Because 60+ years worth of Joker stories have told us that.
Except for the
original concept of the character. That is something that other writers have insisted on.
How do we know whether the character
originally had perma-white skin? That's just something that OTHER writers have insisted on.
Listen carefully now: The character's backstory is not definitive. That is what DC tells us. Not you, not me, not Nolan, and not the man on the moon. The editors and writers of DC for decades tell us this.
How do they tell us this? Thru the origin stories they give him. Each one only retaining one constant - the chemical bath. The one factor they have obviously decided is the best way to show how his whole body became permawhite.
That's the way it is. Fact. You just refuse to accept that because you dislike the permawhite feature of the character.
Okay, here's something for you to chomp on:
FROM THE DC DATABASE:
What is suggested and
largely accepted, however, is he was a petty thief duped into wearing the mask of the Red Hood to act as a costumed figurehead for thugs bent on robbing the
Ace Chemical Processing Plant in
Gotham City. Thwarted by
Batman, the Red Hood fell into a vat of toxic chemicals that bleached his skin bone white, turned his hair green and left him with a crazed, ruby red, malignant rictus for a smile. Driven utterly insane, the Joker fixated upon Batman as his arch-nemesis. Depending on the writer, Joker heavily drinks and smokes, but still he has not suffered any ill side effects.
It is "largely accepted" -- not "definitive".
Do you know why it isn't the definitive origin of the character? Because the creators of the character didn't give him an origin. You proved my point earlier when you asked "how else could the Joker have perma-white skin?" Well, that's EXACTLY what the writers of DC have asked themselves. They have promoted the chemical bath origin because they think it is the ONLY way for him to have perma-white.
They have GUESSED the origin of the character, because that is all they CAN do.
How does that represent the same thing? Joker could have cut that smile on himself, somewhat like what Morrisson did recently in Batman #663.
He's always, repeat always been permawhite.
I'm not really arguing whether the Joker is perma-white or not -- just that the creators of the character never hinted about his skin so how can it be a FACT that the character HAS perma-white skin?
You seem to have a difficulty with determining the difference between something DEFINITIVE and something WIDELY ACCEPTED.
For instance, Superman was sent to Earth from Krypton, right before it was destroyed. Do you know why that is definitive? Because that's how the character was
originally written.
You are the one dodging this, my friend.
Maybe so. But he gets them, anyway. Fact.
You mean, writers
guess at how the Joker came to have white skin?
Is it f**k.
If it was definitive, then the ORIGINAL CREATORS OF THE CHARACTER WOULD HAVE MADE IT SO.
They never did; they intentionally left his origin unknown.
Nolan is just not the stickler for the comic books that everyone likes to think. Begins is a shining example of that:
- Bruce recieving all his training and guidance from Ra's Al Ghul, whom he never met in the comics until the 1970's, after he abducted Robin.
- There is no Rachel Dawes character in the comics.
- Flass is a green beret, not a fat ass.
- Batman didn't get all his equipment from Lucius Fox
Nolan chose to ignore the permawhite element of the character for his own reasons. His own preferences. Just like he made changes to other staple elements of Batman's mythos.
Yeah, but Nolan could make a very good argument for not giving Joker perma-white skin.
Namely, Bob Kane and co. never provided the character with an origin, so how can the character HAVE a definitive origin? For all we know, the original design of the character could have applied make-up. We just don't know -- it's just that writers have ASSUMED that the character had perma-white, and then have rounded up an explanation for the white skin.
It's hardly definitive -- it's just widely accepted.
So what?
Are you seriously trying to say that just because it wasn't in the original story, then it doesn't count?
LMAO!
Nolan based most of Begins on Year One, and that didn't come out until the 80's. But that is considered the origin story for Batman and Gordon and how it all started.
I'm not talking about THE STORY. That is you, misinterpreting my f*****g argument. I'm talking about THE CHARACTER, in of themselves. There's a big difference, you know.
Oh, I see. So, only what the creating writer writes is concrete. Anything else future writers expand on is totally in the air?
You're priceless.
YES! If he creators of the character didn't give the Joker an origin, then how can OTHER writers, who had nothing to do with the thinking up and design of the character, determine his origin? You said it yourself; how else can the Joker have perma-white skin?
That's exactly what Alan Moore and co. did. They ASSUMED that the Joker had perma-white skin, and then tried to come up with an explanation as to HOW.
They're just guessing.
Why is Peter Parker's origin definitive? Because that's how the creator wrote the character.
Why is Kal-El's origin definitive? Because that's how the creator wrote the character.
Why is Bruce's origin definitive? Because that's how the creator wrote the character.