The Killing Joke is Outdated

For one, it’s the story that made the paralysis of the once and future Batgirl, Barbara Gordon, canon - a decision that remains controversial to this day. What felt so fresh in the 1980s has now become overused and emotionally simplistic. The story was designed to work as a one-off but has been appropriated and paid homage to so many times that its character and structural weaknesses have only been exacerbated with time.

As influential as the comic has been, both in terms of depictions of The Joker and stylistic takes on the Batman world as a whole, its own creator looks back on it with heavy cynicism. In a 2000 interview, Moore admitted, “I don’t think it’s a very good book. It’s not saying anything very interesting.” He elaborated on this point in 2006 when he expressed regret over the fate of Barbara.

Its legacy has been further mired in controversy following the 2016 cartoon adaptation of the comic. Even at a scant 77 minutes in length, the film felt overlong, with not enough story to pad out the running time. To fix that problem, the creators added a new romantic subplot between Batman and Batgirl, which turned a few stomachs among fans. It didn’t help that this storyline added nothing to the main plot, along with the implication that The Joker raped Barbara. It’s not a great adaptation, but it also highlighted how The Killing Joke itself is past its prime. While its influence remains, you can’t blame fans for wanting a change of story-line.

How The Joker Origin Movie Can Fix The Killing Joke

That this is the version of The Joker that Phillips and DC are keen to build on is not a surprise. Yet it has its undeniable potential too. The Killing Joke has grown tired but there are ways to make it fresh for a new age. Assuming the stories we’ve heard about this project are true, DC may already be halfway there. For one, this could be a story about The Joker that’s 100% about him: No Batman, no Batgirl, and no Commissioner Gordon. The story works best as an ambiguous origin story told by an unreliable narrator, one without the baggage of Gotham’s finest detective.

The ambiguity of The Killing Joke is something many people overlook. The origin story he tells that of a failed comedian who has a very bad day and ends up being driven mad after falling into a vat of chemicals is not necessarily how he truly became The Joker. He’s a self-confessed unreliable narrator, saying, “Sometimes I remember it one way, sometimes another … If I’m going to have a past, I prefer it to be multiple choice!” Really, it’s the best kind of origin for The Joker: Relentlessly grim, deeply nihilistic, and probably one big fat joke to the world. Replicating that on the big-screen could prove difficult, but the ultimate result would be unlike anything currently happening in the world of superhero cinema.

This could present a fascinating opportunity to create not only comic book adaptation powered by a character study, but also one with its roots firmly in classic cinema. Many people have already pointed out how this synopsis hearkens back to Scorsese’s own film, The King of Comedy, wherein Robert De Niro plays an unsuccessful stand-up comedian who kidnaps a talk-show host in a pathetic plot to break into the big time.

Playing The Joker as someone with that relentlessly desperate need to make people laugh - an act that may or may not be the catalyst for his villainy - would get to the heart of what makes The Killing Joke work while keeping it fresh enough to build upon in new ways. Add to that the possibility of a 1980s setting and DC could have even the most ardent cynics on their side. If it all comes together, it could look and feel like nothing else in blockbuster cinema right now, and that sort of evolution is something DC could seriously use right now.

For now, details remain scant on this project, and the chances are we won’t find out anything concrete until actors are attached and Warner Bros. make a proper announcement. As it stands, the potential is there for DC to take one of their most beloved and overused stories and create something that builds upon its sizable legacy. Fans already know The Killing Joke, but this could make it a whole new world.

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