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The Joker was an Anti-Marxist Hero: The Dark Knight has an Anti-Marxist Parable

The Reverend Bob

Fart Machine and Beastmaster
In the Dark Knight, Gotham is in deep trouble. It is all in all the very description of a kleptocracy where a capitalist kleptocracy rules the day, they control the banks, the means of production and the edifice of law and order itself (the courts and the police). In the midst of this crisis emerges an triumvirate that is analogous to the heroes of the Marxists ideological myth. Harvey Dent is an idealist, he represents the figure of Marx himself, Commissioner Gordon is a true believer in the ideas that Dent represents, he is the enforcer and chief protector of Dent's (Marxist) idealism, he is the very figure Vladimir Lenin in this mythological cycle and now we come to the Batman himself, who is this mysterious figure that lurks in the dark? He primarily identifies as a protector of the people of Gotham against the criminal (capitalist) class, it is obvious that in this narrative that the Batman represents Trotsky! Trotsky was known in the Marxist myth to be the protector of the proletariat who wishes to see the proletariat emancipate itself from capitalism much like Batman longs to see the people of Gotham emancipate themselves from the criminal class that rules over them. He wishes to inspire not rule.

Should I go on?
 
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ADigitalArtist

Veteran Member
Staff member
Premium Member
I prefer comics Joker to the movies.
DHLYiYuXUAAiLvI.jpg
 

Quagmire

Imaginary talking monkey
Staff member
Premium Member
interesting. You could expand on the Harvey Dent part of the analogy and say that the Two-Face character he becomes represents the ideology of Marxism vs the reality of Communism.
 

The Reverend Bob

Fart Machine and Beastmaster
interesting. You could expand on the Harvey Dent part of the analogy and say that the Two-Face character he becomes represents the ideology of Marxism vs the reality of Communism.
Yes, Two-Face represents the eventual corruption and failure of Marxist ideology
 

Quagmire

Imaginary talking monkey
Staff member
Premium Member
As an aside, I think that all of the recent DC movies represent a desperate attempt to compete with Marvel.
 

Shadow Wolf

Certified People sTabber
Should I go on?
No. Dent was a law and order man fighting to free gotham from a ruling class of criminals, not a ruling class. The Joker is anti-order. The Joker showed the failing of our beliefs that order and structure will always prevail. I would say its much darker and depper than merely being anti any single ideology (except for being opposed to the criminal/vigilante Batman).
 

The Reverend Bob

Fart Machine and Beastmaster
No. Dent was a law and order man fighting to free gotham from a ruling class of criminals, not a ruling class. The Joker is anti-order. The Joker showed the failing of our beliefs that order and structure will always prevail. I would say its much darker and depper than merely being anti any single ideology (except for being opposed to the criminal/vigilante Batman).

While some of what you are saying is true, there is something specific and meaningful that the Joker personally offered to each of the three main characters and all three rejected it and it just wasn't that "I am chaos and everything is a joke". The true message of the film comes from the action of Dent, Gordon and the Batman not necessarily the Joker
 

Enoch07

It's all a sick freaking joke.
Premium Member
No. Dent was a law and order man fighting to free gotham from a ruling class of criminals, not a ruling class. The Joker is anti-order. The Joker showed the failing of our beliefs that order and structure will always prevail. I would say its much darker and depper than merely being anti any single ideology (except for being opposed to the criminal/vigilante Batman).

The Joker is Chaos for Chaos's sake.

An example.

If a majority of the civilians were criminals, and Batman was a villain that supported/controlled those criminals. The Joker would become a hero/vigilante.


Why so serious?!?
 

The Reverend Bob

Fart Machine and Beastmaster
Please do. :thumbsup:
At the start of the film, we see that we are in the midst of a revolution that is on its way to being successful! The dirty criminal class that have the police and courts in their pockets are on the run, the very forces of law and order are now starting to side with the people of Gotham and the criminal who once oppressed the masses are being exposed and are on the run. Surely paradise is ahead for the people where they can cast of the fetters of criminal capitalism and finally be free from oppression! The Worker's Paradise is just ahead if they only have faith in the idealism of Dent, Gordon and the Batman. Surely nothing can go wrong, now can it?

"The night is darkest before the dawn. And I promise you, the dawn is coming." - Harvey Dent
 
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SomeRandom

Still learning to be wise
Staff member
Premium Member
Wait. A Marvel/DC Cross-over? I thought Joker was DC, and Red Skull was Marvel, a traditional enemy of Captain America. No?
One time crossovers are apparently a thing going back to the 60s.
I remember passing by a comic shop and doing a double take at a comic where Batman met Wolverine once.
And a friend of mine has one where Spider-Man meets Superman/boy. Blew my mind.
I kind of hope there’s one where the Justice League meets the Fantastic Four. I think the Teen Titans encountered the Fantastic Four once. Not sure.
 

The Reverend Bob

Fart Machine and Beastmaster
One time crossovers are apparently a thing going back to the 60s.
I remember passing by a comic shop and doing a double take at a comic where Batman met Wolverine once.
And a friend of mine has one where Spider-Man meets Superman/boy. Blew my mind.
I kind of hope there’s one where the Justice League meets the Fantastic Four. I think the Teen Titans encountered the Fantastic Four once. Not sure.
Or when Archie met the Punisher

Punisher Meets Archie Vol 1 1
 

Quagmire

Imaginary talking monkey
Staff member
Premium Member
Wait. A Marvel/DC Cross-over? I thought Joker was DC, and Red Skull was Marvel, a traditional enemy of Captain America. No?
Crossovers are an important genre. They answer some of the more relevant questions of our childhood, like: who would win in a fight, The Hulk or Superman.
Unfortunately, they usually answer incorrectly.
 
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