I thought something: since Jeremiah is Joker, Jerome could be "Jester". Although, perhaps, they were better off keeping him as the actual Joker, instead of creating the twin. I have some mixed feelings, about this.
I'm quite disappointed by his death scene. After everything he did, I would have preferred him to have a more satisfying death. Although maybe he was disappointed that Gordon didn't become a killer, which wouldn't surprise me.
The fact that it's Fake Tragic annoys the hell out of me. In fact, despite being Broken, he's in one of the 'Pure Evil' tabs, because it isn't clear whether he had always been evil even before the abuse he had suffered and for the fact that, apparently, he has subverted this sympathetic quality.
What did Jeremiah? Let's see: While it is true that Jerome has proven to be quite manipulative, Jeremiah is precisely the only one who could not justifice himself using Jerome's manipulations as an excuse. Jerome has only lied in situations where the recipient didn't know the whole story; for example, Jim Gordon didn't know he hated Lila, and he didn't actually tell Dwight he would kill him; those lies were without context of Jerome's intentions. While with Jeremiah, he was speaking precisely with someone who shared the events that Jerome describes. Although Jerome mentions that his memory is confused, Jeremiah does not even try to use this as an excuse, but appeals that Jerome was born bad, which is pretty low. Jerome admits that as a teenager he wanted to kill everything in sight, however, the fact is that Jeremiah left the circus at age 8, so even Jerome's murderous desires could very well be a consequence of Jeremiah's actions. He frames Jerome for trying to kill him, causing his family to turn against him, in what amounts to 9 years of abuse. Years later, Jeremiah admited that he wasn't fully honest about the stories he told, and even try to justifice himself with the death of their mother, that happened after his betray. While Jerome stills being responsable for his own actions, Jeremiah's betray still influented in the nihilist monster he became. As stayed before, Jerome himself stayed that during his puberty he develpoment an extreme murderous desire, leaving with two options, that the abuse made him develmpoment sociopathy, or that as he himself stayed, it's in his DNA, this looks to be the most possible, having the example of Lila Valeska and Zachary Trumble who looks to be unestable and cold hearted. Meaning that just as Jerome, Jeremiah had these instincts of murder as well.
I thought something: since Jeremiah is Joker, Jerome could be "Jester". Although, perhaps, they were better off keeping him as the actual Joker, instead of creating the twin. I have some mixed feelings, about this.
I'm quite disappointed by his death scene. After everything he did, I would have preferred him to have a more satisfying death. Although maybe he was disappointed that Gordon didn't become a killer, which wouldn't surprise me.
@@giosy0072 I'd have preferred if he didn't die tbh I always preferred him over Jeremiah
The fact that it's Fake Tragic annoys the hell out of me. In fact, despite being Broken, he's in one of the 'Pure Evil' tabs, because it isn't clear whether he had always been evil even before the abuse he had suffered and for the fact that, apparently, he has subverted this sympathetic quality.
@@giosy0072 I think it's because of the abuse, while I'm sure he's always had a darkness within, his family helped bring it out
What did Jeremiah? Let's see:
While it is true that Jerome has proven to be quite manipulative, Jeremiah is precisely the only one who could not justifice himself using Jerome's manipulations as an excuse.
Jerome has only lied in situations where the recipient didn't know the whole story; for example, Jim Gordon didn't know he hated Lila, and he didn't actually tell Dwight he would kill him; those lies were without context of Jerome's intentions. While with Jeremiah, he was speaking precisely with someone who shared the events that Jerome describes.
Although Jerome mentions that his memory is confused, Jeremiah does not even try to use this as an excuse, but appeals that Jerome was born bad, which is pretty low.
Jerome admits that as a teenager he wanted to kill everything in sight, however, the fact is that Jeremiah left the circus at age 8, so even Jerome's murderous desires could very well be a consequence of Jeremiah's actions.
He frames Jerome for trying to kill him, causing his family to turn against him, in what amounts to 9 years of abuse. Years later, Jeremiah admited that he wasn't fully honest about the stories he told, and even try to justifice himself with the death of their mother, that happened after his betray.
While Jerome stills being responsable for his own actions, Jeremiah's betray still influented in the nihilist monster he became.
As stayed before, Jerome himself stayed that during his puberty he develpoment an extreme murderous desire, leaving with two options, that the abuse made him develmpoment sociopathy, or that as he himself stayed, it's in his DNA, this looks to be the most possible, having the example of Lila Valeska and Zachary Trumble who looks to be unestable and cold hearted. Meaning that just as Jerome, Jeremiah had these instincts of murder as well.
Do you know red john in "the mentalist" can you make his kill count ?
@@christophebrunetier9478 never seen The Mentalist, is it good?
@@_tenebris25_ The first 6 seasons yes and and the finale of season 7 too.
@@christophebrunetier9478 I'll add it to the watch list then
@@_tenebris25_ good
Uno de duncan vizla de la película polar con mads mikelsen
@@alejandroohiggins4349 quando lo veo lo hago
@@_tenebris25_ la película está en Netflix
La película está en Netflix
@@alejandroohiggins4349 no uso Netflix
@@_tenebris25_ entonces que usas