The children of The Joker and Harley Quinn run straight into terrible danger! The innocent Joker family road trip has taken a turn for the worse. While visiting the place where their parents' love story began, Bryce and Jackie find themselves trapped...by the daughter of the Ventriloquist! Will they be able to escape this puppet show from hell? Or does the Napier-Quinn line end here?
Batman White Knight Presents Generation Joker #2 sets a very chaotic tone for this series. As usual, I'm hooked and can't wait for issue three! Read Full Review
As fun as the idea is, Generation Joker doesn't really have any right to be anywhere near as entertaining as it is. After all, this is just a few different elements that have been fused together into a road trip action comedy sort of situation. Andolfos art brings together a three-person writing team in a way that makes it all feel so vibrant and full of life. It's just too bad that the artist doesn't have more room to explore a more dynamic visual range. There's just way too much going on in every single page. Read Full Review
This issue has a few surprising cameos from other government agents besides DianaJohn Stewart and Wally West both make their debutsbut overall, this feels like a diversion from the ongoing story while Murphy gets ahead on the next volume's art. Read Full Review
The entertainment is there. The execution is impressive in its ability to juggle so many stories at the same time. I'm just feeling a bit underwhelmed when I know what this comic looks like when put side by side with Sean Murphy's stories. Sure Sean Murphy might not have navigated Batman's world with the most tact but it was bold and brilliant in it's own right and I still admire the risks taken. Not so much here Read Full Review
There are evident ideas beneath the mess, but the script and its mediocre execution on the page barely cohere and fail to provide a story deserving of much more than a summary blurb on the Wikipedia page for Batman: White Knight. Read Full Review