@@tylerwalsh5721 bro that guys a fucking maniac i checked out his channel like it reminds me of that one vid with the creepy fucking doll singing that song
Joker (2019) Forever alone in a crowd, failed comedian Arthur Fleck seeks connection as he walks the streets of Gotham City. Arthur wears two masks -- the one he paints for his day job as a clown, and the guise he projects in a futile attempt to feel like he's part of the world around him. Isolated, bullied and disregarded by society, Fleck begins a slow descent into madness as he transforms into the criminal mastermind known as the Joker. But the main ideal presented in the 2019 film “joker” is that people often want to oppress those with mental illnesses, and to create a sort of divisive-ness in their society thus, causing the mentally unstable to feel alone, and ultimately seek retribution for their unjust oppression. This oppression is often categorized as people seeing mentally ill people as deficient or treating them unjustly. (I.e Societal, economical and job prospects.) This oppression leads to a wheel of hate for the individual who is affected by mental illnesses like schizophrenia, but this wheel of hate is an unquenchable bloodlust of sorts, because as time advances, so does technology and as technology advances we become more greedy and less remorseful. In this fuels our cycle of hate towards each other, but this hatred is most often placed on the mentally unstable. Thus giving us what we see as the character “joker” in the 2019 film “joker” (under the same name) Furthermore, it is to be noted of how the 2019 film “joker” depicts a low income character, struggling to get by when the people around him treat him as dirt or inferior which adds on to the mental stress/anxiety of the mentally unstable patient. Or in this case the main protagonist. Additionally, the movie itself deals with mature themes and subject matter. The following themes are present in the 2019 film “joker” -hopelessness -feelings of inadequacy -guilt -depression - a sort of “meloncholic” wave of emotions expressed by the protagonist -a feeling of retribution/reckoning Etcétera etcétera The point of the film “joker” released in 2019 is supposed to demonstrate the unstable psyche of a mentally unstable person who, for the greater half of his life has been unjustly suffering at the hands of causality. This predicament in his destiny causes him to not only lash out at those around him, but to also change the world in his ideals. Conclusion/wrap up; I thought the film “joker” presented a thought provoking idea about how we as a society, deal with people who are struggling with mental illnesses, and I liked how it pissed off people simply for the fact that white people can experience suffering in their Lives. I also thought that the way the joker was presented in the film gave him a more humanizing aspect to his character, ultimately showing us (I.e the audience) how unjust his life truly is. EDIT: механизм запускается
@@MegaRekless oh! During the time that this came out, a ton of leftists like to inject the concept of “privilege” into the synopsis of the movie and then they subtly suggested that anyone who liked the movie is some how a columbine shooter. (Or a incel)
@@OASIS23- The movie does glorify the Joker's aesthetic and violence towards the end. It's a pretty bad thing to give your homicidal loner a "cool" make-over and revenge scenes that both directly play into the power fantasies that a lot of potentially dangerous people have, hence why the exact demographic of people that the movie supposedly criticizes have used it as an inspiration and justification for their own loser shenanigans. It's a lot easier for these people to "reinvent" themselves instead of dealing with their deep insecurities after all.
The joker (2019): In mainstream movies today, “dark” is just another flavor. Like “edgy,” it’s an option you use depending on what market you want to reach. And it is particularly useful when injected into the comic book genre. Darkness no longer has much to do with feelings of alienation the filmmaker wants to express or purge, as was the case with a film like “Taxi Driver.” It’s not about exploring uncomfortable ideas, as was done in “The King of Comedy.” Do you think Todd Phillips, who co-wrote and directed “Joker,” and references those movies so often you might expect that Martin Scorsese was enlisted as an executive producer here as a way of heading off a plagiarism lawsuit (he dropped out not too long after signing on, however), really cares about income inequality, celebrity worship, and the lack of civility in contemporary society? I don’t know him personally but I bet he doesn’t give a toss. He’s got the pile he made on those “Hangover” movies-which some believe have indeed contributed to the lack of civility in etc.-and can not only buy up all the water that’s going to be denied us regular slobs after the big one hits, he can afford the bunker for after the bigger one hits. Which is not to go so far as to say that if you buy into “Joker,” the joke’s on you. (Except in the long run it really is.) If you live to see Joaquin Phoenix go to performing extremes like nobody’s business, this movie really is the apotheosis of that. As Arthur Fleck, the increasingly unglued street clown and wannabe stand-up comic down and out in what looks like 1980s Gotham (although who knows what period detail looks like in fictional cities), Phoenix flails, dances, laughs maniacally, puts things in his mouth that shouldn’t go there, and commits a couple of genuinely ugly and disgusting crimes with ferocious relish. Much has been made, by Warner, and I guess DC Comics, of the fact that this is meant as a “standalone” film that has no narrative connection to other pictures in the DC Universe, but that’s having your cake and eating it too when you still name your lunatic asylum “Arkham” and your cinematic DC Universe is changing its Batmen every twenty minutes anyway. Maybe what they really mean is that this is the first and last DC movie that’s going to be rated R. A rating it thoroughly earns. The violence in this movie means to shock, and it does. Fleck’s alienation in the early scenes evokes Travis Bickle’s, but this movie is too chicken-livered to give Fleck Bickle’s racism, although it depicts him mostly getting hassled by people of color in the first third. Fleck is also fixated with a Carson-like talk-show host played by Robert De Niro, reversing the “King of Comedy” player positions. He also likes the black woman down the hall from him, played by Zazie Beetz. The casting is not just meant to give the movie bragging rights on the zeitgeist curve, but to evoke Diahnne Abbott in both “Taxi Driver” and “Comedy.” Fleck’s seemingly successful wooing of the character is a jaw-dropper that had me thinking Beetz ought to fire her agent, but a late-game clarification makes it … well, forgivable is not quite the word, but it will do. As Gotham begins to burn (the civil unrest starts with a garbage strike), Fleck, who has been taken as a vigilante by much of the city’s 99%, doesn’t quite know what to make of his underground cult stardom. (The city is beset by rioters in clown makeup and clown masks; because this movie is rather suddenly behind the curve in “clowns-are-scary” awareness-only Pennywise gets a special dispensation these days-these sequences look like “The Revolt of the Juggalos” or something equally laughable.) His mom (Frances Conroy, the poor woman) has been writing letters to her former employer, the magnate Thomas Wayne, and Arthur opens one of the missives and reads them, learning something disturbing. The storyline in and of itself is not a total miss. But once the movie starts lifting shots from “A Clockwork Orange” (and yes, Phillips and company got Warners to let them use the Saul Bass studio logo for the opening credits, in white on red, yet) you know its priorities are less in entertainment than in generating self-importance. As social commentary, “Joker” is pernicious garbage. But besides the wacky pleasures of Phoenix’s performance, it also displays some major movie studio core competencies, in a not dissimilar way to what “A Star Is Born” presented last year. (Bradley Cooper is a producer.) The supporting players, including Glenn Fleshler and Brian Tyree Henry, bring added value to their scenes, and the whole thing feels like a movie. The final minutes, which will move any sentient viewer to mutter “would you just pick a goddamn ending and stick to it?” are likely an indication of what kind of mess we would have had on our hands had Phillips been left entirely to his own cynical incoherent devices for the entire runtime. Fortunately, he gets by with a little help from his friends.
I remember the origin of the bucket head Wojack. Its from a thread posted on /pol/ a while back. People basicaly discussed a new invention by an Israeli company that kind of loocked like a bucket and was supposed to cure depression and all that good stuff with the help of magnetism.
Oh yeah, that. Apparently the magnet affected your political leanings and general agreeability to leftist talking points. Also made you stop believing in God or something.
@@InvidiousIgnoramus yeah something along the lines of decreasing ones faith in religion and positively affecting ones attitude towarda refugees. Realy makes me happy that this Israeli company is so interested in curing us all.
The Joker (2019) was directed by Todd Phillips but it’s success is mostly attributed to Joaquin Phoenix’s masterclass performance. Joaquin does not play the joker in this movie, he becomes Arthur Fleck. The lengths Joaquin goes through to portray himself as Arthur in this film go beyond any typical actor or actress’s performance. While watching the Joker I was heavily reminded of Jack Nicholson and his performance in The Shining. Both actors dedicated that time in their lives into channeling the character they were meant to portrayal into their own behaviors and mannerisms. This is the one of the major defining factors as to why these two performances are so recognizable and fantastic. Of course, Joaquin is not the only reason why I and many others enjoyed Joker (2019) so much. Credit has to be given to all of the cinematography of the film and the overall directing. Cinematography in the Joker was very well done with many memorable and downright iconic shots from the movie still being relevant in pop culture long after the release of the movie. Joaquin's performance could not have been as iconic as it was without the amazing work from Tod Phillips as the director of the film as well. While I believe Joaquin’s performance was the defining factor that makes this film great, I also believe that Phillips’ skilled directing was the catalyst for such a performance. Another major factor in the success of this movie was the simple fact that it had something to say. Joker (2019) had a clear image for what it wanted to portray to its audience and it did so beautifully. The simple message that Phillips wanted to say through Joker was that nobody is born evil. People are shaped by their environments. What I find beautiful about Arthur Flecks journey through this movie is that he starts as a nice, caring son. But, the world around Arthur corrupts him and transforms him into a cynical, hateful psychopath. But after being molded by the corrupt world around him, when Arthur finally gets his voice out there to the world, all he does is create more corruption and chaos because he is no longer the same Arthur Fleck as what we saw at the start of the film. This is where I believe many of the detractors of this film misunderstand. Joker doesn’t aim to make the audience agree with Arthur. We as the audience root for Arthur but not because we agree with him. We root for him because we want to see him do better. We want to see him overcome the burdens that the world has put on him and find meaning in his life. In the end, he does find meaning, but this meaning is sinister and evil. So now, viewers are left with a dilemma; do they feel joy that Arthur has finally been freed from his chains, or disappointment over the monster that he has become in the process. This is where the film, and Joaquin Phoenix’s performance really shines. Of course, the Joker (2019) is not a perfect film. It has its rough edges in several regards and often comes across as too artificially high brow for what is technically a superhero movie. But regardless, I believe this movie deserves a solid 8/10 for Joaquin Phoenix’s masterful acting, the film’s amazing cinematography and direction, and the insightful message that the film so beautifully portrays.
Its the corniest wojak there is, people who use it tend to be retards, alot of the people who identify as a doomer think "im gonna force my ideology on people because they make sad, your the evil one"
Joker was a good movie. It demonstrated the traits of a society too far gone. Where the upper class bully the lower. This leads to people, like the Joker, to be born. They are bad people, but funny. They dance on the stairs. Joker was a good movie and reminds me of myself. I am the Joker. I laugh a lot.
7:30 this mill has both water turbines and wind turbines, so it means that person have two conflicting ideas in their head and doesn't even realise that.
I thought joker (2019) was very great and inspiring. Without the joker I wouldn’t be able to post my joker quotes on Instagram. The movie taught me that we live in a society and that the world is out to get true intelligent minds like me and other joker stans.
*Joker (2019 film)* Joker is a 2019 American psychological thriller film directed and produced by Todd Phillips, who co-wrote the screenplay with Scott Silver. The film, based on DC Comics characters, stars Joaquin Phoenix as the Joker and provides an alternative origin story for the character. Set in 1981, it follows Arthur Fleck, a failed clown and stand-up comedian whose descent into insanity and nihilism inspires a violent counter-cultural revolution against the wealthy in a decaying Gotham City. Robert De Niro, Zazie Beetz, Frances Conroy, Brett Cullen, Glenn Fleshler, Bill Camp, Shea Whigham, and Marc Maron appear in supporting roles. Joker was produced by Warner Bros. Pictures, DC Films, and Joint Effort, in association with Bron Creative and Village Roadshow Pictures, and distributed by Warner Bros. Phillips conceived Joker in 2016 and wrote the script with Silver throughout 2017. The two were inspired by 1970s character studies and the films of Martin Scorsese (particularly Taxi Driver and The King of Comedy), who was initially attached to the project as a producer. The film loosely adapts plot elements from Batman: The Killing Joke (1988) and The Dark Knight Returns (1986), but Phillips and Silver otherwise did not look to specific comics for inspiration. Phoenix became attached in February 2018 and was cast that July, while the majority of the cast signed on by August. Principal photography took place in New York City, Jersey City, and Newark, from September to December 2018. Joker is the first live-action theatrical Batman film to receive an R-rating from the Motion Picture Association. Joker premiered at the 76th Venice International Film Festival on August 31, 2019, where it won the Golden Lion, and was released in the United States on October 4, 2019. The film polarized critics. Although Phoenix's performance, the musical score, and the cinematography were praised, the dark tone, portrayal of mental illness, and handling of violence divided opinion and generated concerns of inspiring real-world violence; the movie theater where the 2012 Aurora, Colorado mass shooting occurred during a screening of The Dark Knight Rises refused to show it.[7] Despite this, Joker became a major box office success and set records for an October release. It grossed over $1 billion, the first and only R-rated film to do so, becoming the sixth-highest-grossing film of 2019, and the 31st-highest-grossing film of all time during its theatrical run. Joker received numerous accolades. At the 92nd Academy Awards, the film earned a leading 11 nominations, including Best Picture, Best Director and Best Adapted Screenplay, winning Best Actor for Phoenix (who became the second actor to win an Oscar for portraying the Joker following Heath Ledger in 2009) and Best Original Score for Hildur Guðnadóttir. Phoenix and Guðnadóttir also won at the Golden Globe and BAFTA Award ceremonies.
Joker 2019 is the 2019th Joker ever born Joker is about a funy clown that isn’t understood by all his friends Joker suffers from a rare disease that makes his jokes extra funny but only to him so no one knows what he’s laughing at On a quest to prove to his loved ones that he is just as funny as the other jokers, he makes his way up the ranks before getting a prime time spot on his favourite tv show! Much like this video I turned it off 5 minutes before the end, but I was proud of his amazing makeup job. All those years being the joker really paid off. My favourite part was when no one laughed at his stand up, but he had the self love and self care to laugh for everyone in the audience. I give joker a 10 out of 5. He didn’t fall into a big vat of Joker Juice which is my favourite part of every joker. I hope the next joker falls into a big vat of bimbofication juice. I think if he does that he will defeat the riddler once and for all
This could, particularly in the current climate, be viewed as a lament for outsiders and the ignored. That’s too simple and Joker does anything but deliver you easy answers. It’s a sad, chaotic, slow-burn study of someone who isn’t visible; who doesn’t even exist to the world around them. But your empathy, sympathy even, isn’t guaranteed, and it begins to dissolve as Arthur somehow moves even further to the edges. This is, we mustn’t forget, the story of how a villain was made. But what writer/director Todd Phillips and co-writer Scott Silver (8 Mile, The Fighter) have written into life is the Joker as a character. What they and the film is interested in is the mental, moral, emotional, physical make-up of the man who became the Joker. As Arthur/Joker, Joaquin Phoenix is astonishing. Phillips has said he had a picture of the actor above his screen when writing the script and it’s a belief that has paid off. Phoenix inhabits Arthur: having lost weight for the role, he looks thin, frail, hungry. Shadows carve out his exposed bones. His physicality is precise - the way he moves, shuffles, runs, sits, smokes, shrinks. His usual intensity is on full display and it’s captivating, even overwhelming in moments. Comparing him to Heath Ledger and Jack Nicholson feels like a nonsense: this is a Joker we’ve never seen - in many respects it isn’t the Joker, it’s Arthur. This is a deliberate consequence of stepping away from the source material. Phillips has said that though elements were drawn from 1988 graphic novel The Killing Joke (in which the Joker is an unsuccessful stand-up), the film doesn’t follow the comic books. A bold move for a universe with such an ardent fan base, but it’s the film’s greatest asset. Not only does it, and the character, sit completely apart from the rest of the DC Cinematic Universe, but it stands apart from comic book movies entirely (even The Dark Knight, as grounded as it was). It’s a character and a movie that’s liberated, entirely. Free to be whatever and whomever it choose.
2:53 “Sometimes I walk and don’t even realize I’m walking” Bruh sometimes if I’m walking for a long time my legs will automatically walk for me I mean it doesn’t feel like I’m controlling them
i think that Joker (2019) is a good call for mental illnesses problems and how opressed people can be victims of the society and their own actions. but after some time people was just using this problem as argument to be assholes on the internet
My review and personal anecdote: The first time I saw Joker I was on mushrooms and it was fucking hilarious but one of my roommates with us didn’t enjoy the experience. Fast forward to next year we’re all living together in a house come to find out he has bipolar and it was absolutely psycho all the time so we begin to call him “the joker“. At one point he completely snaps and we all started mimicking scenes from this film and he eventually moves out. Love that movie.
Actual title: Rating Wojack memes based on how relatable the stereotype they represent is. Boomer doesn't understand memes. "So many people think they are this Wojack" not realizing they are almost exclusively used ironically to make fun of someone.
Joker 1987: The acting of Synthcool was the best acting that i witnessed in my whole life, he also could have made this tier list a quadrilion times better with his top tier 900 IQ funny Family Guy clips.
All I really have to say about joker 2019 is I really enjoyed it upon release, it was wonderful. Later that year though I saw Taxi Driver and realized it's literally just a shitty rip off of that. Deadass the director just grabbed a classic of his slapped a comic book name on it and bam free money. It's so creatively bankrupt and absolutely sad to see.
I thought Joker (2019) Was a mediocre movie released in the right place at the right time. Narratively, I felt that Joker didn't say much at all, despite it's lead audience claiming it to be "Deep" or "Controversial." It was also too unoriginal, taking far too much from Scorcese films like Taxi Driver and King Of Comedy while adding just enough new stuff to be original. Practically, the film is very well made and has much artistic value, from the score, the cinematography, and my personal favorite element, the use of colours. The "Up to interpretation" element and the way that events are presented through the mind of a schizophrenic was very interesting, but was still done MUCH better in American Psycho. In American Psycho, it's used less as a gimmick and more of a very tonal and atmospheric blanket over the film that creates memorable moments. In Joker, it feels as if it was something thrown in at the last minute for publicity. The films location, Gotham, has also been praised as creating a very specific feeling around the movie, and aspect that I feel was underused. Lets compare: The Unnamed city in Se7en (my favourite film) by David Fincher, Vs. Joker's Gotham. In Se7en, the unnamed city is painted as a way to share it's theme and message: That although it seems the world may be bad, it's worth fighting for the good inside of it, even if it's not much. Throughout the film we are always given background noise and chatter, the sound of rain and annoying cars, and other things like newspapers and subtle tv reports snuck in that highlight the intense crime and overall depravity of the city. In Joker, all we're given is some shitty exposition served through Thomas Wayne's campaign. We are told gotham has conflict between classes, but we're NEVER shown any examples of this. This element of the film could've been emphasized much more, and would've served to build significant and memorable characteristics. An element I would like to praise is the final scene. I'm not going to talk about the acting, as that's been praised a lot before, rather I'd like to focus on the way the writers build suspense. Quentin Tarantino once said that suspense is like a rubber band - the longer the scene is, the more you stretch the rubber band, making it more and more tense until it breaks. The Talk show scene does this VERY well. Every point in the conversation between Arthur and Murray stretches the rubber band more - and when the main turning point in the conversation happens (when arthur decides to kill murray rather than kill himself) you can pinpoint it, emphasized well by Pheonix's performance (which was excellent). The music builds during the final joke with these loud banging drums that sound like someone clanging a trash can lid - a very harsh sound that really fits the scene. It crescendos and then - boom. Literally. Very excellent example of suspense done right. Overall, I feel Joker is a little overrated, but deserves recognition for what it did well, which I would say was most of the film.
For a long time i myself have attatch myself to the inherant and potable cringe of acting like the joker, from dark knights Heath ledger to suicide squads jared leto, i found that joining those amoungst the internet who identified with the character as something that just seemed right. This being said it was no suprise that when Joker (2019) came out many of my friends individually came to the conclusion that i should see it with them. So at the time of its release i saw Joker(2019) five times. The first time I saw this movie I thought it was pretty good, I like watching highly rated movies so it wasnt the most mind blowing thing id ever seen. I think that mentality was a result of the types of crowds that would only watch super hero movies and for one of those it appears much more mature and apraisable. Anyways i enjoyed it watching the first time. The second time i watched it now knowing the story i could really pick apart the things I liked and didnt like, I loved the sound track and the performances, I felt that everyone acts like hyperbolic new yorkers, absolute dick heads or people for peace. I got a kick out of the second watching and it consolidated my view that it was a pretty good movie but not a master peice. For the next three viewings all i can say is that i wasnt bored, I knew what to expect and i didnt really pick up on anything new, its not that deep of a movie. But nevertheless i was not bored. I think it truely was an atesyiment to the pacing of the film that despite having seen it so much it was still entertaining to watch. In conclusion because of this movie I can now own the libs and my wife is now aroused during sex.
i needed a solid 2 minutes to remember that adapndah and aztrosist are different people
Based
Redpilled
@@jagerzaku9160 blue pill stummy ache
based moment bruh cringe UPVOTE fax 100 reddit gold reddit karma
@@cghbv1585 N
Thanks I was about to lose an online argument my you came in clutch
Q: How do you make an Octupus laugh?
A: With ten-tickles
@@jdwmyt Thank you for telling us, cringe
@Korero Korero wrong, it’s 3.
You came in my clutch
@Korero Korero dude, how many times i have to tell you there is only 5 Days in a week
I love when aztorsist collabs with himself, 10/10 vid!
i expected to see this comment
@@AxxLAfriku bruh stfu
reported
@@AxxLAfriku dude how high are you
@@tylerwalsh5721 bro that guys a fucking maniac i checked out his channel like it reminds me of that one vid with the creepy fucking doll singing that song
They forgot the “yes honey” wojak 😢
and the coomer
please shut up
@@awfultwine9455 please shut up
@@awfultwine9455 awful twine
@@mr.d3972 haha funny among us red sus! red sus! please SHUT UP
The third Wojak is just an apathetic husk of a former mortal being.
healthcare pls
The furtive pygmy
@@KonkeyDongkey so easily forgotten
scary stories to tell in the dark?
that dude went hollow
Joker (2019)
Forever alone in a crowd, failed comedian Arthur Fleck seeks connection as he walks the streets of Gotham City. Arthur wears two masks -- the one he paints for his day job as a clown, and the guise he projects in a futile attempt to feel like he's part of the world around him. Isolated, bullied and disregarded by society, Fleck begins a slow descent into madness as he transforms into the criminal mastermind known as the Joker.
But the main ideal presented in the 2019 film “joker” is that people often want to oppress those with mental illnesses, and to create a sort of divisive-ness in their society thus, causing the mentally unstable to feel alone, and ultimately seek retribution for their unjust oppression.
This oppression is often categorized as people seeing mentally ill people as deficient or treating them unjustly.
(I.e Societal, economical and job prospects.)
This oppression leads to a wheel of hate for the individual who is affected by mental illnesses like schizophrenia, but this wheel of hate is an unquenchable bloodlust of sorts, because as time advances, so does technology and as technology advances we become more greedy and less remorseful. In this fuels our cycle of hate towards each other, but this hatred is most often placed on the mentally unstable. Thus giving us what we see as the character “joker” in the 2019 film “joker” (under the same name)
Furthermore, it is to be noted of how the 2019 film “joker” depicts a low income character, struggling to get by when the people around him treat him as dirt or inferior which adds on to the mental stress/anxiety of the mentally unstable patient. Or in this case the main protagonist.
Additionally, the movie itself deals with mature themes and subject matter.
The following themes are present in the 2019 film “joker”
-hopelessness
-feelings of inadequacy
-guilt
-depression
- a sort of “meloncholic” wave of emotions expressed by the protagonist
-a feeling of retribution/reckoning
Etcétera etcétera
The point of the film “joker” released in 2019 is supposed to demonstrate the unstable psyche of a mentally unstable person who, for the greater half of his life has been unjustly suffering at the hands of causality. This predicament in his destiny causes him to not only lash out at those around him, but to also change the world in his ideals.
Conclusion/wrap up;
I thought the film “joker” presented a thought provoking idea about how we as a society, deal with people who are struggling with mental illnesses, and I liked how it pissed off people simply for the fact that white people can experience suffering in their Lives.
I also thought that the way the joker was presented in the film gave him a more humanizing aspect to his character, ultimately showing us (I.e the audience) how unjust his life truly is.
EDIT: механизм запускается
Interesting review but who got mad over "the fact that white people can experience suffering in their Lives"
@@MegaRekless oh! During the time that this came out, a ton of leftists like to inject the concept of “privilege” into the synopsis of the movie and then they subtly suggested that anyone who liked the movie is some how a columbine shooter.
(Or a incel)
what the fuxk
eline sağlık man
Good job Alex! 120%
@@OASIS23- The movie does glorify the Joker's aesthetic and violence towards the end. It's a pretty bad thing to give your homicidal loner a "cool" make-over and revenge scenes that both directly play into the power fantasies that a lot of potentially dangerous people have, hence why the exact demographic of people that the movie supposedly criticizes have used it as an inspiration and justification for their own loser shenanigans. It's a lot easier for these people to "reinvent" themselves instead of dealing with their deep insecurities after all.
The joker (2019):
In mainstream movies today, “dark” is just another flavor. Like “edgy,” it’s an option you use depending on what market you want to reach. And it is particularly useful when injected into the comic book genre.
Darkness no longer has much to do with feelings of alienation the filmmaker wants to express or purge, as was the case with a film like “Taxi Driver.” It’s not about exploring uncomfortable ideas, as was done in “The King of Comedy.” Do you think Todd Phillips, who co-wrote and directed “Joker,” and references those movies so often you might expect that Martin Scorsese was enlisted as an executive producer here as a way of heading off a plagiarism lawsuit (he dropped out not too long after signing on, however), really cares about income inequality, celebrity worship, and the lack of civility in contemporary society? I don’t know him personally but I bet he doesn’t give a toss. He’s got the pile he made on those “Hangover” movies-which some believe have indeed contributed to the lack of civility in etc.-and can not only buy up all the water that’s going to be denied us regular slobs after the big one hits, he can afford the bunker for after the bigger one hits.
Which is not to go so far as to say that if you buy into “Joker,” the joke’s on you. (Except in the long run it really is.) If you live to see Joaquin Phoenix go to performing extremes like nobody’s business, this movie really is the apotheosis of that. As Arthur Fleck, the increasingly unglued street clown and wannabe stand-up comic down and out in what looks like 1980s Gotham (although who knows what period detail looks like in fictional cities), Phoenix flails, dances, laughs maniacally, puts things in his mouth that shouldn’t go there, and commits a couple of genuinely ugly and disgusting crimes with ferocious relish.
Much has been made, by Warner, and I guess DC Comics, of the fact that this is meant as a “standalone” film that has no narrative connection to other pictures in the DC Universe, but that’s having your cake and eating it too when you still name your lunatic asylum “Arkham” and your cinematic DC Universe is changing its Batmen every twenty minutes anyway. Maybe what they really mean is that this is the first and last DC movie that’s going to be rated R.
A rating it thoroughly earns. The violence in this movie means to shock, and it does. Fleck’s alienation in the early scenes evokes Travis Bickle’s, but this movie is too chicken-livered to give Fleck Bickle’s racism, although it depicts him mostly getting hassled by people of color in the first third. Fleck is also fixated with a Carson-like talk-show host played by Robert De Niro, reversing the “King of Comedy” player positions. He also likes the black woman down the hall from him, played by Zazie Beetz. The casting is not just meant to give the movie bragging rights on the zeitgeist curve, but to evoke Diahnne Abbott in both “Taxi Driver” and “Comedy.” Fleck’s seemingly successful wooing of the character is a jaw-dropper that had me thinking Beetz ought to fire her agent, but a late-game clarification makes it … well, forgivable is not quite the word, but it will do.
As Gotham begins to burn (the civil unrest starts with a garbage strike), Fleck, who has been taken as a vigilante by much of the city’s 99%, doesn’t quite know what to make of his underground cult stardom. (The city is beset by rioters in clown makeup and clown masks; because this movie is rather suddenly behind the curve in “clowns-are-scary” awareness-only Pennywise gets a special dispensation these days-these sequences look like “The Revolt of the Juggalos” or something equally laughable.) His mom (Frances Conroy, the poor woman) has been writing letters to her former employer, the magnate Thomas Wayne, and Arthur opens one of the missives and reads them, learning something disturbing.
The storyline in and of itself is not a total miss. But once the movie starts lifting shots from “A Clockwork Orange” (and yes, Phillips and company got Warners to let them use the Saul Bass studio logo for the opening credits, in white on red, yet) you know its priorities are less in entertainment than in generating self-importance. As social commentary, “Joker” is pernicious garbage. But besides the wacky pleasures of Phoenix’s performance, it also displays some major movie studio core competencies, in a not dissimilar way to what “A Star Is Born” presented last year. (Bradley Cooper is a producer.) The supporting players, including Glenn Fleshler and Brian Tyree Henry, bring added value to their scenes, and the whole thing feels like a movie. The final minutes, which will move any sentient viewer to mutter “would you just pick a goddamn ending and stick to it?” are likely an indication of what kind of mess we would have had on our hands had Phillips been left entirely to his own cynical incoherent devices for the entire runtime. Fortunately, he gets by with a little help from his friends.
bro you did not write that in 5 minutes
It was alright I guess
too long didn't read, very cool though
Too long didn't read
Take my subscription
Thought this was bizonacci for a sec
That would be nice
@@simoncampbell3328 ikr!!
@@simoncampbell3328 TRUE
He bought? DUM PIT
Damn.... RIP
I love how this is basically a tier list of how much you’d fear or want to beat the shit out of the wojak
If he punched the wojak that looks like a husk (the first one in S tier) it would just crumble lmao
What I love about Aztrosist is that he goes straight to the point on every single video
SLATT!
I remember the origin of the bucket head Wojack. Its from a thread posted on /pol/ a while back. People basicaly discussed a new invention by an Israeli company that kind of loocked like a bucket and was supposed to cure depression and all that good stuff with the help of magnetism.
oh so they were just acting stupid as always
@@ActuallyRocatex who woulda guessed, Israel being stupid
Oh yeah, that. Apparently the magnet affected your political leanings and general agreeability to leftist talking points. Also made you stop believing in God or something.
@@InvidiousIgnoramus yeah something along the lines of decreasing ones faith in religion and positively affecting ones attitude towarda refugees. Realy makes me happy that this Israeli company is so interested in curing us all.
@@captainmartinwalker2848 no, 4chan
The Joker (2019) was directed by Todd Phillips but it’s success is mostly attributed to Joaquin Phoenix’s masterclass performance. Joaquin does not play the joker in this movie, he becomes Arthur Fleck. The lengths Joaquin goes through to portray himself as Arthur in this film go beyond any typical actor or actress’s performance. While watching the Joker I was heavily reminded of Jack Nicholson and his performance in The Shining. Both actors dedicated that time in their lives into channeling the character they were meant to portrayal into their own behaviors and mannerisms. This is the one of the major defining factors as to why these two performances are so recognizable and fantastic.
Of course, Joaquin is not the only reason why I and many others enjoyed Joker (2019) so much. Credit has to be given to all of the cinematography of the film and the overall directing. Cinematography in the Joker was very well done with many memorable and downright iconic shots from the movie still being relevant in pop culture long after the release of the movie. Joaquin's performance could not have been as iconic as it was without the amazing work from Tod Phillips as the director of the film as well. While I believe Joaquin’s performance was the defining factor that makes this film great, I also believe that Phillips’ skilled directing was the catalyst for such a performance.
Another major factor in the success of this movie was the simple fact that it had something to say. Joker (2019) had a clear image for what it wanted to portray to its audience and it did so beautifully. The simple message that Phillips wanted to say through Joker was that nobody is born evil. People are shaped by their environments. What I find beautiful about Arthur Flecks journey through this movie is that he starts as a nice, caring son. But, the world around Arthur corrupts him and transforms him into a cynical, hateful psychopath. But after being molded by the corrupt world around him, when Arthur finally gets his voice out there to the world, all he does is create more corruption and chaos because he is no longer the same Arthur Fleck as what we saw at the start of the film.
This is where I believe many of the detractors of this film misunderstand. Joker doesn’t aim to make the audience agree with Arthur. We as the audience root for Arthur but not because we agree with him. We root for him because we want to see him do better. We want to see him overcome the burdens that the world has put on him and find meaning in his life. In the end, he does find meaning, but this meaning is sinister and evil. So now, viewers are left with a dilemma; do they feel joy that Arthur has finally been freed from his chains, or disappointment over the monster that he has become in the process. This is where the film, and Joaquin Phoenix’s performance really shines.
Of course, the Joker (2019) is not a perfect film. It has its rough edges in several regards and often comes across as too artificially high brow for what is technically a superhero movie. But regardless, I believe this movie deserves a solid 8/10 for Joaquin Phoenix’s masterful acting, the film’s amazing cinematography and direction, and the insightful message that the film so beautifully portrays.
I’m the joker baby
Not reading all that shit
joker
The artist who made it ,made like a thousand of them for some furry for 1000$ to post on 4chan,I am dead serious look it up.
I don’t want it in my search history
@@Airut_Agate
If you say no homo, youre 80% less furry because 80% of furries are gay
Based furry
The story is true but 90% of them didn't go mainstream or only used on 4chan, a lot of the ones here weren't that
The meme was created by guy named Christian Grodecki with nickname "Wojak"
OMG aztrosist collabed with himself!
What a nice guy
If only rusty were still around
Only the best with the best
I love how there is literally no criteria for the rankings and it's great
the sad part about wojaks is that their emotions are true and its scary
Ah yes the emotion of "femboy"
Love how femboy wojack was instant S tier
I don't think thats a femboy. Theres literally nothing femy about it.
Eboy wojak
Put cat ears on it, you got a catboy
*the*
*WHAT*
But doomer is f. We live in a society
Hey, the children’s book you guys were thinking of is probably “Scary Stories To Tell In The Dark”. Very similar illustration style
Love how femboy doomer was an insta S tier
funny how hw says all the ones smoking are "supposed to be badass" but their whole shmick is to be used as a depressed image
Its the corniest wojak there is, people who use it tend to be retards, alot of the people who identify as a doomer think "im gonna force my ideology on people because they make sad, your the evil one"
@@firstlast-pq1tx What are you doing? Using memes in a discussion? Holy shit
@@firstlast-pq1tx chill
I wonder how he made this video, if they're both the same person..
I'm disappointed that Joker didn't give his review on Joker (2019)
Our lord and saviour has arrived
> Femboy Doomer and Doomerette S tier
> O.G. Doomer E tier
You may as well title the vid "Reddit wojak tier list"
Kinda lol
Facts
Yeah I died when they put og doomer so low. Like, why??
Agree on doomer girl, but twinkjak is absolutely S tier
Literal Redditor Tier List.
Wojaks: F rank
Rage Comic faces: S Rank
F rank
n
Doge Faces: A Rank
Q: What is brown and has a head and a tail but no legs?
A: A penny.
the 50 faces of Aztrosist
I watched joker (2019) on a plane, and I must say the sound design is amazing, it's almost like someone made a movie out of sound then added visuals.
My dad took me to watch joker when i was 11
@@ghostie7776 gamer dad
"I can hit you with a D" -Aztrosist 6:46
Vantablackies brimstone
Underage
That Wojak is based off of a Markiplier instagram post, so yeah thats him
Joker was a good movie. It demonstrated the traits of a society too far gone. Where the upper class bully the lower. This leads to people, like the Joker, to be born. They are bad people, but funny. They dance on the stairs. Joker was a good movie and reminds me of myself. I am the Joker. I laugh a lot.
um that's not even 500 words so er I believe you are disqualified
This was not the assignment 30%
I'm the Jokah baybee
i like your analysis of joker the most
7:30 this mill has both water turbines and wind turbines, so it means that person have two conflicting ideas in their head and doesn't even realise that.
Woah
16:58 that the gravitational pull of a black hole which basically means that man is infinitely dense
this video is what happens when redditors discover wojaks
wojaks have been reddit shit since the 30 year old boomer was forced by one guy spamming it on every board
I don’t even care that much about Wojaks, yet it pisses me off how biased this video is.
More like "based" 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
@@redundancy3143 Based on what?
@@Danaredlp based on your mom
They’re rating wojacks, the whole point is to tell us their opinion.
You meant based right
This tierlist sucks so much it's turning me into the angry blood tear Wojak, I hope you're happy with yourselves.
Me rn
@@RoseIsAsleep soyjack talk
It’s weird to see both of them laughing and having a good time like friends
I thought joker (2019) was very great and inspiring. Without the joker I wouldn’t be able to post my joker quotes on Instagram. The movie taught me that we live in a society and that the world is out to get true intelligent minds like me and other joker stans.
Didnt meet the 500 word quota but at least you have a formed opinion 6/10
“We live in a simulation”
is the next level of
“We live in a society”
simulated society
@@calico.5588 real society simulated simulation
*Joker (2019 film)*
Joker is a 2019 American psychological thriller film directed and produced by Todd Phillips, who co-wrote the screenplay with Scott Silver. The film, based on DC Comics characters, stars Joaquin Phoenix as the Joker and provides an alternative origin story
for the character. Set in 1981, it follows Arthur Fleck, a failed clown
and stand-up comedian whose descent into insanity and nihilism inspires
a violent counter-cultural revolution against the wealthy in a decaying
Gotham City. Robert De Niro, Zazie Beetz, Frances Conroy, Brett Cullen, Glenn Fleshler, Bill Camp, Shea Whigham, and Marc Maron appear in supporting roles. Joker was produced by Warner Bros. Pictures, DC Films, and Joint Effort, in association with Bron Creative and Village Roadshow Pictures, and distributed by Warner Bros.
Phillips conceived Joker in 2016 and wrote the script with Silver throughout 2017. The two were inspired by 1970s character studies and the films of Martin Scorsese (particularly Taxi Driver and The King of Comedy), who was initially attached to the project as a producer. The film loosely adapts plot elements from Batman: The Killing Joke (1988) and The Dark Knight Returns
(1986), but Phillips and Silver otherwise did not look to specific
comics for inspiration. Phoenix became attached in February 2018 and was
cast that July, while the majority of the cast signed on by August. Principal photography took place in New York City, Jersey City, and Newark, from September to December 2018. Joker is the first live-action theatrical Batman film to receive an R-rating from the Motion Picture Association.
Joker premiered at the 76th Venice International Film Festival on August 31, 2019, where it won the Golden Lion,
and was released in the United States on October 4, 2019. The film
polarized critics. Although Phoenix's performance, the musical score,
and the cinematography were praised, the dark tone, portrayal of mental
illness, and handling of violence divided opinion and generated concerns
of inspiring real-world violence; the movie theater where the 2012 Aurora, Colorado mass shooting occurred during a screening of The Dark Knight Rises refused to show it.[7] Despite this, Joker became a major box office success and set records for an October release. It grossed over $1 billion, the first and only R-rated film to do so, becoming the sixth-highest-grossing film of 2019, and the 31st-highest-grossing film of all time during its theatrical run.
Joker received numerous accolades. At the 92nd Academy Awards, the film earned a leading 11 nominations, including Best Picture, Best Director and Best Adapted Screenplay, winning Best Actor for Phoenix (who became the second actor to win an Oscar for portraying the Joker following Heath Ledger in 2009) and Best Original Score for Hildur Guðnadóttir. Phoenix and Guðnadóttir also won at the Golden Globe and BAFTA Award ceremonies.
Great job Pasi1234567, 100%
My review of Joker (2019)
This happened to my friend Paul.
The fact that doomer is E and not S would make this video invalid, but femboy doomer being S redeems it.
1:59 probably meant stephen gammell's scary stories
nah i thought that at first but it looks more like shel silverstein's illustrations
wojak at 2:10 or whatever looks like the art style from Where the Wild Things Are (heavily shaded with individual lines)
“Jarvis. Select a Wojack then quote what they say and post.”
2:00 i think hes talking about the “how did you feel in pe today” image
Guts kinda looks like an illustration from scary stories to tell in the dark tbh
Yes, I read children’s books
I didn't watch Joker (2019).
Alright Paul!
Alright Paul!
Cool 👍
@@-Gug- Alright Gugs mcGooble!
Joker 2019 is the 2019th Joker ever born
Joker is about a funy clown that isn’t understood by all his friends
Joker suffers from a rare disease that makes his jokes extra funny but only to him so no one knows what he’s laughing at
On a quest to prove to his loved ones that he is just as funny as the other jokers, he makes his way up the ranks before getting a prime time spot on his favourite tv show!
Much like this video I turned it off 5 minutes before the end, but I was proud of his amazing makeup job. All those years being the joker really paid off.
My favourite part was when no one laughed at his stand up, but he had the self love and self care to laugh for everyone in the audience.
I give joker a 10 out of 5. He didn’t fall into a big vat of Joker Juice which is my favourite part of every joker.
I hope the next joker falls into a big vat of bimbofication juice. I think if he does that he will defeat the riddler once and for all
This could, particularly in the current climate, be viewed as a lament for outsiders and the ignored. That’s too simple and Joker does anything but deliver you easy answers. It’s a sad, chaotic, slow-burn study of someone who isn’t visible; who doesn’t even exist to the world around them. But your empathy, sympathy even, isn’t guaranteed, and it begins to dissolve as Arthur somehow moves even further to the edges. This is, we mustn’t forget, the story of how a villain was made. But what writer/director Todd Phillips and co-writer Scott Silver (8 Mile, The Fighter) have written into life is the Joker as a character. What they and the film is interested in is the mental, moral, emotional, physical make-up of the man who became the Joker.
As Arthur/Joker, Joaquin Phoenix is astonishing. Phillips has said he had a picture of the actor above his screen when writing the script and it’s a belief that has paid off. Phoenix inhabits Arthur: having lost weight for the role, he looks thin, frail, hungry. Shadows carve out his exposed bones. His physicality is precise - the way he moves, shuffles, runs, sits, smokes, shrinks. His usual intensity is on full display and it’s captivating, even overwhelming in moments. Comparing him to Heath Ledger and Jack Nicholson feels like a nonsense: this is a Joker we’ve never seen - in many respects it isn’t the Joker, it’s Arthur.
This is a deliberate consequence of stepping away from the source material. Phillips has said that though elements were drawn from 1988 graphic novel The Killing Joke (in which the Joker is an unsuccessful stand-up), the film doesn’t follow the comic books. A bold move for a universe with such an ardent fan base, but it’s the film’s greatest asset. Not only does it, and the character, sit completely apart from the rest of the DC Cinematic Universe, but it stands apart from comic book movies entirely (even The Dark Knight, as grounded as it was). It’s a character and a movie that’s liberated, entirely. Free to be whatever and whomever it choose.
Cool video, Aztrozist!
Oh so it’s called a wojak.
18:53 "bottom right of the joker"
*gets the bottom left*
11:30 Pillar men from Jojo S2
I'm so sorry **runs off in shame**
5:38 when you go beyond the doomer and become doomed
2:53
“Sometimes I walk and don’t even realize I’m walking”
Bruh sometimes if I’m walking for a long time my legs will automatically walk for me
I mean it doesn’t feel like I’m controlling them
i think that Joker (2019) is a good call for mental illnesses problems and how opressed people can be victims of the society and their own actions. but after some time people was just using this problem as argument to be assholes on the internet
Wojack memes are just an evolution of rage comics.
Yeah and it reached the max rage level by adding niggas into it
Damn they missed my favorite: The inverse of 0:03, where the smirk peaks out from behind the crying mask
3:30 HE SAID IT
JOKER (2019) was one of the movies of this decade.
Aztrosist's lack of wojak knowledge really hurts this video.
so true
Shroomjak was too late
3 years later... and sitting on the toilet successor is... skibidi toilet...
My review and personal anecdote:
The first time I saw Joker I was on mushrooms and it was fucking hilarious but one of my roommates with us didn’t enjoy the experience. Fast forward to next year we’re all living together in a house come to find out he has bipolar and it was absolutely psycho all the time so we begin to call him “the joker“. At one point he completely snaps and we all started mimicking scenes from this film and he eventually moves out. Love that movie.
it's nice to see two brothers collab
Troll face is coming back and I’m really about that
Actual title: Rating Wojack memes based on how relatable the stereotype they represent is. Boomer doesn't understand memes.
"So many people think they are this Wojack" not realizing they are almost exclusively used ironically to make fun of someone.
thank you for your intellectual interpretation of a wojack tier list
Stunning commentary 12/10
The Joker was probably the funniest movie of 2019
Joker 1987: The acting of Synthcool was the best acting that i witnessed in my whole life,
he also could have made this tier list a quadrilion times better with his top tier 900 IQ funny Family Guy clips.
This was not the assignment 30%
The old meme coming back is trollface comics
Where’s coomer
That 2nd s tier is making my neuron activate
It's really difficult to follow along with this conversation. They're both the same person after all.
Buckethead is a guitarist who wears a bucket over his head because of his stage fright.
Hey alpharad
Joker (2019):
Happened to my buddy Eric
Coal. Should've rated Cobson.
COBSON S TIER
Meds xhe came out in 2021
You don't measure the 3 wojaks in power level you measure them in reddit karma
All I really have to say about joker 2019 is I really enjoyed it upon release, it was wonderful. Later that year though I saw Taxi Driver and realized it's literally just a shitty rip off of that. Deadass the director just grabbed a classic of his slapped a comic book name on it and bam free money. It's so creatively bankrupt and absolutely sad to see.
I thought Joker (2019) Was a mediocre movie released in the right place at the right time. Narratively, I felt that Joker didn't say much at all, despite it's lead audience claiming it to be "Deep" or "Controversial." It was also too unoriginal, taking far too much from Scorcese films like Taxi Driver and King Of Comedy while adding just enough new stuff to be original. Practically, the film is very well made and has much artistic value, from the score, the cinematography, and my personal favorite element, the use of colours.
The "Up to interpretation" element and the way that events are presented through the mind of a schizophrenic was very interesting, but was still done MUCH better in American Psycho. In American Psycho, it's used less as a gimmick and more of a very tonal and atmospheric blanket over the film that creates memorable moments. In Joker, it feels as if it was something thrown in at the last minute for publicity. The films location, Gotham, has also been praised as creating a very specific feeling around the movie, and aspect that I feel was underused. Lets compare: The Unnamed city in Se7en (my favourite film) by David Fincher, Vs. Joker's Gotham. In Se7en, the unnamed city is painted as a way to share it's theme and message: That although it seems the world may be bad, it's worth fighting for the good inside of it, even if it's not much. Throughout the film we are always given background noise and chatter, the sound of rain and annoying cars, and other things like newspapers and subtle tv reports snuck in that highlight the intense crime and overall depravity of the city. In Joker, all we're given is some shitty exposition served through Thomas Wayne's campaign. We are told gotham has conflict between classes, but we're NEVER shown any examples of this. This element of the film could've been emphasized much more, and would've served to build significant and memorable characteristics.
An element I would like to praise is the final scene. I'm not going to talk about the acting, as that's been praised a lot before, rather I'd like to focus on the way the writers build suspense. Quentin Tarantino once said that suspense is like a rubber band - the longer the scene is, the more you stretch the rubber band, making it more and more tense until it breaks. The Talk show scene does this VERY well. Every point in the conversation between Arthur and Murray stretches the rubber band more - and when the main turning point in the conversation happens (when arthur decides to kill murray rather than kill himself) you can pinpoint it, emphasized well by Pheonix's performance (which was excellent). The music builds during the final joke with these loud banging drums that sound like someone clanging a trash can lid - a very harsh sound that really fits the scene. It crescendos and then - boom. Literally. Very excellent example of suspense done right.
Overall, I feel Joker is a little overrated, but deserves recognition for what it did well, which I would say was most of the film.
Whats with you movie cucks and bringing up Taxi Driver
@@chugsfromtriad It was cited as one of Phillip's main inspirations. It was neccesary for me to cite.
The word "wojak" is actually spelled more like voyak (it means "soldier" by the way)
Two grown men.
1 cup
Having sex?
Your muscles involuntarily flex?
18:36 And thus the madness starts
13:30
I have teleported bread
For a long time i myself have attatch myself to the inherant and potable cringe of acting like the joker, from dark knights Heath ledger to suicide squads jared leto, i found that joining those amoungst the internet who identified with the character as something that just seemed right. This being said it was no suprise that when Joker (2019) came out many of my friends individually came to the conclusion that i should see it with them. So at the time of its release i saw Joker(2019) five times. The first time I saw this movie I thought it was pretty good, I like watching highly rated movies so it wasnt the most mind blowing thing id ever seen. I think that mentality was a result of the types of crowds that would only watch super hero movies and for one of those it appears much more mature and apraisable. Anyways i enjoyed it watching the first time.
The second time i watched it now knowing the story i could really pick apart the things I liked and didnt like, I loved the sound track and the performances, I felt that everyone acts like hyperbolic new yorkers, absolute dick heads or people for peace. I got a kick out of the second watching and it consolidated my view that it was a pretty good movie but not a master peice.
For the next three viewings all i can say is that i wasnt bored, I knew what to expect and i didnt really pick up on anything new, its not that deep of a movie. But nevertheless i was not bored. I think it truely was an atesyiment to the pacing of the film that despite having seen it so much it was still entertaining to watch.
In conclusion because of this movie I can now own the libs and my wife is now aroused during sex.
Good job Bungus the 3th, 85%
That drawing he’s thinking of is in diary of a wimpy kid if I recall correctly, I think it was terrifying scribbles or soemthing LMAO
Now do the big chungus tier list
wojacks are just the modern rage comics
The third wojak is the faded memory of an empty husk of what could've been barely considered a human.
16:56 That guy is meant to be dense, because that's a diagram of the density of a black hole
1:46
I usually have a more demonic version of this face whenever I see animal abuse
thanks i needed this
joker (2019): based
The bucket one is a PvZ reference, commonly referred to as davejack in reference to crazy dave
laughing is just high-pitched moaning
NO
blocked.
Buy
@@caitlin.b5915 Pants are just long fingerless gloves for your legs
4:00 cup holder
1:59 shel silverstein books probably
I like the 12:25 one because it looks like an album cover I would use it as an album cover I think
14:35 his hairline is a wife beater
13:38 a bucket!
Dear god…
I agree with this whole video even if i haven't watched more then 2 seconds of it