THE THREE JOKERS IN DC REBIRTH

Batman learned there are three Jokers in the DC Universe. This was made possible by the machinations of Doctor Manhattan of Watchmen. It turns out Doctor Manhattan had stolen ten years from the DC Universe and was responsible for its transition from the New 52 continuity that began in 2011 to the current DC Rebirth continuity. Somehow, the Joker was split into three versions of himself: the original incarnation of the Joker created by Bill Finger, Jerry Robinson and Bob Kane, the 1980s version of the Joker Alan Moore and Brian Bolland essayed in The Killing Joke, and the modern New 52 version of the Joker primarily written by Scott Snyder and illustrated by Greg Capullo. They are all the Joker, with all of their murderous insanity intact, but their histories are different because they’re from different DC Universe continuities, yet they all currently exist in the DC Rebirth continuity.

THE TWO JOKERS IN DC MOVIES

If we cast aside the previous cinematic versions of the Joker played by Cesar Romero in 1966, Jack Nicholson in 1989’s Batman, and by Heath Ledger in 2008’s The Dark Knight (as well as Mark Hamill’s beloved animated Joker) as entirely separate from the current DCEU cinematic franchise, we are looking at two different Jokers simultaneously existing in movies said to be unrelated to each other. When Ben Affleck’s Dark Knight fights the Joker, as we saw in Suicide Squad, it’s the Joker played by Jared Leto as they are both the ‘official DCEU versions’ of the characters. At this point, it’s anyone’s guess if there will be a Batman in the Todd Phillips Joker origin movie, and who will portray him.

DC has long been proud of his ‘multiverse’ concept, where different incarnations of their superheroes can exist in different media platforms simultaneously. For instance, while Henry Cavill plays the Man of Steel in the feature films, Supergirl on The CW has its own, very different version of Superman played by Tyler Hoechlin. There’s also a ‘proto-Joker’ on FOX’s Gotham series played by Cameron Monaghan, though it’s still not certain if his character Jerome will truly transform into the Joker on that show.

However, this will be the first time two different versions of a character will exist in the movies (and not a past/future version of the same character in the same universe like both Patrick Stewart and James McAvoy playing different ages of the same Charles Xavier in X-Men:Days of Future Past). 2007’s planned Justice League: Mortal film directed by George Miller (Mad Max: Fury Road) was scrapped in part because Christopher Nolan vetoed the idea of a completely different Batman than Christian Bale’s in a movie while The Dark Knight Trilogy was still happening in theaters.

TOO MANY JOKERS?

To give the Devil his due, the Joker is the single most famous and iconic super villain in comic book history. Like Superman and Batman, the Joker is identifiable all over the world. It’s reasonable to say most people have heard of the Joker and can cite his basic traits: his ghoulish smile, his evil laugh, and his status as a homicidal lunatic who is Batman’s greatest adversary. With the success of Suicide Squad, comprised of its array of the “Worst Heroes Ever,” and the burgeoning trend of “anti-hero” comic book movies like Venom starring Tom Hardy and Black Adam starring Dwayne Johnson in pre-production, it’s not surprising that DC Films would go all the way and make a villain-centric comic book movie about the greatest villain in their pantheon. After all, they’re in the movie business to make green, and we don’t just mean the color of the Joker’s hair.

DC looks like they’re taking a page from FOX’s X-Men franchise. While the core X-Men films about Charles Xavier (James McAvoy), Magneto (Michael Fassbender), and Mystique (Jennifer Lawrence) are set in one version of X-Men continuity, the recent films Logan and Deadpool are X-Men films that exist in their own continuities. Logan was set in the possible future of an alternate universe where the X-Men are dead, while Deadpool is in its own continuity set in modern day but with cameos by X-Men like Colossus (Stefan Capicic) and Negasonic Teenage Warhead (Brianna Hildebrand). X-Men: New Mutants, currently in production, won’t be related to any of the prior films either. Meanwhile, television’s Legion and The Gifted are set in their own X-Men universes unrelated to any of the others. Confusing? Sure, but fans are enjoying each different X-Men franchise regardless.

With Geoff Johns overseeing every film produced under a DC banner starring DC’s characters, the question remains of whether he will have the movies follow the comics’ lead and introduce a Joker trifecta. The place to find a third and different cinematic Joker might just be the Batgirl film under the auspices of Joss Whedon. Batgirl is said to be based upon the New 52 comics that follow The Killing Joke’s continuity, which features Barbara Gordon as a survivor of an assault by the Joker that left her paralyzed. Whether or not Batgirl will take place outside the DCEU as well might mean that Jared Leto won’t play the Joker that attacked Barbara Gordon. The Joker, if he’s seen in Batgirl and not played by Leto or whoever stars in Todd Phillips’ Joker, would then be the third Joker concurrent in a DC movie. The DC movies will then become just like the DC Rebirth comics, with three movie Jokers, and Warner Bros. laughing all the way to the bank.