Mar 082015
 

Jaredleto&Joker.jpgSo with  filming starting just in a few months, Jared Leto has finally cut his luscious mane and bushy beard to start getting in character for his Joker portrayal in the upcoming SUICIDE SQUAD movie.

The actor has said that this portrayal of the Joker is going to be different than the ones done before by both Jack Nicholson and the late Heath Ledger.

“Jared wants to make sure his Joker is not only something the fans will love, but he doesn’t want to step on the toes of Jack Nicholson or Heath Ledger,” according to a purported inside source for Hollywood Life.

“He wants to make the character completely his own. … He knows that this role may be his most difficult ever, but he is confident that he will make his version of the Joker the best. This Joker will be more cerebral and comedic than what we have seen before, nobody should expect a copycat version. It’s going to be awesome!”

Here are some nice videos of Jared’s new look.

 

Mar 012015
 

RafRobledoJrJKR.jpgI sometimes like to do my own statues and sculptures when I want certain figure or pose that I like.  I know that companies are not there for me, so I go and take a lump of Sculpey and just start creating my figures. I love learning new things about customizing and sculpting figures and I find this guy to be if not the best, pretty darn close.  His name is RAFAEL ROBLEDO Jr. and he has a YouTube channel that showcases his work HERE.  He does ALL kinds of customizations and some are pretty neat.

 

Then I found he customized a Joker sculpture, and decided I had to share that with Jokerdom.  Here are the video series for your entertainment.




Feb 222015
 

Jaredleto&Joker.jpg   A great report by Joey Paur for GEEK TYRANT hints to the preparations actor Jared Leto is doing to help him get in the role of the Clown Prince of Crime on the upcoming SUICIDE SQUAD movie.  Here is a transcript of the article:

We’re all really curious to see what director David Ayer‘s and Jared Leto’s version of the Joker is going to be like in Suicide Squad. This will be the first time that we see the Crown Prince of Crime up on the big screen since the character was played by Heath Ledger. Those are some pretty big shoes to fill, but I think Leto is going to be great in the role.

During an interview with Billboard, Leto discussed the Joker and how he’s preparing to take on the part. It’s interesting to note that he’s bulking up for the part.

“I’m trying to gain a lot of weight. It means I have to eat every couple of hours — and I’m terrible at eating a lot.” 

I don’t think any of the actors who have played the Joker gained weight for the role, but Leto is a pretty skinny guy, so that might be the reason why. I don’t think we’re going to be seeing a juiced up Joker or anything. He went on to discuss what attracted him to the role:

“The opportunity to take on this nearly Shakespearean character — that’s what graphic novels and comic books are becoming, right? [He’s] this beautiful disaster of a character — what a big challenge.” 

I love his description of the character as a “beautiful disaster.” The Joker is one of my favorite villains of all time, and I really do hope that they get him right in Suicide Squad. Ayer is a very gritty and hardcore director, so I imagine that that is going to be the kind of Joker that we see in the movie.  I wonder how different this version will be than Ledger’s Joker. Will he be a darker and crazier version? I guess we’ll just have to wait and see. What do you hope to see from the character in this movie? The rest of the Suicide Squad cast includes Will Smith as Deadshot, Margot Robbie as Harley Quinn, Jai Courtney as Captain Boomerang, Cara Delevigne as Enchantress, and Joel Kinnaman as Rick Flagg. The movie hits theaters on August 5th, 2016.

(See original article source at GEEK TYRANT HERE)
Feb 212015
 

Why did I not find this before?  Who knows, maybe sometimes the more you look the less you see.

Anyways this is an awesome Batman cowl redesigned in the style of the Joker and it was created by Derek Deal for the SDCC 2014 CAPE/COWL/CREATE.  Here is a picture of his design and I think that it is something a Jokerized Batman would wear…

tumblr_n9j3hjKa8Y1qg8i80o8_r1_1280-1

Feb 092015
 

untitledJust wanted to give my Jokerholic friends a heads up.

I finished watching today’s episode of GOTHAM which starred Jonathan Crane and his father in search of a cure for fear (great origin episode by the way) but what caught my attention is the fact that on the previews for the show next week, the big hint is the quote you see in the title….COULD IT BE?  ARE THEY HINTING A POSSIBLE JOKER ORIGIN STORY?

Well, it was less than thirty seconds long, but the kid evil laugh is a little creepy and scary…maybe this is it. What new origin are they cooking for our favorite clown?  Hope they don’t give much.  I don’t want the whole episode focused on the kid who will become the Joker (or two like they did with Crane), but I would still would like to see what hints they will throw out there.

I know many people out there DON’T want to see a Joker, but the series is doing a good job with hinting all the characters personalities in their futures impersonations as well as giving very plausible origin stories based on science and real facts. ( the only one I think they need tweaking is Nigma, but that is just me).

Just check out the episode.  I think it will be interesting.  The series is not that bad…I find it refreshing to have a Batman series without well…Batman.   It is interesting knowing that all these characters we love (and hate depending on what team you play) had a life before the creep in the Bat-suit starting jumping from roofs.

Take a look at the preview from MOVIEWEB.COM 

Remember GOTHAM airs every Monday at 8pm on Fox…see ya there next week!

Feb 052015
 

Bats36-00aI was just going to put a comment to my post on CBR’s interview with Snyder about Batman #38 when I realize that he has turned into a LARGE assay…sorry for this, but I really wanted to touch a few things here. Please…bear with me.

Ok, now to my opinion.  I had been waiting some time for this story line since the last one…though well written, hinted me to a transformation of Joker into this gory Halloween monster that lost all the essence that has made him a lasting villain in the Batman Universe for the last 75 years. His “insanity” had been taken to an extreme that have made it even a stranger to those who have followed his evil deeds for decades. Don’t take me wrong…the story was WELL WRITTEN (even in those homoerotic undertones that sometimes were sprinkled over the main story), but I was worried that this new ghoulish faceless clown was going to be the standard of the new DC 52 continuity. I was not too thrilled by the idea, to tell you the truth.

Fortunately, the new storyline reinstates the Joker in the continuity of the DC Universe as we, the fans, really want to see him (and I sigh in relief). A large tsunami of chaos and perversity with the only goal of proving a single point: ‘No matter how hard you fight me, no matter how many times you kill me, you’ll never defeat me. I’m more than you ever will be. I’ll always be here. In every corner, in every alley even if you’re not looking.  Because I’m part of this city, of every citizen and I am even part of you Batman; you just didn’t see it before and I will show you now so sit tight and enjoy the show.’

And Joker now returns in all his glory…and WHOLE PERSONA (thanks Mr. Snyder)…to bring to the city of Gotham his favorite brand of pure and absolute chaos.

That is what Joker loves and that is what we fans love see him doing.  That is what made Ledger’s Joker famous. He is so outside of the regulations of society, that there are no bars or limits in his behavior. He is disturbed (HELL YES HE IS!), but that does not weaken him. Instead, it makes him in my opinion stronger.  A force to reckon with; a true scary enemy that does not conform to standards of madness or greed, or anything you know might drive a criminal and you really can’t measure in any way.  And how do you find a weakness on something you can’t neither understand nor predict? Scary thought…even for the Batman, I’m sure.

About his origins… I agree  with Snyder in when he says that Joker is really not insane in the clinical sense of the word.  Outside of society’s standards yes, but Joker in my opinion is a very bad man with a very disturbed sense of good and evil, not a nutcase that needs a padded cell all the time.  He’s calculating, cunning,  and he definitely has his own agenda.

And Batman  knows it too. He’s never being deceived by the Joker’s so called “madness”.

We are the fools that can’t conceive such a concept in human behavior and quickly label someone so deranged as “CRAZY”.  He just likes to be evil.  He rejoices in other people’s suffering.  He rejoices in chaos…

Still, reinventing Joker is like swimming in choppy waters, I’m sure no one knows better than Snyder himself. (and a brave man he is by proposing just ANOTHER origin for the Clown Prince of Crime to add to his already large repertoire) because this could quickly get out of hand and become so cheesy and flat, that his will be all a waste of time to accomplish just…NOTHING at the end. We could end with a Clown Prince so fantastic and mystical that we lose track of the real meaning of being Joker.

But Snyder’s abilities as a writer have been well cemented with his previous successful storylines (Court of Owls an example).  I think this new Joker is in capable hands to set the new questions and mysteries surrounding our Clown Prince of Crime in the 52 Universe. Questions that hopefully future writers will be able to try to answer in stories that would add dimensions to this new Joker mythos.

And why am I enjoying this new Joker story line so much? Because it is fresh, it is mysterious, and so far…ambivalent (is Joker’s  secret real, or one of the multiple origins he likes to create for himself as another lie from the master manipulator he is?). With Joker we’re never sure what to expect.

I also believe, that as long as we don’t lose perspective of the man underneath the clown face, this new vision of a man who is probably as old as Gotham city itself offers a lots of opportunities to explain his survival through the ages (Remember, assuming previous stories still apply in the 52 Universe Joker has been electrocuted, beaten to a pulp, shot more than once, hit head on by a truck, fallen from buildings, and lost his face that he “miraculously” regrew).

And this new and refreshing beginning also offers countless of new venues to experiment with the character.

What made this man the way he is? We have seen from long living villains like Vandal Savage, Ra’s Al’Ghoul (even Marvel’s Apocalypse) that long lives tend to cause this already twisted souls to eventually lose their empathy for the human race. They feel superior and outside of the norm.  Is this what happened to him? If so…why finally settle in Gotham?  With this kind of immortality, one would imagine that Joker would have had travelled all over the place, right? And what is this hinted connection with the Court of Owls? Why has this obsession with Batman lasted this long (75 years is a very long time).  Is Joker enjoying seeing his enemy get old and weak gives him a new sense of pleasure of his own superiority?

Then we have to consider that this might be one more of Joker’s lies.  One on top of countless others he has made over his life to hid what or who he really is, because the man he was is not important. Only Joker matters now.

We’ll have to wait until Snyder finishes his “last” Joker opus to see what really in store for our favorite ever smiling, deadly Clown, don’t we? So bring the next issue forth I say and let’s see where this story takes us…

Feb 042015
 

Batman38CVRThe  incredible guys at  COMIC BOOK RESOURCES had a chance to talk to Scott Snyder about the his role in the new  Joker story line ENDGAME and the acclaimed writer talks about his unconventional origin story for Joker that he hinted in BATMAN #38 this month.  Here is the interview highlights.  (WARNING…SPOILERS AHEAD!):

CBR News: In “Batman” #38, you explain that the Joker virus is unique in that it heals The Joker even as it slowly kills its victims. It’s a complete inverse, like life and death and comedy and tragedy and, really, like Batman and The Joker. Why is it human nature to be so fearful of our polar opposite?

Scott Snyder: Part of the point of “Endgame” is that The Joker now positions himself as a stranger to Batman. “You don’t know me at all, and I know everything about you.” That’s terrifying not only because he’s a reflection of Batman, but suddenly he’s become this obscured reflection. It was always his message in “Death of the Family” and earlier in continuity, that, “We are two sides of the same coin. I’m doing this because I make you stronger.”

But this time, he something’s different. “All I am is the unknown.” Now, he’s this stranger that knows Bruce very well, and knows his weaknesses. I don’t think there is anything scarier than somebody coming after you that knows what you are most afraid of, and is happy to bring that to your doorstep.

While he’s often portrayed as crazy and the Clown Prince of Gotham, this time around, we’re seeing a more calculated approach to his mayhem.

I’ve actually never really seen him as crazy. I see him as evil. I think people like to think he’s crazy because we’re less comfortable with the idea that somebody could be deeply evil. You so rarely see absolute lack of empathy and compassion in a character that is operating with gleeful malevolence. That is something that just goes completely against our nature to believe in another human being. The Joker is that. In my interpretation, The Joker never says he’s crazy. He more, unapologetically, says, “This is who I am.” He very much has reasons for doing the things that he does, which make sense in his relationship with Batman. But I don’t think he views himself as crazy, and I don’t think Batman thinks he’s crazy either. The public perception of him is that he is a lunatic, but deep down, he’s actually very evil.

Speaking of crazy, we also get the New 52 debut of Crazy Quilt in this issue, a much maligned supervillain since his debut in 1946. Why mine Batman’s past to find these gems when building a story arc like “Endgame,” as opposed to creating new adversaries like the Court of Owls?

That’s a great question. For me, this story is meant to be somewhat celebratory, as dark and twisted as it is. It started as a celebration of Batman’s 75th anniversary, and it ends as a celebration of Joker’s 75th anniversary…

…Crazy Quilt was perfect because I needed a character that was really Frankenstein-ian. I needed a doctor that Batman believes must have helped Joker make this inverse strain. Joker must be taking something that is giving him this ability to heal and letting him make this argument that he is ancient. When he targets Dekker, he’s sure that he’s right: This is the person that did it. But even though Dekker admits that he helped Joker make the virus, what he says that stuns Batman is, “The substance in the virus, it’s from him. I got it from The Joker’s body… from his spine. He found it long ago. He is who he says he is.” Because Crazy Quilt is so integral to the story, you forgot the silliness of him. ..

…Again, this story, albeit very twisted, is meant to be fun. Even though Joker said “Death of the Family” is a comedy and “Endgame” is a tragedy, for him, he revels in tragedy, so “Death of the Family” must have been more uncomfortable for him. That story was more grim and dark, and this story is more eye-popping and silly and fun. And it only gets more so. You’ll see a lot more nuttiness as the story moves forward. I wanted this to be a big birthday party for The Joker and Batman, because this will definitely be the last time I ever write The Joker.

Well, looking at the cover for “Batman” #40, it’s fairly mythic.

I love that cover. I told Greg that I wanted it to be like Batman and The Joker had turned into completely mythological figures, something that you would see portrayed in a stained glass window. I wanted it like they are fighting deep in the pages of an ancient story, because again, this will be the last time we use The Joker. “Death of the Family” was the first part of a story, and I intended to do something with The Joker that was more of a tragedy in the second part. But when I started working on this one, which basically started when I was finishing the first one, I quickly realized that this one was going to be the one when nothing is left on the table. Everything that Joker didn’t do or said he wouldn’t do — and I don’t mean not kill people — but everything and anything is possible. The consequences of this one change everything. In “Death of a Family,” he gave Batman a chance. In this one, there are no chances. This one is about tearing everything down, for The Joker. And a lot of it does get torn down, and what comes out on the other side and what it leads to, the transformative aspects to the story, is very, very big.

I know from talking to you about “The Wake” that you love science and biology, so when I see such a well-defined, scientific explanation for the Joker virus based on jellyfish physiology, I know you’ve done your research. Do you have a team of scientists working for you?

[Laughs] No team, but I actually did a lot of research on that science. Again, the story has been planned for over a year and I love the idea of making it somewhat plausible. That gene, LIN28, is real. It’s one of the key genes that they’ve found in mice to be responsible for regenerative abilities for lost limbs. The idea of the cellular matrix and magic dust is all speculative stuff that is fun to read about. I really wanted to make something that links the mythology of some different aspects of “Batman” in a way that could be true and could be not true, because Crazy Quilt is crazy. At the same time, his belief that the Lazarus Pit is a corrupted version of this substance or has this substance in it, and the electrum that the Owls have possibly have this substance in it. And there is the idea that Vandal Savage was possibly touched by this substance long ago, and that’s why he is this immortal figure, which is how Grant [Morrison] positioned him in the cave.

This story really is a goodbye to a lot of things that we’ve built, and lots of the status quo, and it’s a celebration at the same time. I just want it to be as big as we ever go. AWe can pull back with a new status quo in June. It’s almost time to start over, in a way. I want people to say, “I did not know that they had that in them, to try something that nutty in their fifth year on the book” — my fifth year, Greg’s fourth.

Traditionally in the DCU, Batman and Joker have been portrayed as wickedly clever and resourceful. But in this arc, you’re basically making Joker a super threat in terms of strength and immortality. How does that change the Batman/Joker dynamic?

One of the things that is almost unspoken between Bruce and Dick is the question of, “Did we just miss our chance to kill him?” Or is it possible that The Joker always had this substance in him and it wouldn’t have worked any way? He would have just got up and laughed. Ultimately, now he is kind of reveling in the fact that you cannot take him down. He is this character that has a much longer history than you would think.

The other reason that it’s deeply scary, and why he’s chosen to flaunt it in front of Batman, whether or not it’s true, is because he believes very much that Batman’s biggest problem, his biggest fear, is his own mortality. He’s tried to transform himself into a symbol that extends beyond his own body and extends beyond his own life, and not in a way that he is afraid of dying. Bruce is afraid of losing Batman to his own body as he gets older. He’s afraid that he’ll go down fighting, but he won’t be strong enough, he won’t be fast enough. He isn’t exactly the legend that Batman has become. He’s still, ultimately, physically defined by his own body. He’s a person, and The Joker is saying that. He’s saying, “I know who you are. You’re nothing. You’re reduced to being just Bruce Wayne. I’m something much bigger than you — and I always have been.”

(This is just a partial transcript.   The whole article (and pictures) can be accessed HERE)

Jan 162015
 

This is a reprint from an article by  JOHN SAAVEDRA titled “SCOTT SNYDER AND GREG CAPULLO’S JOKER: A HAUNTING IN GOTHAM CITY” that appeared in the site DEN OF GEEK.

I found it interesting and very comprehensive, and now that I am following the new Joker storyline of ENDGAME (which for those who need to know, started in BATMAN ##35) I have to agree that the new twist on the Joker’s little revenge plans are hinting a little towards the supernatural.  Don’t know exactly where Snyder and Capullo are heading for, but I have complete trust on his writer’s abilities (Snyder had demonstrated them more than once with COURT OF OWLS and DEATH OF THE FAMILY  among other storylines).  I believe that the supernatural can be fun too if it is written well and with respect for the characters own history (remember, there has been Joker and Batman for almost 75 years now and just because the Batman comics restarted the saga, does not mean that the past is completely gone.  Even Snyder had paid homage to the Joker’s past in his DEATH OF THE FAMILY run).

I think we are all in for a surprise, and Snyder himself has said in multitude of interviews that this story will change EVERYTHING in the Batman world. Let’s hope it will be worth the wait and news buzz.

Well since no more interruption…here is the transcript of the article. WARNING:  SPOILERS AHEAD…READ AT YOUR OWN RISK!

The Joker is back in Batman: Endgame, but he’s not the same old clown. He’s something more. Snyder and Capullo turned him into a haunting.

Editor’s Note: This article contains Batman comics spoilers…

When I spoke to the Batman team of Scott Snyder and Greg Capullo at NYCC 2014, something Capullo, who drew his share of monsters with Spawn, said really stuck with me: “What kid or adult doesn’t love a monster?” We were specifically talking about the Joker, who made his triumphant return to the pages of Batman back in October, after an almost two year absence. Of course, it was revealed in Batman #36 that he’s been creeping his way from panel to panel all along, but we’ll get to that in a moment. 

Snyder and Capullo’s Joker is a special kind of animal, the one closest to the form I always thought the villain should become — the omnipotent, indestructible evil that can commit any atrocity that enters its twisted mind. A creature much larger than the entire Batman legend that can transcend a physical form. It doesn’t even suffice to call the Joker a “he” anymore since it’s all but obvious in #37 that Batman is dealing with a beast. Whether the beast is the devil or just a demon (or perhaps its all a trick of the light) still remains to be seen. For now, we watch him smile through the flames:

In case you haven’t read that issue, which I suggest you do at all costs, the above panel shows Snyder and Capullo take their first big step into the supernatural within the pages of Batman. A few panels before, Gordon shot the Joker in the chest and the villain fell back into a fire. A relieved Commissioner Gordon calls Batman to tell him the good news. The city is still going to shit with the zombie-like apocalypse brought on by the new, invincible strain of the Joker’s laughing gas, but at least the Joker’s dead…I’m not sure I’ve seen anyone so absolutely finish off the Joker since his death in Batman: Arkham City or “death and rebirth” in Grant Morrison’s run a few years back. But Gordon learned quite a bit about the Joker this issue. He’d do well to turn around.

There are a couple of big discoveries made about this version of the Joker in Batman #37. In fact, I’d even even call it a primer for what this new era’s Joker is going to be/what he’s been about all along. Snyder brought his complete writing toolkit to the book in “Endgame,” the arc in which all of this takes place. While the writer has mostly kept the supernatural out of this run, he’s definitely a veteran of the form. American Vampire, The Wake, and now Wytches have all solidified Snyder’s place in the realm of scary supernatural tales. Finally, we see him bring that to Batman in full form, introducing the Lovecraftian tone that he’s so good at. Snyder’s Joker, it would seem, is the beast that’s older than time itself. At least older than Batman.

We get a clue of just how long the Joker has haunted Gotham City, a discovery made by poor Jim Gordon, who gets his fair share of trouble in this arc, and will probably see even more by the time Batman #40 rolls out in March. Without spoiling too much of the plot, Gordon is investigating the mysterious tragedies that have plagued Gotham’s oldest hospital, where Batman must go to find the source of the Joker’s new toxin. In each old newspaper clipping — some dating back to the early 1900s — Gordon finds a familiar face in the background:

Peek-a-boo. The name Gordon is about to utter, as the smoke and fire from his cigarette engulfs his computer screen, is “Beelzebub,” which is the name of the devil. That face belongs to none other than the Joker. If this picture is real, that means that the Joker of the New 52 has been in business for much longer than Batman, who’s only been fighting crime for about six years in current DC continuity. That’s disturbing. 

What’s even more disturbing is what happens next. Playing out like the best ghost stories, a scene as good as Nosferatu climbing up a set of stairs or Stephen King’s Pennywise preying on little children from a gutter, the Joker is revealed as the monster under the bed:

You see why Gordon probably shouldn’t’ve turned his back on the Clown? Joker, the haunting of Gotham City has arrived. But Gordon can’t believe that the Joker could be more than just a mortal man, although I don’t know anybody who would bother calling the villain a human except perhaps Alan Moore, and neither can Bruce, whose quest throughout Snyder’s run has been pretty specific: figure out who the Joker is and stop him once and for all. You remember Bruce sitting in the Batcave at the end of “Death of the Family,” the Batcomputer coming up with zero results for the Joker’s identity. Only the word “Ha” flashes on the screen, a new element in Joker’s gas.

It’s no accident that Batman #37 opens with Bruce telling himself that Joker is nothing more than a man. All along, he’s been trying to put a face to the name, to bring the Clown down to size, to prove his biggest fear wrong. If Joker is nothing more than a mere man, he can be defeated. We see Batman easily defeat Joker in the opening pages of Detective Comics Vol. 2 #1. This is shortly before Joker has Dollmaker cut off his face, so that he may be reborn. 

So much of Synder and Capullo’s run has focused on the Joker. From the Joker-centric “Death of the Family,” which Snyder likes to call a comedy — in the dramatic sense, of course — to “Zero Year,” which calls back to the classic “Red Hood” Joker origin story of the Silver Age, not to mention Alan Moore and Brian Bolland’s The Killing Joke, the team have chronicled the Joker’s transformation. And in “Endgame,” this tragedy about Batman’s mortality (Snyder’s words, not mine), the stage is set for Joker’s transcendence. 

It’s appropriate then that the Joker’s sinister smile and mad laugh would be pasted on the faces of every Gothamite and heard in even the darkest alleys of the city during the villain’s latest attack. The idea that the Joker is more of a force than just a criminal mastermind has never been more apparent. He can be anyone and everywhere. It’s not hard to believe that he could take on the face of Arkham Asylum’s Eric Border in order to keep an eye on Batman, to continue their mad dance:

In Batman #36, we get a pretty satisfying answer as to how Joker was able to maintain his Eric Border disguise since his introduction in Batman Annual #2, only a couple of months after the Joker’s demise at the end of “Death of the Family.” Not much in terms of the supernatural going on there. He took some pills that allowed him to keep the psychotic smile off of his face for a couple of hours at a time. Simple and believable, as far as realism in comics goes. 

But even this serves Snyder and Capullo’s purposes. The idea that the Joker can be a cunning master of disguise and deception, that he can become Batman’s most trusted ally within Arkham Asylum while pulling the strings behind the scenes, it all serves as further evidence that Joker could be Snyder’s version of the devil in the pages of Batman, the lord of temptation that whispers in Bruce’s ear. Join me. Join me. You helped me evolve. Now let me help you…

It all comes down to evolution on the Joker’s part. The Batman team has made it so that, even if the Joker is faking his supernatural state, we can sure believe that the Joker could transform into this invincible demonic being. For one thing, Joker tried to help Batman evolve along with him earlier in the run. Snyder has talked at length about how his Joker wanted to help Batman transcend and reach his true potential in “Death of the Family.” Joker asked Bruce to leave his silly little family behind and become more than this mortal man who would one day finally wear out. Make no mistake about it: no matter how twisted the Joker can be, he’s never been interested in killing off the Batman. But rather, to help him live on forever, so that they can continue their hellish love affair for all eternity. In Snyder and Capullo’s Batman, it’s true what we’ve all suspected all along: one can’t live without the other. Until now.

After Batman rejects the Joker’s offer to be greater, to be more than a mere human, the Joker decides to break all ties. There’s a change in the dynamic. The Joker doesn’t need the Batman anymore. The monster has evolved past the hero. If this supernatural form is the final step of the transformation for the Joker, then Bruce and his family are definitely in trouble. 

In an interview with CBR about Batman #35, Snyder described Joker’s throught process, as he begins his final battle with Batman: “Joker’s saying, ‘This is the end of us. This is it. This is the last Joker story of Batman and Joker.’ Joker is moving on, is what Joker would say. So it’s really the end of the game played between the two of them.”

How Joker survived the events of “Death of the Family” without a face is anyone’s guess. Snyder hasn’t explained what happened between that arc and Eric Border’s first appearance a few months later, but I’m guessing it all has ties to the supernatural. By the time Joker has his face cut off and jumps off a cliff to a watery doom at the end of his twisted comedy, the final transformation has been triggered. The Joker From Hell.

At NYCC, Snyder and Capullo told me that in “Endgame,” the Joker was out to really hurt Bruce, who must confront his own mortality and his choice to remain tethered to the family that keeps him human. The Joker is pissed about Bruce’s decision and decides to end the man himself. Snyder said, “This time, [Joker]’s going to be looking for a kind of tragedy.” You can see it in Joker’s face:

“Endgame” has been the subject of feverish discussion for Batfans. Some thought perhaps it meant that it would be the end of Snyder and Capullo’s run on the book. I know, ridiculous. But it definitely is an end of sorts to their fantastic run thus far. It is the final act of a three-part Joker arc that has been masterfully woven by Snyder and brought to life by Capullo’s pencils. While Snyder has said that he doesn’t plan to use Joker in his run again, he won’t completely rule it out if there’s another story to tell.

Come June, after DC’s two-month Convergence event, Snyder and Capullo will return with what he’s referred to as soft relaunch of the book. It will be an all-new Batman with plenty of great, gutsy, new stories to tell. I wouldn’t be surprised if the Clown Prince From Hell is creeping behind some of those panels, waiting to be born again…

John Saavedra is currently working on a Master’s thesis about Scott Snyder’s work. What a time to be alive.

 

(Original article appeared in January 7, 2015 at DEN OF GEEK HERE)

Jan 162015
 

Yeah, we know….it is too early in the Batman history to see a Joker.  He should be what? A young man in his late teens early 20s maybe? 

Well, the writers  of the successful TV series from FOX, Gotham, have decided on hinting to possible Joker candidates throughout the series (obviously not setting anything on stone as Joker’s origin is best left where it is…in the unknown) and they seem they will be starting with the second round of episodes for season 1 (or should this be Season 1.5?).  Personally, I hope this is not one of those hints…I really can’t see the man who would become the Joker related in any way with the Grayson’s at this time of the Batman history…it would be just too tacky in my opinion.

Anyways, here is the actual report from our friends at VIXEN VARSITY.

HalysCircusPoster

Filming for Gotham episode 16 took place earlier this week and some interesting on-set images and spoilers have surfaced online via Vixen Varsity.

The episode titled The Blind Fortune Teller will take place at a circus and viewers will be introduced to The Flying Graysons – Robin’s parents. According to the website, following a murder at the circus, Gordon questions the ringmaster and “an evil clown”.

Now, “could this be some sort of nod to The Joker? It’s unlikely, but you never know!” speculates ComicBookMovie.

Here are some more rumoured plot details about the episode, as per Vixen Varsity:

– A fight breaks out between clowns and trapeze artists.
– Detective James Gordon meets Dr Leslie Thompkins at Haly’s circus.
– Mary Lloyd, daughter of a clown is in love with John Grayson, son of a trapeze artist.
– Dr Leslie Thompkins checks out the injured circus folk.

The next episode of Gotham season 1 (episode 12) titled What the Little Bird Told Him airs on 19 January, 2015.

(Picture courtesy of Vixen Varsity via Tweeter)

Dec 282014
 

ArkhamoriginJoker01My friend Kanike liked this site and with good reason.  Russ Burlingame, correspondent for COMICBOOK.COM has a nice overview about the character of the Clown Prince of Crime for those that are new to Jokerdom.  Russ gives away nice facts, recommends an initial bibliography all in a very interesting (and entertaining) segment dedicated to our psychotic clown.  Please enjoy…

Click on the video screen to begin.

(Video courtesy of COMICBOOK.COM.  For more reports, please visit site HERE)