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The joker’s wiles

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ThE recent death of Heath Ledger called attention to the fact that his final completed role, as the Joker in the upcoming Batman film, “The Dark Knight,” is a dark interpretation -- a far cry from the amused, ironic figure Jack Nicholson played in 1989. Ledger, however, is hardly the first to explore the character’s psychotic side. As we see in a deluxe reissue of the 1988 graphic novel “The Killing Joke” (DC Comics: 64 pp., $17.99) -- timed to anticipate the movie -- Alan Moore and Brian Bolland imagined a chilling villain whose skeletal grin and appetite for sadism are definitely not for children (nor some adults).

“The Killing Joke” retells the Joker’s origins somewhat faithfully (his start as a failed comedian and small-time crook who takes a skin-changing plunge in a vat of chemicals). But Moore and Bolland’s story also features a horrific vendetta against Gotham City Police Commissioner Gordon that is marked by unspeakable acts committed against his daughter, Barbara. About this, Bolland writes in an afterword: “I must admit I had to grit my teeth a couple times during the drawing of it.”

There’s something about Batman -- as vigilante, as avenger -- that pulls storytellers into lurid depths. “The Killing Joke” goes deeper than most in exploring the darkness of this contemporary passion play.

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-- Nick Owchar

nick.owchar@latimes.com

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