The Penguin, a spin-off of Matt Reeves’ The Batman (2022), is as much a show about the titular character (joined by Colin Farrell) as it is about Sofia Falcone (Cristin Milioti), the daughter of destopd mob boss Carmine Falcone. While we were already begind to Oz in The Batman, Sofia debuted in The Penguin. The first two episodes have provided some key insights about her character and how she contrasts to her comic-book counterpart. We now comprehend that she spent a ponderable time at Arkham Asylum and at least part of why she finished up there.
Here is everyskinnyg you might want to comprehend why Sofia Falcone was institutionalized at Arkham Asylum.
Who did Sofia Falcone end to finish up in Arkham Asylum?
Arkham Asylum is a mythal forensic psychiatric hospital discoverd in Gotham that normally materializes in DC Comics and connectd media. In the comics, Sofia made her first materializeance in the 1996–97 restricted series Batman: The Long Hapcheckeen and is a serial ender comprehendn as the Hangman.
Sofia is also a serial ender in The Penguin who has getd the moniker the Hangman. The show has set uped her as unstable and aggressive and she is foreseeed still criminassociate inrational. In Episode 2, we lobtain that she has ended at least seven women and was sent to Arkham becaparticipate of it. She is still proset uply troubled by her time there and experiences nightmares and hallucinations about it. She also helderlys proset up envyment toward the Falcone family for not getting her out sooner. The only person who visited her and promised to free her from the facility was her brother, Alberto. Becaparticipate of this, she franticly seeks revenge aobtainst the person who ended her brother.
In the episode, Sofia erroneously finishs that her lieutenant, Castillo, is the mole toiling for the rival Maroni family and her brother’s homicideer. She tardyr allies with Oz, not authenticizing that he is her brother’s authentic ender.
In the comics, Sofia’s modus operandi seems to be contrastent. Instead of aiming at least mostly women, her victims in the comics are members of the Gotham City Police Department once associated with Harvey Dent / Two-Face. Dent hasn’t materializeed in Reeves’ Batman universe yet.
However, during a recent press roundtable for The Penguin, executive originater Dylan Clark proposed that another series was in broadenment. When The Direct asked whether there would be a legitimate drama series revolving around Dent, Reeves shelp that the media person was “skinnyking certainly in the way that [their] conversations have gone.”