The Joker looks a little like Bowie there.
The Joker looks a little like Bowie there.
Exactly, it's not so much that it happened, it was the fact that Barbara's whole role in TKJ was to be shot, and it looked at things from her father and Batman's perspective, but never looked at it from hers.Honestly, I don't see the comparison. The Cap/Bucky thing was more akin to Bruce Wayne's parents or Uncle Ben. It was part of the backstory and motivation in that whole era of storytelling. It had a lasting effect and resonated with his characterisation. It wasn't done for some one-off excuse for a revenge quest. I can't speak to the Gwen Stacy thing since I'm not massively familiar with the material, but my impression is that it's considered a key event in Spider-Man's history and had long reaching significance almost on par with Uncle Ben and served more as a grim reminder than a cheap thrill or one-off drama.
There's a BIG difference between a meaningful character death and a cheap one. Granted they didn't *actually* kill Barbara, but the basic principle is the same. The event didn't alter anything about Batman's characterisation, or Jim Gordon's, she had no agency in the story and was just used as a prop for that particular story. The point wasn't to advance a character, it was to make a wry observation about Batman's *innate* character, make a joke about it and then move on like nothing had happened.
That it later led to Oracle is not to the story's credit since that wasn't conceived and developed until later and by other authors. Her function in TKJ is clear-cut. Get shot. Get used as a means to show how twisted and extreme Joker can be. Lie in bed while the men go do manly revenge things. Be forgotten about by the final panel.
it was the fact that Barbara's whole role in TKJ was to be shot, and it looked at things from her father and Batman's perspective, but never looked at it from hers.
Well, somebody certainly isn't getting it. Oh well.You're still not getting it--her perspective in that story was not the concern. Only how her fate weighed on Batman and Gordon. That was the point--Barbara serving as motivator, but she was not the story. Some seem to believe that there was some need for a "level playing field" in how the characters were handled, when that was so clearly the point.
And here is something else you're apparently not getting. Well at lest there is consistency in it...and that would be the people who are looking at a clear, long-used story structure through the lens of their sociopolitical need to see "injustice" to a character where none exists.
THAT IS THE PROBLEM!!!You're still not getting it--her perspective in that story was not the concern. Only how her fate weighed on Batman and Gordon. That was the point--Barbara serving as motivator, but she was not the story. Some seem to believe that there was some need for a "level playing field" in how the characters were handled, when that was so clearly the point.
The story is thirty years old and isnt going to be rewritten so what's the point of griping about it?
And this has what to do with The Killing Joke?In Carpenter's film, there wre no women characters at all--yet it doesn't seem as old fashioned as the original from the 50's--where you had women--but in typical roles.
I have no problem with men hardly being seen in the new Ghostbusters movie--although that isn't all that likely either. Lots of ways to tell stories.
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