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Let's put on a happy face, at least to start, for "Joker: Folie a Deux.” If there's one undeniably compelling thing about both Todd Phillips' divisive 2019 original and his new follow-up, it's that these movies are best when they dance. The first movie might have been a muddled attempt to retrofit a "Taxi Driver-styled ‘70s realism into a Joker origin story, but, man, when Joaquin Phoenix is on his toes, it's hard to look away.

Just the image of a gaunt Phoenix decked out in the red suit, with his green-streaked hair slicked back, was enough to give "Joker” a kick. The role gave Phoenix, a full-bodied actor, a day-glo canvas on which to unleash torrents of movement, cycling between wounded restraint and flamboyant release in a comic-book genre that usually leaves performers paralyzed by spandex. He's nearly as captivating in "Joker: Folie a Deux," a musical that closely follows the events of the first film as an imprisoned Arthur Fleck (Phoenix) goes on trial for the murders that occurred at the culmination of "Joker.



” Even the way Phoenix theatrically smokes as Arthur – which he does quite a lot in "Folie a Deux" – shows you how much he's luxuriating in the limber physicality of the character. But any sense of forward momentum has gone out the window in "Joker: Folie a Deux,” which opens in theaters. Phillips has followed his very anti-hero take on the Joker with a very anti-sequel.

It combines prison drama, courthouse thriller, and musical and yet turns out re.

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