<i>Praise for the Essential Judge Dredd series:<br /></i><br />"If you’re a fan that hasn’t seen this stuff before, you’re in for a rare treat." - <i>Grovel</i><br /><br />"With 40+ years of Dredd tales to choose from, the new <i>Essential Judge Dredd </i>has opened with an impressive one-two punch." - <i>Comicon</i>
<i>"</i>Shamballa... cements itself a place amongst the best Dreddworld books in Rebellion’s line." - <i>Revert to Saved<br /><br /></i>"The story neatly combines action beats with tragedy and the start of Cass’ gradual disillusionment with her work. It’s a pivotal story and one that would only be built on as the year’s went past." - <i>Games Radar<br /></i><br />"A strength all Grant’s scripts do share is Cassandra Anderson... While Dredd’s cold-hearted law-keeping is great for satirical purposes, Anderson is a complex, emotional protagonist who questions herself and her place as a judge. <i>Shamballa</i> in particular exploits that well, with the recent suicide of a colleague laying heavy on her throughout her journey." - <i>Starburst Magazine<br /></i><br />"What makes the collection so memorable is Ranson's art. There's page after page of detailed splendour, real craft, technique and elegance present in the rendering and seemingly nowhere that Ranson doesn't show a willingness to supply infinite detail to sell the illusion of reality. He goes well above and beyond what most artists would provide, and you could frame almost any page.' -<i> Slings and Arrows<br /></i><br />4/5 Stars - <i>Den of Geek</i><i><br /><br /></i>
Produktdetaljer
Om bidragsyterne
Alan GrantWith over 300 2000 AD stories to his name – not to mention over 250 Daily Star Judge Dredd strips – Alan Grant’s prolific creative record speaks for itself. Outside the Galaxy’s Greatest Comic, Grant is well-known to Batman fans following a lengthy run on various incarnations of the title. More recently he has adapted Robert Louis Stevenson’s classic novels Kidnapped and Doctor Jekyll and Mr Hyde in Graphic Novel format with artist Cam Kennedy.
Arthur Ranson
Arthur Ranson has long been one of 2000 AD’s most popular artists; having made his initial impact working on Judge Anderson, he teamed up with John Wagner to create the highly acclaimed Button Man series, and later with Alan Grant for Mazeworld. He has also co-created the character of pyrokinetic Mega-City One citizen Juliet November, and illustrated both Judge Dredd and several Future Shocks. Ranson’s most recent non-2000 AD work has been for Marvel Comics on X-Factor and latterly X-Treme X-Men X-Posé.
Mick Austin
Artist Mick Austin is perhaps better known for his acclaimed book jacket illustration rather than for his comics work. However, in addition to assorted covers and pin-ups, he has contributed to several 2000 AD series - Future Shocks, Indigo Prime, Judge Anderson, Judge Dredd, Tales of the Doghouse, Terror Tales, Urban Strike and Vector 13. He was also the artist behind the controversial 'Judge Corey' story in 2000 AD Sci-Fi Special 1989, featuring the titular Judge's suicide.