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Batman: The Killing Joke Kindle & comiXology
Presented for the first time with stark, stunning new coloring by Brian Bolland, BATMAN: THE KILLING JOKE is Alan Moore's unforgettable meditation on the razor-thin line between sanity and insanity, heroism and villainy, comedy and tragedy.
According to the grinning engine of madness and mayhem known as the Joker, that's all that separates the sane from the psychotic. Freed once again from the confines of Arkham Asylum, he's out to prove his deranged point. And he's going to use Gotham City's top cop, Commissioner Jim Gordon, and the Commissioner's brilliant and beautiful daughter Barbara to do it.
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherDC
- Publication dateDecember 23, 2014
- Reading age16 - 17 years
- Grade level11 - 12
- File size179272 KB
- Due to its large file size, this book may take longer to download
- Read this book on comiXology. Learn more
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Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find the story quality first-rate, superb, and easy to read. They also appreciate the awesome, stunning, and vibrant artwork. Readers describe the writing as remarkable, expressive, and masterful. They say the book is worth the price and a great buy for newcomers as well as seasoned comic readers. They find the humor entertaining and funny. Customers also mention the tone is dark and gritty.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers find the story quality of the book first-rate, superb, and straightforward. They say it has one of the best origin stories for the Joker and is an incredible comic. Readers also mention the story has a shocking beginning.
"...have a single friend who doesn't think The Killing Joke is one of the most twisted, sick, most perfect stories of the comic medium...." Read more
"Batman: The Killing Joke is by far one of the greatest one-shot graphic novels ever written, Moore is fortunate that it was of such caliber as to..." Read more
"...What really sets it apart is how mature and well told the story is...." Read more
"...'re a Batman fan, or are just curious about the genre, this is an essential read." Read more
Customers find the artwork awesome, stunning, and believable. They also appreciate the atmosphere created by the illustrations. Readers mention the book is beautiful.
"...aspects, but Bolland manages to make this character incredibly believable in appearance, without taking any liberties of changing the body type into..." Read more
"...Masterfully written by Alan Moore and beautifully illustrated by Brian Bolland, Batman: The Killing Joke is a must have for all comic collectors." Read more
"...Speaking of colors, The Killing Joke is rife with fantastic images and finely-crafted spectacles...." Read more
"...The atmosphere created by the illustrations of Brian Bolland, the writing and dialogue created by Alan Moore, really made me feel like I was..." Read more
Customers find the writing quality remarkable and masterful. They appreciate the well-flushed-out characterization and cinematic style. Readers also appreciate the reference photos, comments from the artist, and a short story at the end.
"...This is a seriously talented artist and I only wish he was presented with more opportunities to draw these characters...." Read more
"...Masterfully written by Alan Moore and beautifully illustrated by Brian Bolland, Batman: The Killing Joke is a must have for all comic collectors." Read more
"...cursory fan of Batman, The Joker, dark comedy, or simply superb illustration and writing. Its definitely worth the read...and the laughs...." Read more
"...The words are so well-written and powerful, both because of there fundamental bleakness and the fact that the Joker is truly trying to explain his..." Read more
Customers find the book is worth the price, a great buy, and a must for everyone's collection. They also say it has some bonus stuff, like reference photos and comments from the artist.
"...incredible, it isnt incredible but extremely enjoyable and totally worth the price...." Read more
"...His use of shadows and lines is great.This deluxe edition has some bonus stuff, like reference photos, comments from the artist, and a..." Read more
"...This is a copy worth buying, even if you already own the softback, and keeping in your collection...." Read more
"Great price for a great book. You can never go wrong when buying a book written by Alan Moore. The man is a genius...." Read more
Customers find the book entertaining from beginning to end. They say it's a great read for any comic fan and one of the best literary uses of irony. Readers also mention the comic ends with a good joke.
"...i was expecting something incredible, it isnt incredible but extremely enjoyable and totally worth the price...." Read more
"...the story does to paint the many facets of the Joker, The Killing Joke is a masterpiece...." Read more
"...The Killing Joke is a decent read. Like I said, mediocre, but grade A mediocre...." Read more
"This comic book is no doubt a classic, and a Joker fan favorite...." Read more
Customers find the tone of the book dark, gritty, and melancholy. They say it has a touch of melancholic and the ending leaves them guessing.
"Easily my favorite Joker story! Very dark tone and brilliant art! Unfortunately I much prefer the original coloring to this updated version...." Read more
"...and Alan Moore certainly thinks so, but it still remains as prolific, dark, and extreme as ever." Read more
"...This story is dark, but not as much as some of Moore's other stuff. It's very clever, and the art is crisp and vivid. It is not for your 7 year old!..." Read more
"...The ending of the book is also thoughtful in the level of closure it provides while leaving enough questions in the minds of the reader...." Read more
Customers find the story disturbing, chilling, and memorable. They say the grim proceedings remain disturbing, terrifying, and exhilarating. Readers also describe the Joker as sinister, shocking, and haunting.
"...friend who doesn't think The Killing Joke is one of the most twisted, sick, most perfect stories of the comic medium...." Read more
"...he seems very deep and troubled, possessing many internal demons and finding purpose in his life by doing what he does...." Read more
"...All in all, it remains just as poignant and haunting as it did when first released." Read more
"...You see what I mean? It's psychologically complex and disturbing. It really makes worry about the outcome of ALL the characters...." Read more
Customers find the book terribly short. They say it's unfleshed-out and a quick read.
"...That's really my only complaint. It just a little too short, and I wanted to keep on reading.Final Verdict:..." Read more
"...The un-fleshed-out briefness of the work is part of the problem, though really, this is a story where the bad guy is the true protagonist, who the..." Read more
"...I love this book. My only complaint with this is that it's short it's about like 40 pages. But other than that this is a solid Batman/Joker book." Read more
"...First of all, it is very short. Basically it is just one double-sized comic. That's it, so you'll finish reading this in about 30 minutes...." Read more
Reviews with images
... story except to say that it's one of the better ones, and that any Batman / Joker fan ...
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Top reviews from the United States
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He's crazy, he kills people simply for his own twisted sense of humor, but always has a very zany, cartoonish attitude, which I felt was lacking in Miller's interpretation, where Joker seemed much too serious in appearance, dialogue, and action. The Joker presented in this graphic novel truly is a fiendish jester of fate, who for the most part is truly frightening, but never really acts like anything more than a loon. Bolland's art is very helpful in this aspect, not only bringing the Joker's exaggerated, skeletal body to life, but making it perhaps the most anatomically correct Joker ever seen, while still following the style of the 1970s Joker appearances.
The story revolves around the long struggle between Batman and his foe, and their never ending conflict. Joker, having escaped from Arkham Asylum (again), has decided to prove that one bad day can transform any sane man into a monster, such as himself. Taking possession of an old carnival he's ready to do whatever it takes to prove his point, with the assistance of a circus freak show. Meanwhile The Dark Knight questions himself on how this fight will end; coming to the realization that sooner or later one of them would kill the other, unless they tried to reason it out. A hopeless plan by our hero, but he has to at least try a single time to reason with his arch-nemesis, just so he can say he tried.
While Batman leads the hunt for the psychotic clown, Joker decides to prove his theory, kidnapping Commissioner Gordon, and shooting Barbara Gordon (Batgirl) through the spine (she never walks again). This is one of the most villainous acts in the history of comics; simply because of how pointless the shooting was, considering Barbara wasn't even in the character of Batgirl. She was just a bystander who Joker decided to use as a tool for his plot. Everyone is a puppet, or tool in his mind.
He does this act all of this while wearing a stereotypical beach-going tourist's attire, complete with a large camera, the only exception being his wide-brimmed, purple hat, which conceal his eyes. These are the eyes of a madman, and in one of the comic's final pages his eyes are concealed in shadow once again, before they come out and you see him for the hopeless case he truly is.
The story sets the stage for the most widely accepted Joker back-story through a series of flashbacks, showing him as a failed comedian with a pregnant wife, and soon winds up assisting criminals, and falling victim to tragedy. The character is shown to have had one bad day and that is how he ended up as the smiling super villain who has plagued Gotham City for decades. Of course this back-story isn't necessarily true, being that it comes from flashbacks spawned from Joker's mind, and as he famously states in his confrontation with Batman "If I'm going to have a past, I prefer it to be multiple choice!"
Gordon's capture and torture leads to a fight between these two iconic characters, where Batman tries to see if it is possible to reason with Joker logically, but the villain doesn't even try to lie about what is obviously in store for them. He can never be reasoned with, and won't stop until he's dead, and Batman refuses to kill him so it's a sick cycle that goes round and round. In the end of The Killing Joke the roller coaster has only been reset and it will only be a matter of time before Joker is back on the streets, killing again with some new, random scheme which will only make sense to him alone, depending on the mood he's in at the time, or which version of his past he remembers.
Alan Moore's story is sick, it's disturbing, and doesn't fail to leave the reader in a state of awe. The only problem is that by the end you crave for more! The story practically brings you to the point of begging for a sequel, or expansion which will probably never come. This is a one-shot story, and should remain that way, or else the original's impact may be lost. I don't have a single friend who doesn't think The Killing Joke is one of the most twisted, sick, most perfect stories of the comic medium. It's short, but it delivers a powerful punch!
Brian Bolland's art makes this short graphic novel a masterpiece, providing some of the best art ever seen in the characters' long history, only rivaled (in my opinion) by the art of Alex Ross. Joker really is frightening to look at here, because he doesn't look like a real person in most aspects, but Bolland manages to make this character incredibly believable in appearance, without taking any liberties of changing the body type into something more universal. The tall, skeletal body of the 1970s comics is preserved for the most part, except for the narrowing of the chin, which improves the look even further (hence why it's universally used in today's comics).
Recently I got the hardcover anniversary edition of The Killing Joke, with the artwork being edited by Brian Bolland, and re-colored by Bolland personally the way he intended it to be seen. I must say that I love the changes to the colors, more so than the cheery, bright colors of the original, which I felt distracted from Bolland's line-art, because the colors were way too traditional comic book, not fitting the intensity of the art. These colors are dark, gritty, and really captures to mood of the story more effectively than the bright colors of the original release. I especially love the flashbacks being in black and white, except for concentrating on objects that reflect the color red, which leads up to him taking on the garb of The Red Hood, before his first confrontation, leading to his ultimate disfigurement and insanity. This is a seriously talented artist and I only wish he was presented with more opportunities to draw these characters. Batman and Joker look their very best in these images, and I'd be hard pressed to find a comic with better consistency of art quality.
The Killing Joke is one, if not THE best story in the history of Batman comics, and rightfully earns my rating of 10/10 stars.
The Joker is the single most evil non-superpowered being in the DC universe, and almost nothing is known about who he was before becoming the arch-nemesis of Batman. While curiosity abounds for fans, even more prefer that he maintain this aura of mystery since it is believed that his pre-villain life was not one that would have been considered anything worth writing about; it is because of he IS the Joker that he means anything in the DCU at all.
All that aside, Alan Moore - the creative genius behind such works as V for Vendetta , Watchmen , From Hell , Swamp Thing , The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen and many others - took a chance and in 1988 presented the comic community with what DC has accepted as the official Joker origin story.
WARNING: SPOILERS AHEAD
The Killing Joke is about madness. The Joker has escaped from Arkham Asylum and is setting about a new and truly evil scheme; unrivaled since he murdered Jason Todd/Robin #2 in Batman: A Death in the Family . While Batman is frantically trying to track him down, the Joker has purchased a dilapidated carnival (like something you'd expect to find in a 21st century teen slasher flick, but in his hands is decidedly worse) and is now off to secure his "main attraction". Later at the home of Commissioner Gordon, Barbara answers the door to find a sick fixed smile shooting her through her spine, crippling her; after several off-color disabled jokes, Gordon is kidnapped and spirited away to the the Joker's carnival of horrors. (Moore and DC received a hailstorm of praise and criticism for rendering Batgirl a parapellegic, but the decision stuck and arguably many good, if not great, stories came from it.) Gordon regains consciousness to find himself being stripped down by a host of sideshow freaks and lead at the Joker's behest to a House of Horrors ride filled with the Joker's own snap-shots of Barbara fully undressed and in pain and filled with the Joker and his cronies singing a sardonic song about lunacy (GOD I WISH I KNEW THE TUNE!!!); all of this intended to drive Gordon insane.
Batman uncovers the Joker's plot and rushes to the carnival to stop him; a chase ensues through a booby-trap-laden house of mirrors in which the Joker states that he's proven his point with Gordon's unquestionable descent into madness: "All it takes is one bad day to reduce the sanest man alive to lunacy!" The joker goes on in his analysis with Batman, stating that he too is crazy, but won't admit it and tries to get him to accept it. The final confrontation between them is left a mystery, but it is clear that the Joker - after decades of campy portrayals - has most definitely re-earned the title of most evil comic book villain.
Throughout the story, the Joker offers flashbacks to his life before becoming the monster he is today. He was once a technician at the ACE Chemical Plant who quit his job to become a stand-up comedian. Unfortunately he fails miserably and worries about how he's going to support his very pregnant-in-the-late-trimester wife and soon-to-arrive baby. He decides to make fast, easy money by throwing in his lot with criminals looking to rip off a playing card company next door to the chemical plant and he offers his services to get through unnoticed. So as to protect his own identity, the gangsters present him with his disguise: The Red Hood. While in discussion for the crime, a couple of cops show up to tell him that his wife has died while operating a defunct bottle heater. In his shock, he tries to back out of the crime since he no longer has a reason to go through with it; but the gangsters hold him to it. Later on, they break into the plant, but everything goes wrong as the cops show up and take down the gangsters and that Batman appears to apprehend who he believes to be the Red Hood. Whether he jumped, fell or was pushed is unclear, but the man landed in a vat of chemicals that washed him out of the factory. When he reaches shore and removes his disguise and sees his reflection in a puddle of rainwater, he begins to laugh, turns and reveals himself as the Joker.
At the end of this story follows another one from the mini-series Batman: Black & White called here "An Innocent Guy" about a man - clearly disturbed, making the judgment that if anyone is to truly live a life devoted to good, then they must commit an act of evil to know that that is what they really want. After laying out his basic concept, he arrives at the conclusion that he must kill Batman. He lays out his plan in disturbing detail and closes with the a that after this one act of evil, he can go on to live a thoroughly good life and go to heaven when he dies.
Masterfully written by Alan Moore and beautifully illustrated by Brian Bolland, Batman: The Killing Joke is a must have for all comic collectors.
Top reviews from other countries
Reviewed in Brazil on August 14, 2018


















