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Who portrayed the Joker better: Jack Nicholson or Heath Ledger?

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Jack
34% 342 votes Total: 997 votes
Heath
66% 655 votes

Jack

by Alexandre Muise

Created on: October 30, 2009   Last Updated: October 08, 2010

The question is not only subjective, it`s also lacking a category... Although Jack Nicholson was the funnier one of the two in the slapstick sense of the word (not to mention more accurate to the original DC character), Heath Ledger was the more creepy and memorable. I'll write more about Heath in another article...

I remember when the Jack Nicholson-Michael Keaton movie came out twenty years ago and still enjoy the dark hilarity of one-liners and macabre slapstick comedy that only Jack Nicholson can bring to a story. The type of mentally dangerous yet funny wit could only have come from the actor that starred in Stephen King`s The Shining. Lines like "Where does he get those wonderful toys", "Wait til they get a load of me" and "Have you ever danced with the devil by the pale moonlight" are lines by Jack Nicholson is still ingrained in the memories of millions of movie goers.

Jack Nicholson mixed more the comedy of the cartoon character than he did the scary-creepy-twisted mind. Whereas whenever you saw Heath, the viewer was just scared witless of the character, Jack was the everlasting comic. Each time Jack was on the screen in the Batman movie, although it was sort of dark; we were always waiting for a funny-light hearted line or some action that would make us chuckle.

Jack Nicholson and Michael Keaton also paved the way for Batman movies to switch from the cheesy bright colored costumes and lame Adam West choreography into much deeper and darker style of story that we`ve seen in the newer movies (Batman, Batman Returns, Batman Forever, Dark Knight). In doing so, the Joker is no longer just a funny clown with a bright purple suit, but started to develop into a character with a deep personality that really makes an imagination wonder in fear.

He also set the stage for the Joker character found in the animated series in the sense that that character was also funny in a "criminally insanely dangerous" sort of way. (Cue the next line that strikes the Joker fan repertoire) "Stop the press! Who`s that? - Vicky Vale" Although the real life movie still lacked the animated joker`s "girlfriend" Harley Quinn; Jack Nicholson`s intrigue with Vicky Vale sure made up for it. The reporter Vicky Vale wasn`t the Joker`s girlfriend or assistant, but the girl of his dreams. Unfortunately she was romantically interested in Bruce Wayne, while covering stories on the Batman as well as stories on the Joker.

Which brings another bonus for Jack`s Joker; he was (or at least tried to be) much more the ladies` man. Whereas the only "romantic relationship" that a Heath character went for was the one on Brokeback Mountain (sorry, if this observation is somewhat crude; but it`s still in the backdrop of Heath`s acting career, it`s not meant to offend either Heath's memory or homosexuals). Jack`s the type of actor who, whenever he`s a villain, has to fall as the result of being distracted by a woman;s beauty or insanity on the scale that only Nicholson can bring to the big screen. Although the character still lost; he went down laughing like a crazed clown as the Joker always does.

So just remember; "if you gotta go, go with a smile!"

Learn more about this author, Alexandre Muise.
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Heath

by John Devera

Created on: September 08, 2008

Heath Ledger's Joker was phenomenal. But, then again, so was Jack Nicholson's. Heath Ledger never had the chance to prove his depth as an actor; he flared out too soon in a lightning bolt of talent that lit the sky for a brief moment. Nicholson, on the other hand, has demonstrated over the years that he is the most talented actor of all time. But that wasn't the question. Who portrayed the Joker best? That's a difficult problem because their portrayals were consciously different. Side by side, though, it is obvious which was the better performance.

YOU THINK YOU'RE CRAZY?

The Joker is the purest definition of a psychopath. He is a cold blooded killer. In his earliest comic incarnation, he was a rather straight-forward villain. He transformed himself into a clownish buffoon (with the help of Caesar Romero) with a twisted but always mean-spirited obsession about the batman. But, with the new generation of comics, from Alan Moore on, the Joker became more violent, more menacing and definitely more psychotic. So who was crazier, Heath or Jack. Well, Jack talking to the smoking corpse is one of the greatest moments in film history. Nicholson played the Joker as a psychotic fueled by ruthless revenge, egomania and pure genius. Nicholson is witty, and suave and, most of all, consciously self-interested.

Heat h Ledger plays a modern Joker. There's a humor here, too, but it's more than sardonic; it's sadistic and dreadful. Heath's Joker loves telling people why he's a psychopath, about his childhood and such. But we come to understand that none of those stories are true. Or all of them are. It doesn't matter. Heath Ledger's Joker is a sociopath savant. Heath was playing Joker as a kind of Iago (from Shakespeare's Othello), a malevolent and sadistic nihilist who has no need to justify his actions. He appears from no where and has no motivations that can be tacked down. He is schizophrenic, but more than that, he is a nihilist, believing that, in an absurd world, one cannot live by any rules.

ATTACK OF THE CLOWNS
Nicholson's Joker is clean and pretty, an avant garde art work in purple and pain. His look is a part of his psychosis because of the accident that left him disfigured. And that trauma is what sets him up as a super-villain. He becomes motivated by his damaged psyche that parallels his damaged face. What makes Ledger's appearance so much better is that his Joker is disgusting, dirty and in no way attractive. His charisma works solely on its own, with no help from dapper costumes or a fancy prosthetic. Instead, Ledger's makeup was a minimalistic mess, designed for a high creepy factor and low camp.

WHERE DOES HE GET THOSE TOYS?
Nicholson was great as the Joker because he fulfilled all the traditions of Joker-ness. He had uber-toys. He had Burton-esque balloons. He painted everything in horrible shades of purple and green and red. And he had lots and lots of really crazy henchmen to do his grunt work.

Ledger proved that real psychopaths don't have henchmen, they have victims who are too stupid to understand that you should never trust a psychopath. His puzzle isn't some high-tech, super-scientific Rubix cube. Nope. He builds two really big, really practical really burny bombs and sets them to go off at the same time. He doesn't allow the bat in a hat to figure out some clever way to foil the plan. Instead, he turns Harvey Dent into a raging lunatic and gives the batman a guilt complex. This guy is MEAN.

Ledger plays a cruel sadist. Nicholson plays a guy in funny clothes. Ledger's character is deeply disturbed and deeply disturbing. Nicholson's character is just really fun. Ledger throws away his quips and witticisms as he devastatingly becomes more and more vile and violent. Nicholson plays for laughs and even sympathy. Nicholson makes Batman a fun movie which little kids can enjoy. Ledger ratchets up the sheer terror and horror until The Dark Knight becomes a definite kid-unfriendly movie. Ledger is the Joker for adults, and for a nightmarish vision of the world.

Learn more about this author, John Devera.
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