Joker (2019) exemplifies traditional storytelling focused on individual psychological descent amid societal decay, with virtually no progressive ideological influence. Casting adheres closely to source material expectations—Joaquin Phoenix as the white Joker, Robert De Niro in a key role—with Zazie Beetz's supporting role as the neighbor feeling organic to the gritty Gotham setting rather than forced diversity. Themes explore mental health neglect, class divides, and elite indifference through Arthur Fleck's tragic arc, but avoid identity politics, DEI messaging, or social justice lectures; any inequality critique is class-based and ambivalent, not aligned with contemporary activism. Director Todd Phillips explicitly rejected 'woke culture' as stifling comedy, positioning Joker as a bold anti-establishment response to Hollywood's shifting norms, with no creator intent to push progressive agendas. Reception was a massive box-office triumph and critical acclaim, with pre-release controversy stemming from progressive fears of 'incel' inspiration rather than accusations of wokeness, confirming its pure entertainment value unmarred by ideological intrusions.