Since Cougr did the fabulous image of Sahri as Harley Quinn and Jenna and Lexus as Bud and Lou, Harley's "babies" : http://www.furaffinity.net/view/11958008/ , I got asked to do a picture of Wolf dressed as Joker, which I drew up last night while I was streaming.
It's interesting how, unless I was very specific about *which* Joker i was looking for, all of the image references were of Heath Ledger, as opposed to the original character.
Also interesting was realizing how Joker's outfits intentionally walk a very fine line between outdated and stylish, tailored and ill-fitting; everything about the character's design is just not-quite-right.
It's interesting how, unless I was very specific about *which* Joker i was looking for, all of the image references were of Heath Ledger, as opposed to the original character.
Also interesting was realizing how Joker's outfits intentionally walk a very fine line between outdated and stylish, tailored and ill-fitting; everything about the character's design is just not-quite-right.
Category Artwork (Traditional) / General Furry Art
Species Wolf
Size 484 x 800px
File Size 117 kB
Fitting, since the character himself is not quite right. Okay, so he's not remotely right... The pic, however, is quite nice. The Joker is having one of his more benign moments, I see. Of course, three frames from now he'll be doing something horrific and violent. Gee, look at the time, I must be running... quickly...
>>Also interesting was realizing how Joker's outfits intentionally walk a very fine line between outdated and stylish, tailored and ill-fitting; everything about the character's design is just not-quite-right.
That's super interesting.... never thought about it that way....
That's super interesting.... never thought about it that way....
I *think* you're talking about "Batman: The Brave and the Bold". I saw a few episodes and I was unimpressed; it basically suffered from being "neither fish nor fowl", to me. It lacked the darkness and style of the Bruce Timm series, lacked the playful camp of the 1960 Adam West live action series, instead trying to be that horrible 1970's blend of camp and classic superhero that never quite worked properly when creators were trying to "take lightly" beloved characters that were somewhat grim and gritty, but missed out on Will Eisner's and Wally Wood's genius at creating a hero who was both heroic, noir and camp, all at the same time.
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