The Joker isn't presented as a role model, but the movie does condemn those who do nothing to help the downtrodden get on their feet, which positions him as a somewhat sympathetic character. It also suggests that mental illness is one of the contributing factors to his villainous acts and behavior, which is troubling. The story disparages hate, anger, and unkindness, but it doesn't exactly.
An Army Criminal Investigation Command memo issued Monday put commanders at Fort Sill, Okla., on notice regarding “disturbing and very specific chatter in the dark web” about a possible mass.
Joker (Valeriy Storozhik) uses an anachronistic TOZ-34E over and under shotgun, fitted with sniper scope. The shotgun has a white receiver that indicates a high-grade model; the lack of the button safety on the right side is a feature of early (pre-1982) version.
In Batman: Under the Red Hood, Batman faces his ultimate challenge as the mysterious Red Hood takes Gotham City by firestorm. One part vigilante, one part criminal kingpin, Red Hood begins cleaning up Gotham with the efficiency of Batman, but without following the same ethical code. Killing is an option. And when The Joker falls in the balance between the two, hard truths are revealed and old.
The Joker movie wasn't under fire for appealing to disenfranchised young men, it was under fire for pointing out the fact that abusing, attacking, belittling, and ostracizing men makes them lose their shit. It holds a mirror up to society, particularly the left wing ideologues that screeched loudest about it, and shows them that the monsters.
As such, Joker's release eventually was reluctantly engineered by the criminal kingpin, Black Mask, via various connections, including a lot of money and murder, after an attempt at his life by Red Hood in an attempt to fight fire with fire, with Joker then asked if it was an invite to a slumber party, and added that he packed his toothbrush. Joker then was brought before Black Mask while.