#ClimateScam: World Bank 'Misplaces' $41 BILLION in Climate Change Funding, Says Oxfam
TSA Failure? Body Found in Wheel Well of United Flight From Chicago to...
LEGEND: J.K. Rowling Handles Pro-Trans Troll As Only She Can by Laughing at...
We're SO VERY Back! Oval Office Desk to Undergo Trump-Style Restoration After Biden...
While Normal People Celebrated Christmas, Lefties Stormed the Madison Capitol to Protest f...
The New Yorker Argues Hoover's FBI Was 'Nonpartisan', Trips Over Community Note With...
WATCH: Biden Pardon Attorney Says They Take 'Racial Disparity' Into Consideration for Pard...
Let's See If These Cable Nets Doubling Down on TDS Boosted Post-Election Ratings...
'Couldn't Even Wait 26 Days'! Biden Fam Squeezing in 1 Last Tropical Vacay...
Democrats Plan to Block Trump From White House
PANDER-IFIC! Kamala Claims She Grew Up Celebrating KWANZAA, There's Just a COUPLE of...
WOW: NEW Revelations Show Biden Admin's COVID Lab Leak Cover-Up Even WORSE Than...
Politico Seems to Be Hoping Trump-Supporting Farmers Will End Up 'Ruined' as a...
ARGLE RAR! Matt Gaetz Shares 'Great Note' from Trump and Lefties Lose Whatever's...
WOKEPEDIA: Here's Where Donations for Wikipedia REALLY Go and WOW, No Wonder They're...

It's come to this: Warner Bros. issues statement clarifying that Joker is not 'an endorsement of real-world violence of any kind'

We’re a little late to this story, but it’s so stupid that it’s actually still pretty fresh.

“Joker” hasn’t been released yet, but already it’s being slammed by our woke betters as essentially a step-by-step guide for angry white guys interested in becoming homicidal maniacs. So Warner Bros. is trying to do damage control.

Advertisement

More from Variety:

Warner Bros. has weighed in on the mounting controversy surrounding “Joker,” an R-rated comic book adaptation that is being criticized for offering an in-depth portrait of a mass killer. In a statement on Tuesday, the studio hit back at suggestions that it is glamorizing a mass murderer.

“Make no mistake: neither the fictional character Joker, nor the film, is an endorsement of real-world violence of any kind,” the statement reads. “It is not the intention of the film, the filmmakers or the studio to hold this character up as a hero.”

Warner Bros. broke its silence after family members and friends of the victims of a 2012 mass shooting at a screening of “The Dark Knight Rises” in Aurora, Colo., wrote a letter to the studio expressing concerns about the film’s upcoming release. The letter supported the studio’s right to make the film and endorsed freedom of speech and artistic expression. However, its writers called on Warner Bros. to take several steps to get involved in the gun control movement, including pledging not to donate to political candidates who take money from the NRA.

Advertisement

Glad that this is where we’re at now.

Advertisement

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Twitchy Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement