After a few legal setbacks from Warner Bros., The Peopleā€™s Joker has made its way to theaters this weekend in New York. The parody film sees director/writer Vera Drew as the Harlequin, a trans woman trying to make it in comedy after recently moving into a small town. With a number of other Batman villains also getting the parody treatment in the film, you can guess why WB would try to stomp it outā€”and why folks wanted it to get a fair shot at life.

Spoilers of the Week | June 17th

For Drew, the film is deeply personal and practically autobiographical. As a trans woman, she felt a connection to the actual Joker movie in 2019. Along with Joaquin Phoenixā€™s outcast-turned-criminal Arthur Fleck, she found something relatable in the film being about ā€œcity structures and government systems [that] are completely failing. My family system failed me,ā€ she told Variety. ā€œMy government is still failing me constantly, and for some reason, I still have to pay them taxes next month. I related to that core element of just wanting to make art and put myself out there. How can I do that in a system that is so rigidly gatekept and so much of it is just an arm of propaganda?ā€

Superheroes are ā€œbig, grand, bold, colorful archetypes,ā€ and people already reflect themselves onto them. As a lifelong Batman fan, Peopleā€™s Joker allowed Drew to tell her trans story, something she herself only really processed in 2019. In using comedy to explore some ā€œfalse ideasā€ about herself, she eventually realized she ā€œneeded to process not only coming out as a trans woman in alternative comedy, but how this informed my identity.ā€

Drew was equally candid about the criticism thatā€™s come her way over the last two years. Thereā€™ve been critiquesā€”mainly from ā€œwell-intentioned alliesā€ā€”asking if itā€™s a good time to have a queer villain headline a movie. As far as sheā€™s concerned, sheā€™s a villain already, so may as well accept it. ā€œIā€™m villainized and politicized, and Iā€™m turned into a symbol, just because of my identity,ā€ she said. ā€œSome people think that just because I was assigned a gender at birth that doesnā€™t match me, and then embraced that, Iā€™m somehow a political activist or a symbol of their oppression. To me, I could only make a movie about a queer villain at this point in my life, because Iā€™m completely villainized and my community is completely villainized. So it was important to me to do that.ā€

The Peopleā€™s Joker is now in theaters, with more screenings opening up around the US in the coming weeks.


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Szabi Kisded

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