The DC universe on screen was primarily colonized by Jokers who were often comical and at other times menacing. But after Heath Ledger’s portrayal of the clown, the narrative for Batman literally conflated the comic book universe into what was playing out in the real-time backdrop of our theatres. The Joker is always, in all his forms, an extension of our Byronic hero’s worst and darkest fears. It is the perfect antithesis to the order Batman had established in the middle of his meaningless life, where his parents had been murdered by a tramp over a string of pearls they refused to part with. The death of his parents barely made any sense to him, and that’s when the firearms rejecting, superpower-less guardian of Gotham city decided to spin some sense out of the whirlwind around him. This is where the nihilistic figure of the Joker comes in and plays his card to become an equal and opposite force against the Batman. War-paint spraying, truck ramming, hospital burning his way through town, the Joker’s moves were as unpredictable and shrouded in mysteries as his past. Unlike his nemesis, his origins cannot be traced, and it is this incomprehensible nature of the Joker, an incendiary, mutant-like vile creature (identical to the functions played by the card itself), which throws the order-loving Batman off guard. “What doesn’t kill you, makes you stranger,” — certainly, witnessing a man say those lines when he himself was rumoured to have met with his end while rehearsing that script, added to the enigmatic halo overarching the film. It was perhaps a culmination of smart marketing, an early press screening to make the buzz stronger, coupled with a villain who became timeless even before the film’s release that laid the foundation for what was to become a one-stop-shop for the hashtag-millennial’s lexical needs in the days to come.