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Tim Dillon, who makes a brief appearance in Joker: Folie
à Deux, has described the new sequel as 'terrible' and
'the worst film ever made'.
The follow-up to the Oscar-winning 2019 film, starring Joaquin Phoenix
as Arthur Fleck (Joker) and Lady Gaga as Lee Quinzel
(Harley Quinn), faced negative reviews from critics before its October 4 release and
flopped at the box office.
Tim, 39, who played a guard at Arkham Asylum in the movie,
said Todd Philips's new film has 'no plot' and admitted he knew it was 'going to bomb'
while filming.
Speaking on The Joe Rogan Experience podcast, Tim said: 'It's
the worst film ever made.
'I think what happened, after the first Joker, there was a lot of talk like, 'Oh, this was loved by incels.
This was loved by the wrong kinds of people. This sent the wrong kind of message.
Male rage! Nihilism! All these think pieces.
Tim Dillon, who makes a brief appearance in Joker:
Folie à Deux, has described the new sequel as 'terrible' and 'the worst film ever
made'
The follow-up to the Oscar-winning 2019 film, starring Joaquin Phoenix as Arthur
Fleck (Joker) and Lady Gaga as Lee Quinzel (Harley Quinn), faced
negative reviews from critics before its October 4 release and flopped at the
box office
'And then I think, 'What if we went the other way,' and now they have Joaquin Phoenix and
Lady Gaga tap dancing to a point where it's insane.'
He continued: 'It has no plot. We would sit there, me and
these other guys were all dressed in these security outfits
because we're working at the Arkham Asylum, and I would turn to
one of them and we'd hear this crap and I'd go,
'What the f*** is this?' And they'd go, 'This
is going to bomb, man.' I go, 'This is the worst thing I've ever seen.'
'We were talking about it at lunch, and we'd go, 'What is the plot?
Is there a plot? I don't know, I think he falls in love with her in the prison?' It's not even hate-watchable.
That's how terrible it is.'
Despite the negative reviews a number of fans of the sequel took to social media after its release last month to defend the sequel to Todd Phillips' 2019 motion picture.
The film debuted to a paltry $40 million at the domestic box office,
good enough for the weekend's top spot, but less than projections, and half that of its predecessor.
Amid the early returns, a number of fans took up for the movie and its cinematic depth,
in breaking away from the cookie cutter nature of sequels to introduce
a musical element not present in the first film, with Lady Gaga joining the
franchise.
'Joker 2 was amazing,' one user said, adding that it was '100% as divisive as people are making it
out to be. I love that the film didn't try to be a
traditional sequel, and fully committed to the storytelling they presented.
It never deviated to be a film full of Easter eggs or any other crowd pleasing aspects.'
Another user said, 'I kinda loved Joker 2. I loved how it was structured as a
meta-exploration of the first film's fandom and the musical elements were a lot of fun.'
Tim, 39, who played a guard at Arkham Asylum in the
movie, said Todd Philips's new film has 'no plot' and admitted he knew it was 'going to
bomb' while filming
He said: 'It's the worst film ever made.
It has no plot. We would sit there, me and these other guys
and I'd go, 'What the f*** is this?' And they'd go, 'This is going to bomb,
man.' It's not even hate-watchable. That's how terrible it
is'
Despite the negative reviews a number of fans of the sequel took
to social media after its release last month to defend the sequel to Todd Phillips' 2019 motion picture
One user marvelled that Joker 2 is 'getting universal hate despite
being more interesting and creative than anything
marvel has done in years is expected.'
It comes after lead star Lady Gaga was left 'disappointed' at the immense flood
of negative reactions to Joker: Folie à Deux, with the singer's team now keen to quickly push
out other projects to help distract from the furore over the film, insiders
claim.
Todd Phillips‘ sequel has bombed, raking in just under
$40 million at the domestic box office, and receiving the lowest CinemaScore
in comic book movie history.
Gaga, 38, is reportedly confused at the lack
of love for her turn as Harleen Lee Quinzel,
aka Harley Quinn, alongside Joaquin Phoenix, 49, as the Joker - a role that won him the best actor Oscar in 2019 - in the wake of the standing
ovation it received at the Venice Film Festival last month.
'Gaga is surprised by the response to Joker 2 and is shocked
that people don't love it after the response it received from critics before
it premiered,' a source exclusively told DailyMail.com.
'She put so much heart into the movie and has so much respect for the
DC comics fan base.'
They added: 'Her team is quietly looking at other projects they can roll out as they want to move on this from
as quickly as possible.'
It comes after lead star Lady Gaga was left 'disappointed' at the
immense flood of negative reactions to Joker: Folie à Deux, with the singer's team now
keen to quickly push out other projects to help distract from the furor
over the film, insiders claim
But despite the lacklustre reception from fans, a
second source claimed she is not letting it deter her from returning
to the big screen, with the singer said to be eyeing up a Quentin Tarantino movie.
'She is disappointed that Joker is pretty much a bomb,
' they said.
'She thought that this film could get her an Oscar nomination, especially since the first film was such a success
and Joaquin won an Oscar.
'She would now like to land a role in Quentin Tarantino's next and
final film. Nobody knows what that is going to be, but she
wants to audition.
'She's going to lobby hard to get a meeting with him once a
script is presented, it is a bucket list moment for her to be involved.'
Lady Gaga
Hi! This post couldn't be written any better! Reading through this post
reminds me of my old room mate! He always kept chatting about
this. I will forward this post to him. Fairly certain he will
have a good read. Thanks for sharing!
I couldn't refrain from commenting. Perfectly
written!
Why visitors still make use of to read news papers when in this
technological world all is available on web?
In an early scene in "Smile 2," the fictional pop superstar Skye Riley is in her
drug dealer's apartment. "Do you believe in weird stuff?" he asks her, between doing lines
of coke.
You certainly will after this horror romp - writer-director Parker
Finn's second movie that suddenly opens up the franchise with the promises of multiple directions in the
future. Not for that drug dealer, though: He soon smiles at her
demonically as he repeatedly slams a 35-pound gym weight into his head, making it hamburger.
"Smile 2" lands as unsettling grins are plastered on pumpkins and politicians alike as we approach Halloween and
Election Day, and the psychotic, overly made-up leads
of "Joker: Folie à Deux" have been putting up a brave face
at their terrible box-office numbers.
So it's the perfect time for a sequel to 2020's "Smile," which bridged the gap between elevated art
horror and straight-out, unapologetic slasher.
Finn this time takes on fame, a better tonal fit than the generational trauma of the first.
It's a meditation on breakdowns in the public eye, with a side dish of body
horror.
We start six days after the last movie but they are barely connected
- a single character for a few minutes - as
we watch a demon that forces its victims to smile before meeting a gruesome
end working its way into the low-level drug game.
The evil entity will eventually glom onto our heroine, Skye, a fictional Grammy-winning pop superstar akin to
if Lady Gaga and Miley Cyrus had a baby. We meet her a year after a
horrific car crash she was in that killed her famous boyfriend and left her with a Vicodin addiction and rumors about whether she had anything to do with it.
That drug dealer has now infected Skye, but she has no idea what's in store (or
in score, the terrific work of Cristobal Tapia de Veer).
This image released by Paramount Pictures shows Naomi Scott in a scene from "Smile 2." (Paramount
Pictures via AP)
On thing to really beam about is leading lady Naomi Scott going for it all-out, all snot, smeared blood and
wide-eyed, full on-fear. Scott manages to pour her humanity into the
part - diva, whimpering, defiant, strung out, panicked.
She even sings on the soundtrack - songs that are credible hits.
The smile demon collides with Skye as she's about to launch a comeback tour and the pressure is on. Finn
is at his best here, mocking confessional TV interviews -
a Drew Barrymore cameo, a nice touch - full of self-work and apologies: "I let you down and I promise this will never happen again." Her management demands that she show
up "smile and read from the teleprompter." Skye's mom -
on the payroll - is little help: "You need to stay hydrated," she tells her after Skye is clearly in torment.
Finn has become a much more assured filmmaker and uses humor so well here, from nasty
gangsters enjoying pumpkin Frappuccinos to our heroine Googling "Does vomit have DNA?" He's still
fond of jump-scares and blood spurting and gross-out tricks, like a body dragged by a truck until it's just a smear with entrails.
One delightful moment has Skye chased by demonic backup dancers,
a Bob Fosse-meets-"Thriller" sequence.
Finn also has a ball putting his heroines into cringe-worthy situations.
In the first movie, a murdered cat got bundled into a kid´s birthday present.
In this one, it's a impromptu speech in front of music industry types that goes horrifically off the rails.
He's got a deeper target: How do we quiet those voices in our heads that say
we're no good?
Finn's script sometime lags as he searches for an ending for "Smile 2," seemingly in two minds,
before basically delivering both, kicking up dream sequences and alternate timelines like
a squid pumping out ink to cover its tracks.
Over two hours ends up being too long.
But he has found a great satirical target, given life to a third film
easily and showcased another rising star to watch.
That's a reason to, well, smile about.
"Smile 2," a Paramount Pictures release that lands in movie theaters on Friday, is rated R for "strong bloody violent content, grisly images, language throughout and drug use." Running time: 127 minutes.
Three stars out of four.
This image released by Paramount Pictures shows Ray Nicholson in a scene from "Smile 2." (Paramount Pictures via AP)
Lukas Gage, from left, Naomi Scott and director Parker Finn pose for
photographers upon arrival at the premiere for
the film 'Smile 2' on Tuesday, Oct. 8, 2024, in London. (Photo by Scott A Garfitt/Invision/AP)
This image released by Paramount Pictures shows Lukas
Gage in a scene from "Smile 2." (Paramount Pictures via AP)
Lukas Gage, left, and Naomi Scott pose for photographers upon arrival at the premiere for the film 'Smile 2'
on Tuesday, Oct. 8, 2024, in London. (Photo by Thomas Krych/Invision/AP)
Naomi Scott poses for photographers upon arrival at the premiere for the film 'Smile 2' on Tuesday, Oct.
8, 2024, in London. (Photo by Scott A Garfitt/Invision/AP)
Lukas Gage, left, and Naomi Scott pose for photographers
upon arrival at the premiere for the film 'Smile 2'
on Tuesday, Oct. 8, 2024, in London. (Photo by Thomas Krych/Invision/AP)
This image released by Paramount Pictures shows Dylan Gelula, left, and Naomi Scott in a scene from "Smile 2."
(Paramount Pictures via AP)
This image released by Paramount Pictures shows Rosemarie DeWitt
in a scene from "Smile 2." (Paramount Pictures via
AP)
This image released by Paramount Pictures shows Rosemarie DeWitt,
left, and Naomi Scott in a scene from "Smile 2." (Paramount Pictures via AP)
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Any feedback would be greatly appreciated.
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