under the red hood

Math Kangaroo USA
International Competition in Mathematics
for K-12 students

Login  |    Registration  |    Donate

And then comes the line that shatters the fourth wall of Batman’s psychology: “I’m not talking about killing Penguin, or Scarecrow, or Dent. I’m talking about him. Just him. And doing it because... because he took me away from you.” Jason isn't a crusader for justice. He's a grieving, angry son. He doesn't want Gotham cleansed. He wants revenge for his death. He wants proof that he mattered more than an ideology.

To which Jason whispers the film's thesis: “Why? I’m not talking about killing Dent. I’m talking about him. Just him.”

Most stories are too afraid to answer. But Batman: Under the Red Hood —both the 2010 animated film and the 2005 comic by Judd Winick—doesn't just answer it. It holds the answer up to the light, turns it over, and reveals something far more unsettling than a hero gone bad. It reveals that the rule itself might be the cruelest thing Batman has ever done. Gotham City has a new player. He's young, brutal, and wears a red helmet that feels like a sick parody of the Joker’s style. He's taking over the drug trade, killing crime bosses, and leaving Arkham Asylum a revolving door of corpses. But he doesn't want to destroy Batman. He wants to partner with him.