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From playing the boy who dreams of becoming Superman’s sidekick in “Superboy” to bringing the story of supervillain Joker alive on the big screen, Joaquin Phoenix has navigated his way into Hollywoods hall of fame, with a career carved with unconventional roles.

At the moment, Phoenix, known for dissolving his own identity as he disappears into his roles, is winning plaudits for transforming into the mentally unstable loner Arthur Fleck, who picks violence to find calmness in his life, even as he struggles to make a career in stand-up comedy, and becomes Joker in the comic book drama “Joker“.

The 45-year-old star is being considered as a contender of Best Actor Oscar this year for the Warner Bros. project, which has become the highest-grossing R-rated movie of all time and has crossed the $ 1 billion mark at the worldwide box office.

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From overcoming personal tragedies, struggling with addiction to quitting acting to making a comeback, Phoenix is one of Hollywood’s most respected actors, who has proved his range of versatility time and again.

He had a tough childhood as his parents were followers of a controversial religious cult — Children of God, and it is believed that the cult promoted sex as a direct path to God. They left the group in 1978 when he was three. They moved to Los Angeles where his mother started working with a network and found a way to help her children get entry to showbiz.

His brother, the rising star River Phoenix, died of a drug overdose in 1993 after a night out at a nightclub, and Joaquin entered showbiz at the age of eight as Leaf Phoenix, and did “The Fall Guy”, “Parenthood” and “Anything for Love”.

At the age of 15, Leaf reinvented himself as Joaquin. He took a break for a while and made his comeback in 1995 with Gus Van Sant’s critically acclaimed “To Die For”, which featured Nicole Kidman. The film, in which Joaquin Phoenix featured as Jimmy, whose married girlfriend (Kidman) convinces him to kill her husband, started a new chapter in his career.

He was then seen as a poor man in love with a rich woman in romantic drama “Inventing the Abbotts” (1997), a small-town troublemaker in crime thriller “U Turn” and a young man who befriends a serial killer in “Clay Pigeons”(1998). In 1999, he explored the porn underworld in “8MM” as an employee of an adult video store.