About this deal
I love this character, and understand the comic medium well enough to know to keep my expectations low for a first volume of a thirty-five year old character. Finance is provided by PayPal Credit (a trading name of PayPal UK Ltd, Whittaker House, Whittaker Avenue, Richmond-Upon-Thames, Surrey, United Kingdom, TW9 1EH).
One thing lead to another and now, I have to freely admit that I believe I have found a comic book I can truly say I like.
This is the first of the Judge Dredd case files and an interesting look at how Joe Dredd and Megacity One was conceived and developed in the beginning. The artwork, as is often the case, is by a variety of artists: Ezquerra, Dean Ormston, Sean Philips and Peter Doherty.
You can change your choices at any time by visiting Cookie preferences, as described in the Cookie notice. Stan Lee, Larry Ivie, Larry Lieber, Roy Thomas, Gary Friedrich, Harlan Ellison, Roger Stern, Steve Englehart, Steve Gerber, Chris Claremont, Jim Starlin, Gerry Conway, Dann Thomas, Len Kaminski, Tom DeFalco, Kurt Busiek, Tony Isabella, James Robinson, Jim Shooter, Bill Mantlo, Scott Edelman, Len Wein, David Michelinie, Mark Gruenwald, Steven Grant, Roger Slifer, John Byrne, Ann Nocenti, Danny Fingeroth, Bob Harras, Ralph Macchio, Walt Simonson, Fabian Nicieza, Larry Hama, Brian Michael Bendis, Scott Lobdell, Various, Glenn Herdling, Terry Kavanagh, George Perez, Mark Evanier, Bob Layton, Bob Budiansky, J. The following stories originally appeared in 2000AD Prog 1408 - Prog 1436 and Judge Dredd Megazine 224 - 227 . We will never knowingly harvest your data beyond the cookies needed for smooth running of the site, and wouldn't dream of passing it anywhere.
I’m not a fan of early comics in general so I knew going into this it would not really be my thing, but I did finish it which is more than I can say for my attempts at early Marvel and DC. Rico’s episode is surprisingly frittered away - no build up and none of the repercussions that his death will bring are immediately felt here. He's judge, jury and executioner – the lawman delivering justice to the mean streets of far-future Mega-City One. The art is black and white but very well detailed even if the sequential art is a tad focused on the "joke" at the end of each strip.