For all the DC Comics fans, superhero film "Suicide Squad" can't come soon enough.

Thankfully Empire Magazine has been quenching our antihero thirst, drop by drop, through daily image releases.

Yesterday Empire Magazine dropped a photo of the Joker, played by Jared Leto, and Enchantress, played by Cara Delevingne.

The covers featured spectral captures of the cast, giving fans a glimpse of the glory and gore promised in "Suicide Squad."

Today, however, is a new day, with equally haunting images, courtesy of Empire Magazine.

The first release is a photo of Batman adversary Harley Quinn, a character created by Paul Dini and Bruce Timm, who marked her first appearance in September 1992's "Batman: The Animated Series."

Margot Robbie ("Pan Am," "About Time," "The Wolf of Wall Street") poses as the former psychiatrist turned crazed villain, hinting at all the ways we are going to love and hate (but mostly love) her character.

"Crazy in the right way!" tweeted director David Ayer as he posted the image of Robbie as Harley Quinn. As of posting, the tweet has been retweeted and "favorited" over 4,000 times, respectively.

With such big, and not to mention crazy, shoes to fill, Robbie shares that she is up to the challenge that is the character of Harley Quinn.

"I guess it's intimidating because there's obviously a lot of people I want to please, and a character I have to do justice," she explains. "But it's a challenge, I'm definitely up for it, and hopefully I don't disappoint."

But Robbie's spine-chilling smile isn't the only trick up Ayer's twitter sleeve.

The 47-year-old director also posted an image of another member of the "Suicide Squad, none other than expert marksman and assassin Deadshot, played by legendary actor (coincidentally "I Am Legend" lead) Will Smith.

"The man who never misses," described Ayer's tweet, alongside an image of Smith as Deadshot.

Floyd Lawton, more commonly known as Deadshot, is also a Batman adversary and a staple member of the Secret Six. DC's deadliest marksman first appeared in 1950's "Batman #59," under the creation of Lew Schwartz, David Vern Reed and Bob Cane.

The "Suicide Squad" fandom early awaits Empire Magazine's next image release, to get them through the year's wait for the movie's release in August 2016.

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