

In 2012, Silver Linings Playbook included it in a movie trailer that was in heavy rotation on television. In 2004, Meet the Fockers used it during a football-related scene. In 2006, The Office featured "Rock & Roll Part 2" in an episode. In truth though, the movie is just one in a long line of American products that have actively ignored the crimes of Gary Glitter. There are plenty of stompy old rock 'n' roll hits, similar in genre to "Rock and Roll Part 2," that aren't going to raise the profile of a pedophile. Of all the songs in all the world that Joker could have used for this scene, there is surely no justification in choosing one by this particular monster. He is currently serving 16 years in prison. in 2008.ĭuring 20, as part of a sweeping investigation that brought down a wealth of prominent TV, radio and music personalities in the U.K., Glitter was charged with a multitude of sexual offenses relating to multiple children under the age of 14 (one of whom was 8). He served three years in Thủ Đức Prison, was barred from at least 19 countries, including the Philippines, Cuba, Cambodia and Thailand, and was subsequently deported to the U.K. In 20, he came to the attention of Vietnamese police after preying on multiple young girls, including children as young as 10 and 11-years old, and a 15-year-old who was said to be living with him. In 1999, he was placed on Britain's sex offender register and sentenced to four months in prison after 4,000 images of child pornography (some featuring children under the age of 6) were discovered on his laptop.Īfter his release, he fled to Cambodia where he was eventually deported for sex tourism. Glitter's rap sheet is long and horrifying. It's not for nothing. Glitter, a British glam rocker who found fame with outrageous clothes and catchy songs in the '70s and early '80s, is a pariah in his home country, thanks to his status as a convicted pedophile and unapologetic sexual abuser. (Well, on top of the one that already existed, about centering a movie on a murderous protagonist who gets that way via social rejection.) As he embraces his new role, he is seen dancing down some stairs to the sounds of 1972's " Rock & Roll Part 2" by Gary Glitter-and it's created a furor. There's a scene in Todd Phillips' controversial new Joker movie in which Joaquin Phoenix's tortured lead is finally fully transformed from outcast Arthur Fleck into the dangerously bombastic Joker. This article's text has been amended to reflect that. UPDATE: According to the Los Angeles Times, an unnamed spokesman at Gary Glitter's label in London asserts that " Gary Glitter does not get paid" for the use of "Rock and Roll Part 2," reporting that Glitter sold his publishing rights to the song over 20 years ago.
