Jokerlady01

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Veterinarian, fanfiction author (Jokercentric), amateur writer, artist, painter, comic book collector, movie addict, loves animation and traditional art.

Oct 042011
 

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I was browsing the net and found this report at the TMR ZOO. It is about a preview on ARKHAM CITY where it is said that JOKER DIES!!!!. 

Here is tha actual quote from Jonah Falcon’s article:

 

In CVG’s preview of Batman: Arkham City, it seems that The Joker does
end up dead.

After forcing Hammer’s face into the ground with our knuckles we grapple up
to the room in Sionis Industries where Joker’s been hiding out, medical support
and all. The kick ass, justice dealing tone soon changes when we see Harley
Quinn clutching at The Joker in his chair, crying over his limp body.

Batman tells Quinn to move, she refuses and The Dark Knight’s usually calm
voice sparks a sharp tone of almost desperate urgency as he commands Harley to
move, grabbing her arm and throwing her aside.

Detective Mode confirms The Clown Prince of Crime is dead. It’s a ballsy
decision and one that would usually be reserved for the comics alone. But most
importantly it’s a massive twist that any of the many Arkham City reveals could
never have prepared us for.

It’s hard to believe it’s not just a trick by The Joker, but who knows?

Jonah Falcon is a blogger for TMRzoo and
GameStooge.com and covers all gaming consoles and platforms including Sony
Playstation 3, Microsoft XBOX 360, Nintendo Wii, Sony PSP and computer games
designed for Mac OS, Microsoft Windows and Linux operating systems. Jonah
provides his readers with reviews, previews, release dates and up to date gaming
industry news, trailers and rumors.

 

I personally think that Joker is a character that you never can trust especially when dying is concerned (how many times the Clown has been killed, poisoned, run over by car, stabbed, drowned before only to reappear in another issue?), and a resource for future games as a powerful contender.  Of course, there is also the other half of the storyl.  So far in both the comic book series of ARKHAM CITY  by DC and the game trailers we’ve seen it is suggested that Joker’s state is irreversible and progressive, that the poison has permanently damaged him beyond repair. The Clown Prince is just a character and both Rocksteady and DC can do as they please with him, but It is a risky business to try something like that, in my humble opinion. Joker is so iconic a character that his death will leave a lot of fans of the game with a sour taste on their mouths.  I don’t know what to believe. I ordered the game and I just hope that this is a rumor…

Oct 032011
 

Hey Jokerholic friends…

Probably old news for many of you, but for the others who have not heard, DC DIRECT is releasing a brand new Joker statue based on the DC Universe Online Series.  The statue is based in a design by Jim Lee and is available by  preorder.  Here is the info:

DC UNIVERSE ONLINE JOKE STATUE

  •  Hand Painted Cold Cast Porcelain statue
  • Dimensions: 7.6 inches high x 5.5 inches wide x 2.5 inches deep
  • Publisher:  DC COMICS ( in conjunction with Alter Ego)
  • Release date:  November 16, 2011
  • Available through preorder through PREVIEWS or your local Comic Book Shop
  • Limited Edition and packaged in a 4 color box
  • Retail Price: $ 90

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And don’t forget Joker’s favorite henchwoman from the same series:

  • DC Universe Online Harley Quinn Figure
  • Producer:  DC COMICS
  • Release date:  February 10, 2012

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Oct 032011
 

So this is my  second post on the new Bolland book, with art that is not Joker-centric.

The Book is really awesome.  So much art to enjoy….the pages are populated of as many graphics as his other book THE ART OF BRIAN BOLLAND.  First I have to say that I love the art on both the dustjacket and the actual hard covers. While Joker is in both the back and the front of the dustjacket, the front of the hardcover has a beautifully done inked portrait of Sgt. Rock (see thumbnail below),  and on the back the inked cover of THE INVISIBLES #4.

The art is organized by character for the most part. There are anecdotes for each project, told by Mr. Bolland himself that are quite enlightening and entertaining, adding to the dimension of his work.  Here are just a few previews of the art in the book.  To enjoy them all, please buy the book.  You will not regret it.

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Visit BRIAN BOLLAND’S OFFICIAL WEBSITE for more wonderful art.

 

NOTE:  All material in this post is copyrighted by BRIAN BOLLAND and DC COMICS and is presented here for entertainment purposes only and as a promotion of Bolland’s book which contains much more beautiful art to enjoy.   If you’re a serious Joker or Bolland fan, go and grab a copy of the book. It will enrich any art collection.

Oct 032011
 

batman01-cvro2Probably all of you have a copy of the new Batman #1 in your hands right now.  Good.  Keep it safe because that was one of the fastest selling titles from the new DC 52 reboot.  They are talking now of a third printing, since 1 and 2 have sold out.

Anyways.  You probably know as well that the Joker in this issue is not the real one, but still counts as an appearance.  I personally I’m surprised by the nice clean style of Mr. Capullo’s art.  It contrasts dramatically from his dark and heavy style  years in IMAGE (SPAWN, ANGELA) and it’s good to see that he has grown to become such a strong storyteller.  I think his Joker is more of a mixture between Heath Ledger, Bermejo’s Joker, with a little bit of Spawn, but its kind of refreshing look.  I just hope for more refinement of the face as time goes by and we see more of his Joker.  The storytelling is also  intriguing, but  amusing at the same time, combining the mystery with some humor (so difficult for a character like Batman). The turns and twists will leave you asking for more.  Hope there is much more to see in the future and it is as good as this first issue ( many times titles slack after the first two issues and fall into the same monotony and shortcuts cheap comics present).

Here is a sneak peek of the Joker appearance:

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Oct 022011
 

I just finished checking out Brian Bolland’s new book,  COVER STORY: The DC Comic Art of Brian Bolland, and when I thought that Mr. Bolland could not impress me anymore, I am proven wrong.  THANK GOD! The book is really awesome and presents multiple facets of Bolland’s DC art covering every character he has worked on for DC Comics, even some of his earliest art.  Since this is mainly a Joker-centric site, I will begin highlighting his Joker art on the book as well as some trivia and then I will present his non-Joker art in another post.  Now for my  psycho Clown.

There are a few Joker articles covered in the book.  All of them include awesome art, sketches and descriptions in Mr. Bolland’s own words.  Along with that, Mr. Bolland adds intersting trivia and anecdotes.

BATMAN: THE KILLING JOKE

As everybody knows this is Brian Bolland’s pet project.  He was asked by Dick Giordano what he wanted to do next for DC and Bolland sparked the idea of a Batman Joker graphic novel (a very new term that was just starting to be used in the late 1980’s) and he said that he would like Alan Moore to write it. After negotiations, Dick Giordano got Alan on board and the project started to take shape.  Here is what Bolland says on the subject:

He (Dick Giordano) asked me what I had in mind.  To be quite honest, I’d been drawn to the Joker even more than Batman.  My character Judge Death had been a kind of forshadowing of the Joker for me.  I told Alan that I’d like it to be more of a Joker story with Batman as a less defined background character, and he said okay.  During the writing of it he rang me up once to talk through a dark place he’d reached in the story—the maiming of Barbara Gordon, I think.

I talked in other places about the drawing of the story and my reaction to the finished book, so here I’ll stick to comments about the cover.  What the Joker does to Barbara in the story was, at the time, a darker thing than was usual for DC Comics.  The fact he also takes photos of her also provided me with  the single obvious cover idea. I was never in doubt about the cover.  To push the idea I drew a pencilled , inked and colored version and presented it to Dick

There is something very likable about the Joker.  He smiles at his victims – and the viewer –  before killing them. There is something seductive about that face,  with its slutty eyes and lipstick lips.  He emotes and plays with his audience drawing them in.  Batman doesn’t. He under emotes. He disguises his humanity. He doesn’t want to be your friend.  On the cover to the KILLING JOKE, Joker uses his charm to woo you into liking him, and it’s not until you’ve fisnished the story that it becomes clear that you the readers, are the victim of one of the most henious crimes. Only the ones who have read the story are in on the “joke”!

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Some KILLING JOKE Joker Trivia (or technical points as Bolland calls them):

My Joker was the Neal Adams Joker, specifically from Batman #251 (Sepbtember 1973)

Around the camera lens are the words for “Joker” in German and Polish.  (This, friends I had to see for myself  so I pulled my KILLING JOKE copy, checked it out and….HOLY CRAP! There they are: WITZMACHER and KAWALARZ.  Here is a close-up scan.)

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Look at the birdie!

I used to ask people to guess how many times the actual word “Joker” appears throughout the book. The answer is…NONE!

 

THE GREATEST JOKER STORIES EVER TOLD

The collection first came out in a hardcover edition in 1988 with a very nice Kyle Baker cover.  For the later soft cover, I have Denny O’Neil and the late Marshall Rogers to thank for my voer idea.  They crafted the memorable series of stories that featured the Joker poisoning  Gotham City’s fish stocks.  The Joker always had something up his sleeve (or in this case, his inside coat pocket0– something that he crealry found quite amusing but was actually a bit fishy. 

Of all the Joker covers that I’ve drawn, this is probably my favorite.

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WONDER WOMAN #96-97

To some extent, I felt that I had made the Joker my own–so I was pleased to see  him in a Wonder Woman story.  In #96 he turns up the scen and opens his coat to reveal an explosive vest.  The best visual gat I thought, was in my first rough where he appears to be flashing Wonder Woman. That was judge to be too risque choice (and my least favorite).  The “flashing” rough proved very popular, however, and I’ve been commissioned a couple of times by comic art collectors to draw fisnished ink versions with Wonder Woman wearing her original costume.

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Unfortunately none of these covers made it to the final issues.  These are the final covers to WONDER WOMAN #96-97

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JOKER: LAST LAUGH

During my GOTHAM KNIGHTS run I was asked by DC’s Bat-department to draw the covers for a 6- issue miniseries entitled JOKER: LAST LAUGH.  The Joker hadn’t turned up for me to draw in GOTHAM KNIGHTS and I was feeling a bit possessive of him, so I took the assignment even though the tight deadline meant that I’d  have to miss an issue or two of GOTHAM KNIGHTS.  I like doing unbroken runs on covers if possible, but sometimes you have to make sacrifices.  For the first issue we went with a big pin-up shot.  After I’d sent in the artwork an email came back to me containing a version of my cover with the almost black background replaced by bright yellow.  I’m glad they took my answer “NO!” to heart.

Scripts and reference images arrived for the rest of the issues, and I discovered that there was something about the characters.  All of them where new to me, which didn’t fit into how I saw the world of Batman and the Joker.  I just couldn’t find the willpower to draw the cover of #2.  It’s always a very bad time for me when , having said I’d do something, I have to take it back.  I agonize about it for  a day or two and then make the call, feeling a failure. I imagine that people must see me as unreliable, a prima donna, that the trust between myself and my editor has been eroded.  In this case, however, I was asked to round off the series with the cover to #6.  A simple two-head shot.  The original artwork I sent in was consisered too bloody, so I supplied a slightly cleaded up version.  You can see them both here.

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Visit BRIAN BOLLAND’S OFFICIAL WEBSITE for more wonderful art.

 

NOTE:  All material in this post is copyrighted by BRIAN BOLLAND and DC COMICS and is presented here for entertainment purposes only and as a promotion of Bolland’s book which contains much more beautiful art to enjoy.   If you’re a serious Joker or Bolland fan, go and grab a copy of the book. It will enrich any art collection.

Oct 022011
 

scan_pic0000I just finished reading my copy of Aquaman #1 and I have to say that I’m really impressed with this first issue.  I loved the writing, brought to you by the very talented Geoff Johns (GREEN LANTERN) and  illustrated beautifully by  Ivan Reis (BLACKEST NIGHT). In my humble opinion, Johns and Reis brings back the old classic grandeur of the King of Atlantis and the same time, add a little of fun trying to fit this outsider into our modern crazy world. In a way I think Johns uses Aquaman to give us an image of ourselves and our own little obsessions and kind of make fun of us…in a good way.  Loved the writing and the art is just as impressive.  Aquaman looks as regal as always.  Here is a preview

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Oct 022011
 

I’ve never been a big fan of HELENA, but this peeked my curiosity.  It’s nicely drawn and seems well written. Perfect Combo. Maybe I will pick up an issue and give her a try…

Click on the picture to be taken to Newsarama’s preview on HUNTRESS #1

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Oct 012011
 

detective2preview-01I was fortunate enough to stumble into a short preview of the upcoming DETECTIVE  COMICS #2. Here are just a few scans since DC granted the full preview to MTV.  Complete link to the full preview can be found below this pics.  Enjoy, Jokerholics!

In this issue:  Batman sets his sights on the Gotham Ripper, who in turn has his sights on
Batman. Meanwhile, Bruce Wayne explores a budding romance with television
journalist Charlotte Rivers, who’s visiting Gotham City to cover the gruesome
slayings–while also trying to uncover Bruce’s own mystery. But time is running
out as both Commissioner Gordon and Batman work to uncover the true identity of
this new serial killer.

For the complete preview please visit MTV GEEK/MTV. COM

Oct 012011
 

mini-comiJust wanted to announce that the JOKER’S LAIR has acquired two new Harley figures to add to the already large Harley collection at the JOKER’S FUNHOUSE MUSEUM.

 

 The first one is the DC DIRECT AME-COMI HEROINE SERIES MINI HARLEY.  This Harley is a counterpart of the AME-COMI Full size figure (two times as big) and shows a beautiful posoe of Harley, tiptoing with her oversize gun ready for action. The figure was sculpted by Sam Greenwell.

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The second figure is the MUSEUM QUALITY HARLEY QUINN STATUE and companion to the MUSEUM QUALITY JOKER STATUE  issued a few months ago.  This figure  shows Harley, well armed with her pop gun and accompanied by her two pet hyenas that carry some dynamite and the torn bat-emblem we presume they either tore from the Caped crusader himself or just one of their toys.  The figure is beautifully posed, and great detail has been put on her clothing.  Though I have heard some complains about the face, I find this piece’s face quite appealing. Definitely less comic book looking and more realistic, shows a more mature Harley than its BTAS counterpart (which is what I  like most of the figure).

Sep 252011
 
The celebrated actor Mark Hamill turned 60 years old today!

mark-hamillasjokerMark, known for his character of LUKE SKYWALKER in the STAR WARS trilogy (Episodes 4-6), disappeared from the scene after the Return of the Jedi and turned his career around by becoming a voice actor.  In this little known side of acting, Mark left memorable marks in animated films like THE SIMPSONS, and some anime shows, but he is mostly rememberd as the voice of the JOKER in BATMAN THE ANIMATED SERIES that ran from 1992 to 1995 and offered him a whole series of spinoffs like BATMAN BEYOND: RETURN OF THE JOKER,  and the voice  job done to BATMAN: ARKHAM ASYLUM (2009) and the upcoming  BATMAN: ARKHAM CITY (2011)

To Mark…The staff of JOKER’S LAIR wants to wish you a wonderful birthday, full of joy, happiness and love from your loved ones and your fans.  Thank you for voicing the best villain ever all these years!!  We love you!