The Killing Joke/YMMV


 * Complete Monster: Joker. This work was pretty much the point where making the Joker a heartless psychopath started to become popular.
 * Ironically Deconstructed at the end: the Joker knows he's past the Moral Event Horizon, Thus establishing BOTH characterizations of the Joker as a Complete Monster and Woobie, Destroyer of Worlds.
 * Fridge Brilliance: There is much to praise in Brian Bolland's art. In each panel Joker is in, he is fully capable of smirking maliciously. But when he smiles, it never reaches his eyes.
 * Misaimed Fandom: There are those fans who, even if they think he is still a Complete Monster, believe the Joker when he says that one bad day is all it took to drive him over the edge (and by extension, that one bad day could drive anybody over the edge). Not only is this disproved by the end of the story, since he fails to break Gordon (Your Mileage May Vary on whether he's right about Batman being crazy), its pointed out that his failure and behaviour mean that he's not even right about himself- he was never a perfectly normal human being, because perfectly normal human beings do not react to tragedy by becoming violently psychotic Monster Clowns. In other words, he needed help long before his Trauma Conga Line. Thats not even getting into his Multiple Choice Past claims.
 * Moral Event Horizon: What the Joker does to Barbara. Of all the crimes the Joker has committed - even the murder of Jason Todd - this is the one that haunts the whole DC Universe.
 * Nightmare Fuel: You betcha!
 * That guy Joker infected early on with that poison...toxin...the point is it's freaky as hell.
 * Just look at the former picture for the main page: [[media:Jokerkillingjoke_4254.jpg|the original version]] for simple Nightmare Fuel, or [[media:zad_killing-joke-385_5251.jpg|re-done version of the panel]] for full-fledged Nightmare Fuel.
 * The Joker's face here.
 * Tear Jerker: This is one of the very few Batman stories that can make one feel sorry for The Joker, even after the horrible and nightmarishly evil things he's done this time.
 * Especially the scene towards the end, when Batman chases him. The Joker's face as he asks "Why aren't you laughing?" just breaks ones heart.
 * The Woobie: Believe it or not, the Joker in the final scene. Physically and psychologically defeated, he kneels on the ground, listening to Batman's offer of rehabilitation and, in one Beat panel, appearing to seriously consider it, before saying sadly that it's "too late for that. Far too late," suggesting that there's a grain of sanity and humanity in there somewhere, albeit not enough to make a difference. Thus, the work shows the Joker at his single most sympathetic and humane moment.
 * Woobie, Destroyer of Worlds: If his backstory is true.
 * They Wasted a Perfectly Good Line Art: Brian Bolland's opinion on the original version. He subdued the color palette considerably for the 20th-anniversary edition.