"1) There's an additional element added to the gun. They cased Han's gun in sci-fi stuff so we wouldn't see a German pistol. In Batman, they give Joker's gun a huge barrel so we know it's different."
As I already said, the stuff on Han's gun was unknown stuff with an unknown function, because the prop makers invented it. A longer barrel isn't an unknown thing with an unknown function; it's just fundamentally a pipe, and you could custom order most any barrel length you wanted from S&W way back when, so the Joker's gun could have been 100% factory-stock.
"2) We see the effects of the gun. Han's gun fires different shots. This effect makes us know it's different. Well, we kinda see the effect of Joker's pistol, too."
The effect of Han's gun isn't standalone though; it happens in a movie universe which is already established to have highly "futuristic" (relative to the real world) technology, and we see other "blasters" fire the same plasma type shots before we see Han's do it. And it was established right from the start that it's taking place in a completely different galaxy than our own.
On the other hand, the Joker's gun is an ordinary revolver in a non-futuristic Earth setting, and we see the ordinary effects of ordinary revolvers in other parts of the movie, i.e., they can't defeat soft body armor, exactly like in reality. So when one magically becomes an anti-aircraft weapon, that's a problem, a problem that Han's blaster doesn't have.
The act of breaking your movie's internal logic doesn't count as a valid notice of departure from reality; that would be circular reasoning and would give a free pass to every internal logic inconsistency in every movie ever made. The notice has to be made beforehand.
By the way, Star Wars isn't completely beyond reproach in this respect, since they did use production items as the basis for some of their props (e.g., various makes/models of guns, and flash bulb handles) instead of building all the props entirely from scratch, but because of reasons I've already mentioned, it's minor compared to the Joker's magical gun.
"The third element you highlight - the opening phrase, "A Long Time Ago, In a Galaxy Far, Far Away..." I would actually argue we have as well. The Batman logo tells us this is a comic book where we have special weapons."
And a Smith & Wesson model 15 is definitely not a special weapon, no more than Bob's Colt Government Model was a special weapon, and no more than young Jack Napier's Colt New Service was a special weapon, and no more than the mugger's Smith & Wesson model 19 was a special weapon, and so on. The Joker's handheld electrocution device was a special weapon for example, albeit, an impossible one, but at least it wasn't a production item.
"As to the Joker, he frequently behaves in unpredictable and strange ways. He decides to go on a crime spree that includes mass murder and destruction of art, but he also obsesses over Vicky Vale. He uses acid to make "people art". He kills his own goons sometimes. He has a "bang" gun. That's just in this movie. The character throughout his history is anarchic and chaotic. I don't know what more to tell you. If you don't buy into that essential element of randomness, I guess we just think of the Joker very differently."
None of that means he's insane, and he certainly has a normal self-preservation instinct, as demonstrated in the movie multiple times, except for that one time when the script informs him that he'll be perfectly safe standing in front of machine guns and explosives being fired directly at him.
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