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Moore's probing dialogue is enhanced by a dark, morally ambiguous world of illustrations. The 'book' is less than 50 pages--less than an hour of reading.
This book is a great read, and it doesn't demand much of your time. Reader will recognize several scenes and themes drawn from this work in the Dark Knight.
This comic book has many, many great features. It features several usual characters posed in unique positions that criticize their more traditional mythology.
Pick it up. To begin, it has an excellent writer and illustrator.
Furthermore, this story is incredibly simple.
Brian Bolland went back and added additional figures to his panels. A timeless classic. It would be fun to compare an earlier version of this work to see who the new people are. Beautifully drawn. Cleverly written.
Amazon carries the 2006 edition of DC Universe: The Stories of Alan Moore, which includes this and many other excellent works. Skip this unless you're a collector.
Unfortunately he fails miserably and worries about how he's going to support his very pregnant-in-the-late-trimester wife and soon-to-arrive baby. Whether he jumped, fell or was pushed is unclear, but the man landed in a vat of chemicals that washed him out of the factory. He decides to make fast, easy money by throwing in his lot with criminals looking to rip off a playing card company next door to the chemical plant and he offers his services to get through unnoticed. After laying out his basic concept, he arrives at the conclusion that he must kill Batman. The Joker has escaped from Arkham Asylum and is setting about a new and truly evil scheme; unrivaled since he murdered Jason Todd/Robin #2 in Batman: A Death in the Family. Batman: The Killing Joke is by far one of the greatest one-shot graphic novels ever written, Moore is fortunate that it was of such caliber as to deserve inclusion in the mainstream Batman canon.The Joker is the single most evil non-superpowered being in the DC universe, and almost nothing is known about who he was before becoming the arch-nemesis of Batman. While curiosity abounds for fans, even more prefer that he maintain this aura of mystery since it is believed that his pre-villain life was not one that would have been considered anything worth writing about; it is because of he IS the Joker that he means anything in the DCU at all. Later at the home of Commissioner Gordon, Barbara answers the door to find a sick fixed smile shooting her through her spine, crippling her; after several off-color disabled jokes, Gordon is kidnapped and spirited away to the the Joker's carnival of horrors.
He was once a technician at the ACE Chemical Plant who quit his job to become a stand-up comedian. When he reaches shore and removes his disguise and sees his reflection in a puddle of rainwater, he begins to laugh, turns and reveals himself as the Joker.At the end of this story follows another one from the mini-series Batman: Black & White called here "An Innocent Guy" about a man - clearly disturbed, making the judgment that if anyone is to truly live a life devoted to good, then they must commit an act of evil to know that that is what they really want. While in discussion for the crime, a couple of cops show up to tell him that his wife has died while operating a defunct bottle heater. He lays out his plan in disturbing detail and closes with the a that after this one act of evil, he can go on to live a thoroughly good life and go to heaven when he dies.Masterfully written by Alan Moore and beautifully illustrated by Brian Bolland, Batman: The Killing Joke is a must have for all comic collectors. Later on, they break into the plant, but everything goes wrong as the cops show up and take down the gangsters and that Batman appears to apprehend who he believes to be the Red Hood. (Moore and DC received a hailstorm of praise and criticism for rendering Batgirl a parapellegic, but the decision stuck and arguably many good, if not great, stories came from it). In his shock, he tries to back out of the crime since he no longer has a reason to go through with it; but the gangsters hold him to it. All that aside, Alan Moore - the creative genius behind such works as V for Vendetta, Watchmen, From Hell, Swamp Thing , The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen and many others - took a chance and in 1988 presented the comic community with what DC has accepted as the official Joker origin story.WARNING: SPOILERS AHEADThe Killing Joke is about madness.
So as to protect his own identity, the gangsters present him with his disguise: The Red Hood. The final confrontation between them is left a mystery, but it is clear that the Joker - after decades of campy portrayals - has most definitely re-earned the title of most evil comic book villain.Throughout the story, the Joker offers flashbacks to his life before becoming the monster he is today. While Batman is frantically trying to track him down, the Joker has purchased a dilapidated carnival (like something you'd expect to find in a 21st century teen slasher flick, but in his hands is decidedly worse) and is now off to secure his "main attraction". Gordon regains consciousness to find himself being stripped down by a host of sideshow freaks and lead at the Joker's behest to a House of Horrors ride filled with the Joker's own snap-shots of Barbara fully undressed and in pain and filled with the Joker and his cronies singing a sardonic song about lunacy (GOD I WISH I KNEW THE TUNE.).; all of this intended to drive Gordon insane.Batman uncovers the Joker's plot and rushes to the carnival to stop him; a chase ensues through a booby-trap-laden house of mirrors in which the Joker states that he's proven his point with Gordon's unquestionable descent into madness: "All it takes is one bad day to reduce the sanest man alive to lunacy." The joker goes on in his analysis with Batman, stating that he too is crazy, but won't admit it and tries to get him to accept it.
Give it a try if you're any kind of fan of Batman. This Batman story is really messed up.
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