Case complete dredd file judge
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But it's so packed with witty ideas--Dredd's loathing of paperwork, the left-hand killer, the Carol Monroe Block paragliders, Hershey and Dredd busting down doors for crime swoops to kill some time, "that inconsiderate sniper's made us late for the theatre! Weirdly, the only gag that Smith botches is a big overhead shot of the city--it's the mother of all Dredd jokes that the Statue of Justice is supposed to dwarf the Statue of Liberty in front of it, but here they look about the same size.
The best joke of all, here, though, is the quietest--the second leaper, at the end of the story, deciding to turn around and go back to bed: "Perhaps tomorrow That may have a lot to do with how much artists like drawing them--I seem to remember some interview in which it came out that Bolland has asked Wagner to write him one last Dredd story to draw, as long as it involves the Fatties.
But it's also worth noting that some hardcore competitive eaters are very, very skinny--Takeru Kobayashi, Sonya Thomas It also has one of their least likeable tics--minor characters with comedy Spanish accents--and yet another character, this time David Baloney, who's obviously a caricature of some public figure. At least Ron Smith clearly enjoys drawing the dinosaurs, and his design for the little keeper robot Granville is wonderful.
Smith's most It's also a cute little piece of narrative misdirection: the "Easy Glider" bit in the first couple of pages looks like it's going to be the central joke until the nose routine completely takes over. And the "Robsmith" gag in the final panel is another one I wish somebody would explicate. As for the other artists in this volume: It'd be hard to take stories that looked like "Rumble in the Jungle" every week, but letting Ian Gibson once again appearing under his "Emberton" pseudonym fill 20 pages with crazy mechanical doodles and the occasional personlike form is a fine idea every once in a while.
Brett Ewins takes a while to find his feet in "The Haunting of Sector House 9," but the actual horror imagery like those Ditko-style floating mouths is pretty effective; you can see why he was tapped to draw Judge Anderson a bit later. And Cam Kennedy's first Dredd story, "The Suspect," is very nicely done for a story that relies very heavily on head shots of the same character looking nervous.
The least effective of the artists this time, at least for my taste, is Kim Raymond-- "Pieromania," in particular, suffers from Raymond's inability to stage comedy effectively. Raymond's also responsible for the four-episode sequence where Cadet Dekker gets evaluated and then disappears from the series altogether until Garth Ennis takes over.
She's one of the less interesting supporting Judges to appear more than once or twice in the series, mainly because she's effectively just Dredd Jr. The end of the sequence is the first mention of "Dredd's Comportment" a. But when would he have written it, especially considering how much he hates paperwork?
Next week: a break from Dredd proper, as we tackle the first spinoff volume chronologically , Judge Anderson's Psi Files Volume 1. Bob Temuka August 22, at AM. Stephen August 30, at AM.
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