#psi-judge anderson
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Text

Judge Death and Psi-Judge Anderson from Judge Dredd classic by Brian Bolland
35 notes
·
View notes
Text
It began with this.
Last year, we got this.
Today, 2000 AD confirmed that this version of Cassandra Anderson was the one who made a deal with Satan.
2 notes
·
View notes
Text

Judge Anderson art by Arthur Ranson
58 notes
·
View notes
Video
youtube
Anderson PSI Division
#youtube#2000 A.D comics#Arthur Ranson#Britsh artist#Judge Dread#Judge Anderson#Psi Division#Shamballa
3 notes
·
View notes
Text

PSI-Judge Anderson: The Candidate (collection of some Judge Anderson strips from the pages of 2000AD), cover by Fay Dalton.
Free with an issue of the Judge Dredd Magazine and featuring the talents of Alan Grant, Emma Beeby, Darren Douglas, David Roach, Emma Vieceli, Maura McHugh & Nick Dyer.
#comic books#british comics#judge dredd megazine#alan grant#emma beeby#david roach#darren douglas#nick dyer#maura mchugh#emma vieceli#psi judge anderson#supplements
2 notes
·
View notes
Text






from judge dredd megazine #472, psi-judge anderson undercover in the uniform of an east meg 1 sov-judge
0 notes
Text

Also painted an Anderson today

Judge Dredd painting I did during college breaktimes
15 notes
·
View notes
Text

Essential Judge Anderson: Childhood's End by Alan Grant, Kev Walker, Dave Taylor, David Roach and more. Cover by Tula Lotay. Out in August.
"PSI Judge Cassandra Anderson's belief in the origins of civilisation is put to the test when she is brought to investigate an ancient relic on Mars, believed to be half a million years old. But as her crew members start dying, she finds herself confronting a threat that feels all-too familiar…
This volume collects some of Alan Grant's (Judge Dredd, Batman) defining storylines, including his previously uncollected Judge Death stories. PSI Judge Anderson uncovers traces of an ancient civilisation on Mars, fights a giant robot uprising, and faces off against Judge Death in the third volume of her Essential series."
#essential judge anderson#childhood's end#judge anderson#cassandra anderson#judge death#essential 2000ad#rebellion publishing#rebellion#2000ad#2000 ad#2000 a.d.#alan grant#kev walker#dave taylor#david roach#british comics#collected edition#tpb#books#comics
7 notes
·
View notes
Text
A ripple across universes. Psi Judge Anderson from Judge Dredd and Sister Ephrael Stern from Daemonifuge sense powers beyond their understanding. I call this piece AnderStern for short.
#judge dredd#judge anderson#2000ad#warhammer monthly#warhammer 40k#sisters of battle#ephrael stern#daemonifuge#crossover#my art
40 notes
·
View notes
Note
💬 "They say you can do more than read minds. You can stimulate peoples brains in ways that make them feel any way you want. Happy, depressed, calm, worried, pain..."
"People say a lot of things." Anderson replied.
The judge didn't deny the rumor, because it was all true. Anderson was a Psi-judge, someone with the power to read and to invade a person's mind, making them see and feel what she wanted in the shared dreamscape. "You have nothing to worry about if you have nothing to hide." She left them with a warning.
1 note
·
View note
Text
Psi-Judge Anderson and Judge Death

Bill Sienkiewicz - Judge Dredd
407 notes
·
View notes
Text

Psi-Judge Anderson by Chloe Brailsford
26 notes
·
View notes
Text
Grant - Ranson - Psi-Judge Anderson: Satan
0 notes
Text

Psi Judge Anderson art by Arthur Ranson
4 notes
·
View notes
Photo

Psi-Judge Anderson: Engrams #1, 1993
22 notes
·
View notes
Photo
The Raid, which had a similar scenario, got a sequel (and a darn good one at that), so why can’t Dredd?
Simple answer:: Dredd bombed at the box office, barely making back its budget. In studio parlance that means it lost money, and that means no sequel.
“But wait!” you say. “Dredd is a comic book movie, and those are usually popular at the box office, especially if well done (and Dredd is a good film). So how did it fail?”
Because the studio did not know how to market the film. Judge Dredd the character is not well known outside of the UK. And most people on this side of the pond only know about him from the dreadful (pardon the pun) Sylvester Stallone film, Judge Dredd.
The studio marketing for Dredd needed to make an effort to A) educate the general public about Judge Dredd and his world; and B) make it abundantly clear that this film was in no way, shape or form connected to the Stallone version.
They failed miserably. Dredd had little audience awareness, even among comic book fans in the UK where he’s been a popular character for 40 years. As for the general audience, they had no idea this film was being released, much less what it was about. It was just something that showed up in the cinemas one day.
Added to the woes of the film was that it was in 3-D, and the studio wanted it shown only in 3-D. They severely limited the 2-D prints available to theaters, which also hurt its performance with audiences.
Karl Urban, who starred as Judge Dredd, was very critical of the marketing campaign, stating “Dredd represents a failure in marketing, not filmmaking.”
The film did much better in home video, especially when there was a rumor in the UK that great DVD/BluRay sales would convince the studio to make a sequel. And Karl Urban has stated numerous times that he’s game for a sequel, and that there have been talks on-and-off for the last few years.
However, the last time there was any serious discussion about a continuation of Dredd it was envisioned as a television series, perhaps for one of the streaming services like Netflix or Amazon.
Last time I checked, Karl Urban was already working on a television series for Amazon. A comic book adaptation called The Boys. You may have heard about it. It looks like he’s going to be doing that for awhile, so if there are plans for more Judge Dredd they’re on someone’s back burner.
But we can still hope!
Meanwhile, pop Dredd in the player, or queue it up on whatever streamer you utilize, and watch it again. And if you’ve got friends who’ve never seen it have them give it a go. A growing, dedicated fan base is the key to getting Judge Dredd and Mega-City One back on the screen.
Dredd (2012)
861 notes
·
View notes