No company
or franchise has a perfect track record, but with movie adaptations of comics Marvel
places more often than not. By contrast, DC since the turn of the millennium has
struggled to find a winning horse despite its extensive stable of comic book characters.
The big exception is Christopher Nolan’s Batman
trilogy, particularly The Dark Knight featuring
Heath Ledger’s brilliant incarnation of the Joker as a nihilist anarchist
philosopher-crook. Otherwise the night for DC indeed has been dark. Oh, DC
actually made money from its bad movies, and one might think that is enough. But
execs at both DC and Warner Brothers studios worry (with justice) that without better
critic and viewer reviews the money train will stop, especially since most
revenue these days is aftermarket (streaming and DVD).
Suicide Squad, now in theaters, was supposed to turn things around. It
won’t. Reviews have been devastating. I’m certain this film will make money too,
as the premise is an appealing one: a sort of Dirty Dozen with comic book villains. In Suicide Squad the villains are recruited to take on a superhuman
adversary. All of us have a dark side as Freud noted academically in Civilization and Its Discontents and as R.L.
Stevenson noted more colorfully in The Strange
Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. Letting a viewer identify with a villain
working (however opportunistically) in a good cause taps into both sides.
It surely
is fatuous to complain when comic book characters are drawn cartoonishly. Yet,
it is worth noting, and in this film they are. There are only two partially redeeming
characters out of a large cast: the amoral get-the-job-done Amanda Waller
(Viola Davis) and Harley Quinn (Margot Robbie). There is not much to say about
Amanda other than that she is a very scary boss. Harley Quinn is the one character with a
diagnosable mental condition. (Harley calls Deadshot [Will Smith] a standard sociopath at one point, but he isn't.) Symptoms listed in the diagnostic manual DSM-V for
“histrionic personality” include 1) flirtatiousness, 2) suggestibility, 3)
attention-seeking, 4) superficial speech, 5) provocative clothes, 6) overly
dramatic self-representation, 7) incorrect assessment of intimacy. That’s
Harley. Her completely inappropriate love affair with the Joker evokes Bonnie and Clyde.
Harley
Quinn made her first appearance in the animated Batman TV series (1992) but was later fleshed out in DC comics. She
was Dr. Harleen Quinzel, a psychiatrist at Arkham Mental Hospital where the
Joker was imprisoned. Thanks to her own mental issues and a variety of
Stockholm Syndrome she became infatuated with the Joker, helping him to escape
and becoming his girlfriend/sidekick Harley Quinn. There have been some
neo-Victorian complaints about the sexualization of the character, yet those
complaints miss the degree to which Harley owns her sexuality as a tool – in the
comics she is bisexual with a side thing for Poison Ivy. Her love for the Joker,
as terrible as he is, is very much her chosen statement of identity.
I
think many of us have been there. OK, maybe not with literal supervillains but
certainly with inappropriate lovers.
Unfortunately
this is not a movie about Harley – or Amanda. It is about the Suicide Squad and
their recruiters. For the movie as a whole, despite the big budget mayhem, there is not enough there there,
Thumbs
down.
Clip Suicide
Squad
Yeah, I had no intentions on seeing this one and really don't care to much about watching it on DVD either. I don't know if I'm going through comic book burn out or what, but something about it reminded me more of the 60's Batman TV show or the earlier Burton et al. Batman films. I've read there were a lot of flaws with the film, script problems for one. Like you said though, it'll probably make money anyway given distribution internationally.
ReplyDeleteThere was potential in the moral ambiguity not only of the villains but their employers. The script (despite a complicated plot) went for simplistic motives and cgi destruction. That might be enough for the box office.
DeleteThe trailer made this look like a lot of fun. And I've always liked Harley since the animated series days. Her twisted relationship with the Joker made for some very interesting afternoon cartoon antics. I was so looking forward to seeing her on the big screen. But this one just looks like a misfire. How great would it have been to just have a movie focusing on Harley and the Joker with Batman acting as their villain. Ah well. DC has a lot riding on Wonder Woman. We'll see what happens.
ReplyDeleteIt had unrealized potential.
DeleteI understand there is a Harley movie in the works, but we'll have to wait until 2018 for it. I don't know if the character will follow her development in the comics where, oddly enough, she is a roller derby girl. She'd spend a lot of time in the penalty box.