the original Batman saga, in the Denver suburb on July 20, 2012.
“I don’t need to see a picture of [Holmes],” Sandy Phillips, mother of Aurora victim Jessica Ghawi, told The Hollywood Reporter. “I just need to see a ‘Joker promo’ and I see a picture of the killer.”
“My worry is that one person who may be out there — and who knows if it is just one — who is on the edge, who is wanting to be a mass shooting, may be encouraged by this movie,” Phillips added. “And that terrifies me.”
“When we learned that Warner Bros. was releasing a movie … that presents the character as a protagonist with a sympathetic origin story, it gave us pause,” the five family members say in the letter,…”
You sheeple are truly retarded, aren’t you.
The Joker is a make-believe person. He didn’t kill your relatives, dummies (IF any were killed to begin with, but I think this one actually did perpetrate some real deaths)
That would be your so-called ‘government’ that loves you ‘citizens’ SO much that it wants to take all your guns so they can protect you from bad people, okay?
For cryin’ out loud, can we just watch a movie for the fun of it? Why do they have to turn everything into SJW or some political agenda?
Stop ruining our movies! If you don’t like the story or if you don’t like the fact that movies like James Bond are about a male spy who gets hot women, or that Thor is and always will be a MALE character, then here’s an idea, just DON’T F*@KING WATCH IT! Stop trying to make every male lead a female lead just because you feel insecure with your femininity. NO ONE, INCLUDING THE WOMEN CARE!!!
This whole F**KING feminist and politically correct bullshit is PISSING ME OFF!!
If a movie is an shoot ’em up action movie, then for cryin’ out loud, I don’t care if there are mass shootings and all that crap going on at that time, show the main the character with a gun, dammit! It’s just a friggin’ movie!
And soon we will be having the whole “Happy Holidays” crap put upon us by these bastards, YET AGAIN! It’s ‘MERRY CHRISTMAS”, you friggin’ retards! If you can’t celebrate it or don’t like it as such, then GO SOMEWHERE ELSE!!
Unfrigginbelievable!
Nice rant, NC!
AGREED!!! (That is exactly why I posted this, NC 😉 😀 )
BTW – Have you heard? They are casting a WOMAN as the next Bond/007.
Sorry, I don’t buy it. Give me a Break! ENOUGH with the hypersensitive “Politically Correct”, “Me Too” BS!!!
Yep, that female bond thing is what I meant in my little rant.
They even try to tell us what movie posters we can and cannot display at the movie theater sometimes due to politically correct sensitivities and all that crap. WTF!!!
Also the Jew York Post just said that the army is warning everyone of possible mass shootings and terror attacks amid the Joker movie coming out.
Good grief! Give it a rest already! Our foreign government in occupation just can’t help itself with the constant fear mongering shit! Can’t I just watch and enjoy a movie for what it is and not have fear mongering and political correctness bullshit shoved down my throat?
Unfrigginbelievable!
“CEO Ann Sarnoff” “The company’s name originated from the four Jewish[5] founding Warner brothers (born Wonskolaser or Wonsal before Anglicization)”
Done.
“Joker Director Calls Backlash Against His Film’s Violence Unfair”
https://screenrant.com/joker-movie-violence-backlash-controversy-todd-phillips-reaction/
“Joker Backlash Is Unwarranted Says Aurora Shooting Victim’s Father”
https://movieweb.com/joker-movie-backlash-aurora-shooting-victim-father/