Suicide Squad 2 Harley Quinn’s Costume Is Influenced By Her Arkham City Look

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Essayist/chief James Gunn says Harley Quinn’s ensemble in The Suicide Squad is propelled by the fan-most loved computer game, Batman: Arkham City. New off the MCU’s Guardians of the Galaxy establishment, Gunn’s most recent venture, The Suicide Squad, carries his delightfully contorted style to the DCEU. As a reboot/otherworldly spin-off of David Ayer’s Suicide Squad (2016), Margot Robbie’s Harley Quinn and other returning characters will be joined by newbies including John Cena’s Peacemaker, Joel Kinnaman’s Rick Flag, and Idris Elba’s Bloodsport.

In a selective trailer breakdown with IGN, Gunn said the Arkham computer game arrangement enlivened him to think of Harley’s new suit. Her leather outfit and red expo dress displayed in the trailer are a long ways from the “Daddy’s Lil’ Monster” tee she wore in Ayer’s film. Evidently, Gunn did his exploration to prepare her new one. Look at what he said beneath:

Suicide Squad 2 Harley Quinn's Costume Is Influenced By Her Arkham City Look 2

“Truly I had an enormous guide of various books of Harley Quinn over time in different media, and one of them I enjoyed the best was the Arkham games look of Harley Quinn. Her first look in the film depends on that.”

As the omnipresent Harley, Robbie seems, by all accounts, to be getting right where she left off playing in Suicide Squad and 2020’s Birds of Prey. Like Bloodsport’s Superman reference, it stays not yet clear if The Suicide Squad specifies anything about Harley’s set of experiences with Batman, the Joker, or inside the bigger DCEU. Gunn has spoken on the measure of artistic liberty he was permitted when making The Suicide Squad, intimating that not these characters will make it out alive. Regardless of whether she’s not the film’s center, Harley is set to capture everyone’s attention in some significant activity arrangements, a fascinating dynamic with Rick Flag (in addition to other things), and a closet that honors a portion of her best trips in mainstream society.

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