It's worse than that, though. Fincher looks like a hypocritical scumbag for saying something that he's more guilty of than Philips.
Gone Girl was literally about a mentally unwell, sociopathic woman who kills and manipulates in order to force her estranged husband into acting the way she wants, even if he hates her for it. One could argue it's based on a book, but Fincher took zero liberties in even denouncing her behavior as "bad". In fact, she's rewarded for it at the end of the film.
He does the exact same thing in Fight Club, rewarding bad behavior with the (anti) "hero" getting the girl and sending a message.
The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo was another case of a dis-associative, mentally troubled young woman who is taken advantage of, and then becomes the (anti) "hero" through manipulation and vice. Again, one could argue it's based on a movie trilogy based on a book series, but there's this trend of the people suffering, troubled, disturbed, etc., coming out on top as the "winner", so to speak.
Heck, even in Se7en the villain wins, getting what he wants out of the over-confident hero. The villain was rewarded with the fall of the hero; psychopathy's prophecy fulfilled through the inevitable sin of the supposed righteous.
I wouldn't necessarily say he portrays them in mocking fashion, but more-so seems to outline plot structures that celebrate their cerebral victories, no matter the costs.
At least Joker was honest enough to depict a mentally ill individual as the villain he is, and how society propped him up because he became an unwitting icon for class revolution. There's a lot of irony within Philips' fictionalized world of Gotham, but there's no betrayal there... just a lot of honesty about how a broken system can fail those in need.
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