"Joker," an origin story about Batman's comic-book arch nemesis,
stars Joaquin Phoenix in what movie reviewers have called a
brilliant but terrifying performance as a mentally unhinged
outcast who unwittingly finds fame through an act of violence.
The DC Comics villain is associated with a 2012 mass shooting at
a movie theater in Aurora, Colorado, a suburb of Denver, during
a screening of a different Batman film, "The Dark Knight Rises."
Families of some of the victims expressed concern about the new
film, and it will not be shown in the Aurora multiplex.
Officers wearing helmets and armed with assault rifles stood
outside a screening of "Joker" at the New York Film Festival on
Wednesday night, where audiences had their bags searched and K9
officers were on duty, video footage showed.
Police in New York, Los Angeles and Chicago said in statements
that, while they knew of no specific threats, they were
deploying additional officers or closely monitoring movie
theaters where the "Joker" is playing.
Hollywood website Deadline cited an unidentified New York law
enforcement official as saying that plainclothes officers would
be stationed inside some movie theaters in the city. The NYPD
could not confirm the report.
Charles Kiwacz, 31, described the Aurora shooting as "an
isolated incident."
"I don't think there's any fear at all. I think it's the exact
opposite - people wanting to go out and show that this movie can
be just that, just a movie," the podcast host and producer said
as he bought a ticket for "Joker" near New York's Times Square.
Tyson Sheehan, 32, a Los Angeles-area music student from
Australia, said he was keen to see the film after "looking at
all the trailers and everything," but jitters about its subject
matter, coupled with what he sees as "lax" U.S. gun laws, gave
him pause.
"It's definitely deterred me from going into the theater and
seeing it ... at least for the first week or two," he said as he
strolled along Hollywood Boulevard on Thursday evening.
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Costumes and face masks have been banned for moviegoers at two U.S.
theater chains - AMC and Landmark - while the Alamo Drafthouse
cinema group warned parents not to bring their children.
The Parents Television Council (PTC), a media watchdog, issued a
similar warning on Thursday. "Parents may believe that this film is
appropriate for kids given that is an extension of the popular
Batman franchise," the PTC said in a statement.
Movie studio Warner Bros. said last week the film was not an
endorsement of real-world violence.
"It is not the intention of the film, the filmmakers or the studio
to hold this character up as a hero," Warner Bros. said in a
statement.
Despite the controversy, the movie is expected to take in a bumper
$80 million or more on its opening weekend in North America,
according to box-office analysts.
"Joker" director Todd Phillips criticized people who have attacked
the film without seeing it.
"I didn't imagine the level of discourse that it's reached in the
world, honestly," Variety quoted him as saying at the New York Film
Festival on Wednesday.
"I think it's OK that it sparks conversations and there are debates
around it. The film is the statement, and it's great to talk about
it, but it's much more helpful if you've seen it."
(Reporting by Jill Serjeant in Los Angeles and Maria Caspani in New
York; Additional reporting by Rollo Ross in Los Angeles; Editing by
Peter Cooney and Steve Gorman)
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