Jun 012015
 

I apologize for not posting this column of upcoming merchandise lately…life keeps happening I guess, but now I will make it up for all you JOKERHOLICS and post the latest additions to the Joker merchandise collection to be released between now and 2016.

Always  remember that most of these you might be able to get through your local Comic Book Shop or may be ordered though a store (Amazon, Entertainment Earth, Big Bad Toy Store among others) and occasionally through the manufacturer directly (Sideshow).  Like always, release dates are subject to change and prices are not set on stone either.

Birth of the Joker Statue by Factory Entertainment 

  • Release date:  3rd quarter 2015
  • MSRP:  $80

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DC Comic Icons Joker statue by DC Collectibles

  • Release date:  December 2015
  • MRSP:   $99.99

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DC New 52 Joker version 2 by DC Collectibles

  • Release date:  second quarter 2015
  • MSRP:  $ 24.99

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Sprukits TDK Joker Model Kit by Bandai America

  • Release date:  June 2015
  • MSRP:  $24.95

 

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DC Black and White Lee Bermejo Joker Statue version 2 by DC Collectibles

  • Release date:  October 2015
  • MRSP:  $79.99

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DC Black and White Jim Lee Joker Statue version 2 by DC Collectibles

  • Release date:  November 2015
  • MRSP:  $79.99

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DC Comics Joker Candy Bowl Holder by Rubies Costume Co.

  • Release date:  In Stock
  • MRSP:  $40.00

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Death of the Family Ground Breaker Joker Figure by Rubies Costume Co.

  • Release date: June 2015
  • MRSP:  $74.99

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BTAS Joker and Harley Quinn Action Figure 2-pack by DC Collectibles

  •  Release date:  December 2015
  • MRSP:  $ 40

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The Joker full mask Sun Statches at Urban Collector

  • Release date:  August 2015
  • MRSP:  $ 12.99

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BTAS Jumbo 20 inch Joker action figure by Gentle Giant

  • Release date: 1st quarter 2016
  • MRSP:  $90

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Premium  Format Arkham Asylum Joker Statue by Sideshow Collectibles

  • Release date:  April 2016
  • MRSP: $449.99
  • Note:  There is an Exclusive  Sideshow variant with an extra head sculpt available at the Sideshow site.

SideshowPremiumArkAsylumJKR01

 

NEXT:  HARLEY QUINN MERCHANDISE SOLICITATIONS

 

 

 

 

 

Nov 152014
 

They heard the fan’s prayers….

Yes, after the great story arc of  DEATH OF THE FAMILY…the end was bitter sweet.  The Joker probably didn’t survive the fall and if he did, he would not survive the possible infection that would have followed losing his rotted face for good (not even considering that you should not wear anything rotted on top of open wounds…what is the Joker…CRAZY???  Well, guess I think we know the answer to that….) and turned the Joker into  a new monster to scare you in Halloween.

Anyways, the good news is that in the hew story arc ENDGAME,  he did not only survived the fall (did anybody ever doubt it?), but it seems he got himself a new face too!! (and he had to since his “daughter” now wears the old face.) and I like the new face, going back to the reminiscent mug of the pre-52 Clown Prince of Crime. Here is a preview and if you want to see more…what are you waiting for?  Grab your copy of Batman #36 for part 2 of the new Joker storyline…

Click on the thumbnails for more

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Even his explanation about how he has been hiding in plain sight is incredibly well written… Scott Snyder did his homework. (Just check : AFAMELANOTIDE) and the rest is pretty close to real scientific fact).

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And my favorite scene when the Clown rubs his finger in Batman’s wounded Detective ego. I love the look in both Joker and Batman’s faces.  Great job Mr. Capullo!

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Oct 092014
 

Just finished reading my copy of BATMAN #35 and my heart jumped out of my chest and I smiled widely .  After almost two years of absence guess who’s back in town ( I’ll probably should recommend Jokerholics to re-read Batman 13-17 to refresh your memory of past events….who knows what’s in store for Gotham now…..).  Here is a preview:

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Sep 022013
 

bmjokerFor the enjoyment of all my Jokerkeholic friends, here is a preview of the upcoming BATMAN #23.1 featuring a Joker story.  Hope you like it and don’t forget to thank our friends of COMICBOOKRESOURCES.COM for the preview:

 

 

Feb 142013
 

Well, the final issue of the DEATH OF THE FAMILY story arc with the release of BATMAN #17 this week so….

IF YOU HAVE NOT GOTTEN YOUR COPY…WHAT ARE YOU WAITING FOR…GO!

And this is the final showdow.  Played in part like a love story between Joker and Batman, where the clown tries to show that no matter with how many more allies Batman surrounds him, they are nothing compared with him with, they are unimportant when compared to him.  Joker tries to emerge as the only real interest in Batman’s life, and the only one that could complete him, making the Knight, an ideal parter for the Clown Prince of Crime.

My greatest bit of gratitude goes to the team of  Scott Snyder, Greg Capullo and the army of artists and writers that have been involved in this project, giving the Joker x Batman chemistry a new and invigorating new twist.  With a very small exception  (Yes, I’m still trying to figure that Catwoman story line) they all served their purpose of adding their own two cents to the development of the story. And the intricate web of lies, horrors, blood that the Clown has created finally leads to a great finale that indeed reads more like fencing match  and a ballet. Yes, you heard me right.  Joker has the winning hand, but does he have the courage to play it to his full extent?  He is the Joker after all, so why not?  But there is more to this story than meets the eye,  Batman turns the commedian into the butt of the joke in an end  beautifully played by Snyder and Capullo. I found it a very refreshing story.

MY RATING: 4.5 out of 5  (not a five, because I really wanted more.  If Joker could have cut off his face in issue 1, I’m sure he would not have had a problem to do many more things here…that ended up only a crafty trick. To see why, read the issue.)

First the COVERS:
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The guys at CBR catch up with writer Scott Snyder for a final round up of the series. Here is the Interview.

 

CBR News: When DC Comics relaunched its entire line with the New 52, you delivered a blockbuster event in “Batman” with the “Night of the Owls” story arc. But did you consider kicking things off with this Joker-driven story or, conversely, further holding out to tell this story?

Scott Snyder: Dude, it was a totally huge fear for me because these are characters that literally mean the world to me. I called up [writers] Geoff Johns and Jeff Lemire and asked them, “Should I wait and do Joker later?” But there was another part of me, that fear that was like: “I can’t believe they are letting me write this. They’re going to kick me off the second they get a chance.” I though I better write everything I cared about right this very second. [Laughs] As anxious and neurotic as I am, I am always waiting for my pink slip.

If I only got one chance to write “Batman” ever, this is the story that I would do. I try and proceed that way every time. “If I only had one 

chance to write this character, what would I write?” And honestly, that’s what Joker is to me. This story is what I would do if I was never going to write Joker again and similarly, the story we’re going to do after the Joker story feels the same way.

It’s probably our most ambitious story yet, the story starting in “Batman” #21. It’s just the way I’m wired. I’m mostly functioning on terror [Laughs] that I’m going to get kicked off the book so I always tell the big story that matters to me most.

You joked on Twitter last week — or maybe it wasn’t a joke — that you were happy “Batman” #17 was coming out on February 13th because it makes a great Valentine’s Day present? Is “Death of the Family” a love story?

Well for Joker, it really is. He genuinely believes, in our iteration, that he is Batman’s greatest love and ally. That’s the case that he’s trying to make from the very beginning.

“You love me more than you love this ridiculous family you’ve accumulated and pretend to care about. Otherwise, you would have killed me. Otherwise, you wouldn’t have let me sneak through the windows and doors at night. By not finding out who I am through my DNA.”

“The games we play. I know deep down you wish that you didn’t have to worry about them [the family]. I know deep down that you wish you could go to back to Neverland with me.”

And in that way, he really believes that he loves Batman and that Batman is his king and he is serving him like a devoted servant. And Batman should love him back.

And yet, when Joker shows Batman what’s under the cover of the serving dish, Batman states venomously: “I hate nothing more on this Earth than you Joker. Nothing.”

He could be lying. Who knows? [Laughs] I wanted it to feel like the last Joker story. Again, because I proceed like, “What if I never get a chance to write the Joker ever again?” You want it to have some sense of finality, in that regard. It has to have gravitas or weight to it.

And yet at [the] same time, I already have ideas about what I would do if I got to use Joker again. Batman can say all he wants about “I don’t feel that way” and “this is the last time” and everything else but as much as what Joker says isn’t true, I think what makes him really terrifying is that there is the tiniest kernel of truth in what he says and what makes him who he is.

Joker sees the thing that you’re most afraid is true about yourself and brings that thing to life. In that way, he might not be telling the truth — “You love me,” “You wish this would go on forever between you and me” — Batman might hate him more than anybody in the world, but there is some tiny molecule [Laughs] of truth in that. I think what Joker says has something to it.

Because as Batman, you can’t have a family that you love and care about and not wish for a moment, “What if I never had this?” It doesn’t mean that you don’t love them and wish that they were there all of the time and feel that they make you better and stronger. It just means that there are moments when you just wish that you could stop fearing for them.

Life would be certainly be easier for Bats. And yet, when Joker threatens the family, it pushes Batman beyond his usual

threshold for tolerance. In one of the final scenes Batman holds Joker high above a fall that would severely crush him if not kill him and instead of exoneration, he says, “…everything that happens to you tonight happens by my hand… How about tonight, I stop the game once and for all?”

Exactly. And in that way, I think they push each other too far. And I think Joker is afraid of pushing him too far, which is interesting. He doesn’t want Batman to go to the place where he would kill him. Not that he ever would but I think there is a line that Joker wants to walk where he pushes Batman as far as he can go. And in doing so, he thinks he serves him. But when he crosses the line or Batman crosses the line, they both shut down and don’t want it to happen.

Batman does not want to have to kill The Joker. And The Joker not only doesn’t want to be killed by him but at the same time, doesn’t want to put Batman in a place where that is the option he goes for, as much as he says it would make him happy.

Their relationship is so rich and twisted and wonderful and ever-changing, between writers, that Joker is a character that I would explore again in a second. In a split second.

With Joker still dangling, possibly to his death, Batman tells him that while he was away the past year he finally “deduced” who he really is. Has Batman actually figured it out or was he playing Joker for the fool?

[Laughs] I don’t want to say because I like people to make up their own minds about that but for me I think the idea is that if Batman knew who he was for real and he didn’t tell the family through this event, it would be as though he wasn’t growing enough as a character. He wasn’t growing to the degree I wanted to show him growing in the story.

And plus, if he knew who he was, what fun is that at the end of the day? I like the idea that Gotham would never allow Batman to figure out who Joker is. The Joker is Gotham’s son just like Batman is. Gotham loves them both for being locked in that horrible relationship. I think whatever Batman found, Gotham would blur and erase.

You said Batman would have to tell the family if he knew who Joker really was but when he called the family together at the end of “Batman” #17 for a debrief, Tim, Barbara, Jason, Damian and Dick don’t respond. Or at least they come up with excuses not to. What Joker did put some real distance between Bruce and the Bat family, didn’t it?

Yes, and we wanted it to have lasting repercussions. It was definitely tempting to leave some physical scars on them — to mutilate someone or even kill someone — because The Joker often does that stuff.

I’m not going to lie and say that I didn’t go back and forth and think, “What if we just took a leg?” But at the end of the day, what worried me was that it would become distracting or it would detract from what the story was really about, which was The Joker proving, in some way, that he could divide Batman and the family and in that way, I felt like if somebody died or was horribly mutilated, it wouldn’t have the same resonance. And it wouldn’t cut as deep and it would distract from the deep cut that he’s left, which is the things that he said to the family in the dark, the way that he proves that Batman behaves the wrong way.

Batman didn’t tell them about the card. He didn’t tell them that Joker had taken Alfred. He didn’t trust them, at first, to go after Joker the way they should be able to at this point. All of those things that are his way of protecting them but are misguided but are also, wonderfully his own and prove The Joker’s point in some way and by doing that Joker set Batman up to have a hollow victory. That’s why doing something like that to one of his family members at the end would just take away from it, as tempting as it was to take a finger.

I remember sending Dan DiDio a note. “What if we send a hand? His hand comes in a box. Or what about a finger?” It would be really hard if Alfred had a hook for a hand. He’s going to sew Bruce up with a hook? That’s going to be a mess.

You certainly teased that you were going down that road with Greg’s gruesome panels featuring family around the serving dish with bloodied bandages on their faces.

It’s meaner and more truthful and cruel of The Joker to play a joke them and say, “I can get you to hate each other and to turn on each other. I can create a wedge between you and Batman without doing the thing that would have this horrifying physical consequence.”

“I can basically pretend to do that but the actual cut is this.” And technically, that’s what he’s saying, and the point of this story, at least in The Joker’s mind, is, “I have cut off all of your faces. I showed you what’s beneath the skin. I’ve exposed you to each other.”

And that’s why when his face comes off as he’s falling, it’s supposed to be that brief moment where Batman sees him for who he is, as well.

With the title for the arc, I thought, as did many others, that a Robin would die. Or maybe Alfred. Then I thought with the family torn apart it was the philosophical death of the family. Finally, I thought it was The Joker who died but you’re saying you might have another story with him. So can you confirm Joker survived his Reichenbach Falls’ splash landing?

[Laughs] If I killed him, I knew he’d back. But more than that, I think the idea of death is that they’re all totally allied and they are this well oiled machine that works together and loves each other. I think what The Joker was trying to expose was that there are deep divisions between

Batman and the family and in some ways, he can exploit those and make it so that he can kill, or at least wound very, very badly, the heart of that living relationship between them so that the repercussions of this will play out very darkly and heavily in “Batman” and the mythology of Gotham for some time. And there are more stories actually to be told about it.

Where do you go from here? “The Court of Owls” was a huge story for you and DC Comics and “Death of the Family” was even bigger. Where do you go next?

I would say that the story coming up in 2013, as corny as it sounds, as much as it makes me sound like P.T. Barnum, is definitely our most ambitious. It starts in “Batman” #21 and is a 9 to 10-issue story. It features another one of my favorite rogues and essentially, it’s going to be our boldest take yet.

Like I was telling you earlier, I really want everyone reading this at CBR to know that I’m always waiting for the pink slip. Hopefully, in this way, you know that the story that we’re going to tell is one that if I got kicked off afterwards, I would be excited that I got to tell it. And that’s it. The fact that I get to tell it means the world to me and I owe the readers of CBR and everyone else out there that picks it up my thanks. I’m very grateful. We’re not going to sit back and spin our wheels or do small stories. I promise you that. I’m way too neurotic for that.

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The end according to Joker….Brilliant!

 

Feb 112013
 

Hey folks. the guys at ABVH have created a name for themselves when it comes to creating AMAZING animated gifs.  This time they tried their talents with pictures from the DC BATMAN series “DEATH OF THE FAMILY” and they are fantastic.  Here are a few of examples of the the magic these guys can work to make the images spring to life.  ENJOY

(Note: If you’re having trouble seeing these pictures, just follow the link provided below)

AVBHPeekaboo(Original art Greg Capullo)

 AVBHPreetyME(Original art Greg Capullo)

AVBFHaveUDancedBefore(Original art Greg Capullo Batman #17)

AVBHLALALALALA(Original art by Patrick Gleason)

AVBHTheGreat HAHA(Original art by Patric Gleason Batman & Robin Cover)

(Original Art  as well as more scans can be seen at the ABVH TUMBLR SITE HERE)

Jan 142013
 

The preview for the upcoming issue of Batgirl #16 has been released and it looks that Joker and Batgirl will finally tie the knot.  Joker’s disturbed behavior keeps wreaking havoc in the Batman world.

Please enjoy!!

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Jan 092013
 

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Coming this week is the next chapter of DEATH OF THE FAMILY and while Joker has been wrecking havoc in the Batman universe, this promises developments that will lead to the resolution of the series next month with the last issue  BATMAN #17.  In the meantime take a peek to what’s in store in this issue:

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(Scans courtesy of CBR. Full viewer can be found HERE)

Jan 082013
 

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Coming out this week on print, is another Joker story in the pages of the LEGENDS OF THE DARK KNIGHT #4, and probably the best Joker story of the series so far (I have read the digital version).  Hope you concur with my assessment, now enjoy the preview:

Oct 012012
 

CBR announced to day that artist Greg Capullo will be issuing DIE CUT COVERS for the multititle story arc “Death of the Family” that launches with BATMAN #13  in October 10th.  Here is the CBR report:

When Batman’s arch-nemesis makes his return to the Dark Knight’s world this fall, the Joker will be coming with a horrific new “face mask” made up of his own torn off skin. And to help accentuate the frightening feel of the “Death Of The Family” event that kicks off with October’s “Batman” #13, DC Comics has tapped series artist Greg Capullo to draw a series of special die-cut covers featuring the faces of Batman’s closest allies.

Below, CBR News has an exclusive first look at Capullo’s art for the covers. Capullo’s art graces “Batman,” “Batgirl” and “Catwoman” #13 in October, “Suicide Squad” #14 in November and “Detective Comics,” “Batman & Robin,” “Nightwing,” “Red Hood & The Outlaws” and “Teen Titans” #15 in December.

When he spoke with CBR earlier this month, Capullo called the cover creating process “a bit of a challenge. The die cut itself had to have straight edges. The other challenge was working within the limitation of using only have of a characters face and reusing the same angle for all. Trying to show individual personalities within these confines. I think I pulled it off.”

(Original article by Kiel Phegley. To see full size pics, visit CBR HERE)

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