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Judge Dredd is a 1995 American science fiction action film based on the 2000 AD comics character of the same name.It is directed by Danny Cannon and stars Sylvester Stallone as the eponymous Judge Dredd, a law enforcement officer in the crime-ridden futuristic metropolis of Mega-City One.
The Journal of Luke Kirby [36] is a long-running series, first appearing in 1988 [37] and published until 1995. It was written by Alan McKenzie and has art by John Ridgway, Steve Parkhouse and Graham Higgins. Luke Kirby predates other boy wizards, such as Harry Potter and the Vertigo character Timothy Hunter. [38]
The mini-series was ultimately published as Spider-Man: Fever in April 2010. [11] [12] Brendan returned to 2000 AD in 2010 on a Judge Dredd story with Al Ewing, spoofing Dr Who, and with whom he created a popular new story, The Zaucer of Zilk, [13] [14] which he has described as a cross between Harry Potter and Aladdin Sane: "A glammatronic ...
A Judge Dredd arcade game was created but never completed nor released. It can be found online, where it is available for free, but requires an arcade / coin-op emulator. [34] It features Mean Machine and other Angel Gang members. [citation needed] A Judge Dredd Pinball game was released for MS-DOS in 1998. The same year saw the release of a ...
In 2005 Rebellion also created the series Judge Dredd: The Complete Case Files, which has begun reprinting almost every appearance of Judge Dredd in chronological order. Rebellion's 2005 game Sniper Elite was awarded "Best PC/Console Game" in the TIGA Awards of 2005. [7] Following the release, Rebellion acquired numerous games studios and ...
Judge Dredd was created for IPC's new science fiction comic 2000 AD in 1977 by writer John Wagner and artist Carlos Ezquerra, but problems in pre-publication led to both creators walking out, and the first published story was written by Peter Harris and Pat Mills, and drawn by an inexperienced young artist called Mike McMahon.
In 1979 he began drawing "Judge Dredd" for IPC's 2000 AD, and during the early to mid-1980s, Ron Smith was among the most prolific artists working on the character. Along with Brian Bolland and Mike McMahon he contributed to two of the character's most popular epic-length stories, "The Day the Law Died" and "The Judge Child".
Judge Dredd: The Mega Collection was a British fortnightly partwork collection of hardback books published by Hachette Partworks. The series is made up of 90 volumes which contain thematic collections of stories about 2000 AD’s Judge Dredd and related characters, [1] as well as bonus material including previously unpublished art. [2]