Nov 122011
 

art-salt-jokerThis week’s art for the Masses is somewhat different.  SALT ART!

Ok, as if drawing, painting or photoshoping Joker were not hard enough on their own right, BASHIR SULTANI  brings art to a new level when he tries to make a Heath Ledger Joker portrait out of table salt.  And it looks great…I bow to his talent!!

Nov 072011
 

It’s obvious by now that I’m a great fan of Tony Daniels and his art and when he’s involved in some Joker work, I love him even more.  Here he is kind enough to share a page of pencil art from the upcoming DETECTIVE COMICS.  Please enjoy and don’t forget to thank him for sharing.  Look at this beauty:

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Nov 032011
 

Just wanted to share with you guys the new licence plate that I ordered for my car.  Isn’t it cute??  The image is a Joker painted by the Hildebrant brothers and the design is very mine.  Just wanted to have a piece of Joker in my new car… even if its just a secondary plate. Here is a pic:

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Nov 032011
 

Like the previous two issues, Mr. Daniels has the tremendous ability of leaving me at the edge of my seat wanting more. After issue #1 we have not seen the Joker since he took his face off, but now, we know why.  Dollmaker has been busy with his creations and Batman is about to face maybe one of his greatest challenges.  If one Joker in Gotham is not enough, what do you do against a whole army of them created with a single program in their twisted minds….KILL THE BAT.

I don’t know if Joker is just going to grab some popcorn and the first row seat to  enjoy the show or if he will actually join the party (I think the latter), but I am dying to know if Batman can get out of this.  This DOLLMAKER is probably one of the most twisted psychopaths Bruce has faced in a long time, and when he joins forces with Batman’s greatest foe, you just have to wonder what good can come up of all this. I know Joker could not resist the temptation of getting a piece of the Bat too.

Makes me wonder if Joker have the copyright of his looks….he will make a killing in the next issues with so many look-alikes.  Here is a preview:

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Oct 302011
 

Hiya guys,

Just catching in my reading and found that Joker this month also made an appearance in David Finch’s BATMAN THE DARK KNIGHT #2.  It appears that all of the inmates have been injected with a serum that takes their fear away.  First we found what it did to Two-Face, then we find out is a derivative of Crane’s fear toxin, and it seems that Joker got a taste of it too.  And I thought that Joker was already fearless (and  inmmune to the Scarecrow’s toxin).  Oh well.  The more Joker the merrier and this is enough Joker for everyone. Watch the pic below:

How funny!  A clown dressed in a Bat suit!  Too bad you’re just the opening act…

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Oct 282011
 

My good friend LORDJAZOR posted this picture in his Facebook profile and I just found it incredibly beautiful.  To me, this is the Joker in all it’s glory. He doesn’t say who the artist is, but this is a great photo-manipulation. Thanks LordJazor for posting this magnificent picture and sorry that I took the liberty of posting it here.  I provided a link to LORDJAZOR’s CHANNEL below. Now enjoythe picture.

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To visit LorJazor’s site and hear some of his great voice acting work go HERE!
Original Pic @ DCPLANET.COM

 

Oct 282011
 

 

jkrvisualhcoverFinally, with my copy of JOKER A VISUAL HISTORY in hand I have the power to give you a quick walk through the book.  I got the hardcover which, in addition to the retail Joker cover as a dustjacket, sports a fantastic green and purple collage of Joker moments from his golden and silver age on the inner cover (see pic). I opened the book and there they were, countless guffaws in a purple background and I knew I was in heaven.  I’m an incurable Jokerholic, that is not a secret and as a Joker fan I have to say that it was about time that the best (and craziest) villain in the history of DC got a book dedicated to himself.

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Art from Last Laugh

Joker is one complicated character.  I’m not only referring to the chaotic nature of his psyche but to the fact that every group of writers and artists have taken their liberties with  the villain, making so many stories and versions of him that the task of copiling them into one coherent story seems almost titanic.  A task that does not scare the author, Daniel Wallace, who takes any available resource on the Joker from the 1940’s to the present, from Bob Kane to Grant Morrison and coalesces all the facts into one interesting read.   Here is a preview of what you will find inside:

Table of Contents

10 Introduction
18 The Beginning
32 Spotlight on:  Bob Kane and Bill Finger
34 The Batman
50 Spotlight on:  Frank Miller
52 Arkham Asylum
64 Spotlight:  Grant Morrison
66 Bag of Tricks
80 Partners in Crime
102 Crimes and Capers
128 Shattered Mirror
140 Mad Love
166 Spotlight on:  Paul Dini and Bruce Timm
168 The Clown Prince
178 Spotlight on:  Denny O’neil and Neil Adams
180 Killer Smile
200 Spotlight on:  Alan Moore

 

First I have to say that the introduction written by Mark Hamill was a great treat. He speaks to us in a familiar, casual way to describe he acquaintance with the character during the auditions for the Joker’s voice in BATMAN THE ANIMATED SERIES and how this helped him in the understanding of the character.  One of the things that caught my attention was the part where Hamill is getting the hints on how to play the villain for the first time:

…but under the guidance of vocal director Andrea Romano (who would eventually  guide me through many years of episodes and remain a dear friend to this very day) and a liberating note on page one [of the script]:

“Don’t think  Nicholson” I managed to conjure up my version of the “Grim Jester”, a sort of cross between Claude Rains and the Blue Meanie from Yellow Submarine.  Within days, I received a call and heard the words “Congratulation, they want you for the Joker” I was numb…

And thanks to that liberating note, Mr. Hamill was able to create a new and fresh version that has become a classic and a kind of standard when portraying the villain in animated films and video games that had made Mr. Hamill so famous.

As the book contiues, Dan weaves a nice narrative starting with an explanation of the concept origin for the character (C0nrad Veidt’s THE MAN WHO LAUGHS,  a Joker card and a Coney Island Steeplechase sign that sparked the final look of the Jester).  He follows this biographical construct with an analysis as to why every Batman needs a Joker and how these two characters are so tightly intertwined as well as the Jester’s intimate relationship with Arkham Asylum

The author continues his coverage, turning his attention to those characters that for good or bad had crossed the paths of the Joker, his allies and enemies (No, Harley is not covered here, but later in the book she has her own section), and following this Daniel makes a recount of the Joker’s most memorable crimes from the funny, to the most lethal. Mr. Wallace is  very accurate to call these crimes “perfomances” after all, for the Joker,  showmanship is everything.  Daniel hits a bullseye when he says: “[that for Joker] if its not spectacularly theatrical, it is boring, [and the audience] might fail to see the humor in the horror

Joker’s complex origin is dissected from each version from comics to movies in small steps which makes the character study easy to follow and engaging to read, including the introduction of the Joker’s “love interest” Harley Quinn and finalizes the book with a detailed account on the evolution of the character down to THE DARK KNIGHT, RIP and Bermejo’s JOKER graphic novel.

Wallace’s coverage of the character history and his interaction with the rest of the DC universe demonstrated the research done behind this book.  Every aspect of the Golden, Siver and Bronze age Joker is covered in one way or another, and the sprinkled notes about the writers and artists involved in the evolution of the character make the read quite entertaining.

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Art by Jim Lee

Accompanying the narrative, are literally pages and pages (a few hundred or more, some of them I don’t think have been seen for a while if ever) of images of Joker through the ages, allowing the reader to follow the character’s transformation through time into the valuable villain he is today.

I love the book and consider it a nice addition to the Joker mythos in the DC Universe along with a comprehensive guide of the character in every media.  My only regret was that though there are plenty images of Joker by famed artist Brian Bolland in the book, there is no particular section dedicated to him like other artists even when the artist himself considered Joker his for a short while. I don’t think that his contribution to the character was overlooked, I just think that there is not space to cover EVERY single aspect related to the Joker, otherwise we would need several volumes. This tiny detail though, might fall in the personal preference, since it does not diminish the value of the book both in content and purpose to provide a wide view on who the Joker is in the DC Universe.

AND WHAT ARE YOU WAITING FOR?   GO GET YOUR COPY NOW!! 
Oct 262011
 

Tony Daniel has posted a great splash page from Issue #4 of DETECTIVE COMICS and also commented on Joker’s status in the story line.  Please visit him on Facebook and thank him for the wonderful story and art he is giving us every month.  Here is the art and Tony’s comment.

det4splashdanielsanduflorea

Art by Tony Daniel. Inks by Sandu Florea. Batman copyright DC Comics.

And here is what Mr. Daniel has to say about Joker in the series:

Worked my tail off to get issue 4 of Detective complete.   We’re all hustling over here.  November is a holiday schedule, so I’ll have even less time to complete issue 5.  But strangely my schedule is a little more normal in the month of December.  I won’t complain. 😉  My goal is to go a full 12 months with no fill in (or longer).   What’s on the slate for Detective in the coming months?  Penguin,  dangerous babes and the Scarecrow.   And whatever happened to the Joker?  Where is that mo-fo?  What’s he up to?  hmmmm….
  Share · 16 hours ago near Chicago, IL
Oct 222011
 

I am a Joker fanatic…there is no doubt about that, but when I see good art I am compelled to post it for everyone to enjoy. ALWAYS giving credit to sources and artists whenever possible.  This time it is a HARLEY QUINN pin-up by renowed comic book artist PETER NGUYEN.  He did this beautiful drawing of the Joker’s henchwoman as a commission for a fan in NYCC this year.

harleyquinnnguyen

Art by Peter Nguyen. Picture courtesy of Comic Vine

 

Oct 052011
 

Checking on this week’s DC releases, I was thrilled to see they had a little preview of the upcoming graphic novel BATMAN: NOEL by JOKER artist LEE BERMEJO.  The graphic novel is due in November.  Here is the sneak peek published by DC this week. And if you had any doubt there was going to be any Joker on this one…check the last page of the preview. This preview came from RED LANTERNS #2:

noel000noel001noel002noel003noel004noel005