Sep 302012
 

Our friends from NEWSARAMA have made a nice rummary of the facts we have about Joker’s return, and bring forth some of the worries some of us have regarding the Clown’s return. Here is a transcript, make your own conclusions:

Now that all the Batman family books have revealed their #0 issues, the stage is set for October’s start of “Death of the Family,” which brings Joker to the Bat-books in a big way.

The event, which will have tie-ins in several DC comics, spins out of a story starting in Batman #13 by Scott Snyder and Greg Capullo. After the success of their “Court of Owls” storyline and the subsequent tie-in event “Night of the Owls,” DC is hoping this event will be even bigger.

Snyder is getting to utilize his favorite Batman rogue for his follow-up to “Court of Owls,” calling this the biggest, most impactful Joker story in years.

“This is really my big exploration and love letter to the Joker,” Snyder told Newsarama.

So what clues have we been given about the New 52 version of The Joker? How will his return impact the Bat-family characters, now that their histories have changed? And what have the Bat-writers been hinting about their tie-ins to “Death of the Family?”

Secret Identity

At the heart of the “Death of the Family” storyline appears to be the question of whether or not The Joker knows the identities of the Bat-family and, in turn, Batman himself.

The solicitations for the “Death of the Family” issues of Batman includes this question: “What must Batman do to protect his secret identity and that of those who fight alongside him?”

Scott Lobdell also revealed a similar description to Newsarama in our recent interview:

“Joker may or may not know your identity, and that is maybe the most horrifying part,” Lobdell said. “Imagine, as crazy as the Joker is, you can at least go to bed secure in the knowledge that once you take off the mask you are a little safer. But if he knows who you are….aiyeee!”

Changed Joker?

Although there have been several changes to DCnU characters thanks to last year’s reboot, Snyder indicated in an interview with Newsaramathat this isn’t a different version of the Joker.

“You will see the iconic face and the grin, and he might look a little bit different and scarier,” Snyder said. “But you’ll find that he’s still himself at his core. And he’s really here in his blood-stained clothes going to work.”

The history of the relationship between The Joker and Batman — like The Joker being his greatest enemy and the terrible things he’s done to Jason and the other members of the Bat-family — are still a part of the DCU history. And according to Snyder, they fuel this storyline.

And although The Joker has been gone from the pages of the DCnU for the last year, according to Snyder, he’s been spending that time planning and planting traps. “A year ago, Joker decided, I’m going to walk away from Gotham, I’m going to plan my revenge, and I’m going to come back in a year and bring it all back,” the writer said. “So this is what he’s been planning to do for a long time. And all of those things are set in motion.”

“Of The Family?”

While Snyder has promised that the story in Batman will be “100 percent self-contained,” the story crosses over into several other titles.

From the latest solicitations, we’ve learned that Joker’s revenge is not just aimed at the good guys. Harley Quinn apparently wasn’t involved in the planning by “Mista J,” because DC is touting their “reunion” in Suicide Squad #14 and #15. The Joker will also target a few of Gotham’s criminals in Catwoman #13 and #14, Detective Comics #15 (The Penguin), and the back-ups of the Batmantitle.

As James Tynion IV told Newsarama earlier this week, “There’s always something electric when two iconic villains are on a page with one another, and when one of those characters is The Joker, that electricity is quite a bit more deadly.”

Former Robin Dick Grayson will be confronted by The Joker in Nightwing #15 and #16. Series writer Kyle Higgins told Newsarama that Barbara Gordon/Batgirl shows up within the Nightwingstory.

“The Joker story is really a huge turning point and changes a lot of things” for Nightwing”, Higgins said. “There will be seismic shifts coming out of the Joker story.”

The Joker also gets to battle the current Red Robin, Tim Drake, in Teen Titans #15 and #16, and the current Robin, Damian Wayne, in Batman and Robin #14 & 15.

But perhaps the most anticipated reunion will be those between The Joker and the two more immediate members of Batman’s heroic family who have been traumatized by him in the past.

As readers found out in Red Hood and the Outlaws #0, Jason Todd is more closely connected to The Joker than her realizes. Joker claims that he orchestrated most of the major events in Jason’s life, from his father going to jail to his mother’s OD on a drug laced with a chemical that simulates death. It appears that The Joker built Jason up, just so he could tear him down.

This adds more gravity to their meeting — something Lobdell hinted about in his interview with us. “Joker feels a lot closer to Jason than people have realized. Giving birth to someone is a very intimate experience, but so too is taking their life. In that way, Joker feels a sort of proprietary relationship with Jason that he doesn’t with any of the other Bat-family.”

In Batgirl, readers will also finally see the resolution of Barbara Gordon’s conflict with The Joker, although series writer Gail Simone is reluctant to say it “resolves” the emotional trauma she’s been portraying within Barbara for the last year.

“‘Resolved’ is kind of a tough word, here,” Simone told Newsarama in July. “There’s definitely a feeling out there regarding this stuff that someone is fixed or not fixed, like an on/off switch. It’s not that binary, but she is facing this stuff head on. And I am pretty sure a Joker/Batgirl story is inevitable, but I can’t say more than that. Think of two trains on the same track facing towards each other…there’s nowhere for either of them to go but towards collision.

“It is the once-and-for-all confrontation between the Batgirl and the man who shot and paralyzed her. It does not go as he expected,” she said.

“This story starts in issue #14, and I have to say, it’s pretty shocking. That’s all I’ll say right now, however.”

The Mask of Joker

One of the most obvious changes to the Joker we’ll see in “Death of the Family” is that he’s wearing the loose skin of his face as a mask.

“He really is going to, obviously, have a new look. At the same time, we want it to echo his iconic look,” Snyder told Newsarama. “So it’s Joker in a much more horror movie fashion.”

In Detective Comics #1, released in September 2011, a villain called Dollmaker literally surgically removedthe skin of The Joker’s face at the end of the issue. The police ended up with the “face” and put it on ice, but The Joker himself had gotten away…. and has apparently been walking around the DCU without a face ever since.

Or perhaps he has been wearing a different face? Maybe even the face of someone close to the Batman family?

It’s doubtful, since Snyder didn’t build this story from the Detective ending. He told Newsarama his “Death of the Family” story was formulated before Detective writer Tony Daniel chose how to end his first issue last year.

Thanks to that ending, The Joker has not been seen again in the New 52 universe until just last month in Detective Comics #12, when only his eyes were shown and he said, “Time to put on a happy face.”

So what will Joker look like when he returns?

On the cover of Batgirl #15, DC revealed the basics of how the Joker will now “wear” his familiar smiling face. He has constructed a mask out of the skin of his face, using hooks and a belt wrapped around the back of his head.

But artist Greg Capullo intends to make that look even creepier than we’ve seen on that cover. “I’ve established the main look with the belt in the back and the hooks in the mouth, kind of holding everything in place, but think about that,” he told CBR. “You move in different ways, and that skin can shift on you. Maybe a hook busts loose, and part of your face is flapping free.

“I’ve even talked about the fact, with Scott, that being that the face isn’t on ice in Gotham P.D. evidence anymore, it’d start to decay, right?” he said. “And things that decay stinks a bit and attracts flies, and it might be cool for little touches with flies swimming around his head here or there. It can change is what I’m trying to say. It’ll probably look different through the story than the prototype face you’ve seen so far.”

But perhaps the most telling comment Capullo has made about the way Joker will look was in his Newsarama interview a couple months ago, when he said, simply, “it’s going to be over-the-top, over-the-edge Joker stuff.”

 

(Copied from original article by Vaneta Rogers for NEWSARAMA HERE)

Sep 282012
 

HELLO JOKERDOM!.

I finally have my computer back after it recoved from a serious virus infection and that means me back into the desk getting all the Joker stuff I can get my hands into.The first thing was to get a hold of DC’s latest animated movie DARK KNIGHT RETURNS part 1 and have to say that the piece is really magnificent.

tdkr01

You all SHOULD DEFINITELY have to watchi this movie.

Most of the casting is new, but James Woods makes a return to dub the Dark Knight making a great impression on me.  I think that after Kevin Conroy’s decades of doning the black suit, the character could not have fallen into a better set of hands.  Woods inflection sends this Caped Crusader into a much darker place, while keeping Batman faithful to its gritty nature.  Batman is a man of action, not words but GOOD LORD…when he speaks you better listen.

I also applaud the rest of the cast for a wonderful job, especially that of David Selby (Gordon) and Ariel Winters (Robin).

The whole movie does a nice job of giving dimension to a story that already was leaping from the pages of the graphic novel for it’s intesity, theme and characterization. They don’t only keep Frank’s characteristic art style, but the added scenes that join the ‘panels’ from the novel, give the movie a very smooth continuity.  The story did not seem forced, but fell into place even with the added artistic freedom to reinterpret the classic.

Miller’s story was multilayered. From dealing from aging in a world like Gotham, to doing what is right and heroism to the meaning of friendships and to the chaos both Mutants and Joker will bring to the city. No wonder the best decision was to divide this into two distinct movies.  There could not be enough time to explore all the ideas Miller brought and the movie does a very good job and refreshing those very themes.

Definitely I think this is a great movie and an outstanding reimaging of Frank Miller’s classic.

Now, let’s talk about Joker…

He hardly participates in the movie, as he slowly wakes up from a semi catatonic stage where he has been since Batman’s retirement. Now that his Bat is back, is time to come back and he will do it in a way no one will ever forget…especially Batman. I was always worried about his characterization on the movie since later his voice casting has not been so successful.  After all, Miller’s Joker is so well…Miller’s, and thus not easy to handle. He needed a voice that could be both suave, maniacal, psycho with a touch of charm.  I think Joker had found his new voice with  Michael Emerson, a new comer to the franchise.

This movie does not show much, but it includes  nifty preview where we get to hear more.  Here is the TDKR Part 2 sneak peek:
THE VIDEO HERE WAS REMOVED BY THE USER…WILL FIND ANOTHER SOURCE SOON!

 

I love how Emerson is capable of mixing the charm and the psycho in his interpretation.  He seems to enjoy the Joker’s own twisted psychosis, to bring his best to this bad boy.  I was impressed in what I saw, and was relieved that this was a Joker that definitely I would like to see.

Now, remember, this is Miller’s version Joker, set in a total different place than continuity.  Wonder if Mr. Emerson could cause such a big mark on the character as to make him his own much in the way Mark Hamill did with his version (that lasted for over 2 decades and covered animation and video gaming).  Could he pull off the Joker from KILLING JOKE or any other Jokercentric story translated to the screen?  I will wait until I see the WHOLE performance to emit my opinion, but I have said this before in another post, I have a hunch Joker is in good hands.

For other points of view, more detailed reviews can be read at:

Sep 202012
 

Newsarama contributor Vaneta Rogers sat with BATGIRL ‘s writer Gail Simone to talk about some aspects of the title.  Among them they spoke of the effects of the upcoming DEATH OF THE FAMILY Joker storyline in the Batgirl storyline.  Here are just some highlights of the interview. You can read the whole interview HERE:

coverbatgirl14 Batgirl #14 will begin the title’s “Death of the Family” tie-in, with Joker and Barbara Gordon colliding for the first time since the villain brutally attacked and injured her.

(…)

Nrama: Now that readers have been introduced to Barbara’s status in the New 52 and you’re finishing up your first year of issues, how would you describe Barbara now, in comparison to her debut in issue #1? How do you think she’s grown, and how do you think she’s still dealing with some of the same issues we saw in her introduction?

Simone: I spent a lot of time speaking with specialists and survivors about this, and one thing we saw with trauma survivors over and over was, the nightmares often go on even after the body heals. It’s not weakness, it’s not self-pity, it happens to the bravest people on Earth; soldiers, police, on and on. And Barbara being who she is, she finds herself wondering why she is regaining her mobility when so many will never have that option. Because of her experiences over the first year, she’s having to grapple with it. But again, she’s Barbara Gordon, she will find a way.

Nrama: Looking back at the first few issues of your run, the events of The Killing Joke played a big part in Barbara’s introduction as Batgirl in the New 52. Why did you feel like that was important to incorporate that into the title after introducing the character in #1?

Simone: Here’s the thing, Barbara has always been about inspiring people. She may have been created to boost ratings or whatever, but, the sheer force of having a brainy woman kicking ass in the comics and on television can’t be overstated. And of course, Kim Yale and John Ostrander turned lemons into the best lemonade ever by giving Barbara a purpose and glory after the Killing Joke. I didn’t want to do the book if that element, that inspiring quality, wasn’t part of the mix. I get that not everyone agrees, but we have had endless lines of people who have experienced some massive trauma who found something to believe in with Barbara’s story. In the end, it’s supposed to be entertaining, first. That’s still the primary goal. But heroes who struggle are so much more meaningful to me. Most of us have struggled, but we don’t often see that portrayed as comics move more towards big stories and spectacle.

Nrama: Her emotions over the events of The Killing Joke still don’t feel completely resolved, because she hasn’t had to deal with the Joker again. Since we’ve heard about the return of Joker in “Death of the Family” in the Batman title, and DC has implied it will touch other members of the Batman family, will Barbara be confronted more directly by the villain in your title?

Simone: “Resolved” is kind of a tough word, here. There’s definitely a feeling out there regarding this stuff that someone is fixed or not fixed, like an on/off switch. It’s not that binary, but she is facing this stuff head on. And I am pretty sure a Joker/Batgirl story is inevitable, but I can’t say more than that. Think of two trains on the same track facing towards each other…there’s nowhere for either of them to go but towards collision.

Nrama: And that collision occurs in your “Death of the Family” tie-in to Scott’s Batman story?

Simone: Yes. It is the once-and-for-all confrontation between the Batgirl and the man who shot and paralyzed her. It does not go as he expected. This story starts in issue #14, and I have to say, it’s pretty shocking. That’s all I’ll say right now, however.

Sep 202012
 

In a recent interview with NEWSARAMA contributor Veta Rogers, Nightwing’s writer Kyle Higgins reveals that the confrontation of the Clown Prince of Crime and the former Boy Wonder will “be a monumental yet emotional showdown between Dick Grayson and Joker.”

After a short hiatus from the series, Higgings and artist Eddy Barrow’s join the tittle once more just in time to join the  DEATH OF THE FAMILY story arc and it seems that Joker will be rocking the young hero’s world out of balance.  Here are the the DEATH OF THE FAMILY highlights from the interview.  You can read the whole interview HERE

nwing15cvr2 (…)

Nrama: As you mentioned, there’s a two-issue story arc by Tom DeFalco. Why is he filling in for a couple issues?

Higgins: Because the Joker issues are so important and so big, the decision was made to give me a chance to get ahead on them and jump forward and set some things up, as well as develop pretty in depth what’s coming after the Joker story.The Joker story is really a huge turning point and changes a lot of things. When you see what happens during “Death of the Family,” it will be much clearer why there was a need and a desire for me to jump forward and spend a lot of time developing everything coming out of that.

Nrama: In the New 52, what is the mindset of this Dick Grayson toward Joker. And who is Dick Grayson or Nightwing to the Joker?

Higgins: Who Nightwing is to Joker is an interesting question. And that really taps into what Scott is doing in Batman, and what all of us are doing in our books. The Joker has a very specific opinion on the Bat-family. As that relates to every individual member of the family, there are slight twists on it. I know I’m being quite cryptic. But I’ll just say that the Joker has a very particular opinion of Nightwing, but I don’t want to get into what it is, because it would give a lot away. But Nightwing’s opinion of Joker is pretty much what you would expect and what’s been seen before. He recognizes that this is probably the most deadly and threatening villain in Batman’s rogues’ gallery. So he’s not taking the Joker lightly.And the second that Nightwing hears that the Joker is back, it puts him into a Defcon-5 mode to expect the unexpected. Like I said, he’s not taking it lightly.

Nrama: Are you working pretty closely with Scott Snyder on “Death of the Family?”

Higgins: Yeah. I flew out to New York back in May, and we had a little powwow in the DC offices between myself and Scott and Pete Tomasi and James Tynion IV, who’s doing all the back-ups in Batman as well as launching Talon. And then Gail [Simone] and Scott Lobdell were conference called in. And we all worked pretty closely developing this story and what the particular pieces were going to be. Even coming out of that, I’ve been working pretty closely with Scott, and I wouldn’t have it any other way. It’s a lot of fun. That said, Scott’s given me a ton of freedom — as he’s given all of us really — to make this a story unique to Nightwing. His only mandate was: Make it the scariest, most impactful Joker story that you’ve ever seen for your character. What’s so exciting for me is, aside from a couple instances, I can’t think of a really big Nightwing/Joker story. The moment that comes to mind would be during, what Last Laugh by Chuck Dixon. It was a big crossover where Nightwing killed the Joker.

Nrama: Yeah, yeah, and Batman brings him back.

Higgins: Yeah, so that’s only big one in recent memory that I could point to.

Nrama: Are you having fun writing the Joker as you delve into your “Death of the Family” issues?

Higgins: Yeah, and I have a very specific version of the Joker that I like, and so it was fun to start working on that. And I plan to tell a huge story that will be lasting. I know it has big ramifications. But I hope that, when people think of Nightwing versus the Joker, this is the one that they’ll think about.

Nrama: How many issues is your tie-in to “Death of the Family?”

Higgins: It’s two issues: #15 and #16. And issues #13 and #14 have some set-up and development for my Joker story. I coordinated with Tom a little, giving him a heads up about some of the plot points I needed set up for the Joker story. And then there will be some fall-out for several issues afterward.

Nrama: That sounds dire.

Higgins: That is certainly one word you could use to describe it.

(….)

Higgins: There will be seismic shifts coming out of the Joker story. Big things are coming for Nightwing [in 2013], and there will be big changes ahead for Dick Grayson.

 

Sep 182012
 

Presenting more interesting Joker-centric articles from our friends at CBR.  This time is an interview with Greg Capullow that promises some new insights in his interpretations of the Clown Prince of Crime for the DEATH OF THE FAMILY story arc:

jokercover13-2When the Joker returns to Gotham City, he’ll be doing so sans a normal face. With the skin sliced off from his grinning visage at the start of the New 52’s “Detective Comics,” the take Capullo has worked up for the Clown Prince of Crime is a makeshift frightmask that will carry the villain through a story where he’ll target each of Batman’s crime-fighting allies from Robin to Nightwing and beyond. As part of the story’s growth from solo tale to crossover event, DC announced this week that the artist will also provide a series of special die-cut covers for tie-in issues including “Batgirl” and “Catwoman” #13 and “Suicide Squad” #14 that will reveal some shocking imagery underneath a design-heavy veil.

CBR News invited Capullo to THE BAT SIGNAL,our regular dissection of the Dark Knight’s world, to discuss the story, the villain and his work. Below, the artist explains how he matches Snyder’s meticulously planned stories with a free wheeling approach to his pages, why the Joker is less of a horror character than you may expect, what surprises lie below the surface of “Death of the Family” and the die-cut covers and his personal thoughts on sticking to a monthly deadline.

CBR News: Greg, “Batman” has been one of the most creatively consistent titles of the New 52 with you and Scott working on every chapter of the massive “Court of Owls” story over the first year. I get the impression that you particularly don’t want to fall behind and let someone else draw a chapter of this book. Is that pretty accurate?

Greg Capullo: Yeah, that’s always the way I work. I did something like 80 consecutive issues of “Spawn” when I was drawing it, and 12 issues of “X-Force.” I’m built that way. Because when I was a kid, I’d go into a comic book store, and if I picked up the magazine expecting a particular artist, I’d be really disappointed if he wasn’t there. I never want to do that to fans. We all need to take breaks, but I would never do one mid-arc. Even on the monthly title, that can feel disruptive. But then when it comes to the collected trade, it’s really a speed bump that sticks out as glaring. So I’d definitely never do that. I have a planned break coming up that Scott and I are discussing, but it’s not coming mid-arc. So yeah, I’m cognizant of what fans feel about this, and I’m a workhorse. It’s those two things combined.

What was the experience of the Court of Owls saga like for you as a collaborator. Obviously, Scott put a lot of work in laying out all the pieces in advance, but did you ask to know all the turns up to that final reveal when you started drawing it?

I think the “King Owl” design came a little later in the process, but I knew about the twist early on. And I had to stomach some internet chatter because of that – people saying, “Oh, look at this new character! He looks just like Bruce! Cappulo draws everybody the same!” [Laughs] At first I really wanted to respond to some blogs, but Scott kept telling me, “Shhhhh! We can’t give too much away!” But apart from that, it was a lot of fun, and I was grateful that people ended up liking it so much.

I get the impression that Scott has just been keeping a notebook of all these different big Batman stories he can tell. And in the first issue, you got a chance to draw a classic Joker or at least draw Nightwing in the Joker’s garb. Back then did you have an idea that you’d shift to a big Joker story after the opening year?

No. Never. This was a surprise. I hadn’t read comics in a while, and so I didn’t even know Joker’s face had been severed off until pretty recently really. When I learned everything, I went, “I guess we do kind of have to blow this whole thing up and start again.” It was a nice surprise. And I’m sure there are other things in Scott’s book than Batman stories. It frightens me to think what he’s cooking up there. [Laughs]

Speaking of which, I get an impression of a horror story for this “Death of the Family” arc. Is that a goal for you?

It takes on a horror element just because his face has been torn off. His new face has this makeshift element where he’s holding it on. In that respect, a lot of people have heard me say thatcatwoman-13-2 it’s “Texas Chainsaw Massacre meets Joker,” and they go, “Ohhhh, it’s going to be a horror thing.” But the story really isn’t so much “Texas Chainsaw Massacre” as it is a psychological terror. That’s what we’ve all come to expect from a Joker story. The essence of the Joker has not changed. It’s amped up in the fact that he’s become hands on a bit more in this, which speaks to the level of anger he has. If you want a job done right, you do it yourself. And so we’re seeing Joker act at a level that he never has in the past. In that respect, it does have some horror elements to it, but it’s still a cool Joker that scares your mind more than anything.

For the Joker at this specific moment in the culture, it still feels like the Heath Ledger performance in “The Dark Knight” looms large over the character. Did you have any previous takes like that one or others that you looked and to either match expectations here or even play against type?

To be honest with you, I think one of the things that has served me best is having not looked at comics for a while. I didn’t come in with a lot of previous images on hand, and the movie never crossed my mind. So what’s coming out of me is just my feelings as a guy who grew up on the same planet as everybody else and has been exposed to this stuff. Whatever I’m bringing is just coming from my gut. I’m just drawing upon the well that’s inside me. [Pause] That’s kind of scary, right? [Laughter]

Let’s hope not. Tell me how the story opens for you as an artist. With “Court of the Owls” we started very slowly – setting up the ball and Bruce’s ideas and then meeting the Owls and eventually the Talons. With the Joker, is there less need for preamble there?

Well, there’s definitely a terrifying scene in the first issue! And it’s terrifying for how much you don’t see, actually. It’s escalating quick, and in issue #14, which I just completed yesterday, that’s when things really open up. It’s really pulse-pounding stuff. Scott’s kind of a slow burn guy who builds to his crescendos, but even with that, a lot of explosive stuff happens early. It seems from what I’ve read of the scripts so far that it’ll just build more and more.

Last time your book ended up calling the shots on an event in “Night of the Owls,” it was a bit unexpected. The story grew, and Editorial decided to get more books involved. This time, you’re launching this story with some crossovers built in right out the gate. Have you been doing more design work and turnarounds to catch the other artists up with your vision, or are you just leaving them to play into your issues?

They weren’t as elaborate as turnarounds. I did about three character sketches showing off the possibilities for what you can do with the Joker after Scott and I decided how we wanted him to look. That got passed around to the other guys to draw from. But there’s a lot of possibilities with his face that I personally plan to mess around with. I’ve established the main look with the belt in the back and the hooks in the mouth kind of holding everything in place, but think about that. You move in different ways, and that skin can shift on you. Maybe a hook busts loose, and part of your face is flapping free. There’s only possibilities for me to capitalize on depending on the story Scott provides me. I can always accentuate on a particular scene by adding little flourishes there. I’ve even talked about the fact with Scott that being that the face isn’t on ice in Gotham P.D. evidence anymore, it’d start to decay, right? And things that decay stinks a bit and attracts flies, and it might be cool for little touches with flies swimming around his head here or there. It can change is what I’m trying to say. It’ll probably look different through the story than the prototype face you’ve seen so far.

You’re also working on a series of special die-cut covers for “Batman” and many of the tie-in titles. They themselves tie into the concept of Joker’s new face, but who dreamt up this scheme, and what was your initial reaction to it?

[Co-Publisher] Dan DiDio and [Art Director] Mark Chiarello. Dan actually mentioned it to my wife first. I later talked about it over dinner and he sold me. Dan is so enthusiastic  about all of this stuff. It’s contagious!

In the past, things like character designs mean the final product can be a little more unfinished to get the idea across to your peers. Here, you’re working on a number of different complete pieces for the public. What are you doing here to keep each one unique while also using the die-cut idea to its fullest? Do you have a favorite so far?

Well, it was a bit of a challenge. The die cut itself had to have straight edges. The other challenge was working within the limitation of using only have of a characters face and reusing the same angle for all. Trying to show individual personalities within these confines. I think I pulled it off. As for favorites…is that a trick question?

We know that the story involves Joker targeting members of the Batman family, and he’ll likely bring along some different villains as well. What’s it like to be looking at an arc that expands the cast out in some ways. Is this more like drawing a team book in this arc than a “Batman versus villain” kind of story?

First off, I don’t know what’s coming really on the full story, so I’m not sure what other villains may be showing up. But to me, this whole thing is nothing but a party. I don’t think too much about any of those issue is the truth. When I get the script, I try and let the movie of the story play in my head. Then I pick out a few stills and go, “Okay, how can I translate that so it looks like a comic book page?” To me, that’s nothing but a party. I don’t give it as much thought as people would like to give me credit for. I just let my gut take over and have fun.

Everyone flipped for that issue where you literally turned the pages upside down mid story. That was an unplaned addition by you, so having a writer who doesn’t want to dictate exactly what happens must be a boon to your process.

No, we wouldn’t be able to work together if he was like that! [Laughter] We trust each other, and we both know that we equally love Batman the same. What you’ve got to realize is that the things that mess this stuff up are egos. Egos crush it all, man. If you let egos collide and take over in place of the products and the fans, that’s where it comes undone. Scott and I like each other. We trust each other. And we work together to tell the best story we can. Ego doesn’t come into it. That’s not to say that neither of us has an ego. It just means we don’t let them clash as we work to get in the way of the product. Our #1 goal is to make the baddest ass Batman that there is, ever was, ever will be and put that out for the fans. That’s how it is – putting our blood and sweat and soul into this thing. We just try to put that out there for the fans and set it on fire and hope that everybody likes it.

(Article reprinted from “The Bat Signal Report” by  CBR staff)

Sep 182012
 

batmanlivescast

Our friends at CBR have a very nice video interview with MARK FROST, the actor who portrays Joker in the play BATMAN LIVE! that is now touring the US.  Starting in California this Septerber, the show is supposed to tour the whole US by next year.  Here what Frost himself has to say about his character:

“I think the Joker…brings a bit of fun and a bit of creativity to the proceedings.  I certainly get as many wonderful toys to play with, I get as many interesting and surprising entrances and exits. You never quite know what he’s gonna do next.”

And here is the video. Just click to watch:

Have to admit, when I first heard of this play I thought it was the most ludricuous idea ever…I mean.  With all the special effects needed, how were they going to translate the Caped Crusader into the stage…RIGHT?  Well, as I saw more footage of the stage show, the more intriged I became on what this theatrical company have been able to achieve for this show.  I would even go to one of their shows…just for the heck of  it…and to see me some Joker OF COURSE!!

For more information on schedules of their presentations here in the US, please refer to their website BATMAN LIVES

(Originally reported by Stephen Garding editor of CBR, HERE)

Sep 152012
 

harley1200The guys at IGN have uploaded a match from the new game INJUSTICE:  GODS AMONG US to show the versatility of this new Mortal Kombat style fight game.  The two contenders:  HARLEY QUINN vs. SALOMON GRUNDY.  The quality of the video is good, and the moves are quite impressive.  I personally don’t like Harley’s new look, but she can really pack a punch ( They should make alternate skins for her with her old costume.  That sure will bring many more Harley lovers to play this game I think.

Click below to see the match with commentary.

(Video courtesy of IGN)

Sep 152012
 

Today I bring to you 2 pieces of Joker art….(in part because I am not posting often enough).  Hope you like them.

First comes this piece from Daniel HDR who is presenting some of his pre-NYCC commissions online in his TUMBLR.  I like the pose, and definitely working on watercolors is not easy task… Lucky person who gets this beauty!!!

jokerdanielhdrnycc2012

 

Then the next piece comes from cover artist  Francesco Francavilla.  He posted this on his TWITTER account.  It’s simple, monochromatic, but the drastic contrast of the darks and lights sends an obvious message:  “Look at my throne of dead babies…I am one dangerous clown”  I love the layback pose, obviously inspired by the KILLING JOKE. Always loved that Hawaiian shirt he wore on the graphic novel…

francescofrancavillajbaltimoreccon2012

 

Sep 152012
 

DC Blog revealed the alternate cover of issue  BATMAN #13 that begins the Joker-centric story arc DEATH OF THE FAMILY. Here is a preview of the cover by Aaron Kuder and as always, artists are holding on revealing the Joker’s final look for the series…I hope they don’t disappoint.

Still, nice cover (even the a la Ledger shoe style instead of the classic spats)…I hope they have sketch version of this cover too…

bm_cv13_var_0

Sep 052012
 

According from reports by TV GUIDE and CBR, actor Michael Emerson (Lost, Person of Interest) will take on the role of voicing the Joker in the upcoming direct to video  part 2 release of  Frank Miller’s classic tale. (TDKR part 2 will be realesed in early 2013).

jokersvoice

According to the reports:

Michael Emerson‘s latest gig is no joke. The man best known as Lost’s über-manipulator Ben Linus and Person of Interest’s calculating Harold Finch is taking on one of pop culture’s most iconic villains, the Joker, in the upcoming animated DVD-movie Batman: The Dark Knight Returns, Part 2. In the film, a harrowing adaptation of Frank Miller’s seminal 1986 DC Comics series, the depraved Clown Prince of Crime renews his rivalry with an aging Batman, who has just reemerged in Gotham City after a decade

I have to admit, I was nerver a fan of the LOST series and don’t recall seing any of Emerson’s work before, so I had to do a little net research to grasp an idea of what this actor can bring forward to the character.

Emerson, who started as a performer in Broadway (in lighter comedic roles), made his turn in the dark side portraying a sinister serial killer for the series THE PRACTICE (2001), role for which he earned an Emmy.

Since then he has been seen in shows like THE X-FILESLAW AND ORDER: SPECIAL VICTIMS UNIT and movies like THE LEGEND OF ZORRO and SAW.

In 2006 he took part of the LOST series, portraying the enigmatic  Henry Gale, a character who lied to the survivors.  His role in the series was praised and earned him anonther nomination for an Emmy which he unfortunately lost.

I was amazed by his acting background and his turn to the darker, creepier character has definitely not diminished the quality of his work, knowing how hard it is to portray a believable, compelling heavy on TV or stage.  Villains are never easy.  But what most surprised me was his vision on the Joker, that he seems to understand very well as a character:

“He’s one of those great villains that an actor like me likes to play because he has layers — he has a face for the world and a face for himself,” the Emmy-winning star of CBS’s “Person of Interest” told TV Guide. “He is, in a way, a villain who is a natural actor. All of that is that is delightful and confounding at the same time.”

Playing the unbridled fervor of the Joker was a switch from some of the more emotionally controlled roles on Emerson’s resumé. “It’s freeing because of the largeness of it,” he says. “When he laughs, there’s nothing subdued about it. When he screams in rage, there’s nothing controlled about it. The amp is turned to 11 at all times.”

I think Mr. Emerson has definitely gotten a grasp of what moves the Clown to be Joker.  Maybe  for once we have found someone that can portray this character with the dignity he deserve and become as legendary as other actor voices befor him.  I still have to hear him and see if he can transport me to that space were I can “flesh” out the Joker just by listening to him, but I have a hunch that the character might be in good hands.

Now I understand why my friend Jason Marnocha, a young talented voice actor who has had his deals with the Joker’s voice himself (very successfully I may add) was so pleased with this choice.  I trust your judgement, Jason…I also aprove of this selection for the Joker’s voice…for now.

If you want to know more about Michael Emerson; you can watch this interview from PBS I am including here.

. See more fm Tavis Smiley in his site: MEET MICHAEL EMERSON