
2024-10-03 19:30:03
LOS ANGELES − Lady Gaga recalls finding mountains of inspiration for a twisted Joker love story while driving through Big Sky Country in late 2022 with her boyfriend, Michael Polansky.
Polansky, a San Francisco entrepreneur, is not the Joker here, of course. Gaga, 38, doesn’t even try to hide the sizable diamond engagement ring from her now-fiancé during an interview. But the Wyoming and Teton Range road trip was awesomely illuminating for her role as Harley Quinn, the infamous love interest to Joaquin Phoenix’s DC archvillain in the wildly anticipated sequel to 2019’s “Joker.”
“So Michael, my fiance, and I were driving around some of the most beautiful mountains in the world,” Gaga says. “And I was thinking, ‘Can you believe that this woman says to (the Joker) that ‘We’re gonna build a mountain together’? And I completely believe she believes that. It’s a complete fantasy.”
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It’s a dark illusion at the core of “Joker: Folie à Deux” (in theaters Friday), a warped love story and unconventional supervillain musical starring two of the most electrifying and eccentric actors in Hollywood. Don’t go looking for Batman battles or gleeful crime capers from the duo of Joker (mentally disturbed loner Arthur Fleck) and Harley Quinn (fellow mental patient Lee Quinzel).
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No ‘Batman.’ No bank robberies. So what is ‘Joker 2’ about?
They didn’t fess up to it at the time, but Phoenix and director/producer/co-writer Todd Phillips had long privately discussed a sequel to their R-rated “Joker.” This was ensured when the first film went on to earn $1 billion at the worldwide box office, 11 Oscar nominations and two wins − including for best actor for Phoenix, whose Arthur is arrested but celebrated as the Joker at the end of the chaotic origin story. Yet, the follow-up was never going to be a comic-book movie money grab or even what Phoenix, 49, calls “traditional.”
“We didn’t want to just carry on from the first film like, he’s the Joker now, so now we’re going to see him out there robbing banks,” Phoenix says. “There wasn’t going to be any of that.”
Phillips and Phoenix started talking about a relationship Joker-style.
“And what happens when somebody falls in love with the image that you project? There was something ripe about that,” Phoenix says. “Because even once he’s arrested in the original, Arthur is above everything. He’s like, there are jokes happening inside me that you’re never, ever going to get.”
“Folie à Deux” is set two years later, after a TV movie about the Joker’s original killing spree, and Arthur is over the mass adoration of his hideously made-up Joker persona. Phoenix got his inspiration by imagining the real daily life of the ’70s rock band KISS.
“Did you ever think, how about Gene Simmons from KISS? Where 20-year-olds are painting their faces, putting on platform shoes, all rock ‘n’ roll,” Phoenix says, laughing. “But what happens when you’re in your 40s and like, ‘I don’t want to put the makeup on anymore’? I just started laughing about that. Todd and I were like, maybe that’s the beginning of something.”
In “Folie à Deux,” the daily toll of life in the violent offenders wing of Arkham State Hospital − with daily medications and the oppressive watch of soul-crushing guards − has extinguished Arthur’s flame. If Arthur looked alarmingly thin in the original “Joker” as a result of Phoenix’s 52-pound weight loss, it’s even more apparent in the second movie. Arthur shuffles out of his cell, seemingly more emaciated, all jutting shoulder bones on his exposed back.