Post by abishai100 on Feb 28, 2014 0:20:50 GMT -5
The Joker is perhaps Batman's most ominous nemesis.
We all know that Batman is the great Dark Knight who tackles society's criminally insane. All of Batman's nemeses in the unusual Gotham City are terrifying in their criminal insanity --- the Riddler is maniacally arrogant; Poison Ivy is disturbingly anti-social; Scarecrow is alarmingly deranged.
However, there is something prophetically fearful about the Joker, a man who mixes mayhem with sadistic humor (i.e., "Batman would look great in a lake of fire!").
The modern consumerism globalization rapture (i.e., Burger King) era trumpets Batman villain avatars such as Poison Ivy (a former scientist wielding ecological toxins against civilization in the name of dangerous radical consumption revolution) and Scarecrow (a man who wields fear toxins and represents mental anxieties about harvest failures).
However, the Joker stands out as someone who is eerily contentious of Batman's norms and beliefs about mental peace.
The Joker's girlfriend, Harley Quinn, was a psychiatrist who was cajoled by mental vertigo to become a trickster demon assistant to the demonic Joker.
The Joker sometimes worries Batman with his strange and relentless initiatives towards general mayhem. The Joker, who dresses up like a colorful but sinister-looking jester, was a regular criminal until he was disfigured by a chemical accident which permanently changed his facial expression and gave him a sneering smile and chemically altered the color of his cheeks. The Joker is the Gotham City equivalent of Freddy Krueger (the knife-glove wielding dream demon presented by film genius Wes Craven).
The Joker is Batman's significant adversary, since he reminds everyone of the general mental frailties associated with the idea that humor is created by both friendliness and loneliness...
We all know that Batman is the great Dark Knight who tackles society's criminally insane. All of Batman's nemeses in the unusual Gotham City are terrifying in their criminal insanity --- the Riddler is maniacally arrogant; Poison Ivy is disturbingly anti-social; Scarecrow is alarmingly deranged.
However, there is something prophetically fearful about the Joker, a man who mixes mayhem with sadistic humor (i.e., "Batman would look great in a lake of fire!").
The modern consumerism globalization rapture (i.e., Burger King) era trumpets Batman villain avatars such as Poison Ivy (a former scientist wielding ecological toxins against civilization in the name of dangerous radical consumption revolution) and Scarecrow (a man who wields fear toxins and represents mental anxieties about harvest failures).
However, the Joker stands out as someone who is eerily contentious of Batman's norms and beliefs about mental peace.
The Joker's girlfriend, Harley Quinn, was a psychiatrist who was cajoled by mental vertigo to become a trickster demon assistant to the demonic Joker.
The Joker sometimes worries Batman with his strange and relentless initiatives towards general mayhem. The Joker, who dresses up like a colorful but sinister-looking jester, was a regular criminal until he was disfigured by a chemical accident which permanently changed his facial expression and gave him a sneering smile and chemically altered the color of his cheeks. The Joker is the Gotham City equivalent of Freddy Krueger (the knife-glove wielding dream demon presented by film genius Wes Craven).
The Joker is Batman's significant adversary, since he reminds everyone of the general mental frailties associated with the idea that humor is created by both friendliness and loneliness...