Poison Ivy is most famously and currently "married" to Harley Quinn in various DC Comics continuities, with their relationship evolving into a deeply committed romantic one, even having a wedding in the Injustice series and the Harley Quinn animated show, though the mainstream comics sometimes depict them as in a serious relationship rather than legally wed, but officially confirmed as married in Injustice 2 #70 and Injustice: Year Zero.
While usually portrayed as a supervillain, Ivy has also been an antiheroine at times as well as the primary love interest of Harley Quinn as of The New 52 and DC Rebirth relaunches.
The big reveal came in Injustice 2 #70. While Orca and Killer Croc are getting ready to make their own vows to each other, Poison Ivy nonchalantly reveals that she and Harley Quinn were married in Las Vegas by an Elvis impersonator, which makes complete sense.
The situation is complicated. They're best friends, Harley was obsessed with Joker for years, Poison Ivy is currently engaged to Kite Man. This is not a ride off into the sunset moment, but rather a ``time to really avoid dealing with these feelings'' moment.
Ivy cheated on him which she immediately knew was a terrible thing to do, but there was no benefit to Ivy of marrying Kite Man and whilst having an affair with Harley. He is not rich or anything like that.
Neytiri, the leader of the resistance against Robin in the future apocalyptic world, is introduced to Ivy and Harley as their daughter. Both Ivy and Harley die in this timeline, and Neytiri is named after the character in the Avatar films, which heavily influence the world.
Later that night, Harley successfully seduces Deadshot resulting in a resounding sexual encounter. Harley is sent on a criminal rampage throughout Gotham in search of a doll she's been looking for where she is caught by Batman.
Nightwing wakes up and finds he has been tied to a bed. Harley shows him a pile of rejection letters and that her criminal past prevents her from getting rehired as a psychiatrist. Eventually, the two sleep together.
Son of the Demon
Talia witnessed the murder as a young child. During this storyline, Batman marries Talia and the prior marriage from DC Special Series #15 (1978) is referenced. They have sex which results in her becoming pregnant.
Tabitha was first mentioned in "Thawing Hearts" when King Shark mentioned being betrothed to her while the crew were discussing dates to bring to Poison Ivy's wedding.
Harley Quinn is bisexual and has been in a relationship with The Joker, and, more recently, in a non-monogamous relationship with Poison Ivy. Other characters have been portrayed as bisexual in Batman media adaptations. Gotham's Barbara Kean and Tabitha Galavan are also confirmed to be bisexual.
Joker Jr. was born after The Joker, who had manipulated Harley Quinn into re-entering a life of crime, impregnated her without her knowing. Harley out of shame refused to accept the child and gave him up. He grew up being transferred from various orphanages and foster homes to people who never loved him.
Poison Ivy is canonically Autistic Harley Quinn is canonically AuDHD. CatWoman is canonically CatWoman.
In the latest issue of Injustice 2, the prequel comic for the Injustice video game, DC confirmed that Harley Quinn and Poison Ivy are married. Dr. Pamela Isley and Dr. Harleen Quinzel have been partners in crime, and perhaps more, since their first appearance together in Batman: The Animated Series.
Despite both characters being hyped up as super crazy, neither is usually portrayed as all that crazy. They're both pretty aware of the world around them and their own actions. That being said The Joker is usually calculating and willfully malevolent, where Harley acts out of a genuinely twisted understanding of love.
The main character of this series is Poison Ivy, a queer woman. There are frequent depictions of violence, as well as images of bodies in varying states of decomposition.
DC Rebirth
3) Annual #2) and the series Batman/Catwoman, Selina falls pregnant with Bruce's child whom they name Helena. After Bruce's death in a flash-forward she helps her widowed mother come to terms with it and ends up becoming the new Batwoman.
The characters we highlight and enjoy everyday, The Batman and the Bat- Family, would never discriminate against which lives they protect in Gotham City based on things like sexual orientation and someone's own happiness. All are equal and in need of Gotham's vigilantes' help.
In this case Jason was mentored and taken care of by Talia while he was in a state of being nonverbal. He was 15 when he died, by DC standards he would have been between the ages of 17 and 18 when he slept with her...
Sinking of the Ship: The two of them never actually got together. Although they shared a kiss at the end of Batman Begins, Rachel told Bruce that they can't be together until his work as Batman is done. Bruce tried to win her over again in The Dark Knight, but Rachel was in a committed relationship with Harvey Dent.
The DC Comics character of Dick Grayson (best known as the sidekick Robin and later the hero Nightwing) has been subtextally coded queer since his first appearance over seventy-five years ago.
Despite the two had feelings for each other, the two rarely passed time together out of action, so Lois had a brief romantic relationship with Bruce Wayne before discovering his secret identity as Batman.
Personality Disorder, specifically, Histrionic Personality Disorder plays a key part in Harley Quinn's life. People with Histrionic Personality Disorder are “pervasive and excessive emotionally and display attention-seeking behavior” (Bornstein 1998).
Following is a list of those romantic partners that have been prominently portrayed in comics books and other media:
Lady Gaga is playing Harley Quinn in Joker: Folie à Deux not replacing Margot Robbie, but rather in a separate universe; Robbie herself wanted the role passed on, and Gaga's musical background suits the film's musical nature, plus Robbie gave her blessing for the character to be played by different actors. Gaga's casting offers a fresh, separate take, allowing for creative freedom in the Joker storyline, which focuses on the Joker's origin and relationship with Harley.