Batman- The Killing Joke | Newest
Inside the plant, the heist goes wrong. Batman appears. The terrified Red Hood jumps into a vat of chemical waste to escape, only to be flushed out into a drainage basin. When he pulls off the mask, he looks into a mirror—and sees the Joker for the first time: bleached-white skin, ruby-red lips, green hair. His "one bad day" has physically and mentally unmade him.
And as the lights of the Gotham Police Department flash over two broken figures—one in purple, one in black—we realize the true horror: The Joker may be insane, but his logic is terrifyingly clear. We all think we’re the first guy, bravely shining the light. But deep down, we all know the terror of being halfway across the beam, waiting for it to be turned off. Batman- The Killing Joke
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. Inside the plant, the heist goes wrong
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. When he pulls off the mask, he looks