There’s the Americana at Brand mall-appreciation meme account doing what they do best, which is appreciating the Americana at Brand: One of the most magnificent, sublime, monumental, extraordinary scenes in cinema history /NYSEoNrztx- □□□□□ October 20, 2019 One of the most magnificent, sublime, monumental, extraordinary scenes in cinema history /MNB7myTH92- kate’s bush October 21, 2019 Or another highly memed outcast of 2019 cinema, Ma: One of the most magnificent, sublime, monumental, extraordinary scenes in cinema history /BdDukcFEdq- this bridge called my buss October 23, 2019 Such as Fergie doing one-handed cartwheels while riffing: Joker dancing to the succession theme /YBzgILvWpz- gina October 21, 2019Īnd then there’s the other varietal, the Cool Ranch to the dubs’ Nacho Cheese, that takes rapturous, bizarrely worded, entirely misplaced praise and just applies it to different iconic dance scenes. "wait u know about this?" - Seinfeld Current Day October 21, 2019Īnd of course, the song that has every ounce of swagger and foreboding that “Rock and Roll Part 2” lacks: "Joker DANCED□? did he do the thumbs and the litle kicks" One of the most magnificent, sublime, monumental, extraordinary scenes in cinema history /VixBgiigXn- Jade Budowski October 21, 2019 Because nothing says “twisted menace who doesn’t play by society’s rules” quite like running through the house with a pickle in your mouth. There’s nothing lamer, or less anarchic sounding, or countercultural, or just straight-up uncool, than the riff people do the wave to at hockey games.Ī much more thematically on-point choice would have been, for example, the Song of Summer, “Misbehavin’” from The Righteous Gemstones. The fact of the matter is, “Bing Bong Zoo” is only half a step more ridiculous and out of place than the Gary Glitter song in question. Joker dancing to bing bong zoo by peppa pig /1Z7l1fkodw- critchy October 23, 2019 The first is the tried-and-true method of an aural “open for a surprise,” where the scene dubs over with different songs, such as this fire track from our girl Peppa Pig: Joker dancing memes generally come in two flavors. But mostly? I think it’s just that people like clown memes, and dancing memes, and dancing clown memes. Another is that at a time when Film Twitter is taking contentious sides over the artistic legitimacy of superhero films, Joker is a battle line. So why did this tweet spawn an unholy legion of dancing Jokers soft-shoeing down your timeline? Part of it is that “the death bells” is just a fantastically operatic way to describe any video or song you pair it with. This is literally any commercial for yogurt that helps you shit - sloane (sîpihkopiyesîs) October 22, 2019 The needle drop in this clip is so laughable that some Twitter users who hadn’t seen the movie assumed it was a joke. The really weird thing about that Joker tweet is not that it treats Joker as one of the great films of all time (whatever) but that it treats "the death bells" as this incredibly common phrase that everyone has heard and intuitively understands- Daniel D'Addario October 23, 2019 As Daniel D’Addario from Variety pointed out, “the death bells” is in no world a thing. In spiel, they seem to be reading meaning and depth into a scene that may not have all that much of it. To Joker skeptics, there’s something inherently gratifying about finding this type of sincere Joker stanning in the wild, in such hyperbolic language. ![]() One of the most magnificent, sublime, monumental, extraordinary scenes in cinema history” One of the most magnificent, sublime, monumental, extraordinary scenes in cinema history - strawberry gabri October 18, 2019 Whether Twitter users had seen the film yet or not, we were all familiar with the image of a greasy Joaquin Phoenix in clown paint dancing down a city staircase, ubiquitous as it was on posters and billboards for the film. On October 18, Twitter user tweeted out the Joker stairs dance scene set to “Rock and Roll Part 2,” the one that earned the movie a place in the Significant Stairs on Film canon alongside Rocky and The Muppet Show, and compelled fans to make pilgrimages to the “Joker stairs” in the Bronx. Some early viewers of Todd Phillips’s Joker were surprised to learn that there was a song in it that wasn’t yet another rendition of “Send in the Clowns,” and that the song in question was written by a known pedophile and child molester who is currently serving a 16-year sentence. I wish I could go back to a time before Joker, when I had never heard of something called “Rock and Roll Part 2” and thought that riff was just the background music for 16 bars of the Jock Jams Megamix. I have not known peace since I learned who Gary Glitter was.
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