What classics did you see last week ? (23 Dec - 29 Dec 2018)
Jan 2, 2019 14:52:57 GMT
morrisondylanfan likes this
Post by hitchcockthelegend on Jan 2, 2019 14:52:57 GMT
Dredd (2012) - www.imdb.com/title/tt1343727/reference
Incendiary!
Dredd is directed by Pete Travis and written by Alex Garland. It stars Karl Urban, Olivia Thirlby, Lena Headey and Wood Harris. Music is by Paul Leonard-Morgan and cinematography by Anthony Dod Mantle.
Review for 2D Version Only.
Sylvester Stallone' 1995 attempt at bringing Judge Dredd to the big screen was met with a critical mauling, both professionally and by serious fans of the 2000AD comic books from whence the character came. On its own terms it's a fun popcorn piece, but one that totally missed the fascist grime of the source. Here however, under the guidance of Travis and Garland, Dredd gets the picture the fans and the character deserves.
Plot is simple, we are in a dystopian future in a place known as Mega-City One. The only law and order are the Judges who are able to act as judge, jury and executioner. One such feared judge is Judge Dredd (Urban) and when he and his partner in training, Anderson (Thirlby), answer a call to a triple homicide at the multi storey slum tenement known as Peach Trees, they are locked in by crime boss Ma-Ma (Headey) and forced to defend themselves against practically everyone who resides there.
This is stripped down to the essence of what makes Judge Dredd such a beloved character in comic book lore. There's no need for backstories, love interests or comedy side-kicks, this is bad ass characters from either side of the law going at it full throttle. The action is unrelenting and explosive in its construction, bloody and brutal into the bargain as well.
Dredd the character is rightly kept to a basic level, he's a hard dude in a suit and helmet, with an arsenal of weapons upon his person and he delivers short sharp shock pieces of dialogue with gruff assertiveness. Anderson is a mutant of sorts, she can read minds, which superbly adds spice to this fight for survival narrative. Ma-Ma is a damaged villain, disgustingly menacing without histrionics, it's her calmness that's so terrifying.
At the core of the criminal activities fronted by Ma-Ma is a new drug called Slo-Mo, a drug that reduces the brain's perception to 1% of speed. This allows the makers to bring some dazzling effects into play whilst setting up some blood letting scenarios. The production design is top draw, where Mega-City One has a perfect totalitarianism sheen to it, which in turn is boosted by Dod Mantle's excellent colour lenses.
With Urban perfectly cast and his two lady co-stars also firing, Dredd is a thrilling action sci-fi movie. It doesn't push new boundaries and raise the bar per se, but it keeps the fires well and truly burning in the genre whilst appeasing the fans wholesale. 8/10
TV Episodes
The Twilight Zone - The Night of the Meek (1960) - www.imdb.com/title/tt0734666/reference - Review > www.imdb.com/review/rw3381817/?ref_=tt_urv 9/10
Blackadder's Christmas Carol (1988) - www.imdb.com/title/tt0094754/reference - mdf covered this on last weeks thread. It's 10/10 for me, only I was angry beyond compare to find that the 2005 Box Set features a version that has one of the best jokes edited out. Shameless censorship.
Sadly not a smash hit (the slo-mo shoot-outs are worthy of HK era John Woo) Dredd is the only 3D film I've seen twice at the cinema. In recent Dredd news,Karl Urban says Garland was actually the "uncredited" director of the movie: www.indiewire.com/2018/03/karl-urban-dredd-alex-garland-directed-pete-travis-1201937017/
My 2012 review:

8 www.imdb.com/review/rw2676203/?ref_=ur_urv
Being deeply disappointed with the use of 3D in a number of movies,I was please to witness the technology get a knock out punch to the head!.Opening with the title exploding on the screen,director Pete Travis and Danny Boyle/Lars Von Trier main cinematography Anthony Dod Mantle deliver truly eye-popping 3D,as blood,smoke,bullets and glass "jump out" of the screen to pull the audience deep into the action.Along with the 3D,Travis also shows a real eye for the many tremendous action scenes,by giving the Peach Trees, (named after a building in Shrewsbury UK!) a real seedy atmosphere,whilst also staying away from trigger-happy jump cuttings,to instead allow the viewer to get a real feel of the action taking place.Pulled right from a 40's hard-nosed Gangster movie by Alex Garland's rough'n' ready screenplay,Karl Urban shows the Dredd helmet to be a perfect fit,thanks to being able to deliver the film's adrenaline-rushing,ultra-violence action scenes with a real relish,whilst also keeping the character away from being one dimensional,by cleverly having moments which allow his personality to come through,such as walking to the pounding Industrial score by Paul Leonard-Morgan,to delivering one liners that will put a grin on any Action movie fans face, ("Its judgement time") as they get the chance to witness Judge Dredd deliver some bone crunching hard justice.
Ah man, I would probably kill to go back in time a bit and see Dredd in 3D on the big screen, I can tell by your review it was a thrilling experience, and since it's thrilling in 2D I know that must be fact for like minded fans. I may still get the chance, I have the 2 disc edition (with the 2D and 3D cuts) and my Blu-ray player is 3D set, it's just a question of if I upgrade the TV now! Great film, especially for fans of the source, but definitely one for sci-fi action fans not familiar with Judge Dredd the character.
My side-bar disappointment with anything Dredd related is that I used to own all the comics back in the day, I loved 2000AD (and when it joined with Starlord as a joint publication), but I foolishly sold them when I got towards my 20s. You know when getting rid of stuff for quick cash for a night on the town seemed smart?...


