The answer to the question of The Joker's origin should be "multiple choice," as the supervillain himself once famously put it, but instead, fans and DC Comics alike have accepted a default "canon" backstory for the character. Yet it is fair to say embracing the chaotic uncertainty of the Joker's history would benefit DC on a creative level, while also opening the door to more satisfying Joker stories for fans.
From hardcore comic book readers, to casual superhero fans, the Joker is widely considered the greatest comic book villain of all time. Consequently, it is always worth exploring why that is; in short, Joker is a singular kind of character, falling into "often imitated, but never replicated" territory in many ways.
Among the myriad ways Joker is unlike any other character in comics is that he actually benefits from having an undefined origin story. Most heroes and villains are anchored by their origins, but Joker is weighed down, and less impactful, when readers know the "truth" of his history.
Alan Moore's Version Of Joker's Backstory Was Never Meant To Be Definitive, But It Stuck
The Killing Joke: Written By Alan Moore; Art By Brian Bolland; Published In 1988
For most DC fans, the accepted "reality" of the Joker's origin was told in Alan Moore's Batman: The Killing Joke, a 1988 one-shot which provided a backstory for the villain, narrated by Joker himself. Except this is where the legendary quote, "If I'm going to have a past, I prefer it to be multiple choice" comes from. Further, he precedes this by saying "sometimes I it one way, sometimes another...", making it clear that the Joker is the definition of an unreliable narrator.
In the years since The Killing Joke was published, DC fans and DC writers alike have continued to be obsessed with the Joker's origin.
Meaning, it is contrary to Alan Moore's interpretation of the character to take The Killing Joke's backstory for the Joker seriously, attributing it "canon" status, because the Joker is a character that defies continuity. Beyond that, it does a disservice to the power of the Joker character to focus on the "real" origin of the character, because he is by definition a character that rejects reality. However, in the years since The Killing Joke was published, DC fans and DC writers alike have continued to be obsessed with the Joker's origin.
Ever Since "The Killing Joke," DC Creators And Fans Fixate Too Much On The Joker's Backstory
To The Detriment Of Contemporary Joker Stories
Part of the novelty of The Killing Joke, when it was first published, came from the fact that DC had, up to that point, largely avoided establishing a concrete origin story for the joker. At the time, this was considered a fundamental aspect of the character, and was rightly recognized by the publisher as something pivotal to distinguishing him from Batman's other rogues, and from other supervillains in general. In part, this was why The Killing Joke was framed the way it was, in order to offer one possible story, without it being taken as the "true story."

I’m Sorry, But DC’s New Joker Completely Overlooks What Makes Him Batman's Best Villain
The DC Universe has a new Joker to reckon with, but this new take on the Clown Prince of Crime is going in a wild and unexpected direction.
Unfortunately, this is exactly what happened in the wake of Moore's story hitting shelves. His tale of a down-on-his-luck comedian becoming the small-time crook known as the Red Hood, and then falling into a vat of chemicals and emerging as the Joker, is still generally taken as the definitive of his backstory. In the nearly forty years since, this has led to some memorable alternate origins for the Joker, but in the end, the core problem it created was this fixation on Joker's backstory in the first place, a misunderstanding of the character that persists to this day.
DC's Cinematic Jokers Highlight The Right And Wrong Approach To His Origin
What The Dark Knight Got Right And Joker Got Wrong
The problem being diagnosed with DC Comics' Joker here has its extension in the live-action versions of the Joker of the past several decades, particularly Heath Ledger's Dark Knight Joker, who stands in sharp contrast to Joaquin Phoenix's latest take on the character. In essence, the difference between these two portrayals encapsulates the best and worst approaches to the villain's backstory; on one hand is The Dark Knight’s ambiguity, and on the other is the Joker duology’s very purpose as an origin story, of sorts.
Both films draw evident influence from Alan Moore's The Killing Joke, both directly, and from the lasting impression it has made on all subsequent depictions of the character. However, where they sharply diverge is that The Dark Knight offers a cinematic adaptation of The Killing Joke's "multiple choice" quote, by having Joker deliver several very different origin stories for himself during the course of the movie. In retrospect, this is one of the most evocative and memorable aspects of Ledger's Joker.

It's No Joke: 10 Worst Crimes Committed By the Joker to Date
The Joker is known as the Clown Prince of Crime for a reason, as he's committed just about every single crime that someone could think of.
Todd Phillips' Joker movies, by contrast, are effectively the culmination of DC's fixation on the Joker's origin. Even in the context of the second film's divisive twist ending, the crux of both films was about exploring the ongoing, and increasing cultural fascination with the Joker, but by doing so through an origin story, it made the mistake of demystifying the character, rather than mythologizing him. This reflects the downside of many of DC's contemporary Joker tales, while The Dark Knight is a reminder that the fix is simple.
All DC Comics Has To Do Is Restore The Chaos To The Joker's Backstory
Make Him The DC Universe's True Wildcard
For DC Comics, the a destabilizing presence, and an unpredictable malefactor, if it wants to recapture the spirit of the "formula" that made the antagonist so unforgettable in the first place.
There are certain key tenets of [the Joker] that the publisher and its authors and artists should look to as hallmarks of a defining take on the villain.
And if DC insists on offering up interpretations of the Joker's backstory, then at least what it should do is embrace the concept of The Killing Joke and offer multiple, ambiguous possibilities for his history. In short, anything that makes the Joker more chaotic, and harder to get a handle on, for both readers and Gotham's heroes alike, is a better creative choice for the character than those plot beats that make him easier to grasp, or better understood, or least imaginable at all, at all relatable.
Joker is rightly revered as perhaps the defining supervillain comic book history, and as one of the supreme bad guys in modern popular culture. This puts significant weight on the creators tasked with telling stories about The Joker for DC Comics, and as such, there are certain key tenets of the character that the publisher and its authors and artists should look to as hallmarks of a defining take on the villain, with a lack of clear origin being among the most prominent dimensions of the character that should remain sacrosanct.

Joker
- Created by
- Bob Kane, Bill Finger, Jerry Robinson, Todd Phillips, Scott Silver
- First Film
- Joker
- Films
- Joker: Folie a Deux
- Cast
- Lady Gaga, Brendan Gleeson
- Movie(s)
- Joker, Joker: Folie a Deux
- Character(s)
- The Joker, Harley Quinn, Murray Franklin, Sophie Dumond, Penny Fleck