The success of The Jokerâs numerous schemes in The Dark Knight is dependent on a medley of greed, corruption, stupidity, and mostly collective late-stage astigmatism. Blowing up Gotham General, for instance, requires the thousands of nurses and doctors and orderlies and janitors and cafeteria workers and patients and patientsâ families in the hospital to either get spontaneous migraines or be distracted by a really pithy tweet or something so no one would notice the dozens of explosives planted on the campus. And all of his plans involve a police force so corrupt that five different criminal masterminds with arbitrarilyâand unnecessarilyâcomplex strategies were able to infiltrate it in a five-year span.
Preventing Gothamâs destruction, of course, is SoulCycle Eric Trump doing jujitsu in really scary snorkeling gear. He is not alone, though. Batman is assisted by âgoodâ cops throughout Christopher Nolanâs trilogy. Most notably Jim Gordon in each film and Robin Blake in The Dark Knight Rises. There are also rank and file members of the Gotham police force that serve as allies, too. But unbeknownst to themâand also to Christopher Nolanâeven the âgoodâ cops exist as reminders that all cops are fundamentally bad.
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For instance, The Jokerâs escape from jail depends on several unfathomably absurd things happening exactly as he planned it. But none of it is possible without the most realistic part: the reliability of police brutality.
The scene that probably comes to mind is how the cops allow Batman to kick The Jokerâs ass in the interrogation room while they eat peanuts.
Standing by and watching while American Ninja Zuckerberg mollywops an unarmed suspect definitely qualifies as police brutality. But this isnât even the worst part! That comes after Batman and Gordon leave, and The Joker is left in the room with this guy.
As the movie painstakingly shows, he is one of the few Gotham cops with integrity. Decency. Honor. He is a good apple. And if he just does the job Gotham taxpayers pay him to doâor if he decides to go to Burger King or, I donât know, literally just stands there and raps the first verse of âCalifornia LoveââThe Joker stays locked up and the movie ends! (Also, why is he even in the room?)
But The Joker relies on brutality being an essential function of âgoodâ policing, and baits him into a fight.
Expected brutality is so baked into what weâve been taught to consider good police work that this guy literally admits to it as a function of his goodness.
âI know the difference between punks who need a little lesson in manners, and the freaks like you who would just enjoy itâ is another way of saying âIâm so used to beating unarmed suspects that I can sense whoâd enjoy getting beat more than I enjoy doing the beating, so I wonât beat youââand this guy is supposed to be a good guy. This is copanganda at its best.
Anyway, defund the police, burn Gotham to the ground, and Ben Affleck was the best Batman. Bye!
Straight From
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