Movies News Talk
Red Hood's Redemption: A What-If Story That Shows What Jason Todd Really Needed
Jason Todd, the Red Hood, is a seriously complicated character. He's a member of the Bat-Family, yet he has faced an unbelievable amount of tragedy, much more than many other members, arguably more than most other key figures. DC Comics finally delivers a narrative that really showcases this. We're diving into a fascinating alternate storyline—one that totally changes everything about Jason's history. Warning! Major spoilers from From the DC Vault: Death in the Family: Robin Lives! #4 are ahead! (This issue was written by J.M. DeMatteis, with art by Rick Leonardi, colors by Rico Renzi, and letters by Taylor Esposito).
Everyone knows how Jason died in Batman: Death in the Family (Jim Starlin and Jim Aparo). That moment became iconic; changing that whole story for many fans! Yet DC decides to explore another “what if” scenario in From the DC Vault series—and completely revises many key decisions surrounding Jason; creating a brand new universe within those narratives! This was made clear when many key characters like Batman and Nightwing make their respective reappearances and significantly altered relationships! This is significant because it dramatically affects Jason's character development. And how he lives. This changed universe shows an alternative: What if he hadn't died at the hands of the Joker?
This storyline sees Jason surviving his confrontation with the Joker! That's insane! This simple change drastically impacts his entire life! And changes the actions that Batman ultimately takes. In this new, parallel world, the writers emphasize that this would change almost everything; impacting the development of those plots in incredibly deep and complex ways. And it would eventually drastically affect all future narrative development! His near-death experience changed him. There's serious trauma, but there's also hope! Batman steps up and provides the necessary support–therapy, compassion, an actual caring person willing to provide guidance—and for this incredibly broken character, Batman’s actions directly affect Jason’s healing process in dramatic ways and help shape the events going forward!
Jason Todd’s main DC timeline is brutal. His mom died of an overdose. His criminal dad dies via Two-Face! Then homelessness, and stealing to survive, resulting in contact with Batman. Then his “orphanage” turn – this wasn’t some good orphanage, this turned out to be training ground run by the utterly horrible Ma Gunn. It’s all horribly bleak and these horrific events drastically affected his actions and ultimately the events unfolding later on in that iconic storyline and created significant mental and physical harm which changed him in irreconcilable ways. After he’s rescued by Batman, this is the first positive development and change, which really alters how that child became more cheerful.
After becoming Robin, Jason’s life got better! He thrives under Batman's care, becomes genuinely happy (forget DC’s retcons trying to change Jason’s cheerful early character; it matters because those descriptions made the character so very unique!). This was sadly temporary—his discovery of his real mother’s identity (and forced partnership with the Joker) resulting in her and Jason’s death through that most infamous villain’s cruel hands, leading to another moment and a massive break in Batman’s career!
Years after his death Jason returns as Red Hood, in Batman #635 (by Judd Winick and Doug Mahnke). He's livid after being dead and then learning Joker’s still kicking and destroying Gotham. That is added onto his sense of being abandoned by Batman. And replaces Jason with another Robin! So, the Red Hood is born – becoming a villain and beginning a rampage of destruction, making him a dangerous threat who is almost too horrible for Batman to fix. These feelings were portrayed significantly through that infamous Batman: Under the Red Hood animated movie; emphasizing those moments in more graphic ways and focusing more critically upon the development surrounding his later years!
The main rule Batman lives by: no killing. That gets violated by Jason; resulting in another violent spree against major Gotham gangsters (many are actually slaughtered), showing how deeply intense and committed the Red Hood actually was. It wasn’t about stopping crime, it's controlling it entirely; completely altering all relationships to the level where the two were considered outright enemies! The violence, and lack of control is the core element that affected their relationship and left everything ruined after their confrontation and encounter at the end, as everything fell apart; creating one of those dramatic break points within the history!
In the Robin Lives storyline: Jason kills Joker after surviving. Yet this event significantly changes their relationship entirely! It wasn’t about Jason’s actions being worse; It changes Batman's reactions! He’s utterly shocked to find out his identity, and what he’s actually done. His attempts to become someone entirely distinct; attempting to use that newly acquired and violent method as a primary method of enacting crime created a severe confrontation.
Yet, Batman’s response changes profoundly here – instead of rage he shows compassion and forgiveness in this parallel reality where Jason hadn’t already taken such severe action in an alternate time-frame – embracing Jason (along with Nightwing). This hug says it all—it shows understanding—that it wasn't something to be immediately denounced and rather showed just how deeply emotionally resonant and heartfelt this alternative resolution could’ve become, a reconciliation completely unlike the prior scenario! The simple lack of immediate violent aggression, the focus shifted instead on that more critically important development; creating a chance for reconciliation.
Jason Todd’s path as the Red Hood is defined by intense trauma— that is made obvious even before Jason’s very first appearance within that shared universe! This specific “what if” storyline showcases another perspective! This changed ending, shows exactly what made the previous conflicts so incredibly intense; that trauma from early years coupled with Batman’s actions directly led to Jason’s becoming such a dangerous, destructive individual!
Showing those very alternate narratives – that hypothetical scenario and contrasting them shows a very critical idea for the whole narrative. Even in the "what if" story Jason doesn't receive a fairytale ending; he has yet to fully confront the entirety of his traumas; a reconciliation between him and Batman, and with those other related characters only being suggested by this resolution. However, demonstrating that a simpler action could've created massive change highlights that small acts of compassion, when applied appropriately at the proper moment could completely alter the outcomes and direction in a significantly more positive way than previously explored – the change was exactly what made that final resolution so profound.