The Joker (comic book)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Joker
Cover of The Joker #1 (May–June 1975), art by Dick Giordano.
Publication information
PublisherDC Comics
ScheduleVol. 1: #1–9: Bi-monthly; #10: Monthly
FormatOngoing series
Genre
Publication dateVol. 1: May 1975 - October 1976 (unreleased issue in October 2019)
Vol. 2: March 2021 - present
No. of issuesVol. 1: 10
Vol. 2: 10 and 1 Annual (as of December 2021)
Main character(s)The Joker
Creative team
Created byBob Kane
Bill Finger
Written byVol. 1: Elliot S. Maggin, Dennis O'Neil, Martin Pasko
Vol. 2: James Tynion IV
Penciller(s)Vol. 1: Ernie Chan, José Luis García-López, Irv Novick
Vol. 2: Guillem March
Inker(s)Vol. 1: Tex Blaisdell, Vince Colletta, Dick Giordano, Frank McLaughlin
Colorist(s)Vol. 2: Arif Prianto

The Joker is a comic book series published by DC Comics starring the supervillain the Joker. It ran for nine issues from May–June 1975 to September–October 1976, with a tenth previously unpublished issue released in October 2019.

In 2021, it was relaunched as part of DC's Infinite Frontier relaunch following Dark Nights: Death Metal's conclusion.

Publication history[]

Dennis O'Neil, who wrote the first issue of the series, recounted that "I stopped by Julie [Schwartz, Batman editor]'s office, and he said, 'We're going to do a Joker book'. I know that alarms went off, I could sense the problems that such a thing would entail ...but it was a job".[1] The series was launched in May 1975 by O'Neil and artist Irv Novick.[2] In order to have him work as a protagonist, writers on the series toned down the Joker's insanity and to adhere to the Comics Code Authority, each issue would end with the Joker being apprehended, only to have escaped at the beginning of the next issue (the exceptions were issue #4, where the Joker seemingly falls to his death in a whirlpool in the ocean, only to return in the next issue as if nothing had happened and with no explanation as to how he survived; issue #5, which ends with the Joker being chased by police; issue #8, where the Joker returns to Arkham Asylum voluntarily; and issue #10, which ended on a cliffhanger that was never continued). Batman did not appear in the series and the Joker was forbidden to murder anyone in the pages of his own magazine.[1]

2020s[]

Following Joker War and Dark Nights: Death Metal, James Tynion IV teamed up with Gulliem March to produce a new The Joker series that debuted on March 2, 2021.

Issues[]

  • No. 1 (May–June 1975) - "The Joker's Double Jeopardy!": When a villain named Senor Alvarez breaks Batman's enemy Two-Face out of Arkham Asylum and insults the Joker as being "not a superior criminal", the Joker breaks out of Arkham and decides to both get revenge and prove he is a "superior" criminal.[3]
  • No. 2 (July–August 1975) - "The Sad Saga of Willy the Weeper!": The Joker teams up with a villain called Willy the Weeper, who has a habit of crying when he tries to commit a crime and laughing when he sees others cry, to help him steal platinum after Willy the Weeper breaks him out.[4]
  • No. 3 (September–October 1975) - "The Last Ha Ha": After a battle with the Joker, the Creeper gets amnesia and is persuaded by the Joker that he is the Joker's ally.[5]
  • No. 4 (November–December 1975) - "A Gold Star for the Joker": The Joker falls in love with DC hero the Green Arrow's girlfriend Dinah Laurel Lance and gives her a choice: marry the Joker or die![6]
  • No. 5 (January–February 1976) - "The Joker Goes 'Wilde'!": The Joker competes with Justice League foes the Royal Flush Gang for four valuable paintings done by the late artist Thaddeus Wilde.[7]
  • No. 6 (March–April 1976) - "Sherlock Stalks the Joker!": When the Joker hits Clive Sigerson, an actor playing the famous detective Sherlock Holmes, on his head with a pipe, Sigerson believes he is Holmes and that the Joker is Holmes' archenemy, Professor Moriarty. "Holmes" "stalks" the Joker with the help of a stagehand sent to follow him (who used to be a sailor who worked on the docks) named "Dock" Watson.[8]
  • No. 7 (May–June 1976) - "Luthor -- You're Driving Me Sane!": An experiment of Superman villain Lex Luthor's goes awry (thanks to the Joker's interference) and gives the Joker Luthor's genius and Luthor the Joker's insanity.[9]
  • No. 8 (July–August 1976) - "The Scarecrow's Fearsome Face-Off!": When the Joker steals some "fear-gas" from S.T.A.R. Labs, he ends up competing with fellow Batman villain the Scarecrow to see whose "fear-based" weapon is the best. The Joker wins.[10]
  • No. 9 (September–October 1976) - "The Cat and the Clown!": The Joker and Batman's "frenemy" Catwoman end up competing for a movie actor's trained feline sidekick. Catwoman's victory leads to a two-way rivalry...[11]
  • No. 10 (October–December 2019) - "99 and 99/100% Dead!": The Joker makes a deal with "Lou Cipher" to defeat the Justice League and kill a scientist developing a health serum. After defeating the Flash, the Black Canary, the Green Arrow, and Wonder Woman, the Joker discovers that, while they lack pulses, the League members continue to have brainwaves.[12]

Unpublished issue #10[]

The letters page of The Joker #9 (Sept.–Oct. 1976) mentions that Martin Pasko was writing a Joker vs. the Justice League of America story titled "99 and 99/100% Dead!" to appear in The Joker #10 as the first part of a two- or three-issue story arc, which was never published despite being listed as "on sale right now" on the Daily Planet promotional page for August 16, 1976.[13] In the end notes of The Greatest Joker Stories Ever Told (1989), it is noted that The Joker editor Julius Schwartz had no recollection of this story ever being completed; however, Pasko found xeroxed pages of the story which he sold on eBay in 2011.[14][15] A cover for issue #10 was drawn by Ernie Chan, but was not finished at the time.[16][17] The Joker #10 was published for the first time on August 14, 2019 in DC's The Joker: The Bronze Age Omnibus (which also contains The Joker #1-9 as well as other DC Comics Joker stories from the 1970s)[18][19] and as a stand-alone issue on October 3.[20]

Collected editions[]

Original[]

  • The Greatest Joker Stories Ever Told, includes The Joker #3, HC: December 1988, SC: October 1997, 288 pages, ISBN 978-0930289362
  • Stacked Deck: The Greatest Joker Stories Ever Told - Expanded Edition, includes The Joker #3, HC (leather-bound): November 1990, 352 pages, ISBN 978-0681410152
  • The Joker: The Clown Prince of Crime, collects The Joker #1–9, SC: November 2013, 176 pages, ISBN 978-1401242589
  • The Joker: The Bronze Age Omnibus, collects The Joker #1–10, HC: August 2019, 832 pages, ISBN 978-1401293406

Infinite Frontier (2021-present)[]

  • The Joker Vol. 1, collects The Joker (vol. 2) #1-5, Batman (vol.3) #100, Batman: The Joker War Zone, ISBN 978-1779512017

Animation[]

References[]

  1. ^ a b Stewart, Tom (August 2009). "The Joker's Not So Wild! The Clown Prince of Crime in his Own Magazine!". Back Issue!. Raleigh, North Carolina: TwoMorrows Publishing (#35): 40–43.
  2. ^ McAvennie, Michael; Dolan, Hannah, ed. (2010). "1970s". DC Comics Year By Year: A Visual Chronicle. London, United Kingdom: Dorling Kindersley. p. 163. ISBN 978-0-7566-6742-9. It may have been an unusual idea at the time, but writer Denny'Oneil and artist Irv Novick decided to feature a villain in his own comic book. The Joker lasted only nine issues. {{cite book}}: |first2= has generic name (help)
  3. ^ O'Neil, Dennis (w), Novick, Irv (p), Giordano, Dick (i). "The Joker's Double Jeopardy!" The Joker #1 (May–June 1975)
  4. ^ O'Neil, Dennis (w), Novick, Irv (p), García-López, José Luis (i). "The Sad Saga of Willy the Weeper!" The Joker #2 (July–August 1975)
  5. ^ O'Neil, Dennis (w), Chan, Ernie (p), García-López, José Luis (i). "The Last Ha Ha" The Joker #3 (September–October 1975)
  6. ^ Maggin, Elliot S. (w), García-López, José Luis (p), Colletta, Vince (i). "A Gold Star for the Joker" The Joker #4 (November–December 1975)
  7. ^ Pasko, Martin (w), Novick, Irv (p), Blaisdell, Tex (i). "The Joker Goes "Wilde"!" The Joker #5 (January–February 1976)
  8. ^ O'Neil, Dennis (w), Novick, Irv (p), Blaisdell, Tex (i). "Sherlock Stalks the Joker!" The Joker #6 (March–April 1976)
  9. ^ Maggin, Elliot S. (w), Novick, Irv (p), McLaughlin, Frank (i). "Luthor -- You're Driving Me Sane!" The Joker #7 (May–June 1976)
  10. ^ Maggin, Elliot S. (w), Novick, Irv (p), Blaisdell, Tex (i). "The Scarecrow's Fearsome Face-Off!" The Joker #8 (July–August 1976)
  11. ^ Maggin, Elliot S. (w), Novick, Irv (p), Blaisdell, Tex (i). "The Cat and the Clown!" The Joker #9 (September–October 1976)
  12. ^ Pasko, Martin (w), Novick, Irv (p). "99 and 99/100% Dead!" The Joker #10 (October–December 2019)
  13. ^ Rozakis, Rob, ed. (August 16, 1976). "Direct Currents". Daily Planet. Vol. 76, no. #16. p. 1. Archived from the original on 27 September 2010.
  14. ^ Gold, Mike, ed. (1988). The Greatest Joker Stories Ever Told. DC Comics. ISBN 978-0-930289-36-2.
  15. ^ Wells, John; Dallas, Keith (July 25, 2018). Comic Book Implosion: An Oral History of DC Comics Circa 1978. TwoMorrows Publishing. p. 24. GGKEY:1FQ2FSNDRN1.
  16. ^ Eury, Michael; Kronenberg, Michael (2009). The Batcave Companion. TwoMorrows Publishing. p. 151. ISBN 978-1-893905-78-8.
  17. ^ "Ernie Chan 1970's DC Joker Cover -- Unpublished". Comic Art Fans. n.d. Archived from the original on December 22, 2014. Retrieved December 13, 2010.
  18. ^ Greenfield, Dan (November 19, 2018). "DC to Publish Long-Lost JOKER #10 Four Decades Later". 13th Dimension.
  19. ^ Staff writer (February 2019). "The Joker: The Bronze Age Omnibus". DC Comics. DC Entertainment.
  20. ^ Staff writer (September 2019). "The Joker (1975-1976) #10". Read DC. DC Entertainment. Archived from the original on 7 October 2019.
  21. ^ Jones, Ben (director); Krieg, Jim (writer) (April 15, 2011). "Joker: The Vile and the Villainous!". Batman: The Brave and the Bold. Season 3. Episode 1. Cartoon Network.

External links[]

Retrieved from ""