‘Joker: Folie à Deux’ review: Flat plotting in a visually stunning musical

Todd Phillips’s sequel to ‘Joker’ (2019) stars Joaquin Phoenix and Lady Gaga.

‘Joker: Folie à Deux’ review: Flat plotting in a visually stunning musical

Join our WhatsApp Community to receive travel deals, free stays, and special offers!
- Join Now -

Join our WhatsApp Community to receive travel deals, free stays, and special offers!
- Join Now -

The sequel to Joker (2019) flirts with duality. There’s the lingering question of whether clown-turned-murderer Arthur Fleck is a self-aware psychopath or a patient with dissociative identity disorder who expresses himself through the Joker persona.

Locked away in the brutal Arkham Asylum for killing six people, Arthur (Joaquin Phoenix) careens between lucidity and delusion. His lawyer Maryanne (Catherine Keener) pleads for a fair hearing on the ground of insanity, which is vehemently opposed by state attorney Harvey Dent (Harry Lawtey). Complicating Arthur’s trial is Arkham’s new inmate Lee Quinzel (Lady Gaga), who is obsessed with Joker to the point of mimicking his appearance and actions.

Unlike most sequels, Joker: Folie à Deux has every reason to exist. Todd Phillips’s follow-up to the brilliant Joker (2019) has the intent and means to mine the “madness of two” suggested by the title –but not the rigour or imagination.

The screenplay by Phillips and Scott Silver is barely interested in the transference of psychotic behaviour from killer to mega-fan. Rather, the casting of the singer Lady Gaga – a fine actor in her own right, with an electric screen presence – allows Folie à Deux to pose as a grim musical.

Hildur Guonadottir’s brooding background score merges seamlessly with Gaga’s renditions of popular American songs. The off-kilter...

Read more