‘Gotham’s’ Cory Michael Smith Unlocks the Mystery of the Riddler

Gotham S01E12 Cory Michael Smith Still - H 2015

Jeff Neumann

For Gotham’s Cory Michael Smith, reading a bunch of old Batman comics was “easily the smartest thing” he could have done while preparing to play the Fix show’s Edward Nigma, a character better known as the Gotham City villain the Riddler.

Smith tells The Hollywood Reporter that he didn’t grow up with Batman, preferring to spend his time outside. Outside of repeated viewings of Tim Burton’s 1989 movie and episodes of the animated television spinoff, he was coming to the material fresh — which meant he wanted to research the role.

“When I was auditioning for Gotham, I got a handful of comics from different decades, so I had a perspective — it’s been around for 75 years, which is a long time,” he says. “I wanted to see an evolution of the comics — and of the character.”

What he found was that there is no consistent Riddler throughout the character’s 60-year-plus existence. (The character debuted in 1948’s Detective Comics No. 140, created by artist Dick Sprang and writer Bill Finger, who was also responsible for the creation of the Joker and the Penguin, as well as Gotham’s lead character, Jim Gordon.)

“What I love about [the character’s history] is how diverse it is in terms of how the character is portrayed, in terms of his appearance, the different costumes and hair color,” Smith says. “Sometimes it’s incredibly ostentatious, other times it’s almost professional, or regal. Sometimes, he’s a showman, sometimes he’s a nerd.”

Read more ‘Gotham’ Showrunner on More Bruce Wayne, Arkham and What Lies Ahead

More importantly for Gotham’s purposes, perhaps, is the fact that the comic book version of Edward Nigma — or Edward Nygma, or Edward Nashton, because even his name hasn’t stayed consistent throughout the years — hasn’t always been portrayed as a villain. One thing that has stayed true through the character’s career-to-date is that the Riddler’s reason for turning to crime was never simple greed or a desire for mischief, but instead the need to match wits with a suitable opponent. That means that, like Gotham’s currently benign Nigma, the comic book Riddler has worked with the police on occasion when the circumstances dictated. Indeed, under the pen of Paul Dini, the character spent a number of years working on the side of the angels as a private investigator, occasionally even teaming with Batman to solve crimes (much to the suspicion of the Dark Knight).

While Smith likens the current Gotham incarnation of Edward Nigma to “walking through a field and picking up flower, hanging out with his buddies at the GCPD, and having no evil intentions whatsoever” — a description that could never be applied to any of the comic book versions of the character — he suggests that that isn’t going to be the case for much longer, likening Nigma’s character development on the show to a giant U curve.

“What I’m really excited about is the bottom of that curve,” he says. “Going from this quite innocent, well-intentioned, joyful person to starting to find this other part of him that he didn’t know he had — accessing this place where he responds to the unfortunate things that people are doing to him, and starting to realize how cruel people are to him and how they mistreat him, and then doing that back to them. He’s a person who’s constantly abused, and to finally reach a part of himself where he just can’t take it anymore and starts doing it to other people — and it’s out of anger and exhaustion, and then realizing that when you start taking control of situations like that, you can gain power that way — it’ll be something that he can start to enjoy.”

See more On the Set of ‘Gotham’

Although that would make for a far more emotionally brutal origin than the comic book Riddler — where, traditionally, he’s been portrayed as a man too smart and too bored to stay within the law, and more of a playful sociopath than a survivor of trauma — Smith suggests that the end result would be someone as gleefully mischievous and fun to watch.

Once Nigma “slips up the other side of the U as this completely other person because he’s finally realized how to harness power, he’s going to have a great time with it,” he says. “That’s how you end up with the Riddler, who is this very joyful villain.”

And if there’s one thing that’s consistent in all of the Riddler’s inconsistency, it’s the joy he takes in his job — whatever that job may be.

What do you think of Gotham’s Riddler? Sound off in the comments below. Gotham airs Mondays on Fox.

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‘Gotham’: How the Crime Families Compare to Their Comic Counterparts

Gotham S01E12 John Doman Still - H 2015

Jessica Miglio/FOX

In Gotham, Jim Gordon’s (Ben McKenzie) life is complicated by the control held over the city by its two major crime families: the Falcones and the Maronis. Both families have their roots in the 75-year comic book mythology of the Batman series, but that’s not to say that everything is the same.

Here’s a look at how the families compare on Fox’s TV take and the comics.

THE FALCLONES

How they’re similar:
Carmine Falcone looms over both incarnations of the Falcone crime family. In Gotham, John Doman’s Carmine is the head of the family, while in the comic books, Falcone — nicknamed “The Roman” — was believed dead until last year’s Batman: Eternal series, when he re-appeared with the intent of usurping control of the crime families from the hands of the Penguin. Think of it as the first season of the television show in reverse.

How they’re different:
Arguably the most important figure in the Falcone crime family of Gotham isn’t a Falcone, but Fish Mooney (Jada Pinkett Smith). That character doesn’t even exist in the comic book mythology, where crime family drama tends to stick to disagreements between families, with members remaining relatively loyal to each other. Another important difference between the comic book and TV Gothams? In the comics, Oswald Cobblepot (Robin Lord Taylor on the Fox show) has succeeded in taking control of the Falcone family.

Key comics:
The big Falcone stories are Batman: Year One, Batman: The Long Halloween, both of which are available as collected editions, and the ongoing Batman: Eternal.

See more Secrets of the ‘Gotham’ Set

THE MARONIS

How they’re similar:
No matter the medium, the Maronis are thorns in the side of Falcone family, with Sal Maroni seemingly enjoying the struggle. In both Gotham and the comics, the Maronis are, technically, below the Falcones in terms of power. At one point in comic book continuity, the two families essentially merged for a time, under the control of the Falcones — but that doesn’t mean that Sal isn’t scheming to come out on top.

How they’re different:
Aside from the absence in Gotham of Sal Maroni’s father, “Big Lou,” the biggest difference between the two versions of the family is that the defining moment for the comic book Maronis hasn’t arrived yet in the television timeline: Sal Maroni is the mob boss responsible for the accident that turns idealistic Harvey Dent into the villainous Two-Face. Of course, given that Dent has shown up in Gotham (played by Nicholas D’Agosto), that might be about to change.

Key comics:
While the origin of Two-Face has been told many times, the big Maroni comic to read is Batman: The Long Halloween, which also includes Harvey’s accident and everything that follows.

THE CALABRESES

How they’re similar/How they’re different:
Fans of Gotham might be wondering just who the Calabrases are, in that the name hasn’t even been mentioned on the show as yet. But in recent issues of DC’s Catwoman, it has been revealed that Selina Kyle (aka Camren Bicondova on Gotham) is actually the daughter of a mobster named Rex Calabrese, and heir to a crime family all of her own. Will the television show follow suit? Only time will tell.

Key comics:
Recent issues of both Batman: Eternal and Catwoman reveal more.

Gotham airs Mondays on Fox.

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Marvel To Release ‘Daredevil’ Special Issue To Tie-In With Netflix Series

Daredevil Point One - H 2014

Chris Samnee/Marvel Entertainment

Newcomers to Marvel’s Daredevil looking for more adventures of the blind-lawyer-turned-superhero after the debut of the Netflix series this April will find something special waiting for them: a one-off comic book set during the early days of the hero’s comic book crime-fighting career.

The confusingly-numbered Daredevil No. 15.1 — the issue number comes from the fact that it will be released following the fifteenth issue of the current Daredevil series, but not take place following it in continuity; don’t ask — will feature a story written by Arrow showrunner Marc Guggenheim with art by Peter Krause, as well as a second story written and drawn by regular Daredevil artist Chris Samnee.

Guggenheim told Newsarama.com that his story has “a very simple concept in which Matt goes out on patrol as Daredevil one night and catches a murderer just after he had killed someone. The next day, his law firm assigns him a pro bono case, where lawyers for the good of society and to be charitable take on a case of an indigent defendant for free. His client, however, turns out to be the same guy that Daredevil captured the previous night.”

The writer said that he’s “humming with anticipation” over the debut of the Netflix Daredevil series, which debuts Apr. 10 and features Charlie Cox in the lead role of Matt Murdock. “I’m always excited to see Daredevil in any form,” he said, “but television is a medium tha Daredevil is tailor made to be transported to from comics. I can’t wait.”

Guggenheim also said admitted, in an imaginary fight between Marvel’s hero and the star of his CW series, he thinks he’s “contractually obligated to say Green Arrow [would win], but my heart lies elsewhere.” Somewhere, Stephen Amell is frowning.

Daredevil No. 15.1 will be released in comic stores and digitally this April.

Read more ‘Daredevil’ Star Charlie Cox Talks Netflix’s “Darker” Matt Murdock: “He Can’t Stop”

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