^ Which is quite a drag. I do not read Dredd, but the movie was great. Urban was terrific and I really felt I understood that world. Naturally, I just want more 2000 AD movies and would see any that are made, regardless of whether or not I am a fan of the property.
Damn shame, still would love to see one. On the flipside, the movie is pretty great and shockingly self contained. Sometimes so much awesome can only be contained to one experience.
Found this the other day, it's a spoof of the old British children's programme Camberwick Green, only starring Judge Dredd: Judge Dredd - Cambermeg Green
I saw this recently and cannot believe that Fantastic Four may have a sequel instead of Dredd. Perhaps one of the few films of the last twenty years deserving of being thought of as a legitimate action film. A shame.
How was this not made into a video game? I'm thinking a first person shooter set in the one building, kind of like Half Life. Could have been amazing.
http://www.peeltheorange.net/2016/0...s-to-do-a-dredd-series-for-netflix-or-amazon/ Urban restates his interest in doing a sequel and also floats the idea of a Netflix or Amazon series. Any of those would be fantastic.
I'm pleased they may be doing another one. Personally I enjoyed the first one and its 80's style violence. What always confused me was why only release it in 3d, (which btw looks fantastic with some of the slow motion scenes), because I'm convinced that it what made this film take less at the box office.
I'm a convert on Urban's Dredd. It's really a smart little movie with a focused and compelling narrative on a shoestring budget. I wish it were still on Netflix. But that doesn't mean we needed a sequel.
Dredd played it very smart. Everyone involved knew the chances of a sequel were pretty slim, so they made the first one stand alone perfectly. However seeds were still planted for future installments. When Cassandra started digging into Dredd's past at the start of the movie it was clear that an arc of some kind was being set up. So I would still like to see where everything was intended to go over the intended trilogy of movies.