Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Joker: Last Laugh is a crossover storyline published by DC Comics in 2001. [1] Summary ... Dick beats him to death until the Batman Family, Robin included, arrives on ...
The Batman Who Laughs is an alternate universe variant of Batman from Earth-22 in the Dark Multiverse who was transformed into a Joker-like form as part of the original Joker's dying scheme. He then takes over Earth, killing most of his allies and turning his son Damian Wayne into a mini-Joker.
Batman: The Man Who Laughs is a one-shot prestige format comic book written by Ed Brubaker and drawn by Doug Mahnke, released in February 2005, and intended as a successor to Batman: Year One. [ 1 ] It tells the story of Batman 's first encounter with the Joker in post- Zero Hour continuity.
Last Laugh (comics), a DC Comics crossover series featuring the Joker The Last Laugh (The Hardy Boys), a novel in the Hardy Boys Casefiles series; The Last Laugh: a new philosophy of near-death experiences, apparitions, and the paranormal, a 1999 book by Raymond Moody
She also appeared in two episodes of the original Star Trek television series, "The Galileo Seven" (1967) and "The Way to Eden" (1969), and in the 1967 two-parter "The Joker's Last Laugh / The Joker's Epitaph", of the TV series Batman. After her acting career ended, she sold real estate.
Although his chief obsession is Batman, the character has occasionally ventured outside Gotham City to fight Batman's superhero allies. In "To Laugh and Die in Metropolis" (1987) the character kidnaps Lois Lane, distracting Superman with a nuclear weapon. The story is notable for the Joker taking on a (relative) god and the ease with which ...
"The Last Laugh" Kevin Altieri: Carl Swenson: September 22, 1992 ... Loosely based on "Batman: The Last Arkham" of Batman: Shadow of the Bat #1–4 by Alan Grant, ...
Beatty co-wrote the critically acclaimed and bestselling Robin: Year One, Batgirl: Year One, Nightwing: Year One, and Joker: Last Laugh miniseries for DC. Beatty's and Dixon's Batgirl: Year One —the middle arc of their Batman "Sidekick Trifecta" at DC—was named Best Miniseries of 2003 by Wizard: The Comics Magazine and is considered the ...