Batman- The Killing Joke May 2026
Through it all, Gordon remains defiant. Covered in sweat, blood, and filth, he keeps repeating a single phrase: "I want him brought in by the book." He refuses to break. He refuses to become the Joker. Intercut with this horror is a flashback—the Joker’s "possible" origin. Moore is careful to frame it as unreliable: "Something like that... happened to me, you know? I'm not sure. I... I remember it differently. But... it's not bad." We see a failed comedian, desperate to support his pregnant wife, Jeannie. He agrees to guide two criminals through a chemical plant as "Red Hood" to score a big payday. On the night of the heist, police tell him his wife has died in a household accident. Grief-stricken, he tries to back out, but the criminals force him to proceed.
Moore was approached to write a Joker story. Initially reluctant, he was intrigued by the idea of giving the Joker a definitive origin—something that had only been hinted at in past comics (most notably in 1951’s "The Man Behind the Red Hood!" by Bill Finger and Lew Sayre Schwartz). Moore’s concept was bleakly simple: to explore the thesis that anyone, even the most upright citizen, is just "one bad day" away from complete insanity. Batman- The Killing Joke
In the pantheon of graphic novels, few works have burrowed under the skin of popular culture quite like Batman: The Killing Joke . Published in 1988, written by Alan Moore, illustrated by Brian Bolland, and colored by John Higgins, this 48-page one-shot was intended to be a definitive origin story for the Joker. Instead, it became a controversial masterpiece—a grim, psychological horror story that permanently altered the relationship between Batman and his greatest foe. It gave us iconic lines ("All it takes is one bad day to reduce the sanest man alive to lunacy"), horrifying images (the crippling of Barbara Gordon), and an ending that has been debated for three decades. Through it all, Gordon remains defiant
Batman confronts the Joker. Their final exchange is not a fight but a philosophical debate. Batman says, "Maybe it's just you. Maybe you're the one who couldn't cope with a bad day." He offers again to rehabilitate the Joker, to end their cycle of violence. Intercut with this horror is a flashback—the Joker’s