I'm assuming you mean Batman and related, yes? Or DC in general?
DC in general and Batman.
I'm assuming you mean Batman and related, yes? Or DC in general?
DC in general and Batman.

I agree. It was the most vanilla, by the numbers Joker/Batman rivalry. Entirely forgettable, IMO. Practically all Batman's enemies want to kill him. Having that dimension of Joker seeing Batman more as an entertaining play thing that makes crime more fun, so he doesn't want to kill him, is far more interesting.
My dislike for Leto's Joker design aside, it already looks like he has an interesting relationship with Batman based on the [BLACKOUT]death of Robin tease that we got with the defiled Robin costume by Joker.[/BLACKOUT] I really hope they go somewhere with that.
Batman obviously, Kate Kane, Barbara Gordon, Stephanie Brown, Cassandra Cain, Dick Grayson, Gordon, Flamebird, Alfred, Catwoman, Huntress, Black Canary, Katana, Renee Montoya, Joker, Harley Quinn, Bane, Hugo Strange, Hush, Mad Hatter, Mr. Freeze, Penguin, Poison Ivy, Ra's, Riddler, Scarecrow, Two-Face, Ventriloquist, Alice, come to mind as far as Batman-related ones go. Doing all of DC would take more time.![]()
Do you like the arkham games?
It still confuses me at times though, with how Joker is, he still tries to kill Batman. Ledger and Hamill, both of their Jokers tried to murder Batman, but they still found him to be fun to challenge and they were protective of him too. It does make Joker seem even more insane when he claims Batman is fun, but pulls a gun and starts to shoot at him.
I have a feeling that they will, because so many people loved Ledger’s portrayal and that was a big part of his Joker.
I guess I'm a little nuts but my favorite Batman suits are both Bale outfits and the Keaton Batman Returns outfit. I like the BvS suit but the dark knight returns look was always a look i liked but never my favorite. I prefer longer ears and i definitely prefer the TDK Cape. I actual prefer the TDK cowl's expression too. There's something about Batman literally looking like a Knight that i liked, and the lean look worked for me.
I guess I'm a little nuts but my favorite Batman suits are both Bale outfits and the Keaton Batman Returns outfit. I like the BvS suit but the dark knight returns look was always a look i liked but never my favorite. I prefer longer ears and i definitely prefer the TDK Cape. I actual prefer the TDK cowl's expression too. There's something about Batman literally looking like a Knight that i liked, and the lean look worked for me.
I guess I'm a little nuts but my favorite Batman suits are both Bale outfits and the Keaton Batman Returns outfit. I like the BvS suit but the dark knight returns look was always a look i liked but never my favorite. I prefer longer ears and i definitely prefer the TDK Cape. I actual prefer the TDK cowl's expression too. There's something about Batman literally looking like a Knight that i liked, and the lean look worked for me.
You know, talking about that reminds me of when I read the writer’s bible of BTAS. I remember a section of it talking about how Joker really didn’t want to kill Batman, but he’d still try. I think with Ledger, this was the case too, he didn’t exactly want to kill him, but he’d still want to see what he could live through.
I found a page of it; I think it represents the relationship between Batman and Joker perfectly.
Another thing that really killed Burton’s movie is that they made the relationship between Joker and Batman too simple. It was simply revenge with the “you made me” thing and that doesn’t sit well with me. If people like that, then go ahead, but I prefer Joker to have fun challenging Batman and doing the battle of wits. It says a lot about how psychotic Joker is.
Probably the most problematic change for fans is the twist that it was the Joker, as a young Jack Napier, who killed Bruce’s parents and thereby inadvertently created Batman.
Hence, another reason why this is more Burton’s fairy tale than a comic book adaptation. While the duality of Batman and Joker’s relationship is brilliantly explored in Nolan’s The Dark Knight, it has never been more symbiotic than in this film. In the comics and more recent movies, Batman’s order needs Joker’s chaos. But for Burton, it is good and evil co-existing because they literally make and remake each other out of necessity.
Napier created the only singular force that would one day stop him like a bratty child wanting to be punished. Batman created an adversary to justify his extreme existence. It is a causality dilemma, like the chicken and the egg, wrapped up in comic book drag. It’s so elegantly realized, this writer still wishes the filmmakers knew better than to kill the Joker at the end.
Ledger's Joker recognised early on that Batman would be a formidable challenge and he relished that, especially since Bats had held the principle of no killing so closely. Could he have Batman? Who knows. But more importantly the cat and mouse chase is what thrilled him the most and pushing Batman to his limits morally.
In the Dark Knight, I do remember Ledger's Joker did try to kill Batman a couple of times. He tried to stab him at the end of the movie. Joker is contradictory on things.
The revenge element was pretty much the basis for the "feud" in B'89, since Joker was after Batman because he dropped him in the chemicals. Then it flips and Batman is looking for revenge because Joker killed his parents.
It wasn't a yin yang relationship. It was a contrived revenge one. Joker being responsible for the creation of Batman is just so so wrong.
I don't remember him trying to stab Batman at the end. He was using a metal bar to hit him. I always wished it had been a crowbar, it would have been a nice homage to A Death in the Family.
He did stab him at one point, if memory serves. The "of all the old, familiar places" line, followed by stabbing him between the armour plates.