Joaquin Phoenix returns as Arthur Fleck, while Lady Gaga plays his love interest Lee Quinn. How does the sequel stack up? Well...
Warner Bros. has found someone to get behind the camera for its next DC series, while still looking for its co-lead John Stewart.
io9 sat down with Absolute Batman team Scott Snyder and Nick Dragotta to discuss reshaping Batman—literally and metaphorically—for a new age.
Nobody puts Superbabies in a corner.
Kelly Thompson and Hayden Sherman discuss making a new, but familiar Wonder Woman in a fresh new DC universe.
Everyone knows Joker's obsessed with Batman, and even Phillips thinks that fixation could be applied to his take of the villain.
HBO is said to be eyeing either Aaron Pierre or Stephan James to co-star in the upcoming series.
The Sonic x DC Comics collab is being penned by writer Ian Flynn and will run for five monthly issues.
McFarlane is one of many creatives involved in a new crowdfunded documentary about the making of one of DC's most famous Elseworld tales, Kingdom Come.
The team behind Fox's now decade-old Batman prequel give an oral history on its creation and impact during its five-season, 100-episode run.
The Caped Crusader will be honored September 26 at an event with DC's Jim Lee.
DC's new, very large Batman has a new, very large Bat-axe—and maybe a laissez-faire approach to the Dark Knight's traditional "no killing" rule.
The new DC universe begins when the animated series hits Max in December.
In Lady Gaga and director Todd Phillips' attempts to downplay Joker 2 as a musical, they end up defining what a musical is.
Warner Bros. may be all-in on Matt Reeves' grounded take on the Dark Knight, but apparently not so all-in that he can headline a game.
Here's hoping Gunn's take on Superman puts some respect on Olsen's name.
Batman's 2009 game didn't just change his life, it also became a core pillar of triple-A gaming over the past 15 years.
The new All In comics are letting Cass Cain, Black Lightning and Canary, and the Question headline their first solo books in years.
DC Comics is reissuing some of its most popular titles in a handy-dandy portable format.
When comics are bent to reflect upcoming movies, the medium and its characters feel less special.
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