Irving's more recent work has made great use of colour as lighting, but it's sometime's felt as though he's relying on it rather than using it. It's pretty straight-forward but then made difficult to understand by the art style.Īt first I found it hard to read this story instead of simply just letting my eyes drift over page after page of dark, luscious Frazer Irving artwork. He can possess bodies to do his killing and he believes everyone should be killed his mantra is "All sins are committed by the living, so living must be a sin." Eventually he learns about weapons of mass destruction, so then aims to use nukes. They check the crystals and it seems it has been replaced by a fake. She vaguely sees a vision of Judge Death who should be imprisoned in a crystal. Judge Anderson is psychic and reads a child's mind to understand a murder case. I did have to skip back and reread the initial pages to understand what was happening. I haven't read any Judge Dredd comics before so I'm not sure if people will be familiar with these characters. Not only does it make it cluttered, but it often makes it a bit ambiguous what is happening. Then there's often lines that I think sometimes represent light, but sometimes movement, or maybe just there for a laugh. Otherwise, it is a okay tale about one of 2000AD's more memorable villains. However, it does have its laugh points, especially when Judge Death enters Las Vegas and meets the corrupted Judges there. The artwork, while stark and occasionally glorifying the form of Justice applied by Judge Death, is mainly serviceable but not outstanding. We never learn the fate of Judge Anderson, nor does it completely appear that this really is the end for Judge Death. However, the story is somewhat unsatisfying. He would play a part in the apocalyptic ending that would appear to end Judge Death once and for all. The story also gives a side-focus on one man's vendetta against Death for killing his family. The solution would be found in an abandoned library and Judge Death believes he has found a way to serve Justice: at least on Mega City One. As he roams the Cursed Earth, he monologues about the numerous obstacles blocking his application of Justice mainly that there are too many people living for him to serve Justice individually. The comic initially focuses on Judge Anderson discovering that Judge Death has escaped from prison but suddenly switches to Judge Death's point of view after he disables Judge Anderson (to prevent her from following his every move using her psi powers). ![]() "When people think of Dredd enemies, they think of The Dark Judges.An average story about Judge Death, who escapes from prison, disables Judge Anderson and escapes into the Cursed Earth, where he proceeds to apply his form of Justice for the sin of living (since all crime are committed by the living, life itself is a crime). The critically acclaimed Essential Dredd Collection is a perfect jumping on point for new readers and this volume introduces Judge Death, the Dark Judges and wisecracking Psi Judge Cassandra Anderson.įeaturing Adam Basil as Judge Dredd with an ensemble cast including Amber Rose Revah, Peter Serafinowicz and Doug Cockle, long-time fans and newcomers to the world of Judge Dredd will be transported to Mega-City One for an immersive listening experience like no other. The crime is life! The Judgement is death! When Judge Death enters Mega-City One from a parallel dimension, his plan is simple: to find every single living cit and sentence them - to death! ![]() The essential Judge Dredd graphic novel series - the ultimate introduction to the Lawman of the Future!
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