Jason Todd’s death has always been seen as Dark Knight’s biggest fault, but Jason Todd returns to life and this focus has shifted to the question that what Batman did next.
The death of the second Robin, Jason Todd is always considered as Batman’s biggest fault. Todd’s death at the hand of Joker became the worse nightmare of Bruce Wayne, but things got changed when he figured out that Josan Todd has returned to life and has been operating in the mask of Red Hood.
As Bruce and the other members of the Bat-family have grown to accept the anger, guilt and violent vigilant resentment over his death have cast a long shadow over Bruce and his former partner. The fact that Jason Todd returns to life is the surprise Bruce Wayne receives in Batman: Three Joker #2.
Jason Todd Returns To Life After losing his life in 1988’s “A Death In The Family”
Jim Starlin and Jim Aparo, he remained lifeless until he was brought back. After spending a year without moving and another year in a coma, Talia al Ghul discovers Jason and convenience her father Ra’s Al Ghul allow Jason to be submerged into one of his Lazarus Pits.
The League of Assassins’ was also responsible for eliminating any trace of Jason’s resurrection to throw Batman and his allies off Jason’s trial, as the Pit restored Jason’s health and memories but potentially made him more mentally unstable and violent. After learning about the fact that he has been replaced with other Robin, Jason decides to undertake Bruce’s training to became the new vigilant, he collected all the essential skills to make an official comeback as Robin in Batman #638.
Since, Jason has decided to become a treatable ally of the Bat-family, his violent and questionable behavior in Batman: Three Joker #2 has become a subject of an argument between the Batfamily. Arguing that Jason’s murder of the Joker is grounds for him to be arrested, Batgirl is surprised to find that Batman is against this, explaining that they should be sympathetic to Jason’s suffering.
Jason Todd returns to life. Batman: Three Joker #2 delivers another interesting fact that Barbara Gardon and Jason Todd were the same, as because of Joker they both suffered the same kind of trauma. But somewhere Barbara’s family and friends helped him to get over this trauma but Jason’s rebirth impeded him from receiving any kind of support. The core takeaway is that rather than simply failing Jason, Batman was prevented from helping him; a process which it’s suggested would have led to a more successful recovery. In most Batman tales It already confirmed that Jason’s death is Batman’s biggest failure. But later Jason Todd returns to life.
Since Jason Todd returns to life, his conversation with Barbara is making sense as he said that He didn’t receive any kind of care as she did because everyone in his family and his friends assumed that he is already dead. By the time they all learned of his return, he had already “healed” and reinvented himself as the Red Hood and that all of the immediate Bat-Family collectively regret not being there for him when he needed their support – something Jason says no-one has told him before.