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Rafael Albuquerque reveals controversial variant cover for Batgirl #41

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Can't see anything really noteworthy.

Generally don't mind when people get angry over things, but seems like stuff like this makes it easier for people to dismiss concerns over the more overt stuff.
 
That's really great artwork; the Joker looks rather terrifying there. I don't think the cover is glorifying rape or trying to make women seem weak, but it's certainly not a lighthearted cover. Given what the cover is referencing story-wise I can see why Batgirl would be reacting that way.
 
Is it really hard to believe a reaction of fright when she is being held hostage by a fucking psycho?

Really like the style it has going for it, adds a very grim vibe to the overall piece.
This is a character that has spent years in a wheel chair because of being beaten by the Joker. She finally has another run as Batgirl, and this is her own book. I do think it's a bit offensive that the character is portrated as such on the cover to her OWN book considering her history.

just my two cents...
 
This is a character that has spent years in a wheel chair because of being beaten by the Joker. She finally has another run as Batgirl, and this is her own book. I do think it's a bit offensive that the character is portrated as such on the cover to her OWN book considering her history.

just my two cents...

They just referenced it last month in the new book and in the secret origins book last week.
 
To everyone going "lol how is this offensive those dang SJWs just want to get offended."

The cover is an homage to the time Barbara was shot in the spine, stripped naked, and sexually abused by the Joker while he took pictures of the acts to show to her father. As much as I love Killing Joke as a story, genuinely thinking it's one of the greatest comics DC ever put out, it's the absolute nadir of Barbara, treated not as a character but as a prop for big tough men to stand around looking grim and determined, where she has no say, no views no weight to the plot besides how her misfortune affects the men in her life. The new Batgirl is being written with a trendy, feminist viewpoint, so highlighting one of the clearest examples of "Women in Refrigerators" in comic book history strikes me as counter-intuitive to that goal. Not to mention, Barbara is being depicted as weak, quivering victim. Helpless and crying in the hands of the Joker. You would never see this happening to Batman, Nightwing, hell, not even Damian Wayne, and that kid's 10.

Granted, the new run of Batgirl has been a fucking trainwreck, with the transphobic mess that was Dagger Type.
 
First, I think that's great artwork. Second, comic covers are hardly ever meant to be interpreted literally. In this case, the villain that infamously tortured and crippled her is being featured in a story arc, and this pays homage to that old story - arguably the most crucial story regarding the character of all time. It shows the fear deep inside that Barbara may still have regarding that encounter, one which she suffered intense post traumatic stress disorder over.

I'm all for eliminating the blatant misogynistic imagery and portrayals often shown in comics, and reducing the use of those that are unintentional and merely insensitive, or intentional but not thoughtful (shock value). I think people are overreacting to this one. Longtime comic readers more familiar with old Batman comics probably had a different reaction, by and large, to this image than newer readers. That's just my guess, anyways.
 
Looks great, and Joker should be controversy incarnate - for example his relationship with Harley isn't exactly sane. Definitely not family friendly though.
 
To everyone going "lol how is this offensive those dang SJWs just want to get offended."

The cover is an homage to the time Barbara was shot in the spine, stripped naked, and sexually abused by the Joker while he took pictures of the acts to show to her father. As much as I love Killing Joke as a story, genuinely thinking it's one of the greatest comics DC ever put out, it's the absolute nadir of Barbara, treated not as a character but as a prop for big tough men to stand around looking grim and determined, where she has no say, no views no weight to the plot besides how her misfortune affects the men in her life. The new Batgirl is being written with a trendy, feminist viewpoint, so highlighting one of the clearest examples of "Women in Refrigerators" in comic book history strikes me as counter-intuitive to that goal. Not to mention, Barbara is being depicted as weak, quivering victim. Helpless and crying in the hands of the Joker. You would never see this happening to Batman, Nightwing, hell, not even Damian Wayne, and that kid's 10.

Granted, the new run of Batgirl has been a fucking trainwreck, with the transphobic mess that was Dagger Type.

Killing Joke led to the rebirth of Babs as Oracle, a role in which she gained more attention, fans and goodwill than she ever had as the ditzy, young Batgirl. It's THE Batgirl story, imo. The "women in refrigerators" comment would be more apt if it actually ended up affecting Batman and Joker in a larger way instead of transitioning into the Oracle plotline. That comment would honestly be more fitting for the original Death In The Family storyline.
 
The issue is that DC doesn't make an equivalent cover art featuring The Joker placing Batman in a state of submission, with Batman's face radiating utter terror

In addition to what Weiss said
 
To everyone going "lol how is this offensive those dang SJWs just want to get offended."

The cover is an homage to the time Barbara was shot in the spine, stripped naked, and sexually abused by the Joker while he took pictures of the acts to show to her father. As much as I love Killing Joke as a story, genuinely thinking it's one of the greatest comics DC ever put out, it's the absolute nadir of Barbara, treated not as a character but as a prop for big tough men to stand around looking grim and determined, where she has no say, no views no weight to the plot besides how her misfortune affects the men in her life. The new Batgirl is being written with a trendy, feminist viewpoint, so highlighting one of the clearest examples of "Women in Refrigerators" in comic book history strikes me as counter-intuitive to that goal. Not to mention, Barbara is being depicted as weak, quivering victim. Helpless and crying in the hands of the Joker. You would never see this happening to Batman, Nightwing, hell, not even Damian Wayne, and that kid's 10.

Granted, the new run of Batgirl has been a fucking trainwreck, with the transphobic mess that was Dagger Type.

That same new run that has a villain using the imagery from the killing joke vs her
 
She looks terrified to the core while the Joker looks like his classic psychotic murderous self. Its a great cover, and would be even if it was Bruce or Batman losing their shit with tears of terror.


The sticking point with people upset about this is that it isn't Batman, it would never be Batman crying and terrified and helpless on the cover.
 
Killing Joke led to the rebirth of Babs as Oracle,

True, but that wasn't actually planned beforehand. Hell, Killing Joke wasn't supposed to be in-continuity. Moore didn't write that thinking "this will be a catalyst for the character to grow from later," because that wasn't even supposed to happen. If the story was written with the intent/knowledge that it'd be used as a transition point, that'd be one thing, and then that response would carry more weight. But it wasn't envisioned or executed like that, and that's what Weiss is getting at, I think.
 
The issue is that DC doesn't make an equivalent cover art featuring The Joker placing Batman in a state of submission, with Batman's face radiating utter terror

In addition to what Weiss said
If I saw a cover with Batman in tears from sheer terror I wouldn't think it crazy or unusual. I'd actually be surprised if that hasn't happened already in some form or another.
 
The sticking point with people upset about this is that it isn't Batman, it would never be Batman crying and terrified and helpless on the cover.

It would never be Wonder Woman either. I'd say there is more characteristics at play than just the gender.
 
The sticking point with people upset about this is that it isn't Batman, it would never be Batman crying and terrified and helpless on the cover.

Because I would argue that, simply from a scenaristic/comic history viewpoint, Batman doesn't have that kind of relationship with the joker. But it was shown he did have cover when he was in a position of helplessness

The imagery with batgirl doesn't come out of left field for me. I understand the general paranoia versus comics some have, I dislike heavily a lot of female designs. But in this case, it is thematically appropriate, and mostly a nod to an incredibly famous part of the history of the character as a whole. If the big question is "Is this cover problematic ?" I'd say no.

The complaing of "Batman didn't have the exact same pose" to me is a bit shallow. Of course not, he's a different character. I would say I wouldn't be against it at all though. Like I mentionned earlier, I'd rather have more super heroes show their psychological weaknesses more openly rather than the stern stoic 2cool4u attitude we've been used to
 
Killing Joke led to the rebirth of Babs as Oracle, a role in which she gained more attention, fans and goodwill than she ever had as the ditzy, young Batgirl. It's THE Batgirl story, imo. The "women in refrigerators" comment would be more apt if it actually ended up affecting Batman and Joker in a larger way instead of transitioning into the Oracle plotline. That comment would honestly be more fitting for the original Death In The Family storyline.

It's a shame that Nu52 undid the Oracle. That was an amazing character. As Batgirl she's a pale imitation of Batman, literally the female version of an existing character. As Oracle she was something new and interesting while still showing that she was quite capable of fighting (even from her chair) and that ultimately her intelligence was her best weapon.
 
What is the issue here?
It makes perfect sense considering their pasts, no?

Not for a Batfamily member, no.

I will quote myself again because I love to see myself talk:

You know what DOES really bother me about this cover, and a lot of the Killing Joke references?

Joker never shot Batgirl.

He shot a Barbara Gordon who had already retired from the superhero life some time ago.

I think it's a shitty thing to do to put her in the costume and reference TKJ. That's not the Babs he shot. That Babs wouldn't have let it happen. And even if she did the costume represents you as something more than yourself. It is an aegis against your fears as a civilian. If they HAD to make her Batgirl again (they shouldn't have), I would have preferred they explore that idea than the "Oh I must get over this trauma!" bullshit.
 
The sticking point with people upset about this is that it isn't Batman, it would never be Batman crying and terrified and helpless on the cover.

But he has been shown crying or helpless or other grim images on the cover... It's just that he hasn't been drawn in this exact way. People make it sound like every batman cover ever has him as some badass hero. There have been plenty of him looking defeated, crying, emotional, or whatever. Him and pretty much everyone in the series has been affected and deeply fucked up from various traumatic experiences. He and others aren't portrayed as unscathed or unaffected by those traumas but rather usually harps on how it continually haunts them.
 
I associate Batman, as a universe, with psychological terror, a tool used and expressed by Batman's foes as well as by Batman himself. Has Bats never been brought to such states by The Scarecrow or Joker or anybody else in that world? THAT would be surprising to me.

It's not a question of "in the comics." It's the point that Batgirl is advertised as psychologically terrorized, and Batman is not.
 
I think the most offensive thing here is that some people consider Alan Moore a good writer.


His style never jived with me.

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cool cover. killing joke is a gnarly ride.

i remember reading on the beach in mid summer after a nice surf. put me right off my ice cream.
 
It's not a question of "in the comics." It's the point that Batgirl is advertised as psychologically terrorized, and Batman is not.

Are...are we talking about the same batman here ?

Because Psychological Terror/Trauma is pretty much his long middle name (and not talking only about the dead parents here. Shiet son, he gets fucking terrified when fighting the court of owls the first time)
 
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