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Joker (character)

The Joker is a supervillain appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics. The character was created by Bill Finger, Bob Kane, and Jerry Robinson, and first appeared in the debut issue of the comic book Batman on April 25, 1940. Credit for the Joker's creation is disputed; Kane and Robinson claimed responsibility for the Joker's design while acknowledging Finger's writing contribution. Although the Joker was planned to be killed off during his initial appearance, he was spared by editorial intervention, allowing the character to endure as the archenemy of the superhero Batman.

Joker
Promotional artwork for Batman: Three Jokers (2020), depicting the incarnations of the Joker from the Golden Age (bottom), the Silver Age (middle), and the Modern Age (top). Art by Jason Fabok.
Publication information
PublisherDC Comics
First appearanceBatman #1 (cover-dated spring 1940; published April 25, 1940)[1]
Created by
In-story information
Team affiliations
Notable aliasesRed Hood[2]
Abilities
  • Criminal mastermind
  • Expert chemist
  • Uses weaponized props and toxins

In his comic book appearances, the Joker is portrayed as a criminal mastermind. Introduced as a psychopath with a warped, sadistic sense of humor, the character became a mostly harmless, comical prankster in the late 1950s in response to regulation by the Comics Code Authority, before returning to his darker roots during the early 1970s (although some of his more comedic characterization was kept for many incarnations of the character). As Batman's nemesis, the Joker has been part of the superhero's defining stories, including the murder of Jason Todd—the second Robin and Batman's ward—and the paralysis of one of Batman's allies, Barbara Gordon. The Joker has had various possible origin stories during his decades of appearances. The most common story involves his falling into a tank of chemical waste that bleaches his skin white and turns his hair green and lips bright red; the resulting disfigurement drives him insane. The antithesis of Batman in personality and appearance, the Joker is considered by critics to be his perfect adversary.

The Joker possesses no superhuman abilities, instead using his expertise in chemical engineering to develop poisonous or lethal concoctions and thematic weaponry, including razor-tipped playing cards, deadly joy buzzers, and acid-spraying lapel flowers. The Joker sometimes works with other Gotham City supervillains, such as the Penguin and Two-Face, and groups like the Injustice Gang and Injustice League, but these relationships often collapse due to the Joker's desire for unbridled chaos. The 1990s introduced a romantic interest for the Joker in his former psychiatrist, Harley Quinn, who became his criminal sidekick and girlfriend before finally escaping their abusive relationship. Although his primary obsession is Batman, the Joker has also fought other heroes, including Superman and Wonder Woman.

One of the most iconic characters in popular culture, the Joker has been listed among the greatest comic book villains and fictional characters ever created. The character's popularity has seen him appear on a variety of merchandise, such as clothing and collectible items, inspire real-world structures (such as theme park attractions), and be referenced in a number of media. The Joker has been adapted in live-action, animated, and video game incarnations, including the 1960s Batman television series played by Cesar Romero and in films by Jack Nicholson in Batman (1989), Heath Ledger in The Dark Knight (2008), Jared Leto in the DC Extended Universe (2016–2021), and Joaquin Phoenix in Joker (2019–present); Ledger and Phoenix each earned an Academy Award for their portrayals. Mark Hamill among others have provided the character's voice in media ranging from animation to video games.

Creation and development

Concept

 
 
(left) Jerry Robinson's 1940 concept sketch of the Joker. (right) Actor Conrad Veidt in character as Gwynplaine in The Man Who Laughs (1928). Veidt's grinning visage inspired the Joker design.

Bill Finger, Bob Kane, and Jerry Robinson are credited with creating the Joker, but their accounts of the character's conception differ, each providing his own version of events. Finger's, Kane's, and Robinson's versions acknowledge that Finger showed them an image of actor Conrad Veidt in character as Gwynplaine (a man whose mouth is disfigured into a perpetual grin) in the 1928 film The Man Who Laughs as an inspiration for the Joker's appearance, and Robinson produced a sketch of a joker playing card.[2][3]

Robinson stated that it was his 1940 card sketch that served as the character's concept, and Finger associated that image with Veidt in the film.[2] Kane hired the 17-year-old Robinson as an assistant in 1939, after he saw Robinson in a white jacket decorated with his own illustrations.[4] Beginning as a letterer and background inker, Robinson quickly became primary artist for the newly created Batman comic book series. In a 1975 interview in The Amazing World of DC Comics, Robinson said he wanted a supreme arch-villain who could test Batman, not a typical crime lord or gangster designed to be easily disposed of. He wanted an exotic, enduring character as an ongoing source of conflict for Batman, designing a diabolically sinister, but clownish, villain.[5][6][7] Robinson was intrigued by villains; he believed that some characters are made up of contradictions, leading to the Joker's sense of humor. He said that the name came first, followed by an image of a playing card from a deck he often had at hand: "I wanted somebody visually exciting. I wanted somebody that would make an indelible impression, would be bizarre, would be memorable like the Hunchback of Notre Dame or any other villains that had unique physical characters."[8] He told Finger about his concept by telephone, later providing sketches of the character and images of what would become his iconic Joker playing-card design. Finger thought the concept was incomplete, providing the image of Veidt with a ghastly, permanent rictus grin.[5]

Kane countered that Robinson's sketch was produced only after Finger had already shown the Gwynplaine image to Kane, and that it was only used as a card design belonging to the Joker in his early appearances.[3] Finger said that he was also inspired by the Steeplechase Face, an image in Steeplechase Park at Coney Island that resembled a Joker's head, which he sketched and later shared with future editorial director Carmine Infantino.[9] In a 1994 interview with journalist Frank Lovece, Kane stated his position:

Bill Finger and I created the Joker. Bill was the writer. Jerry Robinson came to me with a playing card of the Joker. That's the way I sum it up. [The Joker] looks like Conrad Veidt – you know, the actor in The Man Who Laughs, [the 1928 movie based on the novel] by Victor Hugo. ... Bill Finger had a book with a photograph of Conrad Veidt and showed it to me and said, 'Here's the Joker.' Jerry Robinson had absolutely nothing to do with it, but he'll always say he created it till he dies. He brought in a playing card, which we used for a couple of issues for him [the Joker] to use as his playing card.[10][11]

Robinson credited himself, Finger, and Kane for the Joker's creation. He said he created the character as Batman's larger-than-life nemesis when extra stories were quickly needed for Batman #1, and he received credit for the story in a college course:[12]

In that first meeting when I showed them that sketch of the Joker, Bill said it reminded him of Conrad Veidt in The Man Who Laughs. That was the first mention of it ... He can be credited and Bob himself, we all played a role in it. The concept was mine. Bill finished that first script from my outline of the persona and what should happen in the first story. He wrote the script of that, so he really was co-creator, and Bob and I did the visuals, so Bob was also.[13]

Finger provided his own account in 1966:

I got a call from Bob Kane.... He had a new villain. When I arrived he was holding a playing card. Apparently Jerry Robinson or Bob, I don't recall who, looked at the card and they had an idea for a character ... the Joker. Bob made a rough sketch of it. At first it didn't look much like the Joker. It looked more like a clown. But I remembered that Grosset & Dunlap formerly issued very cheap editions of classics by Alexandre Dumas and Victor Hugo ... The volume I had was The Man Who Laughs — his face had been permanently operated on so that he will always have this perpetual grin. And it looked absolutely weird. I cut the picture out of the book and gave it to Bob, who drew the profile and gave it a more sinister aspect. Then he worked on the face; made him look a little clown-like, which accounted for his white face, red lips, green hair. And that was the Joker![14]

Although Kane adamantly refused to share credit for many of his characters, and refuted Robinson's claim for the rest of his life, many comic historians credit Robinson with the Joker's creation and Finger with the character's development.[2][3][4][9] By 2011, Finger, Kane, and Robinson had died, leaving the story unresolved.[5][9][15]

Golden Age

 
From the Joker's debut in Batman #1 (April 25, 1940)

The Joker debuted in Batman #1 (April 1940) as the eponymous character's first villain, about a year after Batman's debut in Detective Comics #27 (May 1939). The Joker initially appeared as a serial killer and jewel thief, modeled after a joker playing card with a mirthless grin, who killed his victims with "Joker venom," a toxin that left their faces smiling grotesquely.[16] The character was intended to be killed in his second appearance in Batman #1, after being stabbed in the heart. Finger wanted the Joker to die because of his concern that recurring villains would make Batman appear inept, but was overruled by then-editor Whitney Ellsworth; a hastily drawn panel, indicating that the Joker was still alive, was added to the comic.[2][17][18] The Joker went on to appear in nine of Batman's first 12 issues.[19]

The character's regular appearances quickly defined him as the archenemy of Batman and Robin; he killed dozens of people, and even derailed a train.[20] By issue #13, Kane's work on the syndicated Batman newspaper strip left him little time for the comic book; artist Dick Sprang assumed his duties, and editor Jack Schiff collaborated with Finger on stories. Around the same time, DC Comics found it easier to market its stories to children without the more mature pulp elements that had originated many superhero comics. During this period, the first changes in the Joker began to appear, portraying him as a wacky but harmless prankster; in one story, the Joker kidnaps Robin and Batman pays the ransom by check, meaning that the Joker cannot cash it without being arrested.[21] Comic book writer Mark Waid suggests that the 1942 story "The Joker Walks the Last Mile" was the beginning point for the character's transformation into a more goofy incarnation, a period that Grant Morrison considered to have lasted the following 30 years.[22]

The 1942 cover of Detective Comics #69, known as "Double Guns" (with the Joker emerging from a genie's lamp, aiming two guns at Batman and Robin), is considered one of the greatest superhero comic covers of the Golden Age and is the only image from that era of the character using traditional guns. Robinson said that other contemporary villains used guns, and the creative team wanted the Joker—as Batman's adversary—to be more resourceful.[23][24]

Silver Age

The Joker was one of the few popular villains continuing to appear regularly in Batman comics from the Golden Age into the Silver Age, as the series continued during the rise in popularity of mystery and romance comics. In 1951, Finger wrote an origin story for the Joker in Detective Comics #168, which introduced the characteristic of him formerly being the criminal Red Hood, and his disfigurement the result of a fall into a chemical vat.[25]

By 1954, the Comics Code Authority had been established in response to increasing public disapproval of comic book content. The backlash was inspired by Frederic Wertham, who hypothesized that mass media (especially comic books) was responsible for the rise in juvenile delinquency, violence and homosexuality, particularly in young males. Parents forbade their children from reading comic books, and there were several mass burnings.[2] The Comics Code banned gore, innuendo and excessive violence, stripping Batman of his menace and transforming the Joker into a goofy, thieving trickster without his original homicidal tendencies.[17][26]

The character appeared less frequently after 1964, when Julius Schwartz (who disliked the Joker) became editor of the Batman comics.[2][17][27] The character risked becoming an obscure figure of the preceding era until this goofy prankster version of the character was adapted into the 1966 television series Batman, in which he was played by Cesar Romero.[2][17] The show's popularity compelled Schwartz to keep the comics in a similar vein. As the show's popularity waned, however, so did that of the Batman comics.[2][27] After the TV series ended in 1969, the increase in public visibility had not stopped the comic's sales decline; editorial director Carmine Infantino resolved to turn things around, moving stories away from child-friendly adventures.[28] The Silver Age introduced several of the Joker's defining character traits: lethal joy buzzers, acid-squirting flowers, trick guns, and goofy, elaborate crimes.[29][30]

Bronze Age

 
Cover of Batman #251 (September 1973) featuring "The Joker's Five-Way Revenge", which returned the Joker to his homicidal roots. Art by Neal Adams.

In 1973, after a four-year disappearance,[2] the Joker was revived (and revised) by writer Dennis O'Neil and artist Neal Adams. Beginning with Batman #251's "The Joker's Five-Way Revenge", the character returns to his roots as a homicidal maniac who matches wits with Batman.[31][32] This story began a trend in which the Joker was used, sparingly, as a central character.[33] O'Neil said his idea was "simply to take it back to where it started. I went to the DC library and read some of the early stories. I tried to get a sense of what Kane and Finger were after."[34] O'Neil's 1973 run introduced the idea of the Joker being legally insane, to explain why the character is sent to Arkham Asylum (introduced by O'Neil in 1974 as Arkham Hospital) instead of to prison.[35] Adams modified the Joker's appearance, changing his more average figure by extending his jaw and making him taller and leaner.[36]

DC Comics was a hotbed of experimentation during the 1970s, and in 1975 the character became the first villain to feature as the title character in a comic book series, The Joker.[37] The series followed the character's interactions with other supervillains, and the first issue was written by O'Neil.[38] Stories balanced between emphasizing the Joker's criminality and making him a likable protagonist whom readers could support. Although he murdered thugs and civilians, he never fought Batman; this made The Joker a series in which the character's villainy prevailed over rival villains, instead of a struggle between good and evil.[39] Because the Comics Code Authority mandated punishment for villains, each issue ended with the Joker being apprehended, limiting the scope of each story. The series never found an audience, and The Joker was canceled after nine issues (despite a "next issue" advertisement for an appearance by the Justice League).[38][39][40] The complete series became difficult to obtain over time, often commanding high prices from collectors. In 2013, DC Comics reissued the series as a trade paperback.[41]

When Jenette Kahn became DC editor in 1976, she redeveloped the company's struggling titles; during her tenure, the Joker would become one of DC's most popular characters.[39] While O'Neil and Adams' work was critically acclaimed, writer Steve Englehart and penciller Marshall Rogers's eight-issue run in Detective Comics #471–476 (August 1977–April 1978) defined the Joker for decades to come[31] with stories emphasizing the character's insanity. In "The Laughing Fish", the Joker disfigures fish with a rictus grin resembling his own (expecting copyright protection), and is unable to understand that copyrighting a natural resource is legally impossible.[32][35][42][43] Englehart's and Rogers' work on the series influenced the 1989 film Batman, and was adapted for 1992's Batman: The Animated Series.[35][44] Rogers expanded on Adams' character design, drawing the Joker with a fedora and trench coat.[36] Englehart outlined how he understood the character by saying that the Joker "was this very crazy, scary character. I really wanted to get back to the idea of Batman fighting insane murderers at 3 a.m. under the full moon, as the clouds scuttled by."[17]

Modern Age

Years after the end of the 1966 television series, sales of Batman continued to fall and the title was nearly cancelled. Although the 1970s restored the Joker as Batman's insane, lethal archenemy, it was during the 1980s that the Batman series started to turn around and the Joker came into his own as part of the "Dark Age" of comics, with mature tales of death and destruction. The shift was criticized for moving away from tamer superheroes (and villains), but comic audiences were no longer primarily children.[45][31] Several months after Crisis on Infinite Earths launched the era by killing off Silver Age icons such as the Flash and Supergirl and undoing decades of continuity,[46] Frank Miller's The Dark Knight Returns (1986) re-imagined Batman as an older, retired hero[47] and the Joker as a lipstick-wearing celebrity[36][48] who cannot function without his foe.[49] The late 1980s saw the Joker exert a significant impact on Batman and his supporting cast. In the 1988–89 story arc "A Death in the Family", the Joker murders Batman's sidekick (the second Robin, Jason Todd). Todd was unpopular with fans; rather than modify his character, DC opted to let them vote for his fate and a 72-vote plurality had the Joker beat Todd to death with a crowbar. This story altered the Batman universe: instead of killing anonymous bystanders, the Joker murdered a core character; this had a lasting effect on future stories.[50][51] Written at the height of tensions between the United States and Iran, the story's conclusion had Iranian leader Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini appoint the Joker his country's ambassador to the United Nations (allowing him to temporarily escape justice).[52]

Alan Moore and Brian Bolland's 1988 graphic novel The Killing Joke expands on the Joker's origins, describing the character as a failed comedian who adopts the identity of the Red Hood to support his pregnant wife.[25][53] Unlike The Dark Knight Returns, The Killing Joke takes place in mainstream continuity.[54] The novel is described by critics as one of the greatest Joker stories ever written, influencing later comic stories (including the forced retirement of then-Batgirl, Barbara Gordon, after she is paralyzed by the Joker) and films such as 1989's Batman and 2008's The Dark Knight.[55][56][57] Grant Morrison's 1989 Arkham Asylum: A Serious House on Serious Earth explores the psychoses of Batman, the Joker and other rogues in the eponymous facility.[58][59]

The 1992 animated series introduced the Joker's female sidekick: Harley Quinn, a psychiatrist who falls for—and ends up in an abusive relationship with—the Joker, becoming his supervillain accomplice. The character was popular, and was adapted into the comics as the Joker's romantic interest in 1999.[60] In the same year, Alan Grant and Norm Breyfogle's comic book Anarky concluded with the revelation that the titular character was the Joker's son. Breyfogle conceived the idea as a means to expand on Anarky's characterization, but O'Neil (by then the editor for the Batman series of books) was opposed to it, and only allowed it to be written under protest, and with a promise that the revelation would eventually be revealed incorrect. However, the Anarky series was cancelled before the rebuttal could be published.[61] The Joker's first major storyline in The New 52, DC Comics' 2011 reboot of story continuity, was 2012's "Death of the Family" by writer Scott Snyder and artist Greg Capullo. The story arc explores the symbiotic relationship between the Joker and Batman, and sees the villain shatter the trust between Batman and his adopted family.[19][62] Capullo's Joker design replaced his traditional outfit with a utilitarian, messy, and disheveled appearance to convey that the character was on a mission; his face (surgically removed in 2011's Detective Comics (vol. 2) #1) was reattached with belts, wires, and hooks, and he was outfitted with mechanics overalls.[63] The Joker's face was restored in Snyder's and Capullo's "Endgame" (2014), the concluding chapter to "Death of the Family".[64][65]

The conclusion of the 2020 "Joker War" storyline by writer James Tynion IV and artist Jorge Jiménez sees the Joker leave Gotham after Batman chooses to let him die.[66] This led to a second ongoing Joker series, beginning in March 2021 with Tynion writing and Guillem March providing art.[67]

Character biography

The Joker has undergone many revisions since his 1940 debut. The most common interpretation of the character is that of a man who, while disguised as the criminal Red Hood, is pursued by Batman and falls into a vat of chemicals that bleaches his skin, colors his hair green and his lips red, and drives him insane. The reasons why the Joker was disguised as the Red Hood and his identity before his transformation have changed over time.[17]

The character was introduced in Batman #1 (1940), in which he announces that he will kill three of Gotham's prominent citizens. Although the police protect his first announced victim, millionaire Henry Claridge, the Joker had poisoned him before making his announcement and Claridge dies with a ghastly grin on his face. Batman eventually defeats him, sending him to prison.[68] The Joker commits crimes ranging from whimsical to brutal, for reasons that, in Batman's words, "make sense to him alone".[42] Detective Comics #168 (1951) introduced the Joker's first origin story as the former Red Hood: a masked criminal who, during his final heist, vanished after leaping into a vat of chemicals to escape Batman. His resulting disfigurement drove him insane and led him to adopt the name "Joker", from the playing card figure he came to resemble.[25] The Joker's Silver Age transformation into a figure of fun was established in 1952's "The Joker's Millions". In this story, the Joker is obsessed with maintaining his illusion of wealth and celebrity as a criminal folk hero, afraid to let Gotham's citizens know that he is penniless and was tricked out of his fortune.[69] The 1970s redefined the character as a homicidal sociopath. "The Joker's Five-Way Revenge" has the Joker taking violent revenge on the former gang members who betrayed him,[33] while "The Laughing Fish" portrays him chemically disfiguring fish so they will share his trademark grin, hoping to profit from a copyright, and killing bureaucrats who stand in his way.[32]

 
The Killing Joke author Alan Moore in 2008. The novel has been described as the greatest Joker story ever told.[55][56][57]

Batman: The Killing Joke (1988) built on the Joker's 1951 origin story, portraying him as a failed comedian who participates in a robbery as the Red Hood to support his pregnant wife. Batman arrives to stop the robbery, provoking the terrified comedian into jumping into a vat of chemicals, which dyes his skin chalk-white, his hair green, and his lips bright red. His disfigurement, combined with the trauma of his wife's earlier accidental death, drives him insane, and results in the birth of the Joker.[25] However, the Joker says that this story may not be true; he admits that he does not remember exactly what drove him insane, and says that he prefers his past to be "multiple choice".[70] In this graphic novel, the Joker shoots and paralyzes Barbara Gordon, the former Batgirl, and tortures her father, Commissioner James "Jim" Gordon, to prove that it only takes "one bad day" to drive a normal man insane.[54] After Batman rescues Gordon and subdues the Joker, he offers to rehabilitate his old foe and end their rivalry. Although the Joker refuses, he shows his appreciation by sharing a joke with Batman.[71] Following the character's maiming of Barbara, she became a more important character in the DC Universe: the Oracle, a data gatherer and superhero informant, who has her revenge in Birds of Prey by shattering the Joker's teeth and destroying his smile.[54]

In the 1988 story "A Death in the Family", the Joker beats Jason Todd, the second Robin, with a crowbar and leaves him to die in an explosion. Todd's death haunts Batman, and for the first time he seriously considers killing the Joker.[50] The Joker temporarily escapes justice when Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini appoints him the Iranian ambassador to the United Nations, giving him diplomatic immunity; however, when he tries to poison the U.N. membership, he is defeated by Batman and Superman.[31]

In the 1999 "No Man's Land" storyline, the Joker murders Commissioner Gordon's second wife, Sarah, as she shields a group of infants.[72] He taunts Gordon, who shoots him in the kneecap. The Joker, lamenting that he may never walk again, collapses with laughter when he realizes that the commissioner has avenged Barbara's paralysis.[73]

The 2000s began with the crossover story "Emperor Joker", in which the Joker steals Mister Mxyzptlk's reality-altering power and remakes the universe in his image (torturing and killing Batman daily, before resurrecting him). When the supervillain then tries to destroy the universe, his reluctance to eliminate Batman makes him lose control, and Superman defeats him.[74] Broken by his experience, Batman's experiences of death are transferred to Superman by the Spectre so he can heal mentally.[75] In Joker: Last Laugh (2001), the doctors at Arkham Asylum convince the character that he is dying in an attempt to rehabilitate him. Instead, the Joker (flanked by an army of "Jokerized" supervillains) launches a final crime spree. Believing that Robin (Tim Drake) has been killed in the chaos, Dick Grayson beats the Joker to death (although Batman revives his foe to keep Grayson from becoming a murderer), and the villain succeeds in making a member of the Bat-family break their rule against killing.[31][68]

In "Under the Hood" (2005), a resurrected Todd tries to force Batman to avenge his death by killing the Joker. Batman refuses, arguing that if he allowed himself to kill the Joker, he would not be able to stop himself from killing other criminals.[76] The Joker kills Alexander Luthor, Jr. in Infinite Crisis (2005) for excluding him from the Secret Society of Super Villains, which considers him too unpredictable for membership.[77][78] In Morrison's "Batman and Son" (2006), a deranged police officer who impersonates Batman shoots the Joker in the face, scarring and disabling him. The supervillain returns in "The Clown at Midnight" (2007) as an enigmatic force who awakens and tries to kill Harley Quinn to prove to Batman that he has become more than human.[79][31] In the 2008 story arc "Batman R.I.P." the Joker is recruited by the Black Glove to destroy Batman, but betrays the group, killing its members one by one.[68] After Batman's apparent death in Final Crisis (2008), Grayson investigates a series of murders (which leads him to a disguised Joker).[80] The Joker is arrested, and then-Robin Damian Wayne beats him with a crowbar, paralleling Todd's murder. When the Joker escapes, he attacks the Black Glove, burying its leader Simon Hurt alive after the supervillain considers him a failure as an opponent; the Joker is then defeated by the recently returned Batman.[81][82][83]

In DC's The New 52, a 2011 relaunch of its titles following Flashpoint, the Joker has his own face cut off.[84] He disappears for a year, returning to launch an attack on Batman's extended family in "Death of the Family" so he and Batman can be the best hero and villain they can be.[85] At the end of the storyline, the Joker falls off a cliff into a dark abyss.[85][86] The Joker returns in the 2014 storyline "Endgame" in which he brainwashes the Justice League into attacking Batman, believing he has betrayed their relationship.[87][88] The story implies that the Joker is immortal—having existed for centuries in Gotham as a cause of tragedy after exposure to a substance the Joker terms "dionesium"—and is able to regenerate from mortal injuries. "Endgame" restores the Joker's face, and also reveals that he knows Batman's secret identity.[64] The story ends with the apparent deaths of Batman and the Joker at each other's hands, though it is revealed that they were both resurrected in a life-restoring Lazarus Pit, without their memories.[65][89]

During the "Darkseid War" (2015–2016) storyline, Batman uses Metron's Mobius Chair to find out the Joker's real name; the chair's answer leaves Batman in disbelief. In the DC Universe: Rebirth (2016) one-shot, Batman informs Hal Jordan that the chair told him there were three individual Jokers, not just one.[90] This revelation was the basis for the miniseries Batman: Three Jokers (2020), written by Geoff Johns with art by Jason Fabok. Three Jokers reveals that the three Jokers, who work in tandem, include "The Criminal", a methodical mastermind based on the Golden Age Joker; "The Clown", a goofy prankster based on the Silver Age Joker; and "The Comedian", a sadistic psychopath based on the Modern Age Joker.[91] The Comedian orchestrates the deaths of the other two Jokers and reveals himself as the original. The miniseries ends with the revelation that Batman knows the Joker's true identity.[92]

Origins

"They've given many origins of the Joker, how he came to be. That doesn't seem to matter—just how he is now. I never intended to give a reason for his appearance. We discussed that and Bill [Finger] and I never wanted to change it at that time. I thought—and he agreed—that it takes away some of the essential mystery."

– Jerry Robinson, the Joker's creator[93]

Although a number of backstories have been given, a definitive one has never been established for the Joker. An unreliable narrator, the character is uncertain of who he was before and how he became the Joker: "Sometimes I remember it one way, sometimes another ...if I'm going to have a past, I prefer it to be multiple choice!"[6][70] A story about the Joker's origin appeared in Detective Comics #168 (February 1951), more than decade after the character's debut. Here, the character is a laboratory worker who becomes the Red Hood (a masked criminal) to steal $1 million and retire. He falls into a vat of chemical waste when his heist is thwarted by Batman, emerging with bleached white skin, red lips, green hair and a permanent grin.[94][95]

This story was the basis for the most often-cited origin tale, Moore's one-shot The Killing Joke.[56] The man who will become the Joker quits his job as a lab assistant in order to fulfill his dream of being a stand-up comedian, only to fail miserably. Desperate to support his pregnant wife, he agrees to help two criminals commit a robbery as the Red Hood. The heist goes awry; the comedian leaps into a chemical vat to escape Batman, surfacing disfigured. This, combined with the earlier accidental death of his wife and unborn child, drives the comedian insane, turning him into the Joker.[25][31] This version has been cited in many stories, including Batman: The Man Who Laughs (in which Batman deduces that the Red Hood survived his fall and became the Joker), Batman #450 (in which the Joker dons the Red Hood to aid his recovery after the events in "A Death in the Family", but finds the experience too traumatic), Batman: Shadow of the Bat #38 (in which Joker's failed stand-up performance is shown), "Death of the Family",[95] and Batman: Three Jokers (which asserts that it is the canon origin story).[96] Other stories have expanded on this origin; "Pushback" suggests that the Joker's wife was murdered by a corrupt policeman working for the mobsters,[97] and "Payback" gives the Joker's first name as "Jack".[95] The ending of Batman: Three Jokers establishes that the Joker's wife did not actually die—rather, she fled to Alaska with the help of Gotham police and Batman because she feared her husband would be an abusive father; the police then told the Joker a story about her dying to protect her. The miniseries also reveals that Batman knows the Joker's identity, and has kept it secret in order to protect the criminal's wife and son.[96]

However, the Joker's unreliable memory has allowed writers to develop other origins for the character.[95] "Case Study", a Paul Dini-Alex Ross story, describes the Joker as a sadistic gangster who creates the Red Hood identity because he misses the thrill of committing robberies. He has his fateful first meeting with Batman, which results in his disfigurement. It is suggested that the Joker is sane, and researches his crimes to look like the work of a sick mind in order to avoid the death penalty. In Batman Confidential #7–12, the character Jack is a career criminal who is bored with his work. He encounters (and becomes obsessed with) Batman during a heist, embarking on a crime spree to attract the Caped Crusader's attention. After Jack injures Batman's girlfriend, Batman scars Jack's face with a permanent grin and betrays him to a group of mobsters, who torture him in a chemical plant. Jack escapes, but falls into an empty vat as gunfire punctures chemical tanks above him. The flood of chemicals (used in anti-psychotic medication) alters his appearance and completes his transformation.[98] In The Brave and the Bold #31, the superhero Atom enters the Joker's mind and sees the criminal's former self - a violent sociopath who tortures animals, murders his own parents, and kills for fun while committing robberies.[99] Snyder's "Zero Year" (2013) suggests that the pre-disfigured Joker was a criminal mastermind leading a gang of Red Hoods.[87][100]

Characterization

Renowned as Batman's greatest enemy,[101][102][103][104] the Joker is known by a number of nicknames, including the Clown Prince of Crime, the Harlequin of Hate, the Ace of Knaves, and the Jester of Genocide.[103][105] During the evolution of the DC Universe, interpretations and versions of the Joker have taken two main forms. The original, dominant image is that of a psychopath[106] with genius-level intelligence and a warped, sadistic sense of humor.[107][108] The other version, popular in comic books from the late 1940s to the 1960s and in the 1960s television series, is an eccentric, harmless prankster and thief.[109] Like other long-lived characters, the Joker's character and cultural interpretations have changed with time; however, unlike other characters who may need to reconcile or ignore previous versions to make sense, more than any other comic book character, the Joker thrives on his mutable and irreconcilable identities.[110] The Joker is typically seen in a purple suit with a long-tailed, padded-shoulder jacket, a string tie, gloves, striped pants and spats on pointed-toe shoes (sometimes with a wide-brimmed hat). This appearance is such a fundamental aspect of the character that when the 2004 animated series The Batman placed the Joker in a straitjacket, it quickly redesigned him in his familiar suit.[109]

The Joker is obsessed with Batman, the pair representing a yin-yang of opposing dark and light force; although it is the Joker who represents humor and color and Batman who dwells in the dark.[111] No crime – including murder, theft, and terrorism – is beyond the Joker, and his exploits are theatrical performances that are funny to him alone. Spectacle is more important than success for the Joker, and if it is not spectacular it is boring.[112] Although the Joker claims indifference to everything, he secretly craves Batman's attention and validation.[113][32] The character was described as having killed over 2,000 people in The Joker: Devil's Advocate (1996). Despite this body count, he is always found not guilty by reason of insanity and sent to Arkham Asylum, avoiding the death penalty.[114][115] Many of the Joker's acts attempt to force Batman to kill; to the Joker, the greatest victory would be to make Batman become like him. The Joker displays no instinct for self-preservation, and is willing to die to prove his point that anyone could become like him after "one bad day".[116] The Joker is the "personification of the irrational," and represents "everything Batman [opposes]."[117]

Personality

 
Joker co-creator Jerry Robinson in 2008; he conceived the Joker as an exotic, enduring archvillain who could repeatedly challenge Batman

The Joker's main characteristic is his apparent insanity, although he is not described as having any particular psychological disorder. Like a psychopath, he lacks empathy, a conscience, and concern over right and wrong. In Arkham Asylum: A Serious House on Serious Earth, the Joker is described as capable of processing outside sensory information only by adapting to it. This enables him to create a new personality every day (depending on what would benefit him) and explains why, at different times, he is a mischievous clown or a psychopathic killer.[118] In "The Clown at Midnight" (Batman #663 (April 2007)), the Joker enters a meditative state where he evaluates his previous selves to consciously create a new personality, effectively modifying himself for his needs.[119]

The Killing Joke (in which the Joker is the unreliable narrator) explains the roots of his insanity as "one bad day": losing his wife and unborn child and being disfigured by chemicals, paralleling Batman's origin in the loss of his parents. He tries (and fails) to prove that anyone can become like him after one bad day by torturing Commissioner Gordon, physically and psychologically.[29][54] Batman offers to rehabilitate his foe; the Joker apologetically declines, believing it too late for him to be saved.[71] Other interpretations show that the Joker is fully aware of how his actions affect others and that his insanity as merely an act.[111] Comics scholar Peter Coogan describes the Joker as trying to reshape reality to fit himself by imposing his face on his victims (and fish) in an attempt to make the world comprehensible by creating a twisted parody of himself. Englehart's "The Laughing Fish" demonstrates the character's illogical nature: trying to copyright fish that bear his face, and not understanding why threatening the copyright clerk cannot produce the desired result.[35][120]

The Joker is alternatively depicted as sexual and asexual.[121] In The Dark Knight Returns and Arkham Asylum: A Serious House on Serious Earth, the Joker is seductive toward Batman; it is uncertain if their relationship has homoerotic undertones or if the Joker is simply trying to manipulate his nemesis. Frank Miller interpreted the character as fixated on death and uninterested in sexual relationships, while Robinson believed that the Joker is capable of a romantic relationship.[121] His relationship with Harley Quinn is abusively paradoxical; although the Joker keeps her at his side, he heedlessly harms her (for example, throwing her out a window without seeing if she survives). Harley loves him, but the Joker does not reciprocate her feelings, chiding her for distracting him from other plans.[122]

Snyder's "Death of the Family" describes the Joker as in love with Batman, although not in a traditionally romantic way. The Joker believes that Batman has not killed him because he makes Batman better and he loves the villain for that.[62][123] Batman comic book writer Peter Tomasi concurred, stating that the Joker's main goal is to make Batman the best that he can be.[124] The Joker and Batman represent opposites: the extroverted Joker wears colorful clothing and embraces chaos, while the introverted, monochromatic Batman represents order and discipline. The Joker is often depicted as defining his existence through his conflict with Batman. In 1994's "Going Sane", the villain tries to lead a normal life after Batman's (apparent) death, only to become his old self again when Batman reappears; in "Emperor Joker", an apparently omnipotent Joker cannot destroy Batman without undoing himself. Since the Joker is simply "the Joker", he believes that Batman is "Batman" (with or without the costume) and has no interest in what is behind Batman's mask, ignoring opportunities to learn Batman's secret identity.[74][125] Given the opportunity to kill Batman, the villain demurs; he believes that without their game, winning is pointless.[113] The character has no desire for typical criminal goals like money or power; his criminality is designed only to continue his game with Batman.[84]

The Joker is portrayed as having no fear; when fellow supervillain Scarecrow doses him with fear toxin in Knightfall (1993), the Joker merely laughs and says "Boo!"[126] The villain has been temporarily rendered sane by several means, including telepathic manipulation by the Martian Manhunter[71] and being resurrected in a Lazarus Pit (an experience typically inducing temporary insanity in the subject). At these moments, the Joker is depicted as expressing remorse for his crimes;[127][128] however, during a medically induced period of partial sanity in Batman: Cacophony, he tells Batman, "I don't hate you 'cause I'm crazy. I'm crazy 'cause I hate you," and confirms that he will only stop killing when Batman is dead.[129][130]

Skills and equipment

 
The Joker's lapel often holds an acid-spraying flower

The Joker has no inherent superhuman abilities.[131] He commits crimes with a variety of weaponized thematic props such as a deck of razor-tipped playing cards, rolling marbles, jack-in-the-boxes with unpleasant surprises and exploding cigars capable of leveling a building. The flower in his lapel sprays acid, and his hand often holds a lethal joy buzzer conducting a million volts of electricity, although both items were introduced in 1952 as harmless joke items.[30][132] However, his chemical genius provides his most-notable weapon: "Joker venom", a liquid or gaseous toxin that sends its targets into fits of uncontrollable laughter; higher doses can lead to paralysis, coma or death, leaving its victim with a ghoulish, pained rictus grin. The Joker has used venom since his debut; only he knows the formula, and is shown to be gifted enough to manufacture the toxin from ordinary household chemicals. Another version of the venom (used in Joker: Last Laugh) makes its victims resemble the Joker, susceptible to his orders.[32][68][133][134] The villain is immune to venom and most poisons; in Batman #663 (April 2007), Morrison writes that being "an avid consumer of his own chemical experiments, the Joker's immunity to poison concoctions that might kill another man in an instant has been developed over years of dedicated abuse."[135][109]

The character's arsenal is inspired by his nemesis' weaponry, such as batarangs. In "The Joker's Utility Belt" (1952), he mimicked Batman's utility belt with non-lethal items, such as Mexican jumping beans and sneezing powder.[132] In 1942's "The Joker Follows Suit", the villain built his versions of the Batplane and Batmobile, the Jokergyro and Jokermobile (the latter with a large Joker face on its hood), and created a Joker-signal with which criminals could summon him for their heists.[136] The Jokermobile lasted for several decades, evolving with the Batmobile. His technical genius is not limited by practicality, allowing him to hijack Gotham's television airwaves to issue threats, transform buildings into death traps, launch a gas attack on the city and rain poisoned glass shards on its citizens from an airship.[137][138]

The Joker is portrayed as skilled in melee combat, from his initial appearances when he defeats Batman in a sword fight (nearly killing him), and others when he overwhelms Batman but declines to kill him.[139] He is talented with firearms, although even his guns are theatrical; his long-barreled revolver often releases a flag reading "Bang", and a second trigger-pull launches the flag to skewer its target.[132][140] Although formidable in combat, the Joker's chief asset is his mind.[141]

Relationships

The Joker's unpredictable, homicidal nature makes him one of the most feared supervillains in the DC Universe; the Trickster says in the 1995 miniseries Underworld Unleashed, "When super-villains want to scare each other, they tell Joker stories."[142][143] Gotham's villains also feel threatened by the character; depending on the circumstances, he is as likely to fight with his rivals for control of the city as he is to join them for an entertaining outcome.[144] The Joker interacts with other supervillains who oppose Batman, whether he is on the streets or in Arkham Asylum. He has collaborated with criminals like the Penguin, the Riddler, and Two-Face, although these partnerships rarely end well due to the Joker's desire for unbridled chaos, and he uses his stature to lead others (such as Killer Croc and the Scarecrow).[145] The Joker's greatest rival is the smartest man in the world, Lex Luthor. Although they have a friendly partnership in 1950's World's Finest Comics #88, later unions emphasized their mutual hostility and clashing egos.[146]

Despite his tendency to kill subordinates on a whim, the Joker has no difficulty attracting henchmen with a seemingly infinite cash supply and intimidation; they are too afraid of their employer to refuse his demands that they wear red clown noses or laugh at his macabre jokes.[137] Even with his unpredictability and lack of superhuman powers, the 2007 limited series Salvation Run sees hundreds of villains fall under his spell because they are more afraid of him than Lex Luthor.[147] Batman #186 (1966) introduced the Joker's first sidekick: the one-shot character Gaggy Gagsworthy, who is short and dressed like a clown; the character was later resurrected as an enemy of his replacement, Harley Quinn.[148][149] Introduced in the 1992 animated series, Quinn is the Joker's former Arkham psychiatrist who develops an obsessive infatuation with him and dons a red-and-black harlequin costume to join him as his sidekick and on-off girlfriend. They have a classic abusive relationship; even though the Joker constantly insults, hurts, and even tries to kill Harley, she always returns to him, convinced that he loves her.[149][150] The Joker is sometimes shown to keep spotted hyenas as pets; this trait was introduced in the 1977 animated series The New Adventures of Batman.[137] A 1976 issue of Batman Family introduced Duela Dent as the Joker's daughter, though her parentage claim was later proven to be false.[39]

Although his chief obsession is Batman, the character has occasionally ventured outside Gotham City to fight Batman's superhero allies. In "To Laugh and Die in Metropolis" (1987) the character kidnaps Lois Lane, distracting Superman with a nuclear weapon. The story is notable for the Joker taking on a (relative) god and the ease with which Superman defeats him—it took only 17 pages. Asked why he came to Metropolis, the Joker replies simply: "Oh Superman, why not?"[151] In 1995, the Joker fought his third major DC hero: Wonder Woman, who drew on the Greek god of trickery to temper the Joker's humor and shatter his confidence.[152] The character has joined supervillain groups like the Injustice Gang and the Injustice League to take on superhero groups like the Justice League.[153][154]

Alternative versions

A number of alternate universes in DC Comics publications allow writers to introduce variations on the Joker, in which the character's origins, behavior, and morality differ from the mainstream setting.[155] The Dark Knight Returns depicts the final battle between an aged Batman and Joker; others portray the aftermath of the Joker's death at the hands of a number of characters, including Superman.[74][156] Still others describe distant futures in which the Joker is a computer virus or a hero trying to defeat the era's tyrannical Batman.[141] In some stories, the Joker is someone else entirely; Flashpoint portrays Batman's mother Martha Wayne becoming the Joker after being driven mad by her son's murder,[157] and in Superman: Speeding Bullets, Lex Luthor becomes the Joker in a world where Superman is Batman.[158]

Amalgam Comics

Amalgam Comics is a 1997–98 shared imprint of DC Comics and Marvel Comics, which features characters that are composites of DC and Marvel characters. The Hyena (Creed H. Quinn) is a composite of DC's Joker and Marvel's Sabretooth. He is the nemesis of the Dark Claw (Logan Wayne), a composite of Batman and Marvel's Wolverine. Hyena, like Wayne, is a mutant with the ability to rapidly heal injuries. The two were both subjects of the Weapon X program, an attempt to create "living weapons". Hyena used his enhancements to become a psychopathic killer. The Hyena first appeared in Legends of the Dark Claw #1 (April 1996).

Batman Beyond

In the timeline of Batman Beyond, set in the DC animated universe after the events of the film Batman Beyond: Return of the Joker, the Joker remains deceased. In the Justice League Beyond arc "Flashdrive" his corpse appears in a flashback, set immediately after his death at the hands of Tim Drake in Return of the Joker, being buried beneath Arkham Asylum by Batman and James Gordon. The Joker's death is shown to be the catalyst for Barbara Gordon's retirement as Batgirl besides Drake's eventual retirement as Robin.

Batman/Judge Dredd

Batman/Judge Dredd featured the Joker character as a member of the Dark Judges, in the original miniseries Batman and Judge Dredd: Die Laughing #1–2 (1998). The Joker helped free the original Dark Judges in exchange for immortality. He received his payment by having his spirit merged into a corpse (which was not quite the "immortality" he had sought), creating "Judge Joker". As a Dark Judge, the Joker could kill masses of people with his laugh, which caused human heads to explode.

His tenure was a brief one, as he quickly became bored with slaughter simply for its own sake and did not share the original Dark Judges' fanatical zeal for their "sacred mission" of purging all life. The Joker was restored to his normal, mortal form upon returning to Gotham City via a defective dimensional jump device.

Batman/Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles

During Batman/Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles the Joker is first seen mocking one of Arkham's psychiatrists, earning him a dose of medication.[159] The Joker is also mutated into a king cobra in style of naga. Despite almost killing Batman, he is quickly knocked out by Donatello.

Batman: Damned

In the miniseries Batman: Damned, printed under the DC Black Label, the Joker's death is the center of the story. The circumstances are left unclear, though it occurred after a confrontation with Batman led to both of them tumbling over a bridge. The Joker's body is later discovered by police, having washed up on shore, while Batman is severely injured and disoriented.[160] Harley Quinn snaps completely and performs surgery on herself to resemble the Joker, before leading his henchmen on a revenge mission.[161]

Batman: Earth One

The Joker is introduced towards the end of Volume Three of the graphic novel series Batman: Earth One. In this version, he is suggested to be the one responsible for the Flying Graysons' demise, and frees Toyman from police custody in order to enlist him for his future plans.

Batman: White Knight

In this alternate reality, the Joker mocks Batman's attitude towards his "crusade" for justice, claiming that Batman's actions amount to nothing but an attempt to control his world and the Joker simply gives him the opportunity to express this rage. Disgusted at this claim, Batman force-feeds the Joker a bottle of pills that the villain had just stolen, but the overdose has the unexpected side effect of restoring the Joker to sanity, as well as remembering his former identity of Jack Napier, prompting him to "order" the GCPD to either charge Batman for assault, or he would sue the department for complicity in Batman's abuse of prisoners.[162] Napier's case against the department continues as he states that the GCPD locked him up as a major criminal on minimal evidence, and even finds himself reforming Harley Quinn as he reveals that he drove the true Doctor Harleen Quinzell away a long time ago and the Harley he has been working with was another madwoman.[163] He reinforces his vendetta against Batman by discovering records of the cost of building insurance to compensate for all the damage caused by Batman's actions, as well as taking control of several other villains by adapting the technology used by the Mad Hatter to take control of Clayface and then expose the others to samples of Clayface, allowing him to control them by proxy.[164]

Captain Carrot and His Amazing Zoo Crew

The 1980s series Captain Carrot and His Amazing Zoo Crew presented the parallel Earth of "Earth-C", a world populated by talking animal superheroes. Captain Carrot, in his secret identity of Roger Rodney Rabbit, is the creator of the superhero comic Just'a Lotta Animals (a cartoon-animal version of the Justice League of America). Captain Carrot and the Zoo eventually discover the characters in Rodney's comics actually live on "Earth-C-Minus", in yet another alternate universe. There, the Porker, a pig analog of the Joker, is the nemesis of the Batmouse.[165] A poster of the Porker (drawn in a style resembling Alex Ross's version of the Joker) is later seen at a comic book convention on Earth-C.[166]

DC/Marvel crossovers

  • In the 1981 story Batman and the Incredible Hulk: The Monster and the Madman, the Shaper of Worlds loses control of his powers after passing through a unique field of radiation. He makes contact with the Joker to steal gamma ray equipment from Wayne Enterprises that can treat his condition. Despite the intervention of the Hulk, the Joker manages to escape with the equipment by tricking the Hulk into fighting Batman. The stolen ray proves ineffective, but exposure to the Hulk's unique gamma radiation cures the Shaper instead. As part of a deal with the Joker, the Shaper agrees to make the Joker's dreams real, but Batman and the Hulk are able to trick him into overloading his ability to dream.[167]
  • Carnage teams up with the Joker in Spider-Man and Batman: Disordered Minds #1 (1995). The two meet when behavioral psychiatrist Cassandra Briar attempts to use the two killers as tests for a chip that will "lobotomise" their homicidal instincts. The Carnage symbiote neutralizes Kasady's chip after it is implanted, with Kasady pretending that the chip had worked so that he could meet the Joker. After Carnage removes the Joker's chip, the two's mutual psychoses lead them into a brief alliance before their differing methods of murder cause a clash; Carnage favors numbers and actually seeing the death of his victims of his murder sprees close-up, while the Joker prefers the artistry of his usual traps and tricks, Carnage dismissing the Joker's methods as slow, while Joker sees Carnage as an amateur as anyone can just go out and kill people. The Joker tries to kill Carnage with a bomb, but Carnage drapes a piece of symbiote over a corpse to fake his death. Batman and Spider-Man uncover the trick, and Batman is subsequently engulfed in Carnage's symbiote tendrils. Carnage proposes to kill Batman, but the Joker threatens to set off a bomb to destroy Gotham, himself and Carnage, rather than see Carnage kill Batman. As Batman battles Carnage, Spider-Man follows the Joker. The Joker defiantly dares Spider-Man to kill him, however, Spider-Man is unable to stoop to his level, electing instead to apprehend the Joker in classic hero style.[168]
  • In the 1997 DC/Marvel special Batman/Captain America, the Red Skull hires the Joker to steal an atomic bomb during World War II. Joker evades Batman, Cap, Bucky, and Robin and delivers it to the Skull, but is horrified when he learns that the Skull is a Nazi (saying "I may be a criminal lunatic but I'm an American criminal lunatic!"). When the Skull threatens to drop the bomb on Washington D.C., the Joker attacks him in the plane's cargo bay. While Captain America and Batman fly the plane over the ocean, the two villains are dropped out with the bomb just before it explodes. Both Captain America and Batman are convinced that the two are still alive somehow.[169]

Earth-Two

Joker's history on Earth-Two is the same as his Golden Age history.

King Kull later recruited Joker of Earth-Two to assist Weeper II of Earth-S, Doctor Light of Earth-One, and Shade of Earth-One in order to trap one side of Earth-S in darkness. Joker did show Weeper II how he commits his crimes on Earth-Two. Their plot was defeated by Batman and Robin of Earth-Two, Mr. Scarlet and Pinky the Whiz Kid of Earth-S, and Hawkman and Hawkgirl of Earth-One.[170]

After Batman had died from terminal cancer, Joker refused to believe that his archenemy is dead. Dick Grayson posed as Batman to mesmerize Joker enough for Huntress to apprehend him.[171]

When Nicholas Lucien came out of a coma following his last fight with Batman, he found himself incarcerated at Gotham State Penitentiary where Joker became his cellmate. Lucien planned to have his revenge on Batman only to be told by Joker that Batman is dead.[172]

Earth-2

The Joker of the Post-52 Earth-2 is depicted as an old man, frail and wheelchair-reliant after a lifetime of exposure to deadly chemicals, and ironically unable to laugh without hurting himself. After disfiguring the Huntress's boyfriend, Harry Simms, in an attempt to create a replacement for the deceased Two-Face, he is tracked down by the vengeful heroine. The Joker attempts to kill the Huntress with a lethal joy buzzer, but the attack is intercepted by Power Girl, and the Joker is himself electrocuted as a result.[173]

Earth-3

The Joker of Earth-3 is a hero operating under the alias of the Jokester, and first appeared in Countdown #32 (Sep 2007). He is the nemesis of Owlman, a villainous version of Batman. Jokester and his daughter Duela Dent are killed by the rogue Monitor Solomon.[174]

Earth-9

The Joker of Earth-9 in the DC Comics imprint Tangent Comics is a female hero who uses her array of jokes and comical devices to mock the evil tyrant Superman's authority. She first appears in Tangent Comics/The Joker #1 (Dec. 1997). This Joker is actually three women: student Mary Marvel, entrepreneur Christie Xanadu, and reporter Lori Lemaris, all of whom take turns wearing the Joker costume. Mary is captured by the Tangent Superman and tortured into revealing the identities of the other two before she is killed. Lemaris is sent to prison and Christina's fate is left unknown. Lemaris is later re-offered the Joker mantle, but instead chooses to take up that of her fallen comrade, Manhunter.

Earth-16

On this alternate Earth, the children of metahuman heroes and villains have been forced into apparent retirement due to the efficiency of Superman robots. Amongst these individuals is Duela Dent/the Joker's Daughter, friends with Alexis Luthor, daughter of Lex Luthor.[175]

Earth-23

In the timeline of Batman: The Brave and the Bold, set outside the DC animated universe, the character operates as the hero the Red Hood, escaping the clutches of the villainous Batman counterpart Owlman.

Earth -22

On Earth -22 of the Dark Multiverse, the Joker discovers Batman's secret identity. He slaughters most of Batman's other rogues, as well as Commissioner Gordon, and then infects a sizeable portion of Gotham's population with the same chemicals that transformed him, subsequently killing several parents in front of their children with the goal of creating a gathering of children that were essentially a combination of himself and Batman. As Batman grapples with the Joker, the Joker finally dies from the chemicals that had originally transformed him. As he dies, his decaying body infects Batman with a virus that gradually transforms him into a new Joker. By the time the Batman realizes this, the process is too advanced for him to find a cure. Batman kills most of his allies and transforms Damian into a mini-Joker before turning on the rest of the Justice League and then conquering the world.[176] Although the Batman Who Laughs successfully leads the other Dark Knights in a large-scale assault on the prime DC Universe on behalf of Barbatos, he is finally defeated by Batman and the Joker of the prime Earth. The Joker mockingly notes that even an insane Batman can only plan for scenarios that he believes are possible, and an alliance between the Joker and the Batman is the one thing the Batman Who Laughs could never have considered.

Earth 2

In 2011, "The New 52" rebooted the DC continuity. On Earth 2, Joker is a dangerous criminal who is imprisoned in a stasis chamber at Arkham Base. When Batman entered Arkham base to look for inmates to aid him, he shot Joker in the head.[177]

Elseworlds

Elseworlds titles are stories that take place in their own separate continuities and often feature different interpretations of mainstream continuity characters.

Batman: Bloodstorm (1994)

In Batman: Bloodstorm, a sequel to Batman & Dracula: Red Rain, the Joker becomes the leader of a group of vampires after the death of their original leader, Dracula. Although he successfully coordinates their efforts to take control of Gotham's major crime families, the now-vampire Batman aided by were-cat Selina Kyle is able to destroy the Joker's minions. Unfortunately, Selina is killed in the final battle with the Joker's vampires, with her death causing Batman to succumb to his lust for blood and drink from the Joker. Although he stakes his foe to prevent him from coming back as a vampire, Batman is left tormented by the knowledge that the Joker won their long conflict by driving him to kill, often reflecting that he is damned by Dracula's bite and the Joker's blood in equal measure as he surrenders to his vampire side and turns on his old enemies.

Batman: In Darkest Knight (1994)

In Batman: In Darkest Knight, a Joker/Two-Face analog character is created when Sinestro absorbs the mind of Joe Chill, driving him insane and resulting in his taking on Joker's iconic purple suit and warped sense of humor (as well as a state resembling multiple personality disorder). The classic Joker origin (as depicted in The Killing Joke) is referenced, but averted by Green Lantern Bruce Wayne; after being arrested, the Red Hood says he has "had a really bad day", and Bruce counters by saying that that is no excuse, because everyone has terrible days, which shames the Hood into apologizing.

Batman: Leatherwing (1994)

In Batman: Leatherwing, the Joker is represented as the "Laughing Man", the deformed and insane pirate captain of the ship Pescador. He is the adversary of Captain Leatherwing, a Batman analogue.

Batman: Nosferatu (1999)

In Batman: Nosferatu, the Joker appears as the Laughing Man, a monstrous cyborg created by the experiments of the depraved Dr. Arkham, who uses him as an assassin. This version of the Joker ironically ends up creating this world's Batman after an assassination attempt on Bruce Wayne's counterpart.

Batman: Two Faces (1998)

In Batman: Two Faces, the Joker is not an independent entity, but a shared identity created when a potion created by Bruce Wayne to give himself superhuman strength also creates a new personality, Bruce alternating randomly between himself and the Joker, his Batman identity fighting crime, while the Joker commits murders. After he realizes the truth and confesses to his allies, Bruce, unable to cure himself, allows himself to fall off a building to stop the Joker once and for all.

Gotham by Gaslight (1989)

The Joker cameos in Gotham by Gaslight as a serial killer who, having married and poisoned at least 10 women, tries to commit suicide with strychnine when he is caught, leaving him with a permanent grin.

JLA: The Nail (1998)

In JLA: The Nail, the Joker is provided with Kryptonian gauntlets and launches an attack on Arkham Asylum, forcing most of the inmates to fight each other before brutally murdering Batgirl and Robin while forcing Batman to watch. Catwoman distracts Joker long enough for Batman to escape, but the traumatised Batman subsequently kills the Joker in a rage. During JLA: Another Nail (2004), Batman encounters the Joker in the afterlife when dimensional anomalies allow him to escape from Hell, briefly attempting to sacrifice himself to ensure that the Joker will remain trapped, but Robin and Batgirl's spirit halts Batman's attempted sacrifice and gives him the strength to move on from his guilt.

Superman & Batman: Generations (1999)

In the Superman & Batman: Generations miniseries, the DC characters are shown to age at a normal rate, with Batman and Superman beginning their careers in 1939. In 1949, the Joker and Lex Luthor kidnap a pregnant Lois Lane and expose her to gold kryptonite; this renders her first-born child a normal human.[178] In 1969, the now-elderly Joker secretly escapes Arkham Asylum and poses as 'Joker Junior', claiming to be the original's protégé. The Joker kills the second Batman (an adult Dick Grayson) before revealing his true identity to the police as he gloats about how he has finally killed Batman, but Bruce Junior, Bruce Wayne's son and Grayson's Robin, manages to switch costumes with his mentor to create the impression that the Joker killed Robin rather than Batman.[179] In 1975, Grayson's spirit attacks the Joker in an attempt to kill him, but the spirit of the deceased Alfred Pennyworth convinces Grayson to pass on as the Joker can be no threat to anyone. Learning that his enemy is about to die of old age, the now-retired Bruce Wayne dons the cape and cowl for a final visit to the Joker's deathbed. Batman rejects the Joker's request to learn his true identity, on the grounds that the Joker is the last man that he would want to bring peace to.[180]

Superman: Speeding Bullets (1993)

This Elseworlds story Superman: Speeding Bullets is set on an Earth where baby Kal-El was adopted by Thomas and Martha Wayne and raised as Bruce Wayne. When Bruce's parents are killed, he becomes the ruthless vigilante Batman. Batman's nemesis is Lex Luthor who, in this reality, was injured in the same type of chemical accident that created the main universe Joker. The accident also drives Luthor insane, and he attempts to destroy Gotham City with an army of thugs, but is stopped by Batman.

Thrillkiller and Thrillkiller '62

In the Elseworlds miniseries Batman: Thrillkiller (Jan.-March 1997), the Joker is gangster Bianca Steeplechase, and the nemesis of Batgirl and Robin. Steeplechase poisons Robin, masquerades as the mayor's wife, abducts and tortures Bruce Wayne, and is in a lesbian relationship with Earth-37's Harley Quinn. Bianca is killed by Batgirl, drowning in the Gotham River.[181]

Flashpoint

In the alternate timeline of the Flashpoint event, Martha Wayne is the Joker (and even resembles Heath Ledger's portrayal as seen in The Dark Knight). After Bruce Wayne is shot and killed by Joe Chill, Martha is unable to cope with her loss, so she cuts open her cheeks to create a faux smile.[182]

As the Joker, she is the nemesis of Batman and uses Yo-Yo as a henchman. She kidnaps Harvey Dent's son and daughter. The Joker kills James Gordon after she tricks Gordon into shooting Harvey's daughter (disguised as the Joker). After Dent's son and daughter are saved, Batman confronts the Joker[183] about their son's death. As Batman has recently met Barry Allen, Martha learns that there is a way to rewrite history where Bruce will live, although they will die. Realizing that her son will be Batman in that timeline, Martha flees in horror, falling to her death in the caverns below Wayne Manor.[182]

Injustice: Gods Among Us comic

In this spin-off of the online game, the Joker tires of his unsuccessful fight with Batman, and decides to attack Superman. He and Harley Quinn kill Jimmy Olsen and abduct Lois Lane (who is pregnant with Superman's child). They place a stolen nuclear warhead within Metropolis with a deadman switch wired to Lois. After exposing Superman to kryptonite-laced fear toxin (stolen from the Scarecrow), Superman mistakes Lois for Doomsday and kills her. Metropolis is destroyed in the subsequent nuclear detonation. A grief-stricken and vengeful Superman confronts the captured Joker, who states that he will just escape to commit more crimes and taunts Superman about not finding love and happiness again, saying he will take it again from him. Enraged beyond words, Superman kills the Joker and establishes the Regime, intent on eliminating crime through any means necessary.

In the Year Three comic series, Superman is placed into a magical sleep where he imagines events playing out differently. He is able to break free of the fear toxin in time to save Lois, their child, and Metropolis. Before an angry Superman can attack the Joker, Batman takes the Joker away. When the Joker confesses to Batman that he would try to kill Lois again, Batman kills the Joker and is imprisoned as a result. With the tragedy averted, Superman is able to live a happy life with his wife and child. Superman is eventually woken from his dream and forced to contend with a world where the Joker bested him much to his agonizing fury.

In Year Four it is revealed that the Joker's name is used by the Joker Underground, a large group of people who oppose Superman's Regime and see the Joker as a symbol of freedom. This catches Batwoman and Harley Quinn's eyes and they convince the protestors to use a different system. The Underground agree, but shortly after the two depart an enraged Superman shows up, furious they are using the Joker as a symbol. He then kills the Underground, including over 200 people, as punishment. This results in others continuing to use the Joker's name as a symbol, in response to the fact that Superman showed he is willing to murder those who had already agreed to stop using the Joker's name as their symbol, resulting in the Underground being temporarily co-opted by the Joker of an alternate universe.

Joker (2008)

Another graphic novel, called simply Joker, focuses on the character in a more gritty, realistic version of the Batman mythos.

Planetary/Batman

Planetary/Batman presents the Joker as a field agent for Planetary named Jasper, working under Richard Grayson. He is apparently harmless and has a habit of giggling when he is nervous. Elijah Snow mentions not liking the way Jasper "kept hugging himself" when looking at pictures of homicides.[184]

Smallville

In a comic book miniseries based on the television series Smallville, an interpretation of the Joker made his debut in Smallville: Alien #3 (February 2014). He is the Earth-13 version of Batman and incorporates an element of the Crime Syndicate/Society character, Owlman in addition to pale skin and green hair of Joker.[185]

Possible futures

Batman: Digital Justice

In the 1990 graphic novel Batman: Digital Justice created by Pepe Moreno, an artificial intelligence calling itself the "Joker Virus" takes over a futuristic, technology-dependent Gotham City in the late 21st century and claims to be the reincarnation of its creator, the original Joker. Batman, in this version the grandson of Commissioner James W. Gordon, stops the virus with help from another A.I.: the Batcomputer, as programmed by the long-dead Bruce Wayne.

Dark Knight universe

 
Left: Jokers as seen in The Dark Knight Returns
Right: Dick Grayson as the new "Joker" as seen in The Dark Knight Strikes Again
  • In the alternative future of The Dark Knight Returns (1986), the Joker has been catatonic since Batman's retirement but regains consciousness after seeing a news story about his nemesis' reemergence. He manipulates his psychiatrist into declaring him cured, and hires a publicist to book him on a late night talk show. He then embarks on a killing spree, drawing Batman out into the open. Batman pursues him into the Tunnel of Love at a carnival, where he fractures the Joker's neck in a fit of rage, but cannot bring himself to kill his old foe. The Joker then commits suicide by twisting his fractured neck until it breaks completely, thus framing Batman as a murderer. His body is soon found by the police before it abruptly bursts into flame, Batman having rigged the corpse to create a distraction.
  • In The Dark Knight Strikes Again (2001), the sequel to The Dark Knight Returns, a man resembling the Joker with supernatural powers and a healing factor kills numerous superheroes under orders from Lex Luthor to foil Batman's superhero revolution against Luthor's dictatorial regime. Despite his appearance, several heroes insist that he cannot be the deceased Joker. In the climax, he is revealed to be Dick Grayson, who had been fired and abandoned by Batman many years ago. Grayson targeted Batman's partner Carrie Kelley specifically because of his jealousy of the girl. Grayson's disguise as the Joker is shown to have been a ploy to taunt Batman emotionally before taking his revenge. Dick is killed after a final confrontation with Batman.
  • In All Star Batman and Robin the Boy Wonder, the prequel to The Dark Knight Returns (1986), the Joker is revealed to be the man responsible for the death of Grayson's parents, having hired "Jocko-Boy" Vanzetti to murder them during a circus act.
  • In the one-shot Dark Knight Returns: The Last Crusade, the Joker is revealed to be responsible for the death of Jason Todd, by having ordered his men to brutally beat the new Robin to death in retaliation of his last defeat by the Dynamic Duo.[186]
  • In Dark Knight Returns: The Golden Child (2019), the sequel to The Dark Knight III: The Master Race, another Joker is seen working alongside Darkseid and campaigning to be President of the United States while his henchmen cause chaos in the streets of Gotham before he is defeated by Carrie Kelley as Batwoman. While the identity of this Joker is never revealed in story, the character notes in the deluxe edition of the comic by the artist, Rafael Grampá, for the character seems to suggest that the Joker who appears in The Golden Child is in fact the original Joker from The Dark Knight Returns, and that Frank Miller did not want to explain how or why the Joker was alive again after his death, as such Grampá explains in the character notes he decided to draw the Joker to look as if he had plastic surgery "Since the last time we saw him in the Dark Knight saga, where he was burnt!"

Superman/Batman (2008)

A "Super deformed" version of the Justice League of America and some villains (the Joker among them) appeared in Superman/Batman #51 and #52. In Grant Morrison's 2014–15 miniseries The Multiversity, this alternate Earth is given the designation Earth-42.[187]

Literary analysis

 
A 2015 art exhibition at the Barcelona International Comics Convention focused on the Joker, celebrating the character's 75th anniversary[188]

Since the Bronze Age of Comics, the Joker has been interpreted as an archetypal trickster, displaying talents for cunning intelligence, social engineering, pranks, theatricality, and idiomatic humor. Like the trickster, the Joker alternates between malicious violence and clever, harmless whimsy.[189] He is amoral and not driven by ethical considerations, but by a shameless and insatiable nature, and although his actions are condemned as evil, he is necessary for cultural robustness.[190] The trickster employs amoral and immoral acts to destabilize the status quo and reveal cultural, political, and ethical hypocrisies that society attempts to ignore.[191] However, the Joker differs in that his actions typically only benefit himself.[192] The Joker possesses abnormal body imagery, reflecting an inversion of order. The trickster is simultaneously subhuman and superhuman, a being that indicates a lack of unity in body and mind.[193] In Arkham Asylum: A Serious House on Serious Earth, the Joker serves as Batman's trickster guide through the hero's own psyche, testing him in various ways before ultimately offering to cede his rule of the Asylum to Batman.[194]

Rather than the typical anarchist interpretation, others have analysed the character as a Marxist (opposite to Batman's capitalist), arguing that anarchism requires the rejection of all authority in favor of uncontrolled freedom.[195] The Joker rejects most authority, but retains his own, using his actions to coerce and consolidate power in himself and convert the masses to his own way of thinking, while eliminating any that oppose him.[196] In The Killing Joke, the Joker is an abused member of the underclass who is driven insane by failings of the social system.[197] The Joker rejects material needs, and his first appearance in Batman #1 sees him perpetrate crimes against Gotham's wealthiest men and the judge who had sent him to prison.[198] Batman is wealthy, yet the Joker is able to triumph through his own innovations.[199]

Ryan Litsey described the Joker as an example of a "Nietzschean Superman," arguing that a fundamental aspect of Friedrich Nietzsche's Superman, the "will to power," is exemplified in all of the Joker's actions, providing a master morality to Batman's slave morality.[200] The character's indomitable "will to power" means he is never discouraged by being caught or defeated and he is not restrained by guilt or remorse.[201] Joker represents the master, who creates rules and defines them, who judges others without needing approval, and for whom something is good because it benefits him.[202] He creates his own morality and is bound only by his own rules without aspiring to something higher than himself, unlike Batman, the slave, who makes a distinction between good and evil, and is bound to rules outside of himself (such as his avoidance of killing) in his quest for justice.[203] The Joker has no defined origin story that requires him to question how he came to be, as like the Superman he does not regret or assess the past and only moves forward.[204]

The Joker's controlling and abusive relationship with Harley Quinn has been analyzed as a means of the Joker reinforcing his own belief in his power in a world where he may be killed or neutralized by another villain or Batman.[205] Joker mirrors his identity through Harley in her appearance, and even though he may ignore or act indifferent towards her, he continues to try to subject her to his control.[205] When Harley successfully defeats Batman in Mad Love (1994), the Joker, emasculated by his own failure, severely injures her out of fear of what the other villains will think of him; however, while Harley recovers, the Joker sends her flowers, which she accepts, reasserting his control over her.[206]

Harley's co-creator, Paul Dini, describes their relationship as Harley being someone who makes the Joker feel better about himself, and who can do the work that he does not want to do himself.[207] In the 1999 one-shot comic Batman: Harley Quinn, the Joker decides to kill Harley, after admitting that he does care for her, that their relationship is romantic, and that these feelings prevent him from fulfilling his purpose.[208] Removing the traditional male-female relationship, such as in the Batman: Thrillkiller storyline where the Joker (Bianca Steeplechase) is a female and involved in a lesbian relationship with Harley, their relationship lacks any aspects of violence or subjugation.[209]

Cultural impact and legacy

 
Cesar Romero as the Joker (top) in the 1966 film Batman (based on the TV series of the same name), with Burgess Meredith as the Penguin (left) and Frank Gorshin as the Riddler (center)

The Joker is considered one of the most recognizable and iconic fictional characters in popular culture,[210][211][212] one of the best comic villains, and one of the greatest villains of all time.[213][214] The character was well-liked following his debut, appearing in nine out of the first 12 Batman issues, and remained one of Batman's most popular foes throughout his publication.[215] The character is considered one of the four top comic book characters, alongside Batman, Superman, and Spider-Man.[212] Indeed, when DC Comics released the original series of Greatest Stories Ever Told (1987–1988) featuring collections of stories about heroes like Batman and Superman, the Joker was the only villain included alongside them.[216] The character has been the focus of ethical discussion on the desirability of Batman (who adheres to an unbreakable code forbidding killing) saving lives by murdering the Joker (a relentless dealer of death). These debates weigh the positive (stopping the Joker permanently) against its effect on Batman's character and the possibility that he might begin killing all criminals.[116][217][218]

In 2006, the Joker was number one on Wizard magazine's "100 Greatest Villains of All Time."[219] In 2008 Wizard's list of "200 Greatest Comic Book Characters of All Time" placed the Joker fifth,[220] and the character was eighth on Empire's list of "50 Greatest Comic Book Characters" (the highest-ranked villain on both lists).[221] In 2009, the Joker was second on IGN's list of "Top 100 Comic Book Villains,"[222] and in 2011, Wired named him "Comics' Greatest Supervillain."[223] Complex, CollegeHumor, and WhatCulture named the Joker the greatest comic book villain of all time[211][131][224] while IGN listed him the top DC Comics villain in 2013,[225] and Newsarama as the greatest Batman villain.[101]

The Joker's popularity (and his role as Batman's enemy) has involved the character in most Batman-related media, from television to video games.[2][6] These adaptations of the character have been received positively[19] on film,[226][227] television,[228] and in video games.[229] As in the comics, the character's personality and appearance shift; he is campy, ferocious or unstable, depending on the author and the intended audience.[19]

The character inspired theme-park roller coasters (The Joker's Jinx,[230][231] The Joker in Mexico and California,[232][233] and The Joker Chaos Coaster),[234] and featured in story-based rides such as Justice League: Battle for Metropolis.[234] The Joker is one of the few comic book supervillains to be represented on children's merchandise and toys, appearing on items including action figures, trading cards, board games, money boxes, pajamas, socks, and shoes.[212][235] The Jokermobile was a popular toy; a Corgi die-cast metal replica was successful during the 1950s, and in the 1970s a Joker-styled, flower power-era Volkswagen microbus was manufactured by Mego.[137] In 2015, The Joker: A Serious Study of the Clown Prince of Crime became the first academic book to be published about a supervillain.[212]

Online phenomena

Since 2012–2013, the Joker has inspired a large number of internet memes, often focused on the character's portrayal in films (see below). According to Steven T. Wright of The Outline, the character "came to symbolize the archetype of the 'edgelord,' a vapid, self-styled provocateur who prides himself in his ability to 'trigger' those who hold progressive viewpoints."[236]

The phrase "We live in a society" is commonly associated with the Joker in memes, especially after the release of the trailers of the 2019 film Joker. The line garnered particular notoriety after a trailer for the film Zack Snyder's Justice League (2021) featured Joker saying the line.[237][238]

The Joker is often featured as part of the "Gang Weed" meme, a satirical take on incels, "neckbeards" and "nice guys", as well as cannabis and gamer culture.[239][240]

In other media

 
 
 
Mark Hamill has voiced the Joker in animation and video games since 1992. Heath Ledger won a posthumous Academy Award for his interpretation of the character in 2008's The Dark Knight. Joaquin Phoenix won an Academy Award for his interpretation of the character in 2019's Joker.

The Joker has appeared in a variety of media, including television series, animated and live-action films. WorldCat (a catalog of libraries in 170 countries) records over 250 productions featuring the Joker as a subject, including films, books, and video games,[235] and Batman films which feature the character are typically the most successful.[124] The character's earliest on-screen adaptation was in the 1966 television series Batman and its film adaptation Batman, in which he was played as a cackling prankster by Cesar Romero (reflecting his contemporary comic counterpart).[210][241][242] The Joker then appeared in the animated television series The Adventures of Batman (1968, voiced by Larry Storch),[243] The New Adventures of Batman (1977, voiced by Lennie Weinrib)[244] and The Super Powers Team: Galactic Guardians (1985, voiced by Frank Welker).[245][246]

A version of the Joker named Jack Napier (played by Jack Nicholson) made his film debut in 1989's Batman, which earned over $400 million at the worldwide box office. The role was a defining performance in Nicholson's career and was considered to overshadow Batman's, with film critic Roger Ebert saying that the audience must sometimes remind themselves not to root for the Joker.[247][248] Batman's success led to the 1992 television series, Batman: The Animated Series. Voiced by Mark Hamill, the Joker retained the darker tone of the comics in stories acceptable for young children.[249][250] Hamill's Joker is considered a defining portrayal, and he voiced the character in spin-off films (1993's Batman: Mask of the Phantasm and 2000's Batman Beyond: Return of the Joker), video games (2001's Batman: Vengeance), related series (1996's Superman: The Animated Series, 2000's Static Shock and 2001's Justice League), action figures, toys and amusement-park voiceovers.[251][252][253][254] A redesigned Joker, voiced by Kevin Michael Richardson, appeared in 2004's The Batman; Richardson was the first African-American to play the character.[255][256]

After Christopher Nolan's successful 2005 Batman film reboot, Batman Begins, which ended with a teaser for the Joker's involvement in a sequel, the character appeared in 2008's The Dark Knight, played by Heath Ledger as an avatar of anarchy and chaos.[257][258] While Batman Begins earned a worldwide total of $370 million;[259] The Dark Knight earned over $1 billion and was the highest-grossing film of the year, setting several contemporary box-office records (including highest-grossing midnight opening, opening day and opening weekend).[260][261] Ledger won a posthumous Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor for his performance, the first acting Oscar ever won for a superhero film.[262][263] The Joker has featured in a number of animated projects, such as 2009's Batman: The Brave and the Bold (voiced by Jeff Bennett)[264] and 2011's Young Justice (voiced by Brent Spiner).[265] In comic book adaptations, the character has been voiced by John DiMaggio in 2010's Batman: Under the Red Hood and 2020's Batman: Death in the Family, and by Michael Emerson in 2012's two-parter The Dark Knight Returns.[266][267]

The television series Gotham (2014–2019) explores the mythology of the Joker through twin brothers Jerome and Jeremiah Valeska, played by Cameron Monaghan.[268] Jared Leto portrays the Joker in the DC Extended Universe, beginning with Suicide Squad (2016);[269] Leto reprised the role in Zack Snyder's Justice League (2021).[270] Zach Galifianakis voiced the character in The Lego Batman Movie (2017).[271] The 2019 film Joker focuses on the origins of the Joker (named Arthur Fleck) as portrayed by Joaquin Phoenix. Although the film was controversial for its violence and portrayal of mental illness, Phoenix's performance received widespread acclaim.[272][273][274][275] Like The Dark Knight before it, Joker grossed over $1 billion at the box office, breaking contemporary financial records, and earned numerous awards including an Academy Award for Best Actor for Phoenix.[276][275][277] Barry Keoghan makes a cameo appearance as the Joker in Matt Reeves' film The Batman (2022), where he is credited as "Unseen Arkham Prisoner".[278]

The Joker has also been featured in video games. Hamill returned to voice the character in 2009's critically acclaimed Batman: Arkham Asylum, its equally praised 2011 sequel Batman: Arkham City and the multiplayer DC Universe Online.[279] Hamill was replaced by Troy Baker for the 2013 prequel, Batman: Arkham Origins, and the Arkham series' animated spin-off Batman: Assault on Arkham,[251][280][281][282] while Hamill returned for the 2015 series finale, Batman: Arkham Knight.[283] Richard Epcar has voiced the Joker in a series of fighting games including, Mortal Kombat vs. DC Universe (2008),[284] Injustice: Gods Among Us (2013),[285] its sequel Injustice 2 (2017),[286] and Mortal Kombat 11 (2019).[287] The character also appeared in Lego Batman: The Videogame (2008), Lego Batman 2: DC Super Heroes (2012) and its animated adaptation, and Lego Batman 3: Beyond Gotham (2014) (the latter three voiced by Christopher Corey Smith),[288][289][290] as well as Lego DC Super-Villains (2018), with the role reprised by Hamill. Anthony Ingruber voices the Joker in Batman: The Telltale Series (2016)[291] and its sequel Batman: The Enemy Within (2017).[292]

References

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Sources

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External links

joker, character, joker, redirects, here, other, characters, called, joker, other, uses, joker, joker, joker, supervillain, appearing, american, comic, books, published, comics, character, created, bill, finger, kane, jerry, robinson, first, appeared, debut, i. The Joker redirects here For other characters called Joker or other uses of The Joker see Joker The Joker is a supervillain appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics The character was created by Bill Finger Bob Kane and Jerry Robinson and first appeared in the debut issue of the comic book Batman on April 25 1940 Credit for the Joker s creation is disputed Kane and Robinson claimed responsibility for the Joker s design while acknowledging Finger s writing contribution Although the Joker was planned to be killed off during his initial appearance he was spared by editorial intervention allowing the character to endure as the archenemy of the superhero Batman JokerPromotional artwork for Batman Three Jokers 2020 depicting the incarnations of the Joker from the Golden Age bottom the Silver Age middle and the Modern Age top Art by Jason Fabok Publication informationPublisherDC ComicsFirst appearanceBatman 1 cover dated spring 1940 published April 25 1940 1 Created byBill Finger Bob Kane Jerry RobinsonIn story informationTeam affiliationsInjustice League Legion of Doom Injustice GangNotable aliasesRed Hood 2 AbilitiesCriminal mastermind Expert chemist Uses weaponized props and toxinsIn his comic book appearances the Joker is portrayed as a criminal mastermind Introduced as a psychopath with a warped sadistic sense of humor the character became a mostly harmless comical prankster in the late 1950s in response to regulation by the Comics Code Authority before returning to his darker roots during the early 1970s although some of his more comedic characterization was kept for many incarnations of the character As Batman s nemesis the Joker has been part of the superhero s defining stories including the murder of Jason Todd the second Robin and Batman s ward and the paralysis of one of Batman s allies Barbara Gordon The Joker has had various possible origin stories during his decades of appearances The most common story involves his falling into a tank of chemical waste that bleaches his skin white and turns his hair green and lips bright red the resulting disfigurement drives him insane The antithesis of Batman in personality and appearance the Joker is considered by critics to be his perfect adversary The Joker possesses no superhuman abilities instead using his expertise in chemical engineering to develop poisonous or lethal concoctions and thematic weaponry including razor tipped playing cards deadly joy buzzers and acid spraying lapel flowers The Joker sometimes works with other Gotham City supervillains such as the Penguin and Two Face and groups like the Injustice Gang and Injustice League but these relationships often collapse due to the Joker s desire for unbridled chaos The 1990s introduced a romantic interest for the Joker in his former psychiatrist Harley Quinn who became his criminal sidekick and girlfriend before finally escaping their abusive relationship Although his primary obsession is Batman the Joker has also fought other heroes including Superman and Wonder Woman One of the most iconic characters in popular culture the Joker has been listed among the greatest comic book villains and fictional characters ever created The character s popularity has seen him appear on a variety of merchandise such as clothing and collectible items inspire real world structures such as theme park attractions and be referenced in a number of media The Joker has been adapted in live action animated and video game incarnations including the 1960s Batman television series played by Cesar Romero and in films by Jack Nicholson in Batman 1989 Heath Ledger in The Dark Knight 2008 Jared Leto in the DC Extended Universe 2016 2021 and Joaquin Phoenix in Joker 2019 present Ledger and Phoenix each earned an Academy Award for their portrayals Mark Hamill among others have provided the character s voice in media ranging from animation to video games Contents 1 Creation and development 1 1 Concept 1 2 Golden Age 1 3 Silver Age 1 4 Bronze Age 1 5 Modern Age 2 Character biography 2 1 Origins 3 Characterization 3 1 Personality 3 2 Skills and equipment 3 3 Relationships 4 Alternative versions 4 1 Amalgam Comics 4 2 Batman Beyond 4 3 Batman Judge Dredd 4 4 Batman Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 4 5 Batman Damned 4 6 Batman Earth One 4 7 Batman White Knight 4 8 Captain Carrot and His Amazing Zoo Crew 4 9 DC Marvel crossovers 4 10 Earth Two 4 11 Earth 2 4 12 Earth 3 4 13 Earth 9 4 14 Earth 16 4 15 Earth 23 4 16 Earth 22 4 17 Earth 2 4 18 Elseworlds 4 18 1 Batman Bloodstorm 1994 4 18 2 Batman In Darkest Knight 1994 4 18 3 Batman Leatherwing 1994 4 18 4 Batman Nosferatu 1999 4 18 5 Batman Two Faces 1998 4 18 6 Gotham by Gaslight 1989 4 18 7 JLA The Nail 1998 4 18 8 Superman amp Batman Generations 1999 4 18 9 Superman Speeding Bullets 1993 4 18 10 Thrillkiller and Thrillkiller 62 4 19 Flashpoint 4 20 Injustice Gods Among Us comic 4 21 Joker 2008 4 22 Planetary Batman 4 23 Smallville 4 24 Possible futures 4 24 1 Batman Digital Justice 4 24 2 Dark Knight universe 4 25 Superman Batman 2008 5 Literary analysis 6 Cultural impact and legacy 6 1 Online phenomena 6 2 In other media 7 References 7 1 Citations 7 2 Sources 8 External linksCreation and developmentConcept nbsp nbsp left Jerry Robinson s 1940 concept sketch of the Joker right Actor Conrad Veidt in character as Gwynplaine in The Man Who Laughs 1928 Veidt s grinning visage inspired the Joker design Bill Finger Bob Kane and Jerry Robinson are credited with creating the Joker but their accounts of the character s conception differ each providing his own version of events Finger s Kane s and Robinson s versions acknowledge that Finger showed them an image of actor Conrad Veidt in character as Gwynplaine a man whose mouth is disfigured into a perpetual grin in the 1928 film The Man Who Laughs as an inspiration for the Joker s appearance and Robinson produced a sketch of a joker playing card 2 3 Robinson stated that it was his 1940 card sketch that served as the character s concept and Finger associated that image with Veidt in the film 2 Kane hired the 17 year old Robinson as an assistant in 1939 after he saw Robinson in a white jacket decorated with his own illustrations 4 Beginning as a letterer and background inker Robinson quickly became primary artist for the newly created Batman comic book series In a 1975 interview in The Amazing World of DC Comics Robinson said he wanted a supreme arch villain who could test Batman not a typical crime lord or gangster designed to be easily disposed of He wanted an exotic enduring character as an ongoing source of conflict for Batman designing a diabolically sinister but clownish villain 5 6 7 Robinson was intrigued by villains he believed that some characters are made up of contradictions leading to the Joker s sense of humor He said that the name came first followed by an image of a playing card from a deck he often had at hand I wanted somebody visually exciting I wanted somebody that would make an indelible impression would be bizarre would be memorable like the Hunchback of Notre Dame or any other villains that had unique physical characters 8 He told Finger about his concept by telephone later providing sketches of the character and images of what would become his iconic Joker playing card design Finger thought the concept was incomplete providing the image of Veidt with a ghastly permanent rictus grin 5 Kane countered that Robinson s sketch was produced only after Finger had already shown the Gwynplaine image to Kane and that it was only used as a card design belonging to the Joker in his early appearances 3 Finger said that he was also inspired by the Steeplechase Face an image in Steeplechase Park at Coney Island that resembled a Joker s head which he sketched and later shared with future editorial director Carmine Infantino 9 In a 1994 interview with journalist Frank Lovece Kane stated his position Bill Finger and I created the Joker Bill was the writer Jerry Robinson came to me with a playing card of the Joker That s the way I sum it up The Joker looks like Conrad Veidt you know the actor in The Man Who Laughs the 1928 movie based on the novel by Victor Hugo Bill Finger had a book with a photograph of Conrad Veidt and showed it to me and said Here s the Joker Jerry Robinson had absolutely nothing to do with it but he ll always say he created it till he dies He brought in a playing card which we used for a couple of issues for him the Joker to use as his playing card 10 11 Robinson credited himself Finger and Kane for the Joker s creation He said he created the character as Batman s larger than life nemesis when extra stories were quickly needed for Batman 1 and he received credit for the story in a college course 12 In that first meeting when I showed them that sketch of the Joker Bill said it reminded him of Conrad Veidt in The Man Who Laughs That was the first mention of it He can be credited and Bob himself we all played a role in it The concept was mine Bill finished that first script from my outline of the persona and what should happen in the first story He wrote the script of that so he really was co creator and Bob and I did the visuals so Bob was also 13 Finger provided his own account in 1966 I got a call from Bob Kane He had a new villain When I arrived he was holding a playing card Apparently Jerry Robinson or Bob I don t recall who looked at the card and they had an idea for a character the Joker Bob made a rough sketch of it At first it didn t look much like the Joker It looked more like a clown But I remembered that Grosset amp Dunlap formerly issued very cheap editions of classics by Alexandre Dumas and Victor Hugo The volume I had was The Man Who Laughs his face had been permanently operated on so that he will always have this perpetual grin And it looked absolutely weird I cut the picture out of the book and gave it to Bob who drew the profile and gave it a more sinister aspect Then he worked on the face made him look a little clown like which accounted for his white face red lips green hair And that was the Joker 14 Although Kane adamantly refused to share credit for many of his characters and refuted Robinson s claim for the rest of his life many comic historians credit Robinson with the Joker s creation and Finger with the character s development 2 3 4 9 By 2011 Finger Kane and Robinson had died leaving the story unresolved 5 9 15 Golden Age nbsp From the Joker s debut in Batman 1 April 25 1940 The Joker debuted in Batman 1 April 1940 as the eponymous character s first villain about a year after Batman s debut in Detective Comics 27 May 1939 The Joker initially appeared as a serial killer and jewel thief modeled after a joker playing card with a mirthless grin who killed his victims with Joker venom a toxin that left their faces smiling grotesquely 16 The character was intended to be killed in his second appearance in Batman 1 after being stabbed in the heart Finger wanted the Joker to die because of his concern that recurring villains would make Batman appear inept but was overruled by then editor Whitney Ellsworth a hastily drawn panel indicating that the Joker was still alive was added to the comic 2 17 18 The Joker went on to appear in nine of Batman s first 12 issues 19 The character s regular appearances quickly defined him as the archenemy of Batman and Robin he killed dozens of people and even derailed a train 20 By issue 13 Kane s work on the syndicated Batman newspaper strip left him little time for the comic book artist Dick Sprang assumed his duties and editor Jack Schiff collaborated with Finger on stories Around the same time DC Comics found it easier to market its stories to children without the more mature pulp elements that had originated many superhero comics During this period the first changes in the Joker began to appear portraying him as a wacky but harmless prankster in one story the Joker kidnaps Robin and Batman pays the ransom by check meaning that the Joker cannot cash it without being arrested 21 Comic book writer Mark Waid suggests that the 1942 story The Joker Walks the Last Mile was the beginning point for the character s transformation into a more goofy incarnation a period that Grant Morrison considered to have lasted the following 30 years 22 The 1942 cover of Detective Comics 69 known as Double Guns with the Joker emerging from a genie s lamp aiming two guns at Batman and Robin is considered one of the greatest superhero comic covers of the Golden Age and is the only image from that era of the character using traditional guns Robinson said that other contemporary villains used guns and the creative team wanted the Joker as Batman s adversary to be more resourceful 23 24 Silver Age The Joker was one of the few popular villains continuing to appear regularly in Batman comics from the Golden Age into the Silver Age as the series continued during the rise in popularity of mystery and romance comics In 1951 Finger wrote an origin story for the Joker in Detective Comics 168 which introduced the characteristic of him formerly being the criminal Red Hood and his disfigurement the result of a fall into a chemical vat 25 By 1954 the Comics Code Authority had been established in response to increasing public disapproval of comic book content The backlash was inspired by Frederic Wertham who hypothesized that mass media especially comic books was responsible for the rise in juvenile delinquency violence and homosexuality particularly in young males Parents forbade their children from reading comic books and there were several mass burnings 2 The Comics Code banned gore innuendo and excessive violence stripping Batman of his menace and transforming the Joker into a goofy thieving trickster without his original homicidal tendencies 17 26 The character appeared less frequently after 1964 when Julius Schwartz who disliked the Joker became editor of the Batman comics 2 17 27 The character risked becoming an obscure figure of the preceding era until this goofy prankster version of the character was adapted into the 1966 television series Batman in which he was played by Cesar Romero 2 17 The show s popularity compelled Schwartz to keep the comics in a similar vein As the show s popularity waned however so did that of the Batman comics 2 27 After the TV series ended in 1969 the increase in public visibility had not stopped the comic s sales decline editorial director Carmine Infantino resolved to turn things around moving stories away from child friendly adventures 28 The Silver Age introduced several of the Joker s defining character traits lethal joy buzzers acid squirting flowers trick guns and goofy elaborate crimes 29 30 Bronze Age nbsp Cover of Batman 251 September 1973 featuring The Joker s Five Way Revenge which returned the Joker to his homicidal roots Art by Neal Adams In 1973 after a four year disappearance 2 the Joker was revived and revised by writer Dennis O Neil and artist Neal Adams Beginning with Batman 251 s The Joker s Five Way Revenge the character returns to his roots as a homicidal maniac who matches wits with Batman 31 32 This story began a trend in which the Joker was used sparingly as a central character 33 O Neil said his idea was simply to take it back to where it started I went to the DC library and read some of the early stories I tried to get a sense of what Kane and Finger were after 34 O Neil s 1973 run introduced the idea of the Joker being legally insane to explain why the character is sent to Arkham Asylum introduced by O Neil in 1974 as Arkham Hospital instead of to prison 35 Adams modified the Joker s appearance changing his more average figure by extending his jaw and making him taller and leaner 36 DC Comics was a hotbed of experimentation during the 1970s and in 1975 the character became the first villain to feature as the title character in a comic book series The Joker 37 The series followed the character s interactions with other supervillains and the first issue was written by O Neil 38 Stories balanced between emphasizing the Joker s criminality and making him a likable protagonist whom readers could support Although he murdered thugs and civilians he never fought Batman this made The Joker a series in which the character s villainy prevailed over rival villains instead of a struggle between good and evil 39 Because the Comics Code Authority mandated punishment for villains each issue ended with the Joker being apprehended limiting the scope of each story The series never found an audience and The Joker was canceled after nine issues despite a next issue advertisement for an appearance by the Justice League 38 39 40 The complete series became difficult to obtain over time often commanding high prices from collectors In 2013 DC Comics reissued the series as a trade paperback 41 When Jenette Kahn became DC editor in 1976 she redeveloped the company s struggling titles during her tenure the Joker would become one of DC s most popular characters 39 While O Neil and Adams work was critically acclaimed writer Steve Englehart and penciller Marshall Rogers s eight issue run in Detective Comics 471 476 August 1977 April 1978 defined the Joker for decades to come 31 with stories emphasizing the character s insanity In The Laughing Fish the Joker disfigures fish with a rictus grin resembling his own expecting copyright protection and is unable to understand that copyrighting a natural resource is legally impossible 32 35 42 43 Englehart s and Rogers work on the series influenced the 1989 film Batman and was adapted for 1992 s Batman The Animated Series 35 44 Rogers expanded on Adams character design drawing the Joker with a fedora and trench coat 36 Englehart outlined how he understood the character by saying that the Joker was this very crazy scary character I really wanted to get back to the idea of Batman fighting insane murderers at 3 a m under the full moon as the clouds scuttled by 17 Modern Age Years after the end of the 1966 television series sales of Batman continued to fall and the title was nearly cancelled Although the 1970s restored the Joker as Batman s insane lethal archenemy it was during the 1980s that the Batman series started to turn around and the Joker came into his own as part of the Dark Age of comics with mature tales of death and destruction The shift was criticized for moving away from tamer superheroes and villains but comic audiences were no longer primarily children 45 31 Several months after Crisis on Infinite Earths launched the era by killing off Silver Age icons such as the Flash and Supergirl and undoing decades of continuity 46 Frank Miller s The Dark Knight Returns 1986 re imagined Batman as an older retired hero 47 and the Joker as a lipstick wearing celebrity 36 48 who cannot function without his foe 49 The late 1980s saw the Joker exert a significant impact on Batman and his supporting cast In the 1988 89 story arc A Death in the Family the Joker murders Batman s sidekick the second Robin Jason Todd Todd was unpopular with fans rather than modify his character DC opted to let them vote for his fate and a 72 vote plurality had the Joker beat Todd to death with a crowbar This story altered the Batman universe instead of killing anonymous bystanders the Joker murdered a core character this had a lasting effect on future stories 50 51 Written at the height of tensions between the United States and Iran the story s conclusion had Iranian leader Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini appoint the Joker his country s ambassador to the United Nations allowing him to temporarily escape justice 52 Alan Moore and Brian Bolland s 1988 graphic novel The Killing Joke expands on the Joker s origins describing the character as a failed comedian who adopts the identity of the Red Hood to support his pregnant wife 25 53 Unlike The Dark Knight Returns The Killing Joke takes place in mainstream continuity 54 The novel is described by critics as one of the greatest Joker stories ever written influencing later comic stories including the forced retirement of then Batgirl Barbara Gordon after she is paralyzed by the Joker and films such as 1989 s Batman and 2008 s The Dark Knight 55 56 57 Grant Morrison s 1989 Arkham Asylum A Serious House on Serious Earth explores the psychoses of Batman the Joker and other rogues in the eponymous facility 58 59 The 1992 animated series introduced the Joker s female sidekick Harley Quinn a psychiatrist who falls for and ends up in an abusive relationship with the Joker becoming his supervillain accomplice The character was popular and was adapted into the comics as the Joker s romantic interest in 1999 60 In the same year Alan Grant and Norm Breyfogle s comic book Anarky concluded with the revelation that the titular character was the Joker s son Breyfogle conceived the idea as a means to expand on Anarky s characterization but O Neil by then the editor for the Batman series of books was opposed to it and only allowed it to be written under protest and with a promise that the revelation would eventually be revealed incorrect However the Anarky series was cancelled before the rebuttal could be published 61 The Joker s first major storyline in The New 52 DC Comics 2011 reboot of story continuity was 2012 s Death of the Family by writer Scott Snyder and artist Greg Capullo The story arc explores the symbiotic relationship between the Joker and Batman and sees the villain shatter the trust between Batman and his adopted family 19 62 Capullo s Joker design replaced his traditional outfit with a utilitarian messy and disheveled appearance to convey that the character was on a mission his face surgically removed in 2011 s Detective Comics vol 2 1 was reattached with belts wires and hooks and he was outfitted with mechanics overalls 63 The Joker s face was restored in Snyder s and Capullo s Endgame 2014 the concluding chapter to Death of the Family 64 65 The conclusion of the 2020 Joker War storyline by writer James Tynion IV and artist Jorge Jimenez sees the Joker leave Gotham after Batman chooses to let him die 66 This led to a second ongoing Joker series beginning in March 2021 with Tynion writing and Guillem March providing art 67 Character biographyThe Joker has undergone many revisions since his 1940 debut The most common interpretation of the character is that of a man who while disguised as the criminal Red Hood is pursued by Batman and falls into a vat of chemicals that bleaches his skin colors his hair green and his lips red and drives him insane The reasons why the Joker was disguised as the Red Hood and his identity before his transformation have changed over time 17 The character was introduced in Batman 1 1940 in which he announces that he will kill three of Gotham s prominent citizens Although the police protect his first announced victim millionaire Henry Claridge the Joker had poisoned him before making his announcement and Claridge dies with a ghastly grin on his face Batman eventually defeats him sending him to prison 68 The Joker commits crimes ranging from whimsical to brutal for reasons that in Batman s words make sense to him alone 42 Detective Comics 168 1951 introduced the Joker s first origin story as the former Red Hood a masked criminal who during his final heist vanished after leaping into a vat of chemicals to escape Batman His resulting disfigurement drove him insane and led him to adopt the name Joker from the playing card figure he came to resemble 25 The Joker s Silver Age transformation into a figure of fun was established in 1952 s The Joker s Millions In this story the Joker is obsessed with maintaining his illusion of wealth and celebrity as a criminal folk hero afraid to let Gotham s citizens know that he is penniless and was tricked out of his fortune 69 The 1970s redefined the character as a homicidal sociopath The Joker s Five Way Revenge has the Joker taking violent revenge on the former gang members who betrayed him 33 while The Laughing Fish portrays him chemically disfiguring fish so they will share his trademark grin hoping to profit from a copyright and killing bureaucrats who stand in his way 32 nbsp The Killing Joke author Alan Moore in 2008 The novel has been described as the greatest Joker story ever told 55 56 57 Batman The Killing Joke 1988 built on the Joker s 1951 origin story portraying him as a failed comedian who participates in a robbery as the Red Hood to support his pregnant wife Batman arrives to stop the robbery provoking the terrified comedian into jumping into a vat of chemicals which dyes his skin chalk white his hair green and his lips bright red His disfigurement combined with the trauma of his wife s earlier accidental death drives him insane and results in the birth of the Joker 25 However the Joker says that this story may not be true he admits that he does not remember exactly what drove him insane and says that he prefers his past to be multiple choice 70 In this graphic novel the Joker shoots and paralyzes Barbara Gordon the former Batgirl and tortures her father Commissioner James Jim Gordon to prove that it only takes one bad day to drive a normal man insane 54 After Batman rescues Gordon and subdues the Joker he offers to rehabilitate his old foe and end their rivalry Although the Joker refuses he shows his appreciation by sharing a joke with Batman 71 Following the character s maiming of Barbara she became a more important character in the DC Universe the Oracle a data gatherer and superhero informant who has her revenge in Birds of Prey by shattering the Joker s teeth and destroying his smile 54 In the 1988 story A Death in the Family the Joker beats Jason Todd the second Robin with a crowbar and leaves him to die in an explosion Todd s death haunts Batman and for the first time he seriously considers killing the Joker 50 The Joker temporarily escapes justice when Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini appoints him the Iranian ambassador to the United Nations giving him diplomatic immunity however when he tries to poison the U N membership he is defeated by Batman and Superman 31 In the 1999 No Man s Land storyline the Joker murders Commissioner Gordon s second wife Sarah as she shields a group of infants 72 He taunts Gordon who shoots him in the kneecap The Joker lamenting that he may never walk again collapses with laughter when he realizes that the commissioner has avenged Barbara s paralysis 73 The 2000s began with the crossover story Emperor Joker in which the Joker steals Mister Mxyzptlk s reality altering power and remakes the universe in his image torturing and killing Batman daily before resurrecting him When the supervillain then tries to destroy the universe his reluctance to eliminate Batman makes him lose control and Superman defeats him 74 Broken by his experience Batman s experiences of death are transferred to Superman by the Spectre so he can heal mentally 75 In Joker Last Laugh 2001 the doctors at Arkham Asylum convince the character that he is dying in an attempt to rehabilitate him Instead the Joker flanked by an army of Jokerized supervillains launches a final crime spree Believing that Robin Tim Drake has been killed in the chaos Dick Grayson beats the Joker to death although Batman revives his foe to keep Grayson from becoming a murderer and the villain succeeds in making a member of the Bat family break their rule against killing 31 68 In Under the Hood 2005 a resurrected Todd tries to force Batman to avenge his death by killing the Joker Batman refuses arguing that if he allowed himself to kill the Joker he would not be able to stop himself from killing other criminals 76 The Joker kills Alexander Luthor Jr in Infinite Crisis 2005 for excluding him from the Secret Society of Super Villains which considers him too unpredictable for membership 77 78 In Morrison s Batman and Son 2006 a deranged police officer who impersonates Batman shoots the Joker in the face scarring and disabling him The supervillain returns in The Clown at Midnight 2007 as an enigmatic force who awakens and tries to kill Harley Quinn to prove to Batman that he has become more than human 79 31 In the 2008 story arc Batman R I P the Joker is recruited by the Black Glove to destroy Batman but betrays the group killing its members one by one 68 After Batman s apparent death in Final Crisis 2008 Grayson investigates a series of murders which leads him to a disguised Joker 80 The Joker is arrested and then Robin Damian Wayne beats him with a crowbar paralleling Todd s murder When the Joker escapes he attacks the Black Glove burying its leader Simon Hurt alive after the supervillain considers him a failure as an opponent the Joker is then defeated by the recently returned Batman 81 82 83 In DC s The New 52 a 2011 relaunch of its titles following Flashpoint the Joker has his own face cut off 84 He disappears for a year returning to launch an attack on Batman s extended family in Death of the Family so he and Batman can be the best hero and villain they can be 85 At the end of the storyline the Joker falls off a cliff into a dark abyss 85 86 The Joker returns in the 2014 storyline Endgame in which he brainwashes the Justice League into attacking Batman believing he has betrayed their relationship 87 88 The story implies that the Joker is immortal having existed for centuries in Gotham as a cause of tragedy after exposure to a substance the Joker terms dionesium and is able to regenerate from mortal injuries Endgame restores the Joker s face and also reveals that he knows Batman s secret identity 64 The story ends with the apparent deaths of Batman and the Joker at each other s hands though it is revealed that they were both resurrected in a life restoring Lazarus Pit without their memories 65 89 During the Darkseid War 2015 2016 storyline Batman uses Metron s Mobius Chair to find out the Joker s real name the chair s answer leaves Batman in disbelief In the DC Universe Rebirth 2016 one shot Batman informs Hal Jordan that the chair told him there were three individual Jokers not just one 90 This revelation was the basis for the miniseries Batman Three Jokers 2020 written by Geoff Johns with art by Jason Fabok Three Jokers reveals that the three Jokers who work in tandem include The Criminal a methodical mastermind based on the Golden Age Joker The Clown a goofy prankster based on the Silver Age Joker and The Comedian a sadistic psychopath based on the Modern Age Joker 91 The Comedian orchestrates the deaths of the other two Jokers and reveals himself as the original The miniseries ends with the revelation that Batman knows the Joker s true identity 92 Origins They ve given many origins of the Joker how he came to be That doesn t seem to matter just how he is now I never intended to give a reason for his appearance We discussed that and Bill Finger and I never wanted to change it at that time I thought and he agreed that it takes away some of the essential mystery Jerry Robinson the Joker s creator 93 Although a number of backstories have been given a definitive one has never been established for the Joker An unreliable narrator the character is uncertain of who he was before and how he became the Joker Sometimes I remember it one way sometimes another if I m going to have a past I prefer it to be multiple choice 6 70 A story about the Joker s origin appeared in Detective Comics 168 February 1951 more than decade after the character s debut Here the character is a laboratory worker who becomes the Red Hood a masked criminal to steal 1 million and retire He falls into a vat of chemical waste when his heist is thwarted by Batman emerging with bleached white skin red lips green hair and a permanent grin 94 95 This story was the basis for the most often cited origin tale Moore s one shot The Killing Joke 56 The man who will become the Joker quits his job as a lab assistant in order to fulfill his dream of being a stand up comedian only to fail miserably Desperate to support his pregnant wife he agrees to help two criminals commit a robbery as the Red Hood The heist goes awry the comedian leaps into a chemical vat to escape Batman surfacing disfigured This combined with the earlier accidental death of his wife and unborn child drives the comedian insane turning him into the Joker 25 31 This version has been cited in many stories including Batman The Man Who Laughs in which Batman deduces that the Red Hood survived his fall and became the Joker Batman 450 in which the Joker dons the Red Hood to aid his recovery after the events in A Death in the Family but finds the experience too traumatic Batman Shadow of the Bat 38 in which Joker s failed stand up performance is shown Death of the Family 95 and Batman Three Jokers which asserts that it is the canon origin story 96 Other stories have expanded on this origin Pushback suggests that the Joker s wife was murdered by a corrupt policeman working for the mobsters 97 and Payback gives the Joker s first name as Jack 95 The ending of Batman Three Jokers establishes that the Joker s wife did not actually die rather she fled to Alaska with the help of Gotham police and Batman because she feared her husband would be an abusive father the police then told the Joker a story about her dying to protect her The miniseries also reveals that Batman knows the Joker s identity and has kept it secret in order to protect the criminal s wife and son 96 However the Joker s unreliable memory has allowed writers to develop other origins for the character 95 Case Study a Paul Dini Alex Ross story describes the Joker as a sadistic gangster who creates the Red Hood identity because he misses the thrill of committing robberies He has his fateful first meeting with Batman which results in his disfigurement It is suggested that the Joker is sane and researches his crimes to look like the work of a sick mind in order to avoid the death penalty In Batman Confidential 7 12 the character Jack is a career criminal who is bored with his work He encounters and becomes obsessed with Batman during a heist embarking on a crime spree to attract the Caped Crusader s attention After Jack injures Batman s girlfriend Batman scars Jack s face with a permanent grin and betrays him to a group of mobsters who torture him in a chemical plant Jack escapes but falls into an empty vat as gunfire punctures chemical tanks above him The flood of chemicals used in anti psychotic medication alters his appearance and completes his transformation 98 In The Brave and the Bold 31 the superhero Atom enters the Joker s mind and sees the criminal s former self a violent sociopath who tortures animals murders his own parents and kills for fun while committing robberies 99 Snyder s Zero Year 2013 suggests that the pre disfigured Joker was a criminal mastermind leading a gang of Red Hoods 87 100 CharacterizationRenowned as Batman s greatest enemy 101 102 103 104 the Joker is known by a number of nicknames including the Clown Prince of Crime the Harlequin of Hate the Ace of Knaves and the Jester of Genocide 103 105 During the evolution of the DC Universe interpretations and versions of the Joker have taken two main forms The original dominant image is that of a psychopath 106 with genius level intelligence and a warped sadistic sense of humor 107 108 The other version popular in comic books from the late 1940s to the 1960s and in the 1960s television series is an eccentric harmless prankster and thief 109 Like other long lived characters the Joker s character and cultural interpretations have changed with time however unlike other characters who may need to reconcile or ignore previous versions to make sense more than any other comic book character the Joker thrives on his mutable and irreconcilable identities 110 The Joker is typically seen in a purple suit with a long tailed padded shoulder jacket a string tie gloves striped pants and spats on pointed toe shoes sometimes with a wide brimmed hat This appearance is such a fundamental aspect of the character that when the 2004 animated series The Batman placed the Joker in a straitjacket it quickly redesigned him in his familiar suit 109 The Joker is obsessed with Batman the pair representing a yin yang of opposing dark and light force although it is the Joker who represents humor and color and Batman who dwells in the dark 111 No crime including murder theft and terrorism is beyond the Joker and his exploits are theatrical performances that are funny to him alone Spectacle is more important than success for the Joker and if it is not spectacular it is boring 112 Although the Joker claims indifference to everything he secretly craves Batman s attention and validation 113 32 The character was described as having killed over 2 000 people in The Joker Devil s Advocate 1996 Despite this body count he is always found not guilty by reason of insanity and sent to Arkham Asylum avoiding the death penalty 114 115 Many of the Joker s acts attempt to force Batman to kill to the Joker the greatest victory would be to make Batman become like him The Joker displays no instinct for self preservation and is willing to die to prove his point that anyone could become like him after one bad day 116 The Joker is the personification of the irrational and represents everything Batman opposes 117 Personality nbsp Joker co creator Jerry Robinson in 2008 he conceived the Joker as an exotic enduring archvillain who could repeatedly challenge BatmanThe Joker s main characteristic is his apparent insanity although he is not described as having any particular psychological disorder Like a psychopath he lacks empathy a conscience and concern over right and wrong In Arkham Asylum A Serious House on Serious Earth the Joker is described as capable of processing outside sensory information only by adapting to it This enables him to create a new personality every day depending on what would benefit him and explains why at different times he is a mischievous clown or a psychopathic killer 118 In The Clown at Midnight Batman 663 April 2007 the Joker enters a meditative state where he evaluates his previous selves to consciously create a new personality effectively modifying himself for his needs 119 The Killing Joke in which the Joker is the unreliable narrator explains the roots of his insanity as one bad day losing his wife and unborn child and being disfigured by chemicals paralleling Batman s origin in the loss of his parents He tries and fails to prove that anyone can become like him after one bad day by torturing Commissioner Gordon physically and psychologically 29 54 Batman offers to rehabilitate his foe the Joker apologetically declines believing it too late for him to be saved 71 Other interpretations show that the Joker is fully aware of how his actions affect others and that his insanity as merely an act 111 Comics scholar Peter Coogan describes the Joker as trying to reshape reality to fit himself by imposing his face on his victims and fish in an attempt to make the world comprehensible by creating a twisted parody of himself Englehart s The Laughing Fish demonstrates the character s illogical nature trying to copyright fish that bear his face and not understanding why threatening the copyright clerk cannot produce the desired result 35 120 The Joker is alternatively depicted as sexual and asexual 121 In The Dark Knight Returns and Arkham Asylum A Serious House on Serious Earth the Joker is seductive toward Batman it is uncertain if their relationship has homoerotic undertones or if the Joker is simply trying to manipulate his nemesis Frank Miller interpreted the character as fixated on death and uninterested in sexual relationships while Robinson believed that the Joker is capable of a romantic relationship 121 His relationship with Harley Quinn is abusively paradoxical although the Joker keeps her at his side he heedlessly harms her for example throwing her out a window without seeing if she survives Harley loves him but the Joker does not reciprocate her feelings chiding her for distracting him from other plans 122 Snyder s Death of the Family describes the Joker as in love with Batman although not in a traditionally romantic way The Joker believes that Batman has not killed him because he makes Batman better and he loves the villain for that 62 123 Batman comic book writer Peter Tomasi concurred stating that the Joker s main goal is to make Batman the best that he can be 124 The Joker and Batman represent opposites the extroverted Joker wears colorful clothing and embraces chaos while the introverted monochromatic Batman represents order and discipline The Joker is often depicted as defining his existence through his conflict with Batman In 1994 s Going Sane the villain tries to lead a normal life after Batman s apparent death only to become his old self again when Batman reappears in Emperor Joker an apparently omnipotent Joker cannot destroy Batman without undoing himself Since the Joker is simply the Joker he believes that Batman is Batman with or without the costume and has no interest in what is behind Batman s mask ignoring opportunities to learn Batman s secret identity 74 125 Given the opportunity to kill Batman the villain demurs he believes that without their game winning is pointless 113 The character has no desire for typical criminal goals like money or power his criminality is designed only to continue his game with Batman 84 The Joker is portrayed as having no fear when fellow supervillain Scarecrow doses him with fear toxin in Knightfall 1993 the Joker merely laughs and says Boo 126 The villain has been temporarily rendered sane by several means including telepathic manipulation by the Martian Manhunter 71 and being resurrected in a Lazarus Pit an experience typically inducing temporary insanity in the subject At these moments the Joker is depicted as expressing remorse for his crimes 127 128 however during a medically induced period of partial sanity in Batman Cacophony he tells Batman I don t hate you cause I m crazy I m crazy cause I hate you and confirms that he will only stop killing when Batman is dead 129 130 Skills and equipment nbsp The Joker s lapel often holds an acid spraying flowerThe Joker has no inherent superhuman abilities 131 He commits crimes with a variety of weaponized thematic props such as a deck of razor tipped playing cards rolling marbles jack in the boxes with unpleasant surprises and exploding cigars capable of leveling a building The flower in his lapel sprays acid and his hand often holds a lethal joy buzzer conducting a million volts of electricity although both items were introduced in 1952 as harmless joke items 30 132 However his chemical genius provides his most notable weapon Joker venom a liquid or gaseous toxin that sends its targets into fits of uncontrollable laughter higher doses can lead to paralysis coma or death leaving its victim with a ghoulish pained rictus grin The Joker has used venom since his debut only he knows the formula and is shown to be gifted enough to manufacture the toxin from ordinary household chemicals Another version of the venom used in Joker Last Laugh makes its victims resemble the Joker susceptible to his orders 32 68 133 134 The villain is immune to venom and most poisons in Batman 663 April 2007 Morrison writes that being an avid consumer of his own chemical experiments the Joker s immunity to poison concoctions that might kill another man in an instant has been developed over years of dedicated abuse 135 109 The character s arsenal is inspired by his nemesis weaponry such as batarangs In The Joker s Utility Belt 1952 he mimicked Batman s utility belt with non lethal items such as Mexican jumping beans and sneezing powder 132 In 1942 s The Joker Follows Suit the villain built his versions of the Batplane and Batmobile the Jokergyro and Jokermobile the latter with a large Joker face on its hood and created a Joker signal with which criminals could summon him for their heists 136 The Jokermobile lasted for several decades evolving with the Batmobile His technical genius is not limited by practicality allowing him to hijack Gotham s television airwaves to issue threats transform buildings into death traps launch a gas attack on the city and rain poisoned glass shards on its citizens from an airship 137 138 The Joker is portrayed as skilled in melee combat from his initial appearances when he defeats Batman in a sword fight nearly killing him and others when he overwhelms Batman but declines to kill him 139 He is talented with firearms although even his guns are theatrical his long barreled revolver often releases a flag reading Bang and a second trigger pull launches the flag to skewer its target 132 140 Although formidable in combat the Joker s chief asset is his mind 141 Relationships See also List of Batman family enemies The Joker s unpredictable homicidal nature makes him one of the most feared supervillains in the DC Universe the Trickster says in the 1995 miniseries Underworld Unleashed When super villains want to scare each other they tell Joker stories 142 143 Gotham s villains also feel threatened by the character depending on the circumstances he is as likely to fight with his rivals for control of the city as he is to join them for an entertaining outcome 144 The Joker interacts with other supervillains who oppose Batman whether he is on the streets or in Arkham Asylum He has collaborated with criminals like the Penguin the Riddler and Two Face although these partnerships rarely end well due to the Joker s desire for unbridled chaos and he uses his stature to lead others such as Killer Croc and the Scarecrow 145 The Joker s greatest rival is the smartest man in the world Lex Luthor Although they have a friendly partnership in 1950 s World s Finest Comics 88 later unions emphasized their mutual hostility and clashing egos 146 Despite his tendency to kill subordinates on a whim the Joker has no difficulty attracting henchmen with a seemingly infinite cash supply and intimidation they are too afraid of their employer to refuse his demands that they wear red clown noses or laugh at his macabre jokes 137 Even with his unpredictability and lack of superhuman powers the 2007 limited series Salvation Run sees hundreds of villains fall under his spell because they are more afraid of him than Lex Luthor 147 Batman 186 1966 introduced the Joker s first sidekick the one shot character Gaggy Gagsworthy who is short and dressed like a clown the character was later resurrected as an enemy of his replacement Harley Quinn 148 149 Introduced in the 1992 animated series Quinn is the Joker s former Arkham psychiatrist who develops an obsessive infatuation with him and dons a red and black harlequin costume to join him as his sidekick and on off girlfriend They have a classic abusive relationship even though the Joker constantly insults hurts and even tries to kill Harley she always returns to him convinced that he loves her 149 150 The Joker is sometimes shown to keep spotted hyenas as pets this trait was introduced in the 1977 animated series The New Adventures of Batman 137 A 1976 issue of Batman Family introduced Duela Dent as the Joker s daughter though her parentage claim was later proven to be false 39 Although his chief obsession is Batman the character has occasionally ventured outside Gotham City to fight Batman s superhero allies In To Laugh and Die in Metropolis 1987 the character kidnaps Lois Lane distracting Superman with a nuclear weapon The story is notable for the Joker taking on a relative god and the ease with which Superman defeats him it took only 17 pages Asked why he came to Metropolis the Joker replies simply Oh Superman why not 151 In 1995 the Joker fought his third major DC hero Wonder Woman who drew on the Greek god of trickery to temper the Joker s humor and shatter his confidence 152 The character has joined supervillain groups like the Injustice Gang and the Injustice League to take on superhero groups like the Justice League 153 154 Alternative versionsA number of alternate universes in DC Comics publications allow writers to introduce variations on the Joker in which the character s origins behavior and morality differ from the mainstream setting 155 The Dark Knight Returns depicts the final battle between an aged Batman and Joker others portray the aftermath of the Joker s death at the hands of a number of characters including Superman 74 156 Still others describe distant futures in which the Joker is a computer virus or a hero trying to defeat the era s tyrannical Batman 141 In some stories the Joker is someone else entirely Flashpoint portrays Batman s mother Martha Wayne becoming the Joker after being driven mad by her son s murder 157 and in Superman Speeding Bullets Lex Luthor becomes the Joker in a world where Superman is Batman 158 Amalgam Comics Amalgam Comics is a 1997 98 shared imprint of DC Comics and Marvel Comics which features characters that are composites of DC and Marvel characters The Hyena Creed H Quinn is a composite of DC s Joker and Marvel s Sabretooth He is the nemesis of the Dark Claw Logan Wayne a composite of Batman and Marvel s Wolverine Hyena like Wayne is a mutant with the ability to rapidly heal injuries The two were both subjects of the Weapon X program an attempt to create living weapons Hyena used his enhancements to become a psychopathic killer The Hyena first appeared in Legends of the Dark Claw 1 April 1996 Batman Beyond In the timeline of Batman Beyond set in the DC animated universe after the events of the film Batman Beyond Return of the Joker the Joker remains deceased In the Justice League Beyond arc Flashdrive his corpse appears in a flashback set immediately after his death at the hands of Tim Drake in Return of the Joker being buried beneath Arkham Asylum by Batman and James Gordon The Joker s death is shown to be the catalyst for Barbara Gordon s retirement as Batgirl besides Drake s eventual retirement as Robin Batman Judge Dredd Batman Judge Dredd featured the Joker character as a member of the Dark Judges in the original miniseries Batman and Judge Dredd Die Laughing 1 2 1998 The Joker helped free the original Dark Judges in exchange for immortality He received his payment by having his spirit merged into a corpse which was not quite the immortality he had sought creating Judge Joker As a Dark Judge the Joker could kill masses of people with his laugh which caused human heads to explode His tenure was a brief one as he quickly became bored with slaughter simply for its own sake and did not share the original Dark Judges fanatical zeal for their sacred mission of purging all life The Joker was restored to his normal mortal form upon returning to Gotham City via a defective dimensional jump device Batman Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles During Batman Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles the Joker is first seen mocking one of Arkham s psychiatrists earning him a dose of medication 159 The Joker is also mutated into a king cobra in style of naga Despite almost killing Batman he is quickly knocked out by Donatello Batman Damned In the miniseries Batman Damned printed under the DC Black Label the Joker s death is the center of the story The circumstances are left unclear though it occurred after a confrontation with Batman led to both of them tumbling over a bridge The Joker s body is later discovered by police having washed up on shore while Batman is severely injured and disoriented 160 Harley Quinn snaps completely and performs surgery on herself to resemble the Joker before leading his henchmen on a revenge mission 161 Batman Earth One The Joker is introduced towards the end of Volume Three of the graphic novel series Batman Earth One In this version he is suggested to be the one responsible for the Flying Graysons demise and frees Toyman from police custody in order to enlist him for his future plans Batman White Knight Main article Batman White Knight In this alternate reality the Joker mocks Batman s attitude towards his crusade for justice claiming that Batman s actions amount to nothing but an attempt to control his world and the Joker simply gives him the opportunity to express this rage Disgusted at this claim Batman force feeds the Joker a bottle of pills that the villain had just stolen but the overdose has the unexpected side effect of restoring the Joker to sanity as well as remembering his former identity of Jack Napier prompting him to order the GCPD to either charge Batman for assault or he would sue the department for complicity in Batman s abuse of prisoners 162 Napier s case against the department continues as he states that the GCPD locked him up as a major criminal on minimal evidence and even finds himself reforming Harley Quinn as he reveals that he drove the true Doctor Harleen Quinzell away a long time ago and the Harley he has been working with was another madwoman 163 He reinforces his vendetta against Batman by discovering records of the cost of building insurance to compensate for all the damage caused by Batman s actions as well as taking control of several other villains by adapting the technology used by the Mad Hatter to take control of Clayface and then expose the others to samples of Clayface allowing him to control them by proxy 164 Captain Carrot and His Amazing Zoo Crew The 1980s series Captain Carrot and His Amazing Zoo Crew presented the parallel Earth of Earth C a world populated by talking animal superheroes Captain Carrot in his secret identity of Roger Rodney Rabbit is the creator of the superhero comic Just a Lotta Animals a cartoon animal version of the Justice League of America Captain Carrot and the Zoo eventually discover the characters in Rodney s comics actually live on Earth C Minus in yet another alternate universe There the Porker a pig analog of the Joker is the nemesis of the Batmouse 165 A poster of the Porker drawn in a style resembling Alex Ross s version of the Joker is later seen at a comic book convention on Earth C 166 DC Marvel crossovers In the 1981 story Batman and the Incredible Hulk The Monster and the Madman the Shaper of Worlds loses control of his powers after passing through a unique field of radiation He makes contact with the Joker to steal gamma ray equipment from Wayne Enterprises that can treat his condition Despite the intervention of the Hulk the Joker manages to escape with the equipment by tricking the Hulk into fighting Batman The stolen ray proves ineffective but exposure to the Hulk s unique gamma radiation cures the Shaper instead As part of a deal with the Joker the Shaper agrees to make the Joker s dreams real but Batman and the Hulk are able to trick him into overloading his ability to dream 167 Carnage teams up with the Joker in Spider Man and Batman Disordered Minds 1 1995 The two meet when behavioral psychiatrist Cassandra Briar attempts to use the two killers as tests for a chip that will lobotomise their homicidal instincts The Carnage symbiote neutralizes Kasady s chip after it is implanted with Kasady pretending that the chip had worked so that he could meet the Joker After Carnage removes the Joker s chip the two s mutual psychoses lead them into a brief alliance before their differing methods of murder cause a clash Carnage favors numbers and actually seeing the death of his victims of his murder sprees close up while the Joker prefers the artistry of his usual traps and tricks Carnage dismissing the Joker s methods as slow while Joker sees Carnage as an amateur as anyone can just go out and kill people The Joker tries to kill Carnage with a bomb but Carnage drapes a piece of symbiote over a corpse to fake his death Batman and Spider Man uncover the trick and Batman is subsequently engulfed in Carnage s symbiote tendrils Carnage proposes to kill Batman but the Joker threatens to set off a bomb to destroy Gotham himself and Carnage rather than see Carnage kill Batman As Batman battles Carnage Spider Man follows the Joker The Joker defiantly dares Spider Man to kill him however Spider Man is unable to stoop to his level electing instead to apprehend the Joker in classic hero style 168 In the 1997 DC Marvel special Batman Captain America the Red Skull hires the Joker to steal an atomic bomb during World War II Joker evades Batman Cap Bucky and Robin and delivers it to the Skull but is horrified when he learns that the Skull is a Nazi saying I may be a criminal lunatic but I m an American criminal lunatic When the Skull threatens to drop the bomb on Washington D C the Joker attacks him in the plane s cargo bay While Captain America and Batman fly the plane over the ocean the two villains are dropped out with the bomb just before it explodes Both Captain America and Batman are convinced that the two are still alive somehow 169 Earth Two Joker s history on Earth Two is the same as his Golden Age history King Kull later recruited Joker of Earth Two to assist Weeper II of Earth S Doctor Light of Earth One and Shade of Earth One in order to trap one side of Earth S in darkness Joker did show Weeper II how he commits his crimes on Earth Two Their plot was defeated by Batman and Robin of Earth Two Mr Scarlet and Pinky the Whiz Kid of Earth S and Hawkman and Hawkgirl of Earth One 170 After Batman had died from terminal cancer Joker refused to believe that his archenemy is dead Dick Grayson posed as Batman to mesmerize Joker enough for Huntress to apprehend him 171 When Nicholas Lucien came out of a coma following his last fight with Batman he found himself incarcerated at Gotham State Penitentiary where Joker became his cellmate Lucien planned to have his revenge on Batman only to be told by Joker that Batman is dead 172 Earth 2 The Joker of the Post 52 Earth 2 is depicted as an old man frail and wheelchair reliant after a lifetime of exposure to deadly chemicals and ironically unable to laugh without hurting himself After disfiguring the Huntress s boyfriend Harry Simms in an attempt to create a replacement for the deceased Two Face he is tracked down by the vengeful heroine The Joker attempts to kill the Huntress with a lethal joy buzzer but the attack is intercepted by Power Girl and the Joker is himself electrocuted as a result 173 Earth 3 The Joker of Earth 3 is a hero operating under the alias of the Jokester and first appeared in Countdown 32 Sep 2007 He is the nemesis of Owlman a villainous version of Batman Jokester and his daughter Duela Dent are killed by the rogue Monitor Solomon 174 Earth 9 The Joker of Earth 9 in the DC Comics imprint Tangent Comics is a female hero who uses her array of jokes and comical devices to mock the evil tyrant Superman s authority She first appears in Tangent Comics The Joker 1 Dec 1997 This Joker is actually three women student Mary Marvel entrepreneur Christie Xanadu and reporter Lori Lemaris all of whom take turns wearing the Joker costume Mary is captured by the Tangent Superman and tortured into revealing the identities of the other two before she is killed Lemaris is sent to prison and Christina s fate is left unknown Lemaris is later re offered the Joker mantle but instead chooses to take up that of her fallen comrade Manhunter Earth 16 On this alternate Earth the children of metahuman heroes and villains have been forced into apparent retirement due to the efficiency of Superman robots Amongst these individuals is Duela Dent the Joker s Daughter friends with Alexis Luthor daughter of Lex Luthor 175 Earth 23 In the timeline of Batman The Brave and the Bold set outside the DC animated universe the character operates as the hero the Red Hood escaping the clutches of the villainous Batman counterpart Owlman Earth 22 Main article The Batman Who Laughs On Earth 22 of the Dark Multiverse the Joker discovers Batman s secret identity He slaughters most of Batman s other rogues as well as Commissioner Gordon and then infects a sizeable portion of Gotham s population with the same chemicals that transformed him subsequently killing several parents in front of their children with the goal of creating a gathering of children that were essentially a combination of himself and Batman As Batman grapples with the Joker the Joker finally dies from the chemicals that had originally transformed him As he dies his decaying body infects Batman with a virus that gradually transforms him into a new Joker By the time the Batman realizes this the process is too advanced for him to find a cure Batman kills most of his allies and transforms Damian into a mini Joker before turning on the rest of the Justice League and then conquering the world 176 Although the Batman Who Laughs successfully leads the other Dark Knights in a large scale assault on the prime DC Universe on behalf of Barbatos he is finally defeated by Batman and the Joker of the prime Earth The Joker mockingly notes that even an insane Batman can only plan for scenarios that he believes are possible and an alliance between the Joker and the Batman is the one thing the Batman Who Laughs could never have considered Earth 2 In 2011 The New 52 rebooted the DC continuity On Earth 2 Joker is a dangerous criminal who is imprisoned in a stasis chamber at Arkham Base When Batman entered Arkham base to look for inmates to aid him he shot Joker in the head 177 Elseworlds See also Elseworlds Elseworlds titles are stories that take place in their own separate continuities and often feature different interpretations of mainstream continuity characters Batman Bloodstorm 1994 In Batman Bloodstorm a sequel to Batman amp Dracula Red Rain the Joker becomes the leader of a group of vampires after the death of their original leader Dracula Although he successfully coordinates their efforts to take control of Gotham s major crime families the now vampire Batman aided by were cat Selina Kyle is able to destroy the Joker s minions Unfortunately Selina is killed in the final battle with the Joker s vampires with her death causing Batman to succumb to his lust for blood and drink from the Joker Although he stakes his foe to prevent him from coming back as a vampire Batman is left tormented by the knowledge that the Joker won their long conflict by driving him to kill often reflecting that he is damned by Dracula s bite and the Joker s blood in equal measure as he surrenders to his vampire side and turns on his old enemies Batman In Darkest Knight 1994 In Batman In Darkest Knight a Joker Two Face analog character is created when Sinestro absorbs the mind of Joe Chill driving him insane and resulting in his taking on Joker s iconic purple suit and warped sense of humor as well as a state resembling multiple personality disorder The classic Joker origin as depicted in The Killing Joke is referenced but averted by Green Lantern Bruce Wayne after being arrested the Red Hood says he has had a really bad day and Bruce counters by saying that that is no excuse because everyone has terrible days which shames the Hood into apologizing Batman Leatherwing 1994 In Batman Leatherwing the Joker is represented as the Laughing Man the deformed and insane pirate captain of the ship Pescador He is the adversary of Captain Leatherwing a Batman analogue Batman Nosferatu 1999 In Batman Nosferatu the Joker appears as the Laughing Man a monstrous cyborg created by the experiments of the depraved Dr Arkham who uses him as an assassin This version of the Joker ironically ends up creating this world s Batman after an assassination attempt on Bruce Wayne s counterpart Batman Two Faces 1998 In Batman Two Faces the Joker is not an independent entity but a shared identity created when a potion created by Bruce Wayne to give himself superhuman strength also creates a new personality Bruce alternating randomly between himself and the Joker his Batman identity fighting crime while the Joker commits murders After he realizes the truth and confesses to his allies Bruce unable to cure himself allows himself to fall off a building to stop the Joker once and for all Gotham by Gaslight 1989 The Joker cameos in Gotham by Gaslight as a serial killer who having married and poisoned at least 10 women tries to commit suicide with strychnine when he is caught leaving him with a permanent grin JLA The Nail 1998 In JLA The Nail the Joker is provided with Kryptonian gauntlets and launches an attack on Arkham Asylum forcing most of the inmates to fight each other before brutally murdering Batgirl and Robin while forcing Batman to watch Catwoman distracts Joker long enough for Batman to escape but the traumatised Batman subsequently kills the Joker in a rage During JLA Another Nail 2004 Batman encounters the Joker in the afterlife when dimensional anomalies allow him to escape from Hell briefly attempting to sacrifice himself to ensure that the Joker will remain trapped but Robin and Batgirl s spirit halts Batman s attempted sacrifice and gives him the strength to move on from his guilt Superman amp Batman Generations 1999 In the Superman amp Batman Generations miniseries the DC characters are shown to age at a normal rate with Batman and Superman beginning their careers in 1939 In 1949 the Joker and Lex Luthor kidnap a pregnant Lois Lane and expose her to gold kryptonite this renders her first born child a normal human 178 In 1969 the now elderly Joker secretly escapes Arkham Asylum and poses as Joker Junior claiming to be the original s protege The Joker kills the second Batman an adult Dick Grayson before revealing his true identity to the police as he gloats about how he has finally killed Batman but Bruce Junior Bruce Wayne s son and Grayson s Robin manages to switch costumes with his mentor to create the impression that the Joker killed Robin rather than Batman 179 In 1975 Grayson s spirit attacks the Joker in an attempt to kill him but the spirit of the deceased Alfred Pennyworth convinces Grayson to pass on as the Joker can be no threat to anyone Learning that his enemy is about to die of old age the now retired Bruce Wayne dons the cape and cowl for a final visit to the Joker s deathbed Batman rejects the Joker s request to learn his true identity on the grounds that the Joker is the last man that he would want to bring peace to 180 Superman Speeding Bullets 1993 This Elseworlds story Superman Speeding Bullets is set on an Earth where baby Kal El was adopted by Thomas and Martha Wayne and raised as Bruce Wayne When Bruce s parents are killed he becomes the ruthless vigilante Batman Batman s nemesis is Lex Luthor who in this reality was injured in the same type of chemical accident that created the main universe Joker The accident also drives Luthor insane and he attempts to destroy Gotham City with an army of thugs but is stopped by Batman Thrillkiller and Thrillkiller 62 In the Elseworlds miniseries Batman Thrillkiller Jan March 1997 the Joker is gangster Bianca Steeplechase and the nemesis of Batgirl and Robin Steeplechase poisons Robin masquerades as the mayor s wife abducts and tortures Bruce Wayne and is in a lesbian relationship with Earth 37 s Harley Quinn Bianca is killed by Batgirl drowning in the Gotham River 181 Flashpoint In the alternate timeline of the Flashpoint event Martha Wayne is the Joker and even resembles Heath Ledger s portrayal as seen in The Dark Knight After Bruce Wayne is shot and killed by Joe Chill Martha is unable to cope with her loss so she cuts open her cheeks to create a faux smile 182 As the Joker she is the nemesis of Batman and uses Yo Yo as a henchman She kidnaps Harvey Dent s son and daughter The Joker kills James Gordon after she tricks Gordon into shooting Harvey s daughter disguised as the Joker After Dent s son and daughter are saved Batman confronts the Joker 183 about their son s death As Batman has recently met Barry Allen Martha learns that there is a way to rewrite history where Bruce will live although they will die Realizing that her son will be Batman in that timeline Martha flees in horror falling to her death in the caverns below Wayne Manor 182 Injustice Gods Among Us comic In this spin off of the online game the Joker tires of his unsuccessful fight with Batman and decides to attack Superman He and Harley Quinn kill Jimmy Olsen and abduct Lois Lane who is pregnant with Superman s child They place a stolen nuclear warhead within Metropolis with a deadman switch wired to Lois After exposing Superman to kryptonite laced fear toxin stolen from the Scarecrow Superman mistakes Lois for Doomsday and kills her Metropolis is destroyed in the subsequent nuclear detonation A grief stricken and vengeful Superman confronts the captured Joker who states that he will just escape to commit more crimes and taunts Superman about not finding love and happiness again saying he will take it again from him Enraged beyond words Superman kills the Joker and establishes the Regime intent on eliminating crime through any means necessary In the Year Three comic series Superman is placed into a magical sleep where he imagines events playing out differently He is able to break free of the fear toxin in time to save Lois their child and Metropolis Before an angry Superman can attack the Joker Batman takes the Joker away When the Joker confesses to Batman that he would try to kill Lois again Batman kills the Joker and is imprisoned as a result With the tragedy averted Superman is able to live a happy life with his wife and child Superman is eventually woken from his dream and forced to contend with a world where the Joker bested him much to his agonizing fury In Year Four it is revealed that the Joker s name is used by the Joker Underground a large group of people who oppose Superman s Regime and see the Joker as a symbol of freedom This catches Batwoman and Harley Quinn s eyes and they convince the protestors to use a different system The Underground agree but shortly after the two depart an enraged Superman shows up furious they are using the Joker as a symbol He then kills the Underground including over 200 people as punishment This results in others continuing to use the Joker s name as a symbol in response to the fact that Superman showed he is willing to murder those who had already agreed to stop using the Joker s name as their symbol resulting in the Underground being temporarily co opted by the Joker of an alternate universe Joker 2008 Another graphic novel called simply Joker focuses on the character in a more gritty realistic version of the Batman mythos Planetary Batman Planetary Batman presents the Joker as a field agent for Planetary named Jasper working under Richard Grayson He is apparently harmless and has a habit of giggling when he is nervous Elijah Snow mentions not liking the way Jasper kept hugging himself when looking at pictures of homicides 184 Smallville In a comic book miniseries based on the television series Smallville an interpretation of the Joker made his debut in Smallville Alien 3 February 2014 He is the Earth 13 version of Batman and incorporates an element of the Crime Syndicate Society character Owlman in addition to pale skin and green hair of Joker 185 Possible futures Batman Digital Justice In the 1990 graphic novel Batman Digital Justice created by Pepe Moreno an artificial intelligence calling itself the Joker Virus takes over a futuristic technology dependent Gotham City in the late 21st century and claims to be the reincarnation of its creator the original Joker Batman in this version the grandson of Commissioner James W Gordon stops the virus with help from another A I the Batcomputer as programmed by the long dead Bruce Wayne Dark Knight universe nbsp Left Jokers as seen in The Dark Knight ReturnsRight Dick Grayson as the new Joker as seen in The Dark Knight Strikes AgainIn the alternative future of The Dark Knight Returns 1986 the Joker has been catatonic since Batman s retirement but regains consciousness after seeing a news story about his nemesis reemergence He manipulates his psychiatrist into declaring him cured and hires a publicist to book him on a late night talk show He then embarks on a killing spree drawing Batman out into the open Batman pursues him into the Tunnel of Love at a carnival where he fractures the Joker s neck in a fit of rage but cannot bring himself to kill his old foe The Joker then commits suicide by twisting his fractured neck until it breaks completely thus framing Batman as a murderer His body is soon found by the police before it abruptly bursts into flame Batman having rigged the corpse to create a distraction In The Dark Knight Strikes Again 2001 the sequel to The Dark Knight Returns a man resembling the Joker with supernatural powers and a healing factor kills numerous superheroes under orders from Lex Luthor to foil Batman s superhero revolution against Luthor s dictatorial regime Despite his appearance several heroes insist that he cannot be the deceased Joker In the climax he is revealed to be Dick Grayson who had been fired and abandoned by Batman many years ago Grayson targeted Batman s partner Carrie Kelley specifically because of his jealousy of the girl Grayson s disguise as the Joker is shown to have been a ploy to taunt Batman emotionally before taking his revenge Dick is killed after a final confrontation with Batman In All Star Batman and Robin the Boy Wonder the prequel to The Dark Knight Returns 1986 the Joker is revealed to be the man responsible for the death of Grayson s parents having hired Jocko Boy Vanzetti to murder them during a circus act In the one shot Dark Knight Returns The Last Crusade the Joker is revealed to be responsible for the death of Jason Todd by having ordered his men to brutally beat the new Robin to death in retaliation of his last defeat by the Dynamic Duo 186 In Dark Knight Returns The Golden Child 2019 the sequel to The Dark Knight III The Master Race another Joker is seen working alongside Darkseid and campaigning to be President of the United States while his henchmen cause chaos in the streets of Gotham before he is defeated by Carrie Kelley as Batwoman While the identity of this Joker is never revealed in story the character notes in the deluxe edition of the comic by the artist Rafael Grampa for the character seems to suggest that the Joker who appears in The Golden Child is in fact the original Joker from The Dark Knight Returns and that Frank Miller did not want to explain how or why the Joker was alive again after his death as such Grampa explains in the character notes he decided to draw the Joker to look as if he had plastic surgery Since the last time we saw him in the Dark Knight saga where he was burnt Superman Batman 2008 A Super deformed version of the Justice League of America and some villains the Joker among them appeared in Superman Batman 51 and 52 In Grant Morrison s 2014 15 miniseries The Multiversity this alternate Earth is given the designation Earth 42 187 Literary analysis nbsp A 2015 art exhibition at the Barcelona International Comics Convention focused on the Joker celebrating the character s 75th anniversary 188 Since the Bronze Age of Comics the Joker has been interpreted as an archetypal trickster displaying talents for cunning intelligence social engineering pranks theatricality and idiomatic humor Like the trickster the Joker alternates between malicious violence and clever harmless whimsy 189 He is amoral and not driven by ethical considerations but by a shameless and insatiable nature and although his actions are condemned as evil he is necessary for cultural robustness 190 The trickster employs amoral and immoral acts to destabilize the status quo and reveal cultural political and ethical hypocrisies that society attempts to ignore 191 However the Joker differs in that his actions typically only benefit himself 192 The Joker possesses abnormal body imagery reflecting an inversion of order The trickster is simultaneously subhuman and superhuman a being that indicates a lack of unity in body and mind 193 In Arkham Asylum A Serious House on Serious Earth the Joker serves as Batman s trickster guide through the hero s own psyche testing him in various ways before ultimately offering to cede his rule of the Asylum to Batman 194 Rather than the typical anarchist interpretation others have analysed the character as a Marxist opposite to Batman s capitalist arguing that anarchism requires the rejection of all authority in favor of uncontrolled freedom 195 The Joker rejects most authority but retains his own using his actions to coerce and consolidate power in himself and convert the masses to his own way of thinking while eliminating any that oppose him 196 In The Killing Joke the Joker is an abused member of the underclass who is driven insane by failings of the social system 197 The Joker rejects material needs and his first appearance in Batman 1 sees him perpetrate crimes against Gotham s wealthiest men and the judge who had sent him to prison 198 Batman is wealthy yet the Joker is able to triumph through his own innovations 199 Ryan Litsey described the Joker as an example of a Nietzschean Superman arguing that a fundamental aspect of Friedrich Nietzsche s Superman the will to power is exemplified in all of the Joker s actions providing a master morality to Batman s slave morality 200 The character s indomitable will to power means he is never discouraged by being caught or defeated and he is not restrained by guilt or remorse 201 Joker represents the master who creates rules and defines them who judges others without needing approval and for whom something is good because it benefits him 202 He creates his own morality and is bound only by his own rules without aspiring to something higher than himself unlike Batman the slave who makes a distinction between good and evil and is bound to rules outside of himself such as his avoidance of killing in his quest for justice 203 The Joker has no defined origin story that requires him to question how he came to be as like the Superman he does not regret or assess the past and only moves forward 204 The Joker s controlling and abusive relationship with Harley Quinn has been analyzed as a means of the Joker reinforcing his own belief in his power in a world where he may be killed or neutralized by another villain or Batman 205 Joker mirrors his identity through Harley in her appearance and even though he may ignore or act indifferent towards her he continues to try to subject her to his control 205 When Harley successfully defeats Batman in Mad Love 1994 the Joker emasculated by his own failure severely injures her out of fear of what the other villains will think of him however while Harley recovers the Joker sends her flowers which she accepts reasserting his control over her 206 Harley s co creator Paul Dini describes their relationship as Harley being someone who makes the Joker feel better about himself and who can do the work that he does not want to do himself 207 In the 1999 one shot comic Batman Harley Quinn the Joker decides to kill Harley after admitting that he does care for her that their relationship is romantic and that these feelings prevent him from fulfilling his purpose 208 Removing the traditional male female relationship such as in the Batman Thrillkiller storyline where the Joker Bianca Steeplechase is a female and involved in a lesbian relationship with Harley their relationship lacks any aspects of violence or subjugation 209 Cultural impact and legacy nbsp Cesar Romero as the Joker top in the 1966 film Batman based on the TV series of the same name with Burgess Meredith as the Penguin left and Frank Gorshin as the Riddler center The Joker is considered one of the most recognizable and iconic fictional characters in popular culture 210 211 212 one of the best comic villains and one of the greatest villains of all time 213 214 The character was well liked following his debut appearing in nine out of the first 12 Batman issues and remained one of Batman s most popular foes throughout his publication 215 The character is considered one of the four top comic book characters alongside Batman Superman and Spider Man 212 Indeed when DC Comics released the original series of Greatest Stories Ever Told 1987 1988 featuring collections of stories about heroes like Batman and Superman the Joker was the only villain included alongside them 216 The character has been the focus of ethical discussion on the desirability of Batman who adheres to an unbreakable code forbidding killing saving lives by murdering the Joker a relentless dealer of death These debates weigh the positive stopping the Joker permanently against its effect on Batman s character and the possibility that he might begin killing all criminals 116 217 218 In 2006 the Joker was number one on Wizard magazine s 100 Greatest Villains of All Time 219 In 2008 Wizard s list of 200 Greatest Comic Book Characters of All Time placed the Joker fifth 220 and the character was eighth on Empire s list of 50 Greatest Comic Book Characters the highest ranked villain on both lists 221 In 2009 the Joker was second on IGN s list of Top 100 Comic Book Villains 222 and in 2011 Wired named him Comics Greatest Supervillain 223 Complex CollegeHumor and WhatCulture named the Joker the greatest comic book villain of all time 211 131 224 while IGN listed him the top DC Comics villain in 2013 225 and Newsarama as the greatest Batman villain 101 The Joker s popularity and his role as Batman s enemy has involved the character in most Batman related media from television to video games 2 6 These adaptations of the character have been received positively 19 on film 226 227 television 228 and in video games 229 As in the comics the character s personality and appearance shift he is campy ferocious or unstable depending on the author and the intended audience 19 The character inspired theme park roller coasters The Joker s Jinx 230 231 The Joker in Mexico and California 232 233 and The Joker Chaos Coaster 234 and featured in story based rides such as Justice League Battle for Metropolis 234 The Joker is one of the few comic book supervillains to be represented on children s merchandise and toys appearing on items including action figures trading cards board games money boxes pajamas socks and shoes 212 235 The Jokermobile was a popular toy a Corgi die cast metal replica was successful during the 1950s and in the 1970s a Joker styled flower power era Volkswagen microbus was manufactured by Mego 137 In 2015 The Joker A Serious Study of the Clown Prince of Crime became the first academic book to be published about a supervillain 212 Online phenomena Since 2012 2013 the Joker has inspired a large number of internet memes often focused on the character s portrayal in films see below According to Steven T Wright of The Outline the character came to symbolize the archetype of the edgelord a vapid self styled provocateur who prides himself in his ability to trigger those who hold progressive viewpoints 236 The phrase We live in a society is commonly associated with the Joker in memes especially after the release of the trailers of the 2019 film Joker The line garnered particular notoriety after a trailer for the film Zack Snyder s Justice League 2021 featured Joker saying the line 237 238 The Joker is often featured as part of the Gang Weed meme a satirical take on incels neckbeards and nice guys as well as cannabis and gamer culture 239 240 In other media Main article Joker in other media nbsp nbsp nbsp Mark Hamill has voiced the Joker in animation and video games since 1992 Heath Ledger won a posthumous Academy Award for his interpretation of the character in 2008 s The Dark Knight Joaquin Phoenix won an Academy Award for his interpretation of the character in 2019 s Joker The Joker has appeared in a variety of media including television series animated and live action films WorldCat a catalog of libraries in 170 countries records over 250 productions featuring the Joker as a subject including films books and video games 235 and Batman films which feature the character are typically the most successful 124 The character s earliest on screen adaptation was in the 1966 television series Batman and its film adaptation Batman in which he was played as a cackling prankster by Cesar Romero reflecting his contemporary comic counterpart 210 241 242 The Joker then appeared in the animated television series The Adventures of Batman 1968 voiced by Larry Storch 243 The New Adventures of Batman 1977 voiced by Lennie Weinrib 244 and The Super Powers Team Galactic Guardians 1985 voiced by Frank Welker 245 246 A version of the Joker named Jack Napier played by Jack Nicholson made his film debut in 1989 s Batman which earned over 400 million at the worldwide box office The role was a defining performance in Nicholson s career and was considered to overshadow Batman s with film critic Roger Ebert saying that the audience must sometimes remind themselves not to root for the Joker 247 248 Batman s success led to the 1992 television series Batman The Animated Series Voiced by Mark Hamill the Joker retained the darker tone of the comics in stories acceptable for young children 249 250 Hamill s Joker is considered a defining portrayal and he voiced the character in spin off films 1993 s Batman Mask of the Phantasm and 2000 s Batman Beyond Return of the Joker video games 2001 s Batman Vengeance related series 1996 s Superman The Animated Series 2000 s Static Shock and 2001 s Justice League action figures toys and amusement park voiceovers 251 252 253 254 A redesigned Joker voiced by Kevin Michael Richardson appeared in 2004 s The Batman Richardson was the first African American to play the character 255 256 After Christopher Nolan s successful 2005 Batman film reboot Batman Begins which ended with a teaser for the Joker s involvement in a sequel the character appeared in 2008 s The Dark Knight played by Heath Ledger as an avatar of anarchy and chaos 257 258 While Batman Begins earned a worldwide total of 370 million 259 The Dark Knight earned over 1 billion and was the highest grossing film of the year setting several contemporary box office records including highest grossing midnight opening opening day and opening weekend 260 261 Ledger won a posthumous Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor for his performance the first acting Oscar ever won for a superhero film 262 263 The Joker has featured in a number of animated projects such as 2009 s Batman The Brave and the Bold voiced by Jeff Bennett 264 and 2011 s Young Justice voiced by Brent Spiner 265 In comic book adaptations the character has been voiced by John DiMaggio in 2010 s Batman Under the Red Hood and 2020 s Batman Death in the Family and by Michael Emerson in 2012 s two parter The Dark Knight Returns 266 267 The television series Gotham 2014 2019 explores the mythology of the Joker through twin brothers Jerome and Jeremiah Valeska played by Cameron Monaghan 268 Jared Leto portrays the Joker in the DC Extended Universe beginning with Suicide Squad 2016 269 Leto reprised the role in Zack Snyder s Justice League 2021 270 Zach Galifianakis voiced the character in The Lego Batman Movie 2017 271 The 2019 film Joker focuses on the origins of the Joker named Arthur Fleck as portrayed by Joaquin Phoenix Although the film was controversial for its violence and portrayal of mental illness Phoenix s performance received widespread acclaim 272 273 274 275 Like The Dark Knight before it Joker grossed over 1 billion at the box office breaking contemporary financial records and earned numerous awards including an Academy Award for Best Actor for Phoenix 276 275 277 Barry Keoghan makes a cameo appearance as the Joker in Matt Reeves film The Batman 2022 where he is credited as Unseen Arkham Prisoner 278 The Joker has also been featured in video games Hamill returned to voice the character in 2009 s critically acclaimed Batman Arkham Asylum its equally praised 2011 sequel Batman Arkham City and the multiplayer DC Universe Online 279 Hamill was replaced by Troy Baker for the 2013 prequel Batman Arkham Origins and the Arkham series animated spin off Batman Assault on Arkham 251 280 281 282 while Hamill returned for the 2015 series finale Batman Arkham Knight 283 Richard Epcar has voiced the Joker in a series of fighting games including Mortal Kombat vs DC Universe 2008 284 Injustice Gods Among Us 2013 285 its sequel Injustice 2 2017 286 and Mortal Kombat 11 2019 287 The character also appeared in Lego Batman The Videogame 2008 Lego Batman 2 DC Super Heroes 2012 and its animated adaptation and Lego Batman 3 Beyond Gotham 2014 the latter three voiced by Christopher Corey Smith 288 289 290 as well as Lego DC Super Villains 2018 with the role reprised by Hamill Anthony Ingruber voices the Joker in Batman The Telltale Series 2016 291 and its sequel Batman The Enemy Within 2017 292 ReferencesCitations Zalben Alex March 28 2014 When Is Batman s Birthday Actually New York City MTV News Archived from the original on July 26 2014 Retrieved August 9 2014 a b c d e f g h i j k Eason Brian K July 11 2008 Dark Knight Flashback The Joker Part I Comic Book Resources Archived from the original on February 23 2014 Retrieved February 23 2014 a b c O Neal Sean December 8 2011 R I P Jerry Robinson creator of the Joker The A V Club Archived from the original on October 14 2013 Retrieved October 12 2013 a b Jerry Robinson The Daily Telegraph London December 12 2011 Archived from the original on November 4 2013 Retrieved October 12 2013 a b c R I P Jerry Robinson Ain t It Cool News December 15 2011 Archived from the original on October 14 2013 Retrieved October 12 2013 a b c Patrick Seb December 13 2013 The 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ISBN 978 1 62846 238 8 External linksOfficial website nbsp Joker on DC Database a DC Comics wikiJoker character at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Media from Commons nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Joker character amp oldid 1187385943, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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