Joker Batman the Killing Joke Giant Wall Art Print Poster Picture

"I've proved my point. I've demonstrated there'due south no divergence betwixt me and everyone else! All it takes is one bad day to reduce the sanest homo alive to lunacy. That's how far the earth is from where I am. Only one bad mean solar day. You had a bad day once, am I right? I know I am. I can tell. Yous had a bad day and everything changed. Why else would y'all dress up like a flying rat? You had a bad day, and it drove you as crazy as everybody else... Only you won't admit it! Yous accept to keep pretending that life makes sense, that there'southward some signal to all this struggling! God, you make me desire to puke. I hateful, what is it with you? What fabricated you what you are? Girlfriend killed past the mob, maybe? Brother carved up past some mugger? Something like that, I bet. Something similar that... Something similar that happened to me, you know. I... I'm not exactly sure what information technology was. Sometimes I remember it ane way, sometimes some other... If I'1000 going to have a past, I prefer information technology to be multiple pick! Ha ha ha! But my point is... My signal is, I went crazy. When I saw what a black, awful joke the world was, I went crazy as a coot! I admit it! Why tin't you? I mean, you're non unintelligent! You must see the reality of the situation. Do you know how many times we've come shut to Globe State of war 3 over a flock of geese on a computer screen? Do yous know what triggered the last Globe War? An argument over how many telegraph poles Germany owed its war debt creditors! Telegraph poles! Ha ha ha ha HA! It's all a joke! Everything anybody e'er valued or struggled for... it's all a monstrous, demented gag! So why can't y'all see the funny side? Why aren't y'all laughing?"
―The Joker to Batman [src]

Batman: The Killing Joke is a "prestige edition" i-shot written by Alan Moore and drawn by Brian Bolland, published past DC Comics in 1988. It has in its original form continuously been held in print since then. It has likewise been reprinted every bit part of the DC Universe: The Stories of Alan Moore-trade paperback.

In 2008 information technology was reprinted in a deluxe hardcover edition. This Deluxe Edition features new coloring by Brian Bolland, meant to illustrate his original intentions for the book, with more than somber, realistic, and subdued colors than the intensely-colored original. The reprint also included the story An Innocent Guy, which had earlier been included in Batman Blackness and White series of comics.

Contents

  • 1 Synopsis
    • 1.1 "The Killing Joke"
  • 2 Appearances
    • 2.1 "The Killing Joke"
      • 2.1.1 Individuals
      • two.1.two Locations
      • 2.ane.3 Items
      • 2.i.4 Vehicles
  • 3 Influence in other media
  • 4 Trivia
  • 5 Notes and references

Synopsis

"The Killing Joke"

The plot revolves around a largely psychological boxing betwixt Batman and his longtime foe the Joker, who has escaped from Arkham Aviary. Batman paid a visit to Arkham Asylum, and specifically to the Joker's prison cell. He then tells the Clown Prince of Offense that he's been thinking of their battles, more specifically how they're most likely going to end: One of them is most likely going to kill the other, whether it be Joker killing Batman, or Batman killing Joker, that nigh likely information technology may happen either sooner or later on, and wonders if Joker himself is enlightened of that. However, he then realizes the man in the cell is not really the Joker due to his chalk pare smearing off when he tried to catch him, and demands to know where he is. The Joker intends to bulldoze Gotham City Police force Commissioner James Gordon insane to testify that the about ethical denizen is capable of going mad afterward having "one bad day". Every bit part of his plan, the Joker managed to scam the owner of a run-down entertainment park into giving him control, as well poisoning him in the process when shaking hands on the bargain, revealing that the park was actually Joker'due south since an hour beforehand thanks to his minions forcing his business partner to grant Joker ownership. Along the way, the Joker has flashbacks to his early life, gradually explaining his possible origin.

The pre Joker, with his significant wife.

The man who will go the Joker is an unnamed engineer who quit his task at a chemical company to become a stand-upward comedian, only to fail miserably. Drastic to support his meaning wife, Jeannie, he agrees to guide two criminals into the plant for a robbery. During the planning, the police inform him that his married woman has died in a household accident involving an electric baby bottle heater. Grief-stricken, the engineer tries to withdraw from the plan, but the criminals strong-arm him into keeping his delivery to them.

At the found, the criminals make him don a special mask to go the infamous Red Hood. Unknown to the engineer, this disguise is just the criminals' scheme to implicate any cohort as the mastermind to divert attention from themselves. Once within, they almost immediately blunder into security personnel, and a tearing shootout and a chase ensues. The criminals are gunned down and the engineer finds himself confronted past Batman, who is investigating the disturbance.

Bolland's iconic image of the Joker.

Panicked, the engineer deliberately jumps into the chemic plant'south chemical waste material catch-bowl vat to escape Batman and is swept through a piping leading to the outside. Once outside, he discovers, to his horror, that the chemicals have permanently bleached his skin chalk white, stained his lips red blood-red and dyed his pilus bright green. This turn of events, compounding the man's misfortunes of that ane mean solar day, drives him completely insane, causing him to break out into hysterical laughter, and results in the birth of the Joker.

In the present day, the Joker kidnaps Gordon, shoots and paralyzes his daughter Barbara, and imprisons him in a run-down amusement park. His henchmen then strip Gordon naked and cage him in the park's freak show. He chains Gordon to 1 of the park'due south rides and cruelly forces him to view giant pictures of his wounded daughter in various states of undress. Once Gordon completes the maddening gauntlet, the Joker ridicules him equally an case of "the boilerplate human", a naĂŻve weakling doomed to insanity.

Barbara in the infirmary

1988 version of the scene where Joker reveals his pessimistic views on the globe.

2008 version of the scene where Joker reveals his pessimistic views on the world.

Batman arrives to relieve Gordon, and the Joker retreats into the funhouse. Gordon's sanity is intact despite the ordeal and he insists that Batman capture the Joker "past the volume" in club to "bear witness him that our manner works." Batman enters the funhouse and faces the Joker'southward traps while the Joker tries to persuade his one-time foe that the earth is inherently insane and thus non worth fighting for, also challenge that Batman must accept suffered from a bad mean solar day himself and gone insane too, generally because of his attire (with Joker being far more correct in his supposition than fifty-fifty he realized). He so commented that, while he doesn't call back exactly how his bad day went due to his memories changing every time, he knows he went crazy as a result, particularly afterwards knowing how the world was a black atrocious joke. He then ranted as to why Batman won't acknowledge he's gone crazy, peculiarly when he'due south pretty certain the Caped Crusader was smart enough to meet things from his eyes, pointing out how the Cold War frequently came shut to escalating to Globe War Three due to a flock of geese appearing on a computer screen, or how the second Earth War was allegedly caused by Germany entering an argument over the amount of telegraph poles they owed the Allies when undergoing reparations presently after the outset Earth War, and then denouncing everything anybody has strived to fight for every bit existence a "monstrous, demented gag" before demanding to know why Batman non only doesn't run across the funny side, but why he isn't even laughing at all. Eventually, Batman tracks downwardly the Joker and, after explaining that the reason he isn't laughing at all, nor seeing it as a funny side is because he's heard the joke before, and it wasn't funny the first time around, subdues him. Batman and then attempts to reach out to him to surrender crime and put a finish to their years-long war; otherwise, the two will be eternally locked on a class that will one twenty-four hours outcome in a fight to the death between them. The Joker declines, however, ruefully saying "Information technology's too late for that...far as well tardily." He then tells Batman a joke that was started earlier in the comic:

"See, at that place were these 2 guys in a lunatic asylum... And i night, one night they decide they don't similar living in an aviary whatsoever more. They determine they're going to escape! So, like, they get up onto the roof, and there, just across this narrow gap, they run into the rooftops of the town, stretching away in the moon light... stretching away to freedom. Now, the starting time guy, he jumps right across with no problem. Just his friend, his friend did not dare make the leap. Y'see... Y'see, he'due south afraid of falling. So then, the outset guy has an idea... He says 'Hey! I have my flashlight with me! I'll shine it across the gap between the buildings. Yous tin can walk along the beam and join me!' B-but the second guy simply shakes his head. He suh-says... He says 'Wh-what do you call back I am? Crazy? You'd plow it off when I was half manner across!'"
―Joker's joke

The joke is funny enough to brand the normally rock-faced Batman express mirth. They keep to laugh as the constabulary approach. Batman then grabs the Joker and the story ends, leaving it up to the reader to determine the Joker's fate.

Appearances

"The Killing Joke"

Individuals

  • Batman
  • Barbara Gordon
  • James Gordon
  • Alfred Pennyworth
  • The Joker
  • Jeannie
  • Danny Weaver
  • Two-Confront (Cameo)
  • The Penguin (Cameo)
  • Red Hood (Flashback Only)
  • The Joker'south Carnival Freaks

Locations

  • Gotham City
    • Arkham Asylum
    • Wayne Manor
    • Batcave
    • Ace Chemic Processing Plant (Flashback Only)

Items

  • Joker Venom

Vehicles

  • Batmobile

Influence in other media

Tim Burton claimed that The Killing Joke was a major influence on his film adaptation of Batman: "I was never a giant comic book fan, but I've ever loved the image of Batman and The Joker. The reason I've never been a comic book fan - and I call up it started when I was a kid - is because I could never tell which box I was supposed to read. I don't know if it was dyslexia or whatever, but that's why I loved The Killing Joke, because for the first time I could tell which one to read. It's my favorite. It'south the first comic I've ever loved. And the success of those graphic novels made our ideas more adequate."

Despite Joker not appearing in Batman Returns due to dying in the first movie, there was at least 1 scene that had similarities to a scene from The Killing Joke. In particular, later Selena Kyle concluded up using her "final life" to have out Max Shreck, The Penguin, having survived his descent into the waters of the penguin exhibit, attempts to use one of his umbrellas, with Batman witnessing information technology at the last 2d and looking concerned, only for Penguin to realize upon activating it that he accidentally picked the "cute" umbrella instead of his gun umbrella, which was like to how the Joker upon being beaten past Batman attempted to apply his gun to kill Batman merely to realize upon firing it that he actually had used up all of its rounds (shown past his using the popular out flag maxim "click, click, click").

The Joker'south HP portrait in the SEGA version for Batman: Render of the Joker (titled Batman: Revenge of the Joker) was taken from Joker'south "don't become even, get mad!" console from the comic.

Although there was no directly adaptation of The Killing Joke in the DCAU, the Batman Animated Series episode "Make 'Em Laugh!" indirectly referred to Joker'south alleged backstory of being a failed comedian in that comic, equally Joker initially attempted to enter a One-act contest unexpectedly only to be thrown out, and afterward proceeded to brainwash iii of the judges to earn the title of the funniest man in Gotham. In addition, the episode Harley's Vacation had some thematic similarities to The Killing Joke, in particular the character Harley Quinn having a very bad day during her parole menses, and also coming to a better understanding with Batman similar to the Joker. In fact, some of Harley and Batman'southward exchanges in the episode mirrored dialogue from the comic.

Managing director Christopher Nolan has mentioned that The Killing Joke served equally an influence for the version of the Joker that appeared in The Dark Knight. Heath Ledger, who played the Joker, stated in an interview that he was given a copy of The Killing Joke as reference for the part. The most apparent influence of the graphic novel on the narrative itself would be the Joker'due south concept of his by as existence "multiple choice" – in the film, he describes 2 conflicting scenarios to explain the origins of his scars to ii dissimilar people - as well equally his merits that a bad day could drive anyone mad, which he tries to bear witness through tormenting Gordon in the comic book, and Harvey Paring in the movie. Both Jokers too explicate their behavior and attitude equally seeing what a twisted joke the globe is, with the motion-picture show stating in guild "their morals, their lawmaking: it'south a bad joke. Dropped at the start sign of trouble. They're but equally skilful as the globe allows them to be." In addition, the Joker, when relaying the second of his infamous scar stories to Rachel Dawes, says to her "At present I meet the funny side. Now I'chiliad always smiling!", which was similar to the line "And then why can't you come across the funny side? Why aren't y'all laughing?", besides uttered by the Joker, in the aforementioned graphic novel. When revealing that he collection Harvey Paring insane as his "ace in the hole" for "the battle for Gotham'southward soul", Joker when explaining how information technology wasn't difficult for him to accomplish says that madness was similar to gravity in that "all it takes is a little button", which was similar to Joker's line in the graphic novel of "all it takes is one bad twenty-four hour period for the sanest man alive to be reduced to lunacy."

The infamous scene of Joker paralyzing Barbara Gordon was used in a flashback in Birds of Prey, with the only notable difference being that the Joker in this scene clearly knew the connectedness between Barbara Gordon and Batgirl when shooting her, while in the original comic and various other adaptations afterward, Joker was unaware of her being Batgirl equally well.

The design of the Joker in the video game Mortal Kombat vs. DC Universe is based on The Killing Joke. In addition, 1 of his Fatalities, where he uses a bang flag gun before using a existent gun on his opponent (censored in some versions) is named after the comic. The ending also has him sitting on a throne made of mannequins, alluding to a similar case in the comic.

In the climax for Batman: Arkham Asylum, the Joker is seen sitting on a throne made of dismembered mannequins, alluding to The Killing Joke. In addition, Barbara Gordon'due south status as Oracle and being crippled by the Joker also references the comic. Joker also is about to recite a joke earlier interrupting himself and remembering he already told Batman that joke, alluding to the ending of The Killing Joke. His allonym of "Jack White" was also referenced in the game.

The version of the Joker in The Batman paraphrased Joker's "one bad twenty-four hour period" statement when explaining his origins, while also adding that another reason for his advent was due to falling into a chemic bath.

During the interview tapes in Batman: Arkham City, Joker tells Hugo Foreign his "Origin Story", which was based on The Killing Joke. Hugo, nonetheless, claims information technology to exist fake, every bit he read up on 12 other "origin" stories that Joker had told. Joker also directly references Alan Moore's writing past stating that someone one time told him to respond to his past with "multiple choices." In addition, Joker's character trailer most quotes give-and-take for word what Batman told Joker, or rather, a double of him, in the kickoff of the graphic novel, with the merely departure being that, in a function reversal, information technology is Joker who tells Batman this.

A DLC of The Killing Joke was launched for Injustice: Gods Among Us which includes the tourist costume, the costume he uses in the final confrontation with Batman, and the Red Hood costume.

In the DC Animated Original film serial picture show Batman: Under the Red Hood, aside from references to the Joker's status every bit the original red hood, a flashback to Batman's offset see with the Joker (or rather, the human who would become the Joker) at the ACE Chemical Plant has the man claiming that he was set upwards and that he wasn't a crook before tripping and falling into 1 of the chemical vats, alluding to the backstory given in The Killing Joke where he was strong-armed into participating in the heist. In improver, the second Red Hood, Jason Todd, indirectly alludes to Joker'southward crippling of Barbara Gordon from the comic nearing the end, with the Joker also briefly asking for a photographic camera, alluding to his photographing Barbara Gordon to intermission her father's spirit.

In Batman: Arkham Origins, during Dr. Harleen Quinzel's patient interview with the Joker midway through the game, the flashbacks accompanying the Joker's story to Quinzel are based on his past from The Killing Joke (specifically, his condition as a failed stand-upward comedian and his brief heist equally the Red Hood that led to his beginning encounter with Batman and his disfiguration). Merely prior to the patient interview, Joker asked Quinzel "Tell me something, beloved have *you* ever had a really bad twenty-four hours?", alluding to Joker's conventionalities that it only takes one bad solar day to be driven insane in the comic. It besides showed a flashback to a comedy order also equally him robbing the Ace Chemicals afterward being strongarmed by some criminals, alluding to the flashbacks from the same comic. In improver, his killing an amusement park owner to proceeds control of it via a handshake in the comic was also referenced in the same game, when he explains how he managed to become the equipment and prepare information technology up inside the Gotham Royal Hotel. The verse form on the roof of the Gotham Royal Hotel also referenced The Killing Joke. Joker's voice actor for this game, Troy Baker, likewise recited his "madness being the emergency go out" monologue made by the Joker, in his Joker voice, from The Killing Joke at Comic-Con when he was appear to be the vocalism of the Joker for Arkham Origins. In improver, the achievement for beating Joker, "Maybe Sooner, Maybe Later", refers to what Batman said to Joker, or rather, a body double of the latter, when discussing the bleak futurity that their current feud will lead to, specifically one killing the other, during his visit to the Joker in the get-go of The Killing Joke.

In Batman: Arkham Knight, there was a fear toxin-induced hallucination/flashback referring to the events of Barbara Gordon's paralysis at the easily of The Joker from the comic, with Joker himself also casually alluding to his showing photographs to her dad. Besides like in the comic volume, the flashback had Barbara Gordon opening the door thinking it was her friend Colleen. The DLC story "Batgirl: A Matter of Family" as well indirectly alludes to his taking over of an amusement park and drawing out Commissioner Gordon for his own calendar from the comic, in this case, to force Batgirl and Robin into operating without Batman playing any role in information technology, likewise killing its owner beforehand. It is also unsaid that he did something similar to the comic after crippling her. His Jokermobile'south ultimate assail during a hallucination most the catastrophe, a missile salvo that wipes out anybody in the vicinity, is named afterwards the comic.

The consequence of Darkwing Duck "Toy With Me"'s embrace, depicting Quackerjack using a camera with a worried Darkwing Duck on the camera lens, was taken directly from the cover for The Killing Joke.

Elements of Joker's grapheme (specifically, his facial expression when asking why Batman not only doesn't come across the funny side of everything beingness a joke, but why he'southward not laughing at all) accept been reused in diverse other comic stories featuring him. In particular, in Whatsoever Happened to the Caped Crusader , the Joker has a similar depressed look when albeit that it wasn't funny fifty-fifty when it should accept been when recounting how he killed Batman with enough Joker toxin to have even a regiment of elephants succumb to the effects and Batman yet neither laughed nor even smiled upon expiring. Similarly, in Justice League of America, specifically the issue where Joker is temporarily rendered sane by Martian Manhunter, he shows the same expression when realizing that not only had he been insane for quite some fourth dimension, but too the horrific actions he had conducted.

In the TV series Gotham, owing to Jerome Valeska's label beingness largely based on the Joker (and to a lesser extent, Jeremiah Valeska, his twin brother, actually becoming the Joker in that series), elements of The Killing Joke were used in some of his appearances. In particular, in the episode "Knock, Knock", Jerome's speech about how the people are "prisoners" to their sanity, and comparing it to a prison in their minds that obscures their being "tiny niggling cogs in a giant absurd car" before telling them to be complimentary like the Maniax, was similar to Joker's memories monologue in The Killing Joke. In addition, his graphic symbol arc in Season 3, where he upon his revival abducted Bruce Wayne and tried to force him to go mad at the horrific funfair upon causing a blackout, was like to how Joker tried to force Commissioner Gordon to go insane to prove that it merely took one bad day to bulldoze anyone insane. Lastly, after Jeremiah Valeska, Jerome's estranged twin brother, opened a gift that had been sent by Jerome mail-humously and driven mad via the laughing gas, proceeded to make a similar pose to when Joker was driven insane in the graphic novel while giggling insanely. Likewise, Jeremiah Valeska'south character arc was similar to what Joker described of how a bad day would drive the sanest man to lunacy in the graphic novel. Later on after Jermiah kidnaps Bruce Wayne in a similar manner only difference is he isn't stripped naked.

The DC Showcase film Batman: Death in the Family, aside from plot points directly from Under the Red Hood, the events of The Killing Joke was referenced at to the lowest degree three times, all of which in the Jason Survives scenarios. The outset example is when Jason confronts the Joker and unmasks himself, causing Joker to flash back to his torture of Jason and cause him to say in daze and joy "One. Bad. Twenty-four hours.", referring to Joker'southward view in The Killing Joke that it merely took one bad twenty-four hour period to bulldoze someone insane. The 2nd is soon after this equally Red Hood manages to impale Joker past shooting him in the caput, where information technology shows Commissioner Gordon and Barbara hugging each other in silent relief over Joker's death, with the latter being in a wheelchair, referencing Joker's crippling of her. The third example has the Joker, who was unsaid to take attempted to become sane out of guilt over Batman's death and using makeup to make himself announced more than normal, relaying the same joke that he told Batman in the ending of that comic, causing Jason to recognize him immediately due to reading the files of Joker'due south crippling of Barbara, including transcripts of the joke, back when he was Robin and then promptly kill him by stabbing him in the center after repeating what Joker said to him before leaving him to dice to a bomb. On a like annotation, the flashbacks to Red Hood'southward unconscious murders of various crooks were depicted in blackness and white with some red utilized throughout, which was similar to the art style of the Deluxe version of The Killing Joke besides every bit the animated adaptation.

Trivia

  • In The Killing Joke, the ending was ambiguous, leaving the fates of Batman and Joker to the reader. Notwithstanding, on August 2013, comic book writer Grant Morrison was a guest on Kevin Smith'southward podcast Fatty Man on Batman this calendar week, where he explained how he interpreted the book's ending:
    "No one gets the end, because Batman kills The Joker. That's why it's called The Killing Joke. The Joker tells the 'Killing Joke' at the cease, Batman reaches out and breaks his neck, and that's why the laughter stops and the lite goes out, 'cause that was the final chance at crossing that bridge. And Alan Moore wrote the ultimate Batman/Joker story… he finished it." [one]
    However, there are contradictions to Morrison's thought, some of which coming from the script.[ii] [3] [4]
  • Neither Batman nor Joker are e'er referred to by name in the comic (aside from a cursory viewing of the wanted poster bearing Joker's visage). The initial French release, however, does have Joker existence referred to by name once: When Batman discovers the impostor in Arkham Asylum, Batman shouts "Vous northward'ĂȘtes pas le Joker!", which literally translates to "You're not the Joker!"
  • The ending joke appears to be inspired past an older joke performed by Blood-red Skelton on The Ed Sullivan Show on September 29, 1968.[5]
  • In the 2011 Comic-Con, Mark Hamill said that if there would ever be an animated version of The Killing Joke, he would gladly vocalisation the Joker once more, encouraging fans to campaign for said adaptation,[6] [seven] most notably in a tweet made on October 24, 2011.[8] Since so, a Facebook folio titled "Petition to get Marking Hamill to play the Joker in blithe Killing Joke" has been fix by his fans.[ix] At the premiere of The Night Knight Returns Part 2, producer Bruce Timm dropped a couple hints about DC animated projects, i of which is the mayhap of doing a Killing Joke adaption.[x] At ComicCon 2015, Bruce Timm confirmed that one of the pic lineups for 2016 includes an blithe adaptation of The Killing Joke, with Mark Hamill crossing his fingers of existence allowed to vox Joker when the casting telephone call comes.
  • Originally, information technology was intended that, in improver to Joker shooting Barbara Gordon through the spine and taking nude photos of her to drive her father insane, that Joker was to be explicitly depicted as raping Barbara Gordon. Artwork for the scene was fifty-fifty created, and the scene ended up cut, although rape was still implied in the final version. Gosh! Comics' Billy Hynes somewhen tweeted the original page on December 1, 2013.[xi] [12]
  • A movie adaptation of the Killing Joke was announced on July 21st 2015, with Kevin Conroy and Mark Hamill returning to phonation Batman and the Joker, respectively.[13] In add-on, the motion picture was confirmed to premiere at San Diego Comic Con on July 21-24, 2016. Bruce Timm also mentioned the film volition have a 15-minute prologue section original to information technology, explaining that there wasn't plenty in the source material itself to make a full-fledged pic.[14] It also received an R rating, the first DC Universe Animated Original Movie to take done so.[15] The film received mixed reviews, with praise for Hamill and Conroy's performances and faithfulness to the story, just criticism primarily given towards the prologue and portrayal of Barbara Gordon.

Notes and references

  1. Grant Morrison: Batman kills Joker in The Killing Joke - Batman-News
  2. Did Batman Kill The Joker at the Cease of 'The Killing Joke'? - ScreenRant
  3. The Killing Joke Script Proves Batman Didn't Impale The Joker | Comicbook.com
  4. MTV Geek - Batman Didn't Kill The Joker In 'The Killing Joke,' Pretty Much 100% Confirms Alan Moore'due south Script
  5. "Red Skelton on The Ed Sullivan Show" on YouTube
  6. ane:30 mark of Interview with Marking Hamill at Comic-Con 2011
  7. SDCC 2011-BAC: Marker Hamill Interview
  8. HamillHimself on Twitter
  9. Petition to get Mark Hamill to play the Joker in blithe Killing Joke
  10. Bruce Due west. Timm On A Possible KILLING JOKE Animated Film - Comic Book Movies
  11. https://twitter.com/BillyHynes/statuses/407262919760805889
  12. http://world wide web.breitbart.com/Big-Hollywood/2013/12/08/Revealed-DC-Comic-Was-to-Have-Featured-Rape-and-Torture-of-Batgirl (archived version)
  13. http://collider.com/batman-the-killing-joke-marking-hamill-voicing-joker
  14. http://world wide web.denofgeek.us/movies/batman/247618/batman-the-killing-joke-animated-picture-news-premiere-date-story-details
  15. http://www.ew.com/article/2016/04/14/batman-killing-joke-blithe-rated-r

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Source: https://batman.fandom.com/wiki/Batman:_The_Killing_Joke

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