Watch Batman: The Killing Joke Online Full Movie
The Joker Batman Wiki. This page is about the original comic book character. For other uses, see The Joker (Disambiguation)"All it takes is one bad day to reduce the sanest man alive to lunacy. That's how far the world is from where I am.
Some movie scenes are so shocking that you immediately want to pause in order to see what's going on. These are the most pause-worthy moments.
Watch Suicide Squad Full Movie Online for free.
Just one bad day. You had a bad day once. Am I right? I know I am. I can tell. You had a bad day and everything changed. The Long Good Friday Full Movie. Why else would you dress up like a flying rat? You had a bad day, and it drove you as crazy as everybody else..
E! Entertainment Television, LLC. A Division of NBCUniversal with news, shows, photos, and videos.
You have to keep pretending that life makes sense, that there's some point to all the struggling! God, you make me want to puke. I mean, what is it with you?
What made you what you are? Girlfriend killed by the mob, maybe? Brother carved up by some mugger? Something like that, I bet something like that.. I.. I'm not exactly sure what it was. Sometimes I remember it one way, sometimes another..
If I'm going to have a past, I prefer it to be multiple choice! Ha Ha Ha! But my point is.. I went crazy. When I saw what a black, awful joke the world was, I went crazy as a coot! I admit it! So why can't you? You're not unintelligent, you must see the reality of the situation?
Do you know how many times we've come close to World War III over a flock of geese on a computer screen? Do you even know what triggered the last world war? An argument with Germany over how many telegraph poles they owed their war debt creditors. Telegraph poles! Ha Ha Ha Ha Ha! It's all a joke! Anything anybody ever valued or struggled for, it's all just a monstrous, demented gag. So why can't you see the funny side? Why aren't you laughing?"―Joker, Batman: The Killing Joke[src]The Joker is a supervillain and the archenemy of Batman.
He was first introduced in Batman #1 (Spring 1. The Joker is a master criminal with a clown- like appearance, and is considered one of the most infamous criminals within Gotham City. Initially portrayed as a violent sociopath who murders people for his own amusement, the Joker later in the 1.
That characterization continued through the late- 1. The Joker has been responsible for numerous tragedies in Batman's life, including the paralysis of Barbara Gordon (Batgirl/Oracle) and the murders of Jason Todd (the second Robin) and Jim Gordon's second wife Sarah Essen.
Interpretations of the Joker's appearance in other media include Cesar Romero's in the 1. Batman television series, Jack Nicholson's in Tim Burton's Batman, and Mark Hamill's in Batman: The Animated Series, other DC Animated Universe shows and the Batman: Arkham games.
Wizard magazine listed him the #1 villain of all time in 2. As played by Nicholson, The Joker ranks #4. American Film Institute's list of the top 5. Heath Ledger signed to play the Joker in July 2. Christopher Nolan's Batman Begins sequel, The Dark Knight and won a posthumous Oscar for his performance.
He was also ranked 8th on the Greatest Comic Book Character of All Time list, which was released by Empire (notably being the highest ranked villain character on the list), as well as being the fifth Greatest Comic Book Character Ever in Wizard Magazine's 2. Greatest Comic Book Characters of all Time list, once again being the highest ranked villain on the list. Publication History. Originally conceived as an evil "court- jester" type, the character was initially rejected by studio writer Bill Finger as being "too clownish," but he later relayed the idea to Bob Kane.
Kane, who started out as a gag artist, loved the concept and encouraged its production. Finger found a photograph of actor Conrad Veidt wearing make- up for the silent film The Man Who Laughs, and it was from this photograph that the Joker was modeled. This influence was referenced in the graphic novel Batman: The Man Who Laughs, a retelling of the first Joker story from 1. In his initial dozen or so appearances, starting with Batman #1 (1. Joker was a straightforward spree killer/mass murderer, with a bizarre appearance modeled after the symbol of the Joker known from playing cards.
It is of note that in his second appearance he was actually slated to be killed off, with the final page detailing the villain accidentally stabbing himself, lying dead as Batman and Robin run off into the night. DC editor Whitney Ellsworth thought the Joker was too good a character to kill off, suggesting that he be spared. A hastily drawn panel, calculated to imply that the Joker was still alive, was subsequently added to the comic. For the next several appearances, the Joker often escaped capture but suffered an apparent death (falling off a cliff, being caught in a burning building, etc.), from which his body was not recovered. In these first dozen adventures, the Joker killed close to three dozen people, impressive for a villain who didn't use giant robots, mutant monsters, or space lasers, as was the status quo between 1. Ironically, the turning point came in "Joker Walks the Last Mile" (Detective Comics #6. Joker was actually executed in the electric chair only to be chemically revived by henchmen.
While the Joker was back, he was decidedly less deadly than previous engagements. At this point, the editors decided that only one- shot villains should commit murder, so as to not make Batman look impotent in his inability to punish such recurring foes as the Joker or the Penguin. As the Batman comics softened their tone, the Joker shifted towards a harmless, cackling nuisance. He quickly became the most popular villain and was used frequently during the Golden Age of Comic Books. Watch Brand New-U Online Fandango. The use of the character lessened somewhat by the late 1.
Julius Schwartz took over editorship of the Batman comics in 1. In 1. 97. 3, the character was revived and profoundly revised in the Batman comic stories by Dennis O'Neil and Neal Adams.
Beginning in Batman #2. The Joker's Five Way Revenge", the Joker becomes a homicidal maniac who casually murders people on a whim, while enjoying battles of wits with Batman. This take on the character has taken prominence since. Steve Englehart, in his short but well- received run on the book, added elements deepening the severity of the Joker's insanity. Joker even had his own nine- issue series from 1. This was a major change as he was now the protagonist and in every issue, he was always apprehended and never killed anyone, due to writers telling series creator Dennis O'Neil to make these changes.
However, the development of the Joker as a sociopath continued with the issues "A Death in the Family" (in which readers voted for the character to kill off Jason Todd) and The Killing Joke in 1. DC's Modern Age after the company wide reboot following Crisis on Infinite Earths. A major addition to the character was the introduction of the character Harley Quinn. Originally introduced in Batman: The Animated Series, Quinn is a clinical psychiatrist who falls hopelessly in love with the Joker in Arkham Asylum after he relays his tale of having an abusive father and a runaway mother, and now serves as his loyal, if daffy, sidekick, costumed in a skintight harlequin suit.
Their relationship often resembles that of an abusive domestic relationship, with the Joker insulting, hurting, or even attempting to kill Quinn, who remains undaunted in her devotion. She was popular enough to be integrated into the comics in 1. Joker) was also featured on the short- lived live- action TV series Birds of Prey.
History. Origin. Detective Comics #1. February 1. 95. 1) revealed that he had been a criminal known as the Red Hood. In the story, the Red Hood falls into a vat of chemicals while escaping from Batman. He emerges with white skin, green hair, and a bizarre red grin. Joker recounts several of his possible origins.
Though many have been related, a definitive history of the Joker has never been established in the comics, and his true name has never been confirmed. Nobody knows who the Joker truly is. The most widely cited back- story can be seen in Alan Moore's The Killing Joke.