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-> ''There are seven working defenses from this position. Three of them disarm with minimal contact. Three of them kill. The other - [KRAKK] - hurts.''
-->'''--Batman'''

''Batman: The Dark Knight Returns'' is a four-issue {{Franchise/Batman}} comic book miniseries written and drawn by FrankMiller and published by Creator/DCComics from February to June 1986.

In this storyline, Batman has been retired for ten years, alcoholic and consumed with grief after the death of Jason Todd, the second ComicBook/{{Robin}}[[note]]a full ''two years'' before ''A Death in the Family'', mind you[[/note]]. {{Franchise/Superman}}, still as young and handsome as ever, has become little more than an icon, answering to the government and trying to stay as neutral as possible. Commissioner Gordon is weeks away from retirement, SelfDemonstrating/TheJoker has been silently locked away in Arkham for years, and Two-Face is about to be released back into the world with a brand new skin. In Batman's absence, and in the midst of a killer heat wave, Gotham City is overrun with crime, plagued by a monstrously violent gang known as The Mutants. After encountering a Mutant gang in the alley where his parents were murdered, Bruce Wayne resurrects Batman, aided in his renewed crusade by Carrie Kelly, a 13-year-old girl who becomes the third Robin. Defeating the Mutants, though, turns out to be child's play compared to what Batman faces next...

TDKR is a seminal comic book work, with a gritty, unique style that's draped in the best of FilmNoir techniques. It is often considered as influential as ''ComicBook/{{Watchmen}}'' in demonstrating the possible "[[TrueArtIsAngsty maturity]]" of the comic book medium, and, along with ''Watchmen'', it ushered in TheDarkAgeOfComicBooks (for good or bad). It was also highly influential in the DCU's recasting of Batman and Superman's relationship: no longer are they perfect friends, The World's Finest, but rather somewhat distant and distrusting (if respectful) of each other.

Since its release, a number of Miller's Batman-related works have tied into TDKR in one way or another:
* In 1987 Miller did ''ComicBook/BatmanYearOne'' with David Mazzucchelli during his one-arc-long run in the main ''Batman'' book. Though it was supposed to be the origin of New Earth's Batman, WordOfGod says that it was written so that it could also serve as a prequel to DKR.
* In 1994 the much ignored ''Spawn/Batman'' came out, written by Miller and drawn by Todd [=McFarlane=]. It was an (ill-advised) crossover between the {{Spawn}} Universe and the Dark Knight Universe and {{canon}} to both, whose only tie to TDKR was that it showed where Batman got the technology that he would use to build his power suit... and that's only a couple of pages.
* In 2001 and 2002, Miller produced a sequel, ''TheDarkKnightStrikesAgain''. It was more set ''around'' Batman than ''about'' Batman, being closer to a JusticeLeague story or even a Superman story than a Batman story. Questionable artwork and story developments have made this one of the more controversial Batman stories to date.
* In 2005 to 2008, Miller wrote a prequel, ''ComicBook/AllStarBatmanAndRobinTheBoyWonder,'' which was even more controversially received than ''Strikes Again''. Though it's been on hiatus, the series will return under the name ''Dark Knight: Boy Wonder''. [[DevelopmentHell Maybe.]]

There have been a handful of animated references to TDKR as well. The first is a ten-minute segment in the DCAU, considered to be among the best adaptations of a FrankMiller work. Carrie Kelly also made a very brief cameo as a future Robin in ''WesternAnimation/BatmanTheBraveAndTheBold'', fighting mutants in a "what-if" story. One episode of ''WesternAnimation/DarkwingDuck'' featured a future version of Darkwing that was heavily influenced by TDKR's depiction of Batman in the later issues.

In 2012 and 2013, WesternAnimation/DCUniverseAnimatedOriginalMovies released [[WesternAnimation/BatmanTheDarkKnightReturns an animated film adaptation]], told over [[MovieMultipack two parts]].

A couple of elements from this story were borrowed by Creator/ChristopherNolan for the conclusion to Film/TheDarkKnightSaga, ''Film/TheDarkKnightRises''.

----
!!This miniseries contains examples of:

* AirVentPassageway: The gigantic leader of the Mutant gang is behind bars awaiting trial. Batman knows that being in prison won't hurt his gang cred one bit (it helps that the Mutant leader spends his free time annoying the prison guards and bragging about what kind of havoc he will make when he gets out, instead of showing remorse) -- to break the Mutant gang, you must ''break'' its leader. Thus, he and Gordon arrange for the leader to escape via the prison air vents and meet Batman for a mud pit duel.
* TheAlcoholic: Dialogue from Gordon and Alfred at the start of the series suggests that Bruce is dangerously close to becoming one.
* AnimeHair: [[CoincidentalBroadcast TV reporter]] Lola Wong. See FashionableAsymmetry.
* AntiHero:
** Batman is an UnscrupulousHero, being more ruthless than his original DC counterpart.
** The Sons Of Batman are more or less {{Nominal Hero}}es.
* AntiVillain: Franchise/{{Superman}} is a PunchClockVillain overlapping with HeroAntagonist in this miniseries. He only reluctantly fights against Batman under orders from the US government.
* ArcWords:
** For Batman: "Lucky" and "This would be a ___ death."
** For Gordon: "I think of Sarah. The rest is easy."
* AwesomenessByAnalysis: Par for the course with Batman, right down to his fights. The page quote is one such example.
* AwLookTheyReallyDoLoveEachOther: Batman and Catwoman.
* AxCrazy:
** The Mutants, especially their leader, and The Sons of the Batman once The Mutants are no more.
** The Joker is depicted as having a love/hate fixation on Batman that he feeds with his indiscriminate killing.
---> '''Joker (inner dialogue)''': They could put me in a helicopter and fly me up into the air and line up the bodies head to toe on the ground in delightful geometric patterns like an endless June Taylor dancers routine -- and it would never be enough. No, I don't keep count. But you do. And I love you for it.
* BadassBoast:
-->'''Mutant Leader:''' "Batman! Face me, fool! I kill you! I eat [[HulkSpeak you heart]]! I show you who rules Gotham City!"
** [[CrowningMomentOfAwesome Which is quickly answered in kind]]:
--->'''Batman:''' "Okay, boy... [[BringIt Show me]]."
* BadassGrandpa: Batman, obviously, but also Jim Gordon, Oliver Queen/Green Arrow, Superman (despite having not really physically aged) and Alfred to some extent. And less sympathetically, the Joker too.
* BadassNormal: [[{{Batman}} Do you need to ask?]]
* BadFuture: Batman is gone for ten years and ''everything'' goes to hell.
* BananaRepublic: Corto Maltese.
* BatmanGambit: Bruce uses quite a few over the series. Even his final trick relies on [[spoiler:knowing Clark will let him go]].
* BetterToDieThanBeKilled: Happens twice, once when [[spoiler:the Joker breaks his own neck(!)]] to frame Batman.
* BlackHelicopter: The Batcopter.
* BookEnds: Inverted
--> (at the opening, as Bruce's racecar crashes) ''This would be a good death, but not good enough.''
--> [[spoiler:(at the finale, as he begins his life in the shadows, training his army) ''This will be a good life. Good enough.'']]
* BrassBalls: One character has this as a last name, but is an inversion.
* BreakTheCutie: This is essentially what happens when [[spoiler:Carrie sees the bodies of the Cub Scouts who took the poisoned cotton candy from the Joker]]. Batman's internal dialogue lampshades it.
* BronzeAge
* BulletProofVest: See ChestInsignia below.
* CasaLaneParenting: Carrie's parents seem to have trouble remembering that she even exists.
* ChestInsignia: [[JustifiedTrope Turns out it's bulletproof.]]
-->'''Batman (internal):''' Why do you think I wear a target on my chest? I can't armor my head.
* CivilianVillain: Happens twice, when the same psychiatrist [[WhatAnIdiot declares Two-Face and the Joker legally sane]].
* CoincidentalBroadcast: Used throughout for {{exposition}}.
* CombatPragmatist:
** The Mutant leader puts his claw-like fingernails and filed teeth to good use in the first fight against Batman.
** Batman becomes one in his second fight with the Mutant leader, since brute force failed spectacularly the first time.
* ComicBookTime: Averted. Part of the inspiration was Frank Miller wondering "What if Batman actually got older after taking up crimefighting in the '40s?"
* CoolOldGuy: C'mon now. Batman, Alfred for being so up in the years, still serving ''and'' snarky, Jim Gordon, Green Arrow, Superman (despite being arguably on the wrong side), and even the Joker in a dark and nasty way.
* CrapsackWorld
* CrazyPrepared: You do know who this comic is about, right?
* CurbStompBattle: Batman's second fight with the Mutant leader.
** Also Batman's final fight with [[spoiler:Superman]]. Literally.
* DarkAge
* DarkerAndEdgier: Robin kills. Batman mutilates. TheJoker's massecres are graphically portrayed. FrankMiller lays out his [[StrawmanPolitical grim feelings]] of [[EagleLand America]] for all to see.
* DatingCatwoman
* DeathByDisfigurement: Toyed with. [[spoiler:Batman breaks the Joker's neck just enough to cause paralysis. The Joker finishes the job by himself, both to frame Batman for his death and to spite Batman.]] And yes, it's medically possible. It's the reason why people tell you not to move after car accidents.
* DeathSeeker: Bruce has become one by the start of the story, and after he becomes Batman again, he frequently remarks on how certain things would be good or bad deaths as the story progresses.
* {{Deconstruction}}: Batman's tactics spur debates on toughness on crime, while Superman's idealism makes him an ideal government cat's paw. The story also deconstructs many elements of Batman's mythos, particularly Batman's potential craziness, as well as showing what kind of [[CrapsackWorld world]] would make Batman not only possible, but necessary.
* [[spoiler:DefeatingTheUndefeatable]]: [[spoiler:Batman beats Superman.]]
* DependingOnTheWriter: Happens to Batman and Superman a lot but Batman's X Ray seeking missiles wouldn't be able to tell Superman from anyone else normally because Superman's X-Ray Vision doesn't actually emit X-Rays [[note]]not since the GoldenAge when they pulled double duty as his EyeBeam attack.[[/note]]
* DistaffCounterpart: Carrie to Robin, and hanging on Bruce's every word she becomes more and more like him.
* DoesntLikeGuns: Both played straight and subverted. In issue 4, Batman invokes the trope in his speech to the Sons of the Batman:
--> '''Batman''': (breaks a rifle in two with his hands) This loud, clumsy, ''stupid'' thing... this is the weapon of the enemy. We do not need it. We will not use it.
** That being said, he will use them when they're necessary. In the first issue, he uses a rifle to shoot a grappling line between the Gotham Towers to [[spoiler: confront Two-Face and his henchmen]]. In the fourth issue, he uses [[spoiler: Commissioner Yindel's]] gun to shoot some plastic explosive. He also gets pushed into using one when taking on [[spoiler: three Mutant kidnappers who have a toddler as a hostage. The confrontation culminates with Batman pointing one of the Mutant's guns (a frigging [[{{BFG}} M60 GPMG]]) at the last kidnapper, who is holding the hostage at gunpoint.]]
--->[[spoiler:'''Mutant''': I'll do it man, believe me! Believe me!]]\\
[[spoiler:'''Batman''': (Shoots the wall behind him and rescues the child) I believe you.]]
* TheEighties: A lot of the action and political commentary stems from real-world politics of the period, in particular [[spoiler: the U.S.-Soviet arms race, which comes to a head in part four]].
* ElectraComplex: 13 year old Carrie is utterly in love with Batman, in his fifties.
* ElectricBoogaloo
* ExpositoryHairstyleChange: Of a sort. At the start of the story, Bruce has a mustache, but after a sleepwalk into the Batcave, Alfred notices that he's shaved it off... and he didn't realize he'd done it.
* EyesAlwaysShut: The reporter Lola Wong.
* EyeScream: To reiterate: Sharp batarangs are sharp. [[spoiler:Joker learned the hard way.]]
* FakingTheDead
* FashionableAsymmetry: The newscaster Lola Wong always wears asymmetrical earings, plus her [[AnimeHair hair]] is higher on one side.
* FatGirl: [[spoiler:'''Lana Lang.''']] IWasQuiteALooker is averted, though, as her usual depiction is never addressed.
* FiveBadBand: Joker's gang
** BigBad: Joker
** TheDragon & EvilGenius: Abner
** TheBrute & Dark Chick: Bruno
** EliteMooks: Bobby & Mary
* FollowTheLeader: This miniseries singlehandedly ushered in the new age of Cranky Batman.
* FlatlinePlotline: [[spoiler:Batman's ultimate plot in the fourth issue is to remove himself from the public spotlight by faking his death. Being Batman, he kills himself for a while using a special drug, using the fight with Superman both as a cover and as an excuse to work out his anger and frustration with Superman.]]
* FreudianExcuse: A psychiatrist blames Batman for making the Joker into a raving loon. [[spoiler:He might have a point, but the Joker kills him.]]
* FunWithAcronyms: Sons Of the Batman = [=SOBs=]
* FutureSlang: The Mutants are all over this one. "Balls nasty!", "spud" vs. "slicer-dicer", "chicken legs", and many others.
* GangOfHats: The Mutants and their various splinter groups.
* GodzillaThreshold: Discussed at length. During Commissioner Gordon and his replacement Yindel's first conversation, she asks him why he's allowed a vigilante like Batman to operate in Gotham. Gordon talks about the first time he heard the UrbanLegend that FranklinDRoosevelt let [[WorldWarII Pearl Harbor]] happen in order to get the US into WWII and stop the greater evil of the Axis. He went back and forth on whether it was morally acceptable if true, until he realized the whole thing was "too big" for him to judge.
** Issues later, after Batman [[spoiler:rallies the Sons of Batman and the Mutants to quell the mass riots]], Yindel finally realizes the same. When asked by an officer if they should do something, she can only respond "No. No. He's too big."
* GoingColdTurkey: When Bruce takes up the cowl again, he quits the sauce. He doesn't have any withdrawal issues, possibly because Batman is an even stronger addiction.
* GoodNewsBadNews: The President has a very cheerful way of telling the American People about the dangers of nuclear fallout.
--> "Well folks, I've got good news and bad news. Heh... The good news is that the Soviets have withdrawn their forces from the island of Corto Maltese.... And the bad news, well... It looks like those Soviets are pretty bad losers, yes they are..."
* GoOutWithASmile: [[spoiler:Joker, in one of the most disturbing examples.]]
* GrandfatherClause: The Bat-signal is discussed here.
* GroinAttack: Happens to Batman at the foot of the Mutant leader during their first fight.
--> He shows me what a fast kick is. Something explodes in my midsection. Sunlight behind my eyes as the pain rises.
* HallOfMirrors: Batman chases the Joker into one at the fair. [[spoiler:The Joker gut-shoots him after he gives himself away trying to come through a mirror.]]
* AHandfulForAnEye: During their second fight, Batman cuts the Mutant leader over the eyes to blind him with the blood, then compounds that by throwing mud in his face.
* HandicappedBadass: See ImprobableAimingSkills below.
* HannibalLecture: [[spoiler:The Joker, paralyzed from the neck down,]] hits Batman with one just before [[spoiler:killing himself]].
* HeatWave: Gotham has been stuck in one for a while at the start of the series.
* HeroicBSOD: In the first issue, Bruce, lost in thought, wanders to the spot where his parents were killed and is confronted by Mutants. Their dialogue, casually referring to killing Bruce, having a ''quota'' for murders, and then dismissing Bruce as their target because he's "into it", shakes Bruce to his core, as he's been equating them to his parents' killer up to that point.
--> '''Bruce''': No. Not him. Not him. He flinched when he pulled the trigger. He was sick and guilty over what he did. [...] These... These are his children. A purer breed. And this world is '''theirs'''.
* HesBack:
** Batman, after 10 years in retirement.
---> '''Reporter''': Police phone lines are jammed with citizens describing what appears to be a siege on Gotham's underworld... [[CrowningMomentOfAwesome by the Batman]].
** And Joker in a twisted inverse version.
* HonorBeforeReason: Batman knows that [[spoiler:it's best if he just shoots the Mutant leader in the dump]], but he can't bring himself to cross that line... and it nearly gets him killed.
* HulkSpeak: The Mutant leader's dialogue.
* HumanShield: As Batman's chasing the Joker through the fair, the Joker tries this with one of Carrie's friends. Batman promptly tags him with a handful of batarangs.
* IAmTheNoun: "Tonight, ''we'' are the law. Tonight, ''I'' am the law."
* IFightForTheStrongestSide: Once the Mutant leader is defeated, the gang disintegrates into a number of splinter groups that define themselves by whatever figurehead they're following; the only thing that remains consistent is their use of violence.
* ImAHumanitarian: One of the Mutant leader's {{Catch Phrase}}s is his boasts that he will eat Batman's heart.
* ImprobableAimingSkills: The GreenArrow is better than you at archery even with one arm... in the dark... in the rain... ''hanging upside down''.
* TheInsomniac: The Joker's insomnia is addressed here.
* IWasQuiteALooker: Selina Kyle didn't age well. [[spoiler:The Joker notices.]]
* JackBauerInterrogationTechnique:
** In one instance, Batman scares a perp (the one who had the page quote applied to him earlier on) into talking simply by [[spoiler:walking toward him; the perp falls through a window trying to get away, injuring himself, and talks after Batman tells him that he's the only person who can save him from bleeding to death]].
** In another instance, he [[spoiler:hangs an unconscious Mutant upside-down from a gargoyle at the top of a skyscraper, puts a hand over the Mutant's face, and slowly moves his hand away when the Mutant wakes up and tries to cut a deal]]. What makes this even more effective is that the reader doesn't realize all this until it's all said and done; the sequence is drawn from the Mutant's perspective.
---> '''Batman (internal)''' : It was tough work carrying two hundred and twenty pounds of sociopath to the top of one of Gotham's Twin Towers. The scream alone is worth it.
* JekyllAndHyde: Averted. [[spoiler:Recent breakthroughs in plastic surgery restore Two-Face's appearance, but at the unforeseen cost of forever destroying the good-natured "Harvey" half of the personality and leaving the criminal "Face" in complete control.]]
--> '''Two-Face:''' Got them all to keep their lunches down when they saw my face... saying I was cured... saying I was fixed. I'm fixed all right... at least both sides match now! Go ahead, have your laugh! Take a look... take a look... \\
'''Batman (internal)''' : The scars go deep... too deep. Not fooled by sight, I see him... as he ''is''. (''the panel shows Dent with his entire head a monstrous ruin'')\\
'''Batman:''' I see... a reflection, Harvey. A reflection. (''the next panel shows a bat's snarling face'')
** What makes this scene even more powerful is that Two-Face is the only one of Batman's enemies in the story that he is sympathetic to, as he funded Harvey's surgery and rehabilitation efforts and knows what it's like to be living a dichotomy (Bruce Wayne/Batman vs. Harvey Dent/Two-Face). For bonus points, in ''Batman: Year One'' which occupies the same universe as this book, it's made clear that Harvey Dent was one of Batman's closest allies and friends early in his career.
* {{Jerkass}}: Everything Byron Brassballs says or does is custom-made to make you want him to get his ass kicked. And he only appears twice.
* KryptoniteIsEverywhere: Averted. Kryptonite doesn't show up until the very end of Batman's battle with Superman, when Bruce specifically says that he had to spend years (and millions of dollars) synthesizing it, implying that the naturally occurring stuff is too rare to be a practical weapon. And despite having days to prepare for the showdown, Superman seems genuinely surprised that Bruce was able to get his hands on any at all.
* LiteralMetaphor: The governor is almost strangled by actual [[ObstructiveBureaucrat red tape]].
* MadeOfIron: Subverted here.
* ManBitesMan: The Mutant leader puts his filed teeth to good use against Batman [[spoiler:and the mayor]].
* MediaWatchdog: The public broadcast of the Mutant Leader's video after his capture is cut off after a few sentences... with good reason.
--> '''Mutant leader''': ... and then I'll find your new cop - your ''woman'' cop - and I will-\\
'''Newscaster''': The rest of the Mutant leader's statement is unfit for broadcast.
* MisBlamed: {{In-universe}} example - Batman is accused by the media of inspiring a number of incidents, from a mentally-ill mob enforcer putting on a Batman costume and turning on his boss, to a very disturbed man's religiously-motivated shooting up of a porn theater. Meanwhile, a shop owner who actually WAS inspired by Batman chases off a purse-snatcher attacking an old lady. No one is hurt enough for this to make the news.
* MistimedRevival
* MonsterClown: It should be [[TheJoker obvious]] at this point.
* NeckSnap: Self-inflicted, no less.
* NiceJobBreakingItHero: While Batman's return helps save Gotham from the CrapsackWorld it has become in his absence, it also causes the Joker to snap out of his 10 years of catatonia and gives him a motive to return to crime.
* NixonMask: Used by a group of convenience-store robbers in a throwaway gag.
* NoCelebritiesWereHarmed: Two of the Joker's victims were David Endochrine and Ruth Weisenheimer, who were clearly based on DavidLetterman and Dr. Ruth Westheimer.
* NoHoldsBarredBeatdown: [[spoiler:Batman's first fight with the Mutant leader. Robin's intervention is the only thing that saves Batman from getting killed.]]
* OhCrap: The Joker realizes Batman isn't screwing around this time when [[spoiler:he gets a batarang [[EyeScream in the eye]].]]
--> [=*Joker grabs one of Carrie's friends and puts his gun to her head*=]\\
'''Batman (internal monologue)''' : No, Joker. You're playing the wrong game. The ''old'' game. Tonight you're taking no hostages. Tonight I'm taking no prisoners.\\
[[spoiler:[=*cue batarangs*=]]]\\
'''Joker''' (''runs away shooting wildly''): Out of your ''mind''--
* OlderHeroVsYoungerVillain
* OldSuperhero: Batman is older here.
* ParentalObliviousness: Carrie Kelly's parents.
* PersonOfMassDestruction: Superman is treated as the best deterrent against nuclear warfare.
* PoweredArmor: Used (among other things) to fight {{Superman}}.
* PreMortemOneLiner: Inverted, in that it's the '''winner''' of the climactic battle that delivers it just before he dies.
-->"I want you to '''remember'''... the one man who '''beat''' you..."
* RecurringExtra:
** The... ill-tempered ([[TheSociopath to put it mildly]]) Byron Brassballs, who both encounters Superman (who saved the handicapped man Byron had ''knocked onto the train tracks'') and later plays a role in the Gotham riots... [[spoiler: and in a nice bit of Karmic retribution, gets his ass profoundly kicked by Batman.]]
** You could arguably count Rob and Don here, too. They keep running into Batman but hardly play a significant role in the story.
* RedemptionInTheRain: The shot of fifty-five-year-old Bruce Wayne appearing as Batman for the first time in ten years, during a thunderstorm.
* {{Retirony}}: Inverted, Commissioner Gordon proves he is still a {{Badass}} by living till his planned retirement
* RevengeOfTheSequel
* RobotKid: One of the Joker's mooks builds them... to explode.
* RonaldReagan: Better described here as Evil Dead Ronnie.
* RuleOfThree: Batman tells Robin that if she disobeys, she'll be fired. She disobeys three times, but the third time, she saves his life.
* ServileSnarker: Alfred has always been this, but in TDKR he takes it UpToEleven.
* ShoutOut: Two-Face [[Film/AClockworkOrange was fixed, all right]].
** Corto Maltese is a shout out to an Italian comic book by that name. Strangely, the name was used in the 1989 ''Film/{{Batman}}'' movie as an apparent ShoutOut to ''The Dark Knight Returns'' without recognizing that it was already a ShoutOut.
** There is also a reference to a porn star named "Hot Gates". In Greek, "Hot Gates" is translated "Thermopylae," the setting of [[ThreeHundred another]] of Frank Miller's creations. However, since ''300'' wasn't released for another twelve years, the reference ''here'' is to The300Spartans, an older film that was a favorite of Miller's, and inspired him to write ''300''.
*** Except that The 300 Spartans never used the phrase 'Hot Gates'. The reference is to both the literal translation of Thermopylae and William Golding's (now out of print) collection of essays 'The Hot Gates and other occasional places'.
** Batman's sarcastic internal monologue describing Superman quotes ''Film/MontyPythonsTheMeaningOfLife''.
* SilentScapegoat
* SmokingIsCool
* SociopathicHero:
** One interpretation of Batman in this story, especially in the later chapters. AlanMoore's introduction in one printing of the TPB specifically noted that one interpretation of Batman was "revenge-driven psychopath."
** A generous interpretation of the Sons of Batman.
* SplitPersonalityTakeover: Happens to [[spoiler:Two-Face after getting reconstructive surgery]].
* SpotlightStealingTitle: ''The Dark Knight Returns'' was originally released as ''Batman: The Dark Knight'', with "The Dark Knight Returns" being the first issue's title.
* {{Squee}}: Most of Carrie's scenes with Batman.
* StandingBetweenTheEnemies: Batman does this with a BigNo that occupies a panel.
* StockSubtitle: "Returns."
* AStormIsComing
--> '''Weatherman''': ... like the wrath of God, it's headed for Gotham.
* TheStrategist: Batman of course, especially in his fight against Superman.
* StrawmanPolitical: Features vapidly meaningless strawmen for all parts of the political spectrum because [[GoldenMeanFallacy that's how you make a valid point, right?]]
* SubordinateExcuse: Carrie has a crush on Batman that would do TheJoker proud, and in the comics she dearly loves him. She dresses as Robin and fights crime, hears the Mutants are gathering at the dump and follows Batman there, because she loves him and wants to be close to him.
* SuperRegistrationAct: Superman gets strong-armed into working for the government.
* TakeThat: The Mutants can be seen as a TakeThat to "angsty", rebellious teen superheroes made popular by MarvelComics. Fittingly, they're named "The Mutants" (StanLee's working title for ''Comicbook/XMen''), they wear red shades that look a lot like [[Comicbook/XMen Cyclops']] visor, and they despise adult authority figures. They form a perfect contrast to Batman, who's the epitome of the "traditional" DC superhero--an adult hero who's driven and fearless, and has zero tolerance for crime.
* TankGoodness: This version of the Batmobile, which would go on to be an inspiration for the Tumbler in Film/TheDarkKnightSaga. It's got treads. It's got armor strong enough that "the only thing I know of that can cut through its hide isn't from this planet." [[note]]He's referring to Superman, who proves the point in short order in the fourth issue[[/note]]. It's got machine guns. [[spoiler:"Rubber bullets. Honest."]] It's got at least two decent-sized artillery pieces. It takes up three lanes on the highway. It even has a gyro-stabilized medical bed and can be piloted home by Alfred. It's a god-damned Bat-Tank.
* TechnicalPacifist: Batman will beat you, ''threaten'' to drop you off the ''tallest'' building in Gotham, and break every bone in your body... but he won't ''kill'' you.
* ThereIsNoKillLikeOverkill:
** The Sons of the Batman, who have turned their over-the-top violence as former Mutants to fighting crime instead of creating it. At one point, it's mentioned that they used napalm to break up a three card monte game. One SOB, after killing the aforementioned Nixon mask robbers, took a pair of wire-cutters and sliced off the store owner's fingers on one hand because, as he put it, "you did nothing to stop them."
** The nuke that nearly [[spoiler:killed Superman]] was ''designed'' to create a "nuclear winter" scenario.
* ThoseTwoBadGuys: Rob and Don.
* ThouShaltNotKill: Also behind Batman's dislike of guns.
** WordOfGod says that [[spoiler:Batman didn't kill the aforementioned Mutant who held the baby at gunpoint when he shot him with another Mutant's M-60, stating he shot her shoulder. The film has it to where he shots her hand to disarm her before knocking her out with the butt of her gun]].
** Gruesomely played with when [[spoiler:Batman has the perfect chance to kill the Joker but still refuses to. The Joker notices... and kills himself just to screw with Batman]].
* TotallyRadical: See FutureSlang, above.
** Played for laughs when Carrie reprograms the Bat-Copter to accept verbal commands from her. In ''slang''.
--->'''Batman:''' [''to Bat-Copter''] Boosters! [''nothing happens''] '''Boosters!''' [''nothing happens''] What in the--?\\
'''Carrie:''' Peel.\\
[''cue Boosters'']
* {{Troll}}: Before the Internet TheJoker shows how it's done.
-->'''Joker:''' You're in trouble now.
-->'''Batman:''' Shut up.
-->'''Joker:''' Make me. It doesn't matter. I win. I made you lose control. And they'll kill you for it.
* TruthInTelevision: At the beginning two Mutants try and mug Bruce Wayne. They turn out to be {{Dirty Coward}}s when he sees them, they take into account his size, and run off when he stands his ground and is prepared to fight. It's common in RealLife for thugs like the Mutants to only target those who cannot defend themselves, and want nothing to do with those who can.
* TwentyMinutesIntoTheFuture
* UnwittingPawn: [[spoiler:Two-Face to the Joker]].
* UtilityBelt
* VitriolicBestBuds: Batman and Superman, again.
** Frank Miller's interpretation is that 'these two people do not like each other'
* VomitingCop: Alluded to. After [[spoiler:TheJoker kills everyone at the TV studio]], somebody tells the commissioner that one of the rookies got sick and had to go home.
* YouAreTheNewTrend: Rather than ignoring the Sons of the Batman, he recruits them as his own personal army after disarming them and all but calling them out for being fools in their old tactics. Admittedly, he had stopped them from following their previous leader who was proclaiming "This is our chance to [[KillItWithFire raze Gotham]]... to '''purge''' Gotham."
* WhatTheHellHero: From Alfred after Bruce waxes on about Carrie's qualities as Robin:
--> '''Alfred''': Very well, sir, I shall come right out and say it. Have you forgotten what happened to Jason?
* ZeerustCanon: The sequel.

----

to:

[[quoteright:350:http://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/tdkr_2860.jpg]]

-> ''There are seven working defenses from this position. Three of them disarm with minimal contact. Three of them kill. The other - [KRAKK] - hurts.''
-->'''--Batman'''

''Batman: The Dark Knight Returns'' is a four-issue {{Franchise/Batman}} comic book miniseries written and drawn by FrankMiller and published by Creator/DCComics from February to June 1986.

In this storyline, Batman has been retired for ten years, alcoholic and consumed with grief after the death of Jason Todd, the second ComicBook/{{Robin}}[[note]]a full ''two years'' before ''A Death in the Family'', mind you[[/note]]. {{Franchise/Superman}}, still as young and handsome as ever, has become little more than an icon, answering to the government and trying to stay as neutral as possible. Commissioner Gordon is weeks away from retirement, SelfDemonstrating/TheJoker has been silently locked away in Arkham for years, and Two-Face is about to be released back into the world with a brand new skin. In Batman's absence, and in the midst of a killer heat wave, Gotham City is overrun with crime, plagued by a monstrously violent gang known as The Mutants. After encountering a Mutant gang in the alley where his parents were murdered, Bruce Wayne resurrects Batman, aided in his renewed crusade by Carrie Kelly, a 13-year-old girl who becomes the third Robin. Defeating the Mutants, though, turns out to be child's play compared to what Batman faces next...

TDKR is a seminal comic book work, with a gritty, unique style that's draped in the best of FilmNoir techniques. It is often considered as influential as ''ComicBook/{{Watchmen}}'' in demonstrating the possible "[[TrueArtIsAngsty maturity]]" of the comic book medium, and, along with ''Watchmen'', it ushered in TheDarkAgeOfComicBooks (for good or bad). It was also highly influential in the DCU's recasting of Batman and Superman's relationship: no longer are they perfect friends, The World's Finest, but rather somewhat distant and distrusting (if respectful) of each other.

Since its release, a number of Miller's Batman-related works have tied into TDKR in one way or another:
* In 1987 Miller did ''ComicBook/BatmanYearOne'' with David Mazzucchelli during his one-arc-long run in the main ''Batman'' book. Though it was supposed to be the origin of New Earth's Batman, WordOfGod says that it was written so that it could also serve as a prequel to DKR.
* In 1994 the much ignored ''Spawn/Batman'' came out, written by Miller and drawn by Todd [=McFarlane=]. It was an (ill-advised) crossover between the {{Spawn}} Universe and the Dark Knight Universe and {{canon}} to both, whose only tie to TDKR was that it showed where Batman got the technology that he would use to build his power suit... and that's only a couple of pages.
* In 2001 and 2002, Miller produced a sequel, ''TheDarkKnightStrikesAgain''. It was more set ''around'' Batman than ''about'' Batman, being closer to a JusticeLeague story or even a Superman story than a Batman story. Questionable artwork and story developments have made this one of the more controversial Batman stories to date.
* In 2005 to 2008, Miller wrote a prequel, ''ComicBook/AllStarBatmanAndRobinTheBoyWonder,'' which was even more controversially received than ''Strikes Again''. Though it's been on hiatus, the series will return under the name ''Dark Knight: Boy Wonder''. [[DevelopmentHell Maybe.]]

There have been a handful of animated references to TDKR as well. The first is a ten-minute segment in the DCAU, considered to be among the best adaptations of a FrankMiller work. Carrie Kelly also made a very brief cameo as a future Robin in ''WesternAnimation/BatmanTheBraveAndTheBold'', fighting mutants in a "what-if" story. One episode of ''WesternAnimation/DarkwingDuck'' featured a future version of Darkwing that was heavily influenced by TDKR's depiction of Batman in the later issues.

In 2012 and 2013, WesternAnimation/DCUniverseAnimatedOriginalMovies released [[WesternAnimation/BatmanTheDarkKnightReturns an animated film adaptation]], told over [[MovieMultipack two parts]].

A couple of elements from this story were borrowed by Creator/ChristopherNolan for the conclusion to Film/TheDarkKnightSaga, ''Film/TheDarkKnightRises''.

----
!!This miniseries contains examples of:

* AirVentPassageway: The gigantic leader of the Mutant gang is behind bars awaiting trial. Batman knows that being in prison won't hurt his gang cred one bit (it helps that the Mutant leader spends his free time annoying the prison guards and bragging about what kind of havoc he will make when he gets out, instead of showing remorse) -- to break the Mutant gang, you must ''break'' its leader. Thus, he and Gordon arrange for the leader to escape via the prison air vents and meet Batman for a mud pit duel.
* TheAlcoholic: Dialogue from Gordon and Alfred at the start of the series suggests that Bruce is dangerously close to becoming one.
* AnimeHair: [[CoincidentalBroadcast TV reporter]] Lola Wong. See FashionableAsymmetry.
* AntiHero:
** Batman is an UnscrupulousHero, being more ruthless than his original DC counterpart.
** The Sons Of Batman are more or less {{Nominal Hero}}es.
* AntiVillain: Franchise/{{Superman}} is a PunchClockVillain overlapping with HeroAntagonist in this miniseries. He only reluctantly fights against Batman under orders from the US government.
* ArcWords:
** For Batman: "Lucky" and "This would be a ___ death."
** For Gordon: "I think of Sarah. The rest is easy."
* AwesomenessByAnalysis: Par for the course with Batman, right down to his fights. The page quote is one such example.
* AwLookTheyReallyDoLoveEachOther: Batman and Catwoman.
* AxCrazy:
** The Mutants, especially their leader, and The Sons of the Batman once The Mutants are no more.
** The Joker is depicted as having a love/hate fixation on Batman that he feeds with his indiscriminate killing.
---> '''Joker (inner dialogue)''': They could put me in a helicopter and fly me up into the air and line up the bodies head to toe on the ground in delightful geometric patterns like an endless June Taylor dancers routine -- and it would never be enough. No, I don't keep count. But you do. And I love you for it.
* BadassBoast:
-->'''Mutant Leader:''' "Batman! Face me, fool! I kill you! I eat [[HulkSpeak you heart]]! I show you who rules Gotham City!"
** [[CrowningMomentOfAwesome Which is quickly answered in kind]]:
--->'''Batman:''' "Okay, boy... [[BringIt Show me]]."
* BadassGrandpa: Batman, obviously, but also Jim Gordon, Oliver Queen/Green Arrow, Superman (despite having not really physically aged) and Alfred to some extent. And less sympathetically, the Joker too.
* BadassNormal: [[{{Batman}} Do you need to ask?]]
* BadFuture: Batman is gone for ten years and ''everything'' goes to hell.
* BananaRepublic: Corto Maltese.
* BatmanGambit: Bruce uses quite a few over the series. Even his final trick relies on [[spoiler:knowing Clark will let him go]].
* BetterToDieThanBeKilled: Happens twice, once when [[spoiler:the Joker breaks his own neck(!)]] to frame Batman.
* BlackHelicopter: The Batcopter.
* BookEnds: Inverted
--> (at the opening, as Bruce's racecar crashes) ''This would be a good death, but not good enough.''
--> [[spoiler:(at the finale, as he begins his life in the shadows, training his army) ''This will be a good life. Good enough.'']]
* BrassBalls: One character has this as a last name, but is an inversion.
* BreakTheCutie: This is essentially what happens when [[spoiler:Carrie sees the bodies of the Cub Scouts who took the poisoned cotton candy from the Joker]]. Batman's internal dialogue lampshades it.
* BronzeAge
* BulletProofVest: See ChestInsignia below.
* CasaLaneParenting: Carrie's parents seem to have trouble remembering that she even exists.
* ChestInsignia: [[JustifiedTrope Turns out it's bulletproof.]]
-->'''Batman (internal):''' Why do you think I wear a target on my chest? I can't armor my head.
* CivilianVillain: Happens twice, when the same psychiatrist [[WhatAnIdiot declares Two-Face and the Joker legally sane]].
* CoincidentalBroadcast: Used throughout for {{exposition}}.
* CombatPragmatist:
** The Mutant leader puts his claw-like fingernails and filed teeth to good use in the first fight against Batman.
** Batman becomes one in his second fight with the Mutant leader, since brute force failed spectacularly the first time.
* ComicBookTime: Averted. Part of the inspiration was Frank Miller wondering "What if Batman actually got older after taking up crimefighting in the '40s?"
* CoolOldGuy: C'mon now. Batman, Alfred for being so up in the years, still serving ''and'' snarky, Jim Gordon, Green Arrow, Superman (despite being arguably on the wrong side), and even the Joker in a dark and nasty way.
* CrapsackWorld
* CrazyPrepared: You do know who this comic is about, right?
* CurbStompBattle: Batman's second fight with the Mutant leader.
** Also Batman's final fight with [[spoiler:Superman]]. Literally.
* DarkAge
* DarkerAndEdgier: Robin kills. Batman mutilates. TheJoker's massecres are graphically portrayed. FrankMiller lays out his [[StrawmanPolitical grim feelings]] of [[EagleLand America]] for all to see.
* DatingCatwoman
* DeathByDisfigurement: Toyed with. [[spoiler:Batman breaks the Joker's neck just enough to cause paralysis. The Joker finishes the job by himself, both to frame Batman for his death and to spite Batman.]] And yes, it's medically possible. It's the reason why people tell you not to move after car accidents.
* DeathSeeker: Bruce has become one by the start of the story, and after he becomes Batman again, he frequently remarks on how certain things would be good or bad deaths as the story progresses.
* {{Deconstruction}}: Batman's tactics spur debates on toughness on crime, while Superman's idealism makes him an ideal government cat's paw. The story also deconstructs many elements of Batman's mythos, particularly Batman's potential craziness, as well as showing what kind of [[CrapsackWorld world]] would make Batman not only possible, but necessary.
* [[spoiler:DefeatingTheUndefeatable]]: [[spoiler:Batman beats Superman.]]
* DependingOnTheWriter: Happens to Batman and Superman a lot but Batman's X Ray seeking missiles wouldn't be able to tell Superman from anyone else normally because Superman's X-Ray Vision doesn't actually emit X-Rays [[note]]not since the GoldenAge when they pulled double duty as his EyeBeam attack.[[/note]]
* DistaffCounterpart: Carrie to Robin, and hanging on Bruce's every word she becomes more and more like him.
* DoesntLikeGuns: Both played straight and subverted. In issue 4, Batman invokes the trope in his speech to the Sons of the Batman:
--> '''Batman''': (breaks a rifle in two with his hands) This loud, clumsy, ''stupid'' thing... this is the weapon of the enemy. We do not need it. We will not use it.
** That being said, he will use them when they're necessary. In the first issue, he uses a rifle to shoot a grappling line between the Gotham Towers to [[spoiler: confront Two-Face and his henchmen]]. In the fourth issue, he uses [[spoiler: Commissioner Yindel's]] gun to shoot some plastic explosive. He also gets pushed into using one when taking on [[spoiler: three Mutant kidnappers who have a toddler as a hostage. The confrontation culminates with Batman pointing one of the Mutant's guns (a frigging [[{{BFG}} M60 GPMG]]) at the last kidnapper, who is holding the hostage at gunpoint.]]
--->[[spoiler:'''Mutant''': I'll do it man, believe me! Believe me!]]\\
[[spoiler:'''Batman''': (Shoots the wall behind him and rescues the child) I believe you.]]
* TheEighties: A lot of the action and political commentary stems from real-world politics of the period, in particular [[spoiler: the U.S.-Soviet arms race, which comes to a head in part four]].
* ElectraComplex: 13 year old Carrie is utterly in love with Batman, in his fifties.
* ElectricBoogaloo
* ExpositoryHairstyleChange: Of a sort. At the start of the story, Bruce has a mustache, but after a sleepwalk into the Batcave, Alfred notices that he's shaved it off... and he didn't realize he'd done it.
* EyesAlwaysShut: The reporter Lola Wong.
* EyeScream: To reiterate: Sharp batarangs are sharp. [[spoiler:Joker learned the hard way.]]
* FakingTheDead
* FashionableAsymmetry: The newscaster Lola Wong always wears asymmetrical earings, plus her [[AnimeHair hair]] is higher on one side.
* FatGirl: [[spoiler:'''Lana Lang.''']] IWasQuiteALooker is averted, though, as her usual depiction is never addressed.
* FiveBadBand: Joker's gang
** BigBad: Joker
** TheDragon & EvilGenius: Abner
** TheBrute & Dark Chick: Bruno
** EliteMooks: Bobby & Mary
* FollowTheLeader: This miniseries singlehandedly ushered in the new age of Cranky Batman.
* FlatlinePlotline: [[spoiler:Batman's ultimate plot in the fourth issue is to remove himself from the public spotlight by faking his death. Being Batman, he kills himself for a while using a special drug, using the fight with Superman both as a cover and as an excuse to work out his anger and frustration with Superman.]]
* FreudianExcuse: A psychiatrist blames Batman for making the Joker into a raving loon. [[spoiler:He might have a point, but the Joker kills him.]]
* FunWithAcronyms: Sons Of the Batman = [=SOBs=]
* FutureSlang: The Mutants are all over this one. "Balls nasty!", "spud" vs. "slicer-dicer", "chicken legs", and many others.
* GangOfHats: The Mutants and their various splinter groups.
* GodzillaThreshold: Discussed at length. During Commissioner Gordon and his replacement Yindel's first conversation, she asks him why he's allowed a vigilante like Batman to operate in Gotham. Gordon talks about the first time he heard the UrbanLegend that FranklinDRoosevelt let [[WorldWarII Pearl Harbor]] happen in order to get the US into WWII and stop the greater evil of the Axis. He went back and forth on whether it was morally acceptable if true, until he realized the whole thing was "too big" for him to judge.
** Issues later, after Batman [[spoiler:rallies the Sons of Batman and the Mutants to quell the mass riots]], Yindel finally realizes the same. When asked by an officer if they should do something, she can only respond "No. No. He's too big."
* GoingColdTurkey: When Bruce takes up the cowl again, he quits the sauce. He doesn't have any withdrawal issues, possibly because Batman is an even stronger addiction.
* GoodNewsBadNews: The President has a very cheerful way of telling the American People about the dangers of nuclear fallout.
--> "Well folks, I've got good news and bad news. Heh... The good news is that the Soviets have withdrawn their forces from the island of Corto Maltese.... And the bad news, well... It looks like those Soviets are pretty bad losers, yes they are..."
* GoOutWithASmile: [[spoiler:Joker, in one of the most disturbing examples.]]
* GrandfatherClause: The Bat-signal is discussed here.
* GroinAttack: Happens to Batman at the foot of the Mutant leader during their first fight.
--> He shows me what a fast kick is. Something explodes in my midsection. Sunlight behind my eyes as the pain rises.
* HallOfMirrors: Batman chases the Joker into one at the fair. [[spoiler:The Joker gut-shoots him after he gives himself away trying to come through a mirror.]]
* AHandfulForAnEye: During their second fight, Batman cuts the Mutant leader over the eyes to blind him with the blood, then compounds that by throwing mud in his face.
* HandicappedBadass: See ImprobableAimingSkills below.
* HannibalLecture: [[spoiler:The Joker, paralyzed from the neck down,]] hits Batman with one just before [[spoiler:killing himself]].
* HeatWave: Gotham has been stuck in one for a while at the start of the series.
* HeroicBSOD: In the first issue, Bruce, lost in thought, wanders to the spot where his parents were killed and is confronted by Mutants. Their dialogue, casually referring to killing Bruce, having a ''quota'' for murders, and then dismissing Bruce as their target because he's "into it", shakes Bruce to his core, as he's been equating them to his parents' killer up to that point.
--> '''Bruce''': No. Not him. Not him. He flinched when he pulled the trigger. He was sick and guilty over what he did. [...] These... These are his children. A purer breed. And this world is '''theirs'''.
* HesBack:
** Batman, after 10 years in retirement.
---> '''Reporter''': Police phone lines are jammed with citizens describing what appears to be a siege on Gotham's underworld... [[CrowningMomentOfAwesome by the Batman]].
** And Joker in a twisted inverse version.
* HonorBeforeReason: Batman knows that [[spoiler:it's best if he just shoots the Mutant leader in the dump]], but he can't bring himself to cross that line... and it nearly gets him killed.
* HulkSpeak: The Mutant leader's dialogue.
* HumanShield: As Batman's chasing the Joker through the fair, the Joker tries this with one of Carrie's friends. Batman promptly tags him with a handful of batarangs.
* IAmTheNoun: "Tonight, ''we'' are the law. Tonight, ''I'' am the law."
* IFightForTheStrongestSide: Once the Mutant leader is defeated, the gang disintegrates into a number of splinter groups that define themselves by whatever figurehead they're following; the only thing that remains consistent is their use of violence.
* ImAHumanitarian: One of the Mutant leader's {{Catch Phrase}}s is his boasts that he will eat Batman's heart.
* ImprobableAimingSkills: The GreenArrow is better than you at archery even with one arm... in the dark... in the rain... ''hanging upside down''.
* TheInsomniac: The Joker's insomnia is addressed here.
* IWasQuiteALooker: Selina Kyle didn't age well. [[spoiler:The Joker notices.]]
* JackBauerInterrogationTechnique:
** In one instance, Batman scares a perp (the one who had the page quote applied to him earlier on) into talking simply by [[spoiler:walking toward him; the perp falls through a window trying to get away, injuring himself, and talks after Batman tells him that he's the only person who can save him from bleeding to death]].
** In another instance, he [[spoiler:hangs an unconscious Mutant upside-down from a gargoyle at the top of a skyscraper, puts a hand over the Mutant's face, and slowly moves his hand away when the Mutant wakes up and tries to cut a deal]]. What makes this even more effective is that the reader doesn't realize all this until it's all said and done; the sequence is drawn from the Mutant's perspective.
---> '''Batman (internal)''' : It was tough work carrying two hundred and twenty pounds of sociopath to the top of one of Gotham's Twin Towers. The scream alone is worth it.
* JekyllAndHyde: Averted. [[spoiler:Recent breakthroughs in plastic surgery restore Two-Face's appearance, but at the unforeseen cost of forever destroying the good-natured "Harvey" half of the personality and leaving the criminal "Face" in complete control.]]
--> '''Two-Face:''' Got them all to keep their lunches down when they saw my face... saying I was cured... saying I was fixed. I'm fixed all right... at least both sides match now! Go ahead, have your laugh! Take a look... take a look... \\
'''Batman (internal)''' : The scars go deep... too deep. Not fooled by sight, I see him... as he ''is''. (''the panel shows Dent with his entire head a monstrous ruin'')\\
'''Batman:''' I see... a reflection, Harvey. A reflection. (''the next panel shows a bat's snarling face'')
** What makes this scene even more powerful is that Two-Face is the only one of Batman's enemies in the story that he is sympathetic to, as he funded Harvey's surgery and rehabilitation efforts and knows what it's like to be living a dichotomy (Bruce Wayne/Batman vs. Harvey Dent/Two-Face). For bonus points, in ''Batman: Year One'' which occupies the same universe as this book, it's made clear that Harvey Dent was one of Batman's closest allies and friends early in his career.
* {{Jerkass}}: Everything Byron Brassballs says or does is custom-made to make you want him to get his ass kicked. And he only appears twice.
* KryptoniteIsEverywhere: Averted. Kryptonite doesn't show up until the very end of Batman's battle with Superman, when Bruce specifically says that he had to spend years (and millions of dollars) synthesizing it, implying that the naturally occurring stuff is too rare to be a practical weapon. And despite having days to prepare for the showdown, Superman seems genuinely surprised that Bruce was able to get his hands on any at all.
* LiteralMetaphor: The governor is almost strangled by actual [[ObstructiveBureaucrat red tape]].
* MadeOfIron: Subverted here.
* ManBitesMan: The Mutant leader puts his filed teeth to good use against Batman [[spoiler:and the mayor]].
* MediaWatchdog: The public broadcast of the Mutant Leader's video after his capture is cut off after a few sentences... with good reason.
--> '''Mutant leader''': ... and then I'll find your new cop - your ''woman'' cop - and I will-\\
'''Newscaster''': The rest of the Mutant leader's statement is unfit for broadcast.
* MisBlamed: {{In-universe}} example - Batman is accused by the media of inspiring a number of incidents, from a mentally-ill mob enforcer putting on a Batman costume and turning on his boss, to a very disturbed man's religiously-motivated shooting up of a porn theater. Meanwhile, a shop owner who actually WAS inspired by Batman chases off a purse-snatcher attacking an old lady. No one is hurt enough for this to make the news.
* MistimedRevival
* MonsterClown: It should be [[TheJoker obvious]] at this point.
* NeckSnap: Self-inflicted, no less.
* NiceJobBreakingItHero: While Batman's return helps save Gotham from the CrapsackWorld it has become in his absence, it also causes the Joker to snap out of his 10 years of catatonia and gives him a motive to return to crime.
* NixonMask: Used by a group of convenience-store robbers in a throwaway gag.
* NoCelebritiesWereHarmed: Two of the Joker's victims were David Endochrine and Ruth Weisenheimer, who were clearly based on DavidLetterman and Dr. Ruth Westheimer.
* NoHoldsBarredBeatdown: [[spoiler:Batman's first fight with the Mutant leader. Robin's intervention is the only thing that saves Batman from getting killed.]]
* OhCrap: The Joker realizes Batman isn't screwing around this time when [[spoiler:he gets a batarang [[EyeScream in the eye]].]]
--> [=*Joker grabs one of Carrie's friends and puts his gun to her head*=]\\
'''Batman (internal monologue)''' : No, Joker. You're playing the wrong game. The ''old'' game. Tonight you're taking no hostages. Tonight I'm taking no prisoners.\\
[[spoiler:[=*cue batarangs*=]]]\\
'''Joker''' (''runs away shooting wildly''): Out of your ''mind''--
* OlderHeroVsYoungerVillain
* OldSuperhero: Batman is older here.
* ParentalObliviousness: Carrie Kelly's parents.
* PersonOfMassDestruction: Superman is treated as the best deterrent against nuclear warfare.
* PoweredArmor: Used (among other things) to fight {{Superman}}.
* PreMortemOneLiner: Inverted, in that it's the '''winner''' of the climactic battle that delivers it just before he dies.
-->"I want you to '''remember'''... the one man who '''beat''' you..."
* RecurringExtra:
** The... ill-tempered ([[TheSociopath to put it mildly]]) Byron Brassballs, who both encounters Superman (who saved the handicapped man Byron had ''knocked onto the train tracks'') and later plays a role in the Gotham riots... [[spoiler: and in a nice bit of Karmic retribution, gets his ass profoundly kicked by Batman.]]
** You could arguably count Rob and Don here, too. They keep running into Batman but hardly play a significant role in the story.
* RedemptionInTheRain: The shot of fifty-five-year-old Bruce Wayne appearing as Batman for the first time in ten years, during a thunderstorm.
* {{Retirony}}: Inverted, Commissioner Gordon proves he is still a {{Badass}} by living till his planned retirement
* RevengeOfTheSequel
* RobotKid: One of the Joker's mooks builds them... to explode.
* RonaldReagan: Better described here as Evil Dead Ronnie.
* RuleOfThree: Batman tells Robin that if she disobeys, she'll be fired. She disobeys three times, but the third time, she saves his life.
* ServileSnarker: Alfred has always been this, but in TDKR he takes it UpToEleven.
* ShoutOut: Two-Face [[Film/AClockworkOrange was fixed, all right]].
** Corto Maltese is a shout out to an Italian comic book by that name. Strangely, the name was used in the 1989 ''Film/{{Batman}}'' movie as an apparent ShoutOut to ''The Dark Knight Returns'' without recognizing that it was already a ShoutOut.
** There is also a reference to a porn star named "Hot Gates". In Greek, "Hot Gates" is translated "Thermopylae," the setting of [[ThreeHundred another]] of Frank Miller's creations. However, since ''300'' wasn't released for another twelve years, the reference ''here'' is to The300Spartans, an older film that was a favorite of Miller's, and inspired him to write ''300''.
*** Except that The 300 Spartans never used the phrase 'Hot Gates'. The reference is to both the literal translation of Thermopylae and William Golding's (now out of print) collection of essays 'The Hot Gates and other occasional places'.
** Batman's sarcastic internal monologue describing Superman quotes ''Film/MontyPythonsTheMeaningOfLife''.
* SilentScapegoat
* SmokingIsCool
* SociopathicHero:
** One interpretation of Batman in this story, especially in the later chapters. AlanMoore's introduction in one printing of the TPB specifically noted that one interpretation of Batman was "revenge-driven psychopath."
** A generous interpretation of the Sons of Batman.
* SplitPersonalityTakeover: Happens to [[spoiler:Two-Face after getting reconstructive surgery]].
* SpotlightStealingTitle: ''The Dark Knight Returns'' was originally released as ''Batman: The Dark Knight'', with "The Dark Knight Returns" being the first issue's title.
* {{Squee}}: Most of Carrie's scenes with Batman.
* StandingBetweenTheEnemies: Batman does this with a BigNo that occupies a panel.
* StockSubtitle: "Returns."
* AStormIsComing
--> '''Weatherman''': ... like the wrath of God, it's headed for Gotham.
* TheStrategist: Batman of course, especially in his fight against Superman.
* StrawmanPolitical: Features vapidly meaningless strawmen for all parts of the political spectrum because [[GoldenMeanFallacy that's how you make a valid point, right?]]
* SubordinateExcuse: Carrie has a crush on Batman that would do TheJoker proud, and in the comics she dearly loves him. She dresses as Robin and fights crime, hears the Mutants are gathering at the dump and follows Batman there, because she loves him and wants to be close to him.
* SuperRegistrationAct: Superman gets strong-armed into working for the government.
* TakeThat: The Mutants can be seen as a TakeThat to "angsty", rebellious teen superheroes made popular by MarvelComics. Fittingly, they're named "The Mutants" (StanLee's working title for ''Comicbook/XMen''), they wear red shades that look a lot like [[Comicbook/XMen Cyclops']] visor, and they despise adult authority figures. They form a perfect contrast to Batman, who's the epitome of the "traditional" DC superhero--an adult hero who's driven and fearless, and has zero tolerance for crime.
* TankGoodness: This version of the Batmobile, which would go on to be an inspiration for the Tumbler in Film/TheDarkKnightSaga. It's got treads. It's got armor strong enough that "the only thing I know of that can cut through its hide isn't from this planet." [[note]]He's referring to Superman, who proves the point in short order in the fourth issue[[/note]]. It's got machine guns. [[spoiler:"Rubber bullets. Honest."]] It's got at least two decent-sized artillery pieces. It takes up three lanes on the highway. It even has a gyro-stabilized medical bed and can be piloted home by Alfred. It's a god-damned Bat-Tank.
* TechnicalPacifist: Batman will beat you, ''threaten'' to drop you off the ''tallest'' building in Gotham, and break every bone in your body... but he won't ''kill'' you.
* ThereIsNoKillLikeOverkill:
** The Sons of the Batman, who have turned their over-the-top violence as former Mutants to fighting crime instead of creating it. At one point, it's mentioned that they used napalm to break up a three card monte game. One SOB, after killing the aforementioned Nixon mask robbers, took a pair of wire-cutters and sliced off the store owner's fingers on one hand because, as he put it, "you did nothing to stop them."
** The nuke that nearly [[spoiler:killed Superman]] was ''designed'' to create a "nuclear winter" scenario.
* ThoseTwoBadGuys: Rob and Don.
* ThouShaltNotKill: Also behind Batman's dislike of guns.
** WordOfGod says that [[spoiler:Batman didn't kill the aforementioned Mutant who held the baby at gunpoint when he shot him with another Mutant's M-60, stating he shot her shoulder. The film has it to where he shots her hand to disarm her before knocking her out with the butt of her gun]].
** Gruesomely played with when [[spoiler:Batman has the perfect chance to kill the Joker but still refuses to. The Joker notices... and kills himself just to screw with Batman]].
* TotallyRadical: See FutureSlang, above.
** Played for laughs when Carrie reprograms the Bat-Copter to accept verbal commands from her. In ''slang''.
--->'''Batman:''' [''to Bat-Copter''] Boosters! [''nothing happens''] '''Boosters!''' [''nothing happens''] What in the--?\\
'''Carrie:''' Peel.\\
[''cue Boosters'']
* {{Troll}}: Before the Internet TheJoker shows how it's done.
-->'''Joker:''' You're in trouble now.
-->'''Batman:''' Shut up.
-->'''Joker:''' Make me. It doesn't matter. I win. I made you lose control. And they'll kill you for it.
* TruthInTelevision: At the beginning two Mutants try and mug Bruce Wayne. They turn out to be {{Dirty Coward}}s when he sees them, they take into account his size, and run off when he stands his ground and is prepared to fight. It's common in RealLife for thugs like the Mutants to only target those who cannot defend themselves, and want nothing to do with those who can.
* TwentyMinutesIntoTheFuture
* UnwittingPawn: [[spoiler:Two-Face to the Joker]].
* UtilityBelt
* VitriolicBestBuds: Batman and Superman, again.
** Frank Miller's interpretation is that 'these two people do not like each other'
* VomitingCop: Alluded to. After [[spoiler:TheJoker kills everyone at the TV studio]], somebody tells the commissioner that one of the rookies got sick and had to go home.
* YouAreTheNewTrend: Rather than ignoring the Sons of the Batman, he recruits them as his own personal army after disarming them and all but calling them out for being fools in their old tactics. Admittedly, he had stopped them from following their previous leader who was proclaiming "This is our chance to [[KillItWithFire raze Gotham]]... to '''purge''' Gotham."
* WhatTheHellHero: From Alfred after Bruce waxes on about Carrie's qualities as Robin:
--> '''Alfred''': Very well, sir, I shall come right out and say it. Have you forgotten what happened to Jason?
* ZeerustCanon: The sequel.

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[[redirect:ComicBook/BatmanTheDarkKnightReturns]]
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In 2012 and 2013, WesternAnimation/DCUniverseAnimatedOriginalMovies released [[Film/TheDarkKnightReturns an animated film adaptation]], told over [[MovieMultipack two parts]].

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In 2012 and 2013, WesternAnimation/DCUniverseAnimatedOriginalMovies released [[Film/TheDarkKnightReturns [[WesternAnimation/BatmanTheDarkKnightReturns an animated film adaptation]], told over [[MovieMultipack two parts]].

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