The Shape
In the shadows
- Joined
- May 30, 2006
- Messages
- 21,560
- Reaction score
- 4,461
- Points
- 103
This argument is getting redundant.
You can choose to ignore what is said to be canon in the DC Universe, but it doesn't change the fact that more often than not, the Joker has bleached white skin, and he was made that way by a fall into a chemical bath. Sure, there are other ways to interpret that character, as we're seeing in TDK, and if it doesn't explicitly say that he has white skin in a certain comic you're reading, you can form your own conclusions if you'd life. But this doesn't change the fact that the Joker DOES have white skin, which is permanent.
But why choose to ignore something that's true? By ignoring it, you're pretending that an intricate part of the character's history does not exist. It's almost like watching Batman 1989, and halfway through the movie, you decide you didn't like th acid bath origin and would rather his origin be more mysterious. Why? Sure, maybe Bob Kane didn't decide that the Joker was perma-white when he and Bill Finger first created him. However, Kane was a consultant on B'89 and he loved what they did with the Joker and allowed it.
You can choose to ignore what is said to be canon in the DC Universe, but it doesn't change the fact that more often than not, the Joker has bleached white skin, and he was made that way by a fall into a chemical bath. Sure, there are other ways to interpret that character, as we're seeing in TDK, and if it doesn't explicitly say that he has white skin in a certain comic you're reading, you can form your own conclusions if you'd life. But this doesn't change the fact that the Joker DOES have white skin, which is permanent.
But why choose to ignore something that's true? By ignoring it, you're pretending that an intricate part of the character's history does not exist. It's almost like watching Batman 1989, and halfway through the movie, you decide you didn't like th acid bath origin and would rather his origin be more mysterious. Why? Sure, maybe Bob Kane didn't decide that the Joker was perma-white when he and Bill Finger first created him. However, Kane was a consultant on B'89 and he loved what they did with the Joker and allowed it.