Showing posts with label dredd. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dredd. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 6, 2018

Dredd vs The Raid - The Inevitable Comparison

Written In September 2014

In 1995 Sylvester Stallone made this movie
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It was generally met by revulsion from fans, critics, and audiences alike. So in 2012 these three came together
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To right the egregious wrong that had been done to this great man
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This amendment took the shape of this glorious piece of art
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Meanwhile, in 2011, these three gentlemen came together for the second time ever
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And together they made something that was nothing short of beautiful
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I think I’m gonna cry, excuse me just one second…
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Anywho, in 2012 the above Indonesian action picture got it’s American release just a couple of months BEFORE Dredd was released. This led to a number of idiots upon Dredd’s release to comment
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“I ain’t accusin’ anyone of anythin’. It’s just that yer movie has the exact same plot as me new favorite martial arts movie…”
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“And yer movie came out a few months after I actually saw the damn thing!”
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“So the way I see it, there are three possibilities.”
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“One, you ripped off The Raid.”
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“Two, you ripped of The Raid.”
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“Or three!”
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“You ripped off The *bleep*ing Raid!”
Not realizing that:
A. Alex Garland, the writer and producer of Dredd, had been working on the script for this damn movie since 2006
B. While The Raid began filming in March of 2011, Dredd had actually been filming since November of 2010.
C. A version of Dredd’s shooting script was actually leaked online in July of 2010. Implying that if anyone ripped anyone off here, it’s more likely that Gareth Evans was ripping of Alex Garland.
D. The two films were shot on two entirely separate continents, with The Raid of course being filmed in Indonesia and Dredd being mostly shot in Capetown and Johannesburg in South Africa.
E. Dredd was done shooting by the time The Raid was released, but was currently stuck in Post-Production.
In other words
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DREDD DIDN’T RIP OFF THE RAID!
BUT, me being me, I thought it’d be kind of fun to compare and review the two. So wiggle on over my previous reviews right here
And we’ll get down to business!
So, here’s how we’re gonna do this. I’m gonna break this comparison up into a few categories and then I’ll determine which film I thought did the thing better. The categories will be the following:
  1. Best Hero
  2. Best Villain
  3. Best Supporting Cast
  4. Best Action
  5. Best Storytelling
Whoever scores the most out of five is declared the better movie, so with all that out of the way, let’s get started!
BEST HERO
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Now from a basic character standpoint, these two are day and night. While Rama is a rookie cop who just wants to do the right thing and goes out of his way to be helpful and diligent, Dredd is a senior officer who’s been through the ringer and knows that are some people who deserve a break and some people who deserve to take a bullet to the head. This is also something that shows in how they fight as well; Rama’s style is elaborate and showy but it’s ultimately about getting through as many bad guys as he can while also taking out the bigger threats. Dredd’s style less flashy though, it’s pretty clear policy really, either shoot the dude dead or beat him dead. While Dredd just plows through his opponents like a human bulldozer, Rama spends as much time as he can just swerving around them like a race car around cones on his track.
Another thing that really shines a light on who these characters are is their attitude towards police corruption. When Dredd crosses paths with a corrupt judge he sniffs him out almost immediately, and when he does, he doesn’t let the guy talk his way out of the issue, he puts a bullet in his foot and smashes his throat with one of these puppies
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He doesn’t react with surprise to realize that there’s corrupt judges on his tail, he acts like it’s just an annoying part of a pretty hard job that he’s been saddled with. While on the other side of that coin, Rama is absolutely furious when he realizes that Lieu. Wayhu is a dirty cop who’s in bed with Tama. He realizes that plenty of guys on the force are dicks, he has no issue dealing with and accepting that, but it’s nothing short of unbelievable to him that someone like Wayhu would even dare to turn his back on the thousands of people in this city depending on him to do the right thing.
Ultimately, this is a choice that comes down to personal preference. Of the two, Dredd is easily my favorite. But on the other hand, I think Iko Uwais might just be outacting Karl Urban here. So all in all, I’m gonna call it a draw.
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BEST VILLAIN
While Dredd and The Raid’s heroes are pretty different, they actually have pretty similar villains. So I say we go over a quick list of some similar traits these two have
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  1. Both are gang leaders
  2. Both are often seen with two thugs, one of which they favor and the other they abuse.
  3. Both have a certain taste for sadistic killings
  4. Both are defiant to their end with Tama mocking Lieu. Wayhu as he arrests him and Ma-Ma challenging Dredd to even try to kill her.
  5. Both are rather surprised by their eventual demises.
  6. Hell, they both even address the complex they reign over directly when the authorities arrive.
But that is where their similarities end. While Ma-Ma’s sadism is very much about pure aggression and letting people know who's really in charge, Tama’s sadism is very playful and jovial. Ma-Ma wantspeople to suffer, while Tama likes to see how people squirm, assuming they squirm at all.
I think the perfect example of this is in their respective opening scenes, Ma-Ma is being approached very timidly by her lackies who suggest to her that they skin these little pricks who trespassed on their turf, while Tama is seen standing against his desk with his two lackies on either side of him as he chows down on some noodles before pulling out a revolver and busting a cap in the head of six guys. Tama is as laidback as bad guys come, right down to the fact that he doesn’t even spend most of the movie fully dressed. While Ma-Ma just wants people to die.
Personally, while I’d say this makes Tama a more entertaining villain, but it doesn’t really make him interesting. Tama by his own admission is middle management. While Ma-Ma is the big boss. Tama’s the guy who works with corrupt cops, but Ma-Ma is the person who hires them. And even then, Ma-Ma’s got a lot more going for her as a character. We don’t really know a lot about Tama when we meet him, and that’s fine, we don’t need to know anything about him that doesn’t involve hitting people with a hammer when his gun runs out of bullets. Dredd however decided to go the extra mile and tell us a little bit our bad guy. And my God do you know why she’s so mad. The lady started out as a hooker who got cut up by her pimp and then came back and, excuse my language here, but I need to be frank, BIT HIS FREAKING DICK OFF! And then went and took over his business interests and became the biggest damn mob boss in her block. Which keep in mind, most of these blocks holds an entire city’s worth of people. This lady basically runs a city. Tama runs an apartment complex.
All in all, I gotta call it a tie again. Tama makes me smile more, but Ma-Ma leaves me more interested. I can’t choose between the two, they’re both terrific.
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BEST SUPPORTING CAST
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This one won’t be a hard choice. Dredd has a very small supporting cast, but it makes them count. The Raid has a supporting cast of about seven characters, not including it’s main antagonist, and while they do each make a certain impact, most of them have very unclear motivations and lack any genuinely interesting qualities.
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That’s right fanboys, I just CRITICIZED The Raid! Your holy bastion of everything wonderful in a non-comic book action film has *GASP* flaws! Which I will now proceed to explain.
  1. Lieutenant Wayhu. How do he and Tama know each other? Why is the mob trying to kill him? What is his motivation in working for the mob? Why does he feel the need to kill the only surviving members of his team so he can get away with Tama? Why does he kill Tama and then attempt to kill himself instead of going ahead and killing Andi and Rama? The movie makes me ask all these questions and then responds to me with
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    Smooth move Evans, smooth move!
  2. Sergeant Jaka. The movie sets him up as this great leader who’s an even better man and acts like his demise at the hands of Mad Dog is some horrible heart wrenching moment, when in reality he comes off as a pretty good leader and an overall decent human being, but the entire time I was watching this fight I was just thinking “Dude, you’re like a foot taller than this wacko! Just step on him!” And when Mad Dog actually does kill Jaka, I’m not really left as hurting as the movie wants me to be, in fact I’m feeling compelled to look at the score playing at the moment, as though it were a physical entity and say
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  3. Officer Bowo. Rama at one point says that the man is stubborn as hell but he’s a good guy. I get the stubborn part but I really don’t get good guy. Every single action he takes throughout the movie is something that was in his best interest. He never once acts in the film that would suggest he’s someone capable of considering the feelings and best interest of others. He comes off like a guy who’s got anger issues more than anything else. I have nothing against the character, I found him to be a source of great humor throughout the first half of the film, but I never really saw a lot to this guy. He just told Rama off when he asked the sarge a question, got his ear shot, screamed at a guy while he stabbed him to death, threatened to haunt Rama if Gofar cut him while he’s recuperating, and then telling Gofar to find a bigger knife for Rama to get out the bullet in his leg. I don’t really remember anything else from the guy ultimately.
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  4. Andi. Who the hell is this guy? No really, who the hell is he? He’s Rama’s older brother and one of Tama’s two henchmen, and that’s it! We know nothing else about this guy! Is he a criminal because he finds more fulfillment in the criminal lifestyle? Is he a police officer in deep cover? Was he already a police informant who just rose through the ranks of the criminal underworld? Gareth, do you have a reply?
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    Damn it Gareth!
  5. Dagu does nothing. He is not a character. He’s an extra. He exists only to be shot by Wayhu when we find out he’s a corrupt officer. The end.
And now for the only two supporting characters in The Raid who I think are actually well rounded characters. Gofar and Mad Dog.
  1. Mad Dog is pretty simple. He likes punching people. He dislikes shooting his victims because it feels like it’s too quick and not much fun. He prefers to beat the living snot out of people until they’re made into a corpse because it’s what gets him off. He loves what he does and he does what he loves. And he’s played by the amazing martial artist Yayan Ruhian.
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  2. Gofar. Average Joe who happens to live in Tama’s apartment complex, doesn’t want any trouble, just wants to get some medicine to his sick wife. Gets caught by the cops on his way inside and has to be escorted back to his room. Rama tries to be diplomatic with him and as his way of saying thank you for being a nice guy, he lets Rama and Bowo hide in his room while Tama’s thugs are on the prowl looking for them. He’s a good guy. I liked him.
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So that’s two characters who have a clear dynamic and motivations, who also completely fulfill their purpose in the story. Out of a SEVEN PART SUPPORTING CAST!
Dredd on the other hand has only two supporting characters who are pulled off perfectly.
In one corner we have
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Kay, he’s a drug dealer and a thug. He enjoys doing slow-mo, torturing people (which could possibly include rape), and playing mind games. He’s not terribly bright but he more than makes up for it by being a sadist. He is what you would typically define as an
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He’s not a complex character, but he’s played very well. Every moment that it’s just him and Anderson, you can see the gears turning in his head as he’s trying to figure out just what to say to her so he can freak her out enough for him to get loose. It’s good stuff.
Speaking of Anderson, let’s chat about this girl.
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Cassandra Anderson is a rookie judge at the start of this film and it kinda shows in parts. She’s a little shaky at times and a tad reluctant to actually shoot anyone. But by the end of the movie you know this chick is ready to be a judge. When you see this girl go from
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to
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You know she’s ready to unleash hell.
What I like about her though isn’t her progression from timid newbie to a beast of a policewoman, it’s her reasoning behind becoming a judge in the first place. She wants to make a difference in the world. She sees the screwed up things that are happening around her and she wants to change that, she wants to make things better. And that’s something I admire.
Point for Dredd!
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BEST ACTION
Wait, that doesn’t look right, let me try something else real quick.
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Yeah, that’s more like it! On with the review!
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This one I’m just gonna call a tie on principle. Both movies make good use of their environments. Have good scores driving their fights. Are always intense. Are always bloody. And are always well shot and choreographed. Choosing between them is purely a matter of personal taste. If you like this you’ll love The Raid. If you prefer this, Dredd will not disappoint you.
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BEST STORYTELLING
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And we’ve come to the end, boy this was fun! We should do it again sometime, maybe with something nobody likes so that no one can be offended when I criticize it. But I’ll get to that later. The story in both films is pretty simple. Policeman goes into building. Policeman starts to do job. Things hit the fan. Policeman and his respective allies are trapped in building by the bad guy. Policeman has to go to the tippytop floor of the building confront bad guy. Bad guy is a big meanie poo. Heroic policeman stops the bad guy. End on positive note with a piece of modern music on the soundtrack.
It’s pretty simple stuff. And it’s pretty entertaining stuff. The devil however, is the in the details, as they say.
Dredd’s narrative is pretty simple and uncomplicated even when you get into the details. Judge Dredd is a good cop, although a bit of a cynic. Judge Anderson is a smart rookie with a neat power, but she’s a little bit uneasy at first. The two of them go through the Peach Trees block, do a drug bust, grab a gang member to interrogate back at the station, and then get stuck in the damn block when Ma-Ma realizes that “Oh bugger! One of my dimwit employees just got caught! He’s gonna spill the beans about our whole operation because he’s a complete moron! Great, now I gotta kill two judges!” Some gangbangers come and see if they can get a piece of the judges and fail miserably. Ma-Ma shoots up the entire floor they’re on hoping they’ll die. By some miracle they don’t. Dredd and Anderson squeeze Kay, the dimwit gang member they’ve been carrying, and find out that Peach Trees manufactures all the Slow-Mo in Mega City One. The two of them go out to find Ma-Ma, get distracted long enough for Kay to slip out of his constraints, who then proceeds to grab Anderson for a human shield/hostage. Dredd sets up a trap for the other group of moronic gangbangers who will try to kill him. Ma-Ma out of desperation calls up a group of corrupt judges who handily get their butts kicked by Dredd and an escapee Anderson. The two of them reach Ma-Ma’s compound and wreak havoc without much issue.
The Raid however seems to be under the impression that it can do what these movies did
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While at the same time doing what these movies did
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And I’m sorry Gareth, but that doesn’t work here. The next movie you did though, it worked beautifully, but not so much here.
You wound giving us a great martial arts movie but kind of a cluttered crime thriller. The plot goes as follows though, Rama is a good cop and a good man, no ifs, ands, or buts about it, who happens to have a pregnant wife. He goes in as a member of SWAT team, to go and find a trio of criminals and either take them out or bring them in. Unfortunately when it hits the fan when a little boy who lives in the building alerts a friend to the presence of the police who then alerts the big boss from upstairs himself, Tama. Tama waves this off and lets the raid go on as it was, proceeding to eventually alert the entire complex that if anyone kills just one cop they'l be getting to stay here rent free for the rest of their miserable life. An even larger pile of crap hits an even bigger fan and almost everyone except for about five cops are killed.
The survivors being Rama, Officers Dagu and Bowo, Lt. Wayhu, and Sgt. Jaka. Rama and Bowo are separated from the rest of the team with the latter unfortunately badly injured. In order to find the rest of the team, Rama opts to leave his friend behind with an apartment tenant who he’d earlier escorted back to their room. Rama is forced into a lengthy hand to hand combat confrontation, ending in him and his final opponent falling through a window and landing on a fire escape.
Meanwhile, Andi randomly decides to brutally murder two of the thugs Tama sent him out with. Rama wanders aimlessly through the complex before being met with his older brother, Andi, one of Tama’s henchmen. The two chat for a moment before Rama goes back out to face the bad guys and meet with his friends. Meanwhile, Sgt. Jaka is forced to be separated from Dagu and Lt. Wayhu. Jaka is then forced into a protracted hand to hand brawl with Mad Dog who proceeds to beat the man to death. Rama and Andi meet back up with their teammates where in Rama decides to take the fight back to Tama who incidentally saw Andi help Rama.
Tama leaves Andi’s fate to Mad Dog who strings him up in a freezer and beats the crap out of him repeatedly. Rama, Wayhu, and Dagu unleash hell in one of Tama’s meth labs and continue on to face the man himself. Our main hero’s “I’m a good brother” sense begins to tingle and he goes in to save his sibling from Mad Dog’s wrath. The two fight together and eventually kill Tama’s second man and make their way on up.
Finally, Wayhu reveals that he and Tama are actually working for the same people by killing Dagu. Tama however reveals to Wayhu that the higher ups actually set him up to die. Realizing that if Rama knows he’s corrupt and that if what Tama says is true, he’s screwed no matter what. Wayhu opts for the coward’s way out by killing Tama and attempting suicide. Rama and Andi however apprehend the corrupt old man when his gun fails. Andi gives his brother recordings of all of his boss’s dealings with corrupt cops. Rama and an injured Bowo walk home with a defeated Lt. Wayhu in tow and the film ends.
I had to describe the basic plot of The Raid in FIVE PARAGRAPHS! I could describe the plot of Dredd in one. Gareth, I know you wanted to tell a complex story, and lord knows I like me some complex action movies, I mean I’m a big fan of these in particular
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But Gareth, listen to me. A grand story only works in the context of a grand premise. A crime drama/martial arts movie doesn’t work all that well in the context of a fight inside an apartment complex!
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So yeah, as you may have guessed. Simplicity is key, IMHO. But I’ll give The Raid this, it may be overly complicated but the direction and the acting really do make you stop to care at a certain point. If a movie has a glaring flaw present but can you make not realize it while you’re watching the movie, it’s doing something very right.
Ultimately though, this is another one I’m gonna have to give this Dredd. It just told it’s story better. It flowed smoothly from point A to point B without any real hiccups. The Raid didn’t have any real hiccups either, but it doesn’t real flow from A to B, it goes from A to B to C and then D. Remember Gareth.
Keep
It
Simple
Stupid
The winner is, of course, Dredd!
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FINAL VERDICT
Well it’s three ties and two wins in favor of Dredd, the winner of this inevitable comparison is in fact the dude with the helmet!
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Thank you for reading, I hope you enjoyed this review!

Monday, March 5, 2018

Dredd Vs. The Raid: A Mini-Review Series - Dredd (2012)

Written In September 2014

In 2011 a little Indonesian action picture called The Raid: Redemption was shown off at the Toronto International Film Festival, a year later it got shown at the Sundance Film Festival, and audiences and critics agreed
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This movie
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Made these movies look like absolute dogcrap!
Speaking of which, you remember this crappy movie?
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Well, in 2012, after Americans got to see The Raid, a reboot of that crappile came to the market starring none other than this blasted loon…
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As the titular Judge.
The initial trailers were
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Underwhelming to say the least. BUT then the movie actually came out and people sat down to see it and went
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In fact the movie currently sits at a 78% on the Tomato-meter, and seeing as how it was an adaptation of this series of funny books
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Fanboys agreed it was a great adaptation and a lovely way of washing the foul taste of Stallone’s ego out of their mouths. But several fanboys noticed a number of similarities between this movie and another film, can you guess what it is?
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Yep! Fanboys then did what fanboys always do and went into a whining fest about how “DREDD IS TOTALLY RIPPING OFF THE RAID! I MEAN IT’S NOT LIKE IT WENT INTO FILMING A FULL THREE MONTHS BEFORE THE RAID! OR THAT BEING FROM AN ENGLISH FILMMAKER IN SOUTH AFRICA AND A WELSH FILMMAKER IN INDONESIA THEY LIKELY HAD NO IDEA OF THE OTHER’S EXISTENCE UNTIL THE FILMS WERE RELEASED TO THE GENERAL PUBLIC! OR THAT SEVERAL ACTION MOVIES SINCE DIE HARD HAVE USED THE PLOT OF A LONE HERO IN TALL BUILDING THAT HAS TO WARD OF CRIMINALS IN ORDER TO GET TO THE BIG BAD BOSS! NO THEY’RE TOTALLY RIPPING OFF THE RAID JUST BECAUSE I SAW IT SOONER THAN I DID DREDD!”
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But, the madness of these whiny entitled morons does open the door to a fun conversation. Which of these admittedly similar films is better? And seeing as how I’m still going to be unemployed for the next 72-120 hours, I figured I’d review and compare these two. So I’d say it’s time to wiggle on over to the synopsis and we’ll get started.
Plot Summary Taken From Wikipedia:
The future United States is a dystopic irradiated wasteland known as the Cursed Earth. On the east coast lies Mega-City One, a violent metropolis with 800 million residents and 17,000 crimes reported daily. There, an addictive new drug called “Slo-Mo” has been introduced, which slows the user’s perception of time to 1% of normal. The only force for order are the Judges, who act as judge, jury and executioner. Judge Dredd is tasked by the Chief Judge with evaluating new recruit Cassandra Anderson, a powerful psychic who failed the aptitude tests to be a Judge.
In Peach Trees, a 200-storey slum tower block, drug lord Madeline Madrigal, also known as “Ma-Ma”, executes three rogue drug dealers by having them skinned, infused with Slo-Mo and thrown down the atrium from the top floor. Dredd and Anderson are sent in to investigate and learn of a drug den, which they raid. They arrest a thug named Kay, whom Anderson’s mind probe reveals to be the one who carried out the drug dealers’ executions. Dredd decides to take him in for questioning. In response, Ma-Ma’s forces seize the tower’s security control room and seal the building, using its blast shields under the pretence of a security test, preventing the Judges from leaving or summoning help.
Ma-Ma orders Dredd and Anderson killed, forcing the Judges to fight their way through dozens of armed thugs. Arriving at the 76th floor, the Judges are assaulted by Ma-Ma and her men with Vulcan cannons that rip through the walls, killing numerous residents. The Judges breach an outer wall and are able to call for backup. Meanwhile, Ma-Ma sends her henchman Caleb to confirm the Judges’ deaths. When they meet, Dredd throws Caleb off the tower in full view of Ma-Ma.
Dredd suspects Ma-Ma is desperate to keep Kay quiet and beats him for information. Anderson intervenes and uses her psychic abilities to read Kay’s mind, learning that Peach Trees is the centre of Slo-Mo production and distribution. Anderson suggests they hide while awaiting assistance but Dredd insists they move up the tower and pursue Ma-Ma. Judges Volt and Guthrie respond to Dredd’s call, but Ma-Ma’s computer expert denies them entry by persuading them the security system is malfunctioning. A pair of armed teens confront Dredd and Anderson, allowing Kay to disarm and overpower Anderson. Kay then escapes with her as hostage, and takes her to Ma-Ma’s base on the top floor.
While Dredd works his way towards Ma-Ma, she calls in the corrupt Judges Lex, Kaplan, Chan and Alvarez. The four relieve Volt and Guthrie from duty and are allowed into the building. Dredd encounters Chan and is suspicious that he does not ask about Anderson’s status. Seeing his cover blown, Chan attacks Dredd, only to be killed. Meanwhile, Kay tries to execute Anderson with her own weapon, but the pistol’s DNA scanner does not recognise him and explodes, taking his arm off. She escapes and later encounters Kaplan, whom she promptly kills after reading her mind. Elsewhere, Dredd kills Alvarez but runs out of ammunition, and is shot by Lex in the abdomen. Lex moves in to execute Dredd, but Dredd stalls him long enough for Anderson to arrive and kill Lex.
Anderson and Dredd obtain the code to Ma-Ma’s apartment from her computer expert and confront her. Ma-Ma tells Dredd that in the case of her death, a device on her wrist will detonate explosives on the top floors, destroying the building. Dredd reasons that the detonator’s signal will not reach the explosives from the ground floor, so he forces Ma-Ma to inhale Slo-Mo and throws her down the atrium to her death.
In the aftermath, Anderson accepts that she has failed her evaluation by getting disarmed, and leaves. The Chief Judge asks Dredd about Anderson’s performance; he responds that she has passed.
So if I were to describe this film in a nutshell, I would say it’s if you put Die Hard in a post apocalyptic hellhole of a city and replaced John McClane with an only slightly cleaner Dirty Harry and added a character akin to Robin as his sidekick, and replaced Hans Gruber with Cersei from Game of Thrones, then completely axed McClane’s family from the proceedings, and possibly made one of Cersei’s thugs Dirty Harry and Robin’s prisoner. That is basically what this movie is, but is it awesome?
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Karl Urban is pretty much the perfect man for this job, but then again, it’s not like the guy wasn’t already a badass? After all this is the same guy who got fought Bruce Willis in RED
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Was on Dwayne Johnson’s crew in Doom
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And coplotted an assassination with Vin Diesel
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It actually went better than it looks like it did, but Karl didn’t exactly get what he wanted in the end.
Anywho, the point is, Karl Urban did an excellent job, and I shall explain why… Now.
PROS:
  • Karl Urban’s Judge Dredd comes off perfectly! With the wrong script, director, or actor, the character could’ve easily come off as a heartless fascist who follows the law to the very t, but the guy’s done in just the right way, so that he comes off like a dude who holds his job in high esteem but isn’t against going easy on some guys (sometimes that word is used very loosely) and actually gives a crap about people. When he sees a van of three thugs kill a dude at the start of the movie, he’s just like “Okay, you know what, you just died today.” When Ma-Ma decides to shoot up an entire floor of Peach Trees, killing hundreds of men, women, and children, he goes off on Kay, the punk he and Anderson caught earlier that day. When two kids try to corner him with a gun, he puts on a tough guy act, but when he has to act he chooses to immobilize them as a threat to him and his rookie by stunning them, not just killing them. I also like how he kind of has a sense of humor, when Anderson realizes Kay’s one of the guys they’re in Peach Trees for, he tries to ask him to just confess so he won’t have to get stuck with any pencil pushing for turning in a guy they don’t know for certain is guilty of what they’re accusing him of. I also love his sense of irony, this whole mess got started because these jerks in the Ma-Ma clan threw a couple of guys off the highest floor and hit them with some slow-mo, so when he disposes Ma-Ma and he best guy, he throws them off the rails and hits Ma-Ma herself with some slow-mo for good measure. I guess he has a taste for poetic justice. I also like he’s not just a dumb brute with a gun, he’s smart, when he meets with one of the corrupt judges he quickly comes onto the fact that he is in fact a corrupt judge. When another judge is about to kill him, he asks him to wait, prompting him to go on about how Dredd is a coward and weak, allowing for the jerk to waste enough time for Anderson to get up behind and blow him to hell with a rifle. And you gotta give props to Karl Urban for emoting with just his jaw and his voice. If we’re gonna compare guys from 2012 comic book movies who spoke in bizarre affects and had over half their faces covered, I think Karl did a lot better as Judge Dredd here than Tom Hardy did as Bane in Dark Knight Rises, but that’s comparing apples and oranges honestly because
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    Yeah.
  • Lena Heady as Ma-Ma. Do I need to say more? Is it not enough to just say this character was played by freaking Lena Heady? No?

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    Fine, ugh, I guess I can go into some detail. So for starters, what I like about this character, purely from the standpoint of writing a female character, she doesn’t spend her time, A. Seducing men. Or B. Hating men. She’s basically Heisenberg or Tony Montana with a vagina when you get right down to it. She’s a gangster, and she doesn’t mess around
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    … At all. Also while she’s infamous for having done bodily harm to a man and known for starting out as a prostitute, her character isn’t about subjugating or intimidating men, she employs them and informs them that she is the one in charge. When she’s beating the crap out of one of her thugs, she isn’t doing it because he’s a stupid man, she’s doing it because he’s a stupid punk who has now endangered their entire operation. And she even cares about some men, when she sees Dredd toss her best guy, Caleb, over the railing directly across from her, she gets pissed, she really liked that dude. And she also doesn’t treat women moderately better than men, when Kay (the aforementioned stupid punk) comes back with Anderson, she doesn’t tell him to just shoot her up because she’s sensitive to the plight of being a woman in peril, she tells him to do that because it’s in the best interest of her and the gang that the two judges appear to have just been injured in a drug bust gone wrong instead of having been caught, tortured, raped, and THEN murdered. As for the character herself, I like how she’s a realist. When Dredd comes gunning for her, she doesn’t freak out because “Oh God! How did he find me!” She knows the balance of things; people commit crimes, crimes get noticed, other people report the crimes, police get notified, police come a-snooping, police find bad guys, bad guys die or go to jail; simple as that. She doesn’t give Dredd this grandiose villain speech about she will destroy him or how everything he believes in is based on a lie, no she just tells him that she’s got a device that’ll blow the top of the building causing several tons of rubble to fall on the civilians. She basically tells him that if you kill me you kill everyone in this damn block. I also like the way she handles the situation when she calls up the corrupt judges, she already has two judges inside the building, two outside of it hoping to get inside, and now she’s calling up four more judges who she assumes are open to her interests, she’s playing with fire right here. And she treats it as such, she talks when spoken to and she stands in a manner that offers attention but shows trepidation. Lena Heady just does a terrific job and I loved every second of her.
  • Olivia Thirbly’s Judge Anderson is pretty much the perfect female sidekick in that, she’s not really treated as the FEMALE sidekick. Take a look at this uniform for starters
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    Actual combat boots, long sleeves, long pants, no skirt or boob cups. Now take a look at this
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    Exposed arms, heels, skirts, and boobs cups. Granted these characters are both warriors and are parts of very stylized films while Anderson in police officer in a pretty grounded movie, but at the same time, take a look at Sif and Anderson’s male counterparts
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    Thor’s arms are covered in armor unlike Sif, Thor is wearing actual boots instead of platform shoes, while Dredd’s uniform is pretty much identical to Anderson’s minus the fact that he’s actually wearing his helmet (and of course has a different name on his badge). Now I’m not criticizing the Thor movies or Batman V Superman, the former are both movies I very much enjoy and the latter is a movie I cannot wait to see. I’m just calling out facts here. But as for the character herself? She’s a rookie, she’s optimistic, she’s not there to bust skulls, she’s there to make a difference in the world and hopefully make people sleep a little more soundly at night, and by the end of the movie that urge to do good is still present but it’s tempered by the fact that some people kinda deserve a skull-busting or two. I also like how her psychic powers don’t make her somehow omniscient like Professor Xavier, it’s just a helpful device that allows her to extract information without having to use violence. Plus, a moment I really appreciate is how she hands Dredd her badge at the end because she assumes she failed her field exam. She doesn’t slowly and tearfully hand it to him, she doesn’t plead for another chance, but at the same time she doesn’t act like she doesn’t care. She snatches it from her vest and shoves it into Dredd’s hand, then walks off. She doesn’t storm off but it’s far from just a gentle stroll. There’s a frustration there, but she’s resigned to the fact that she won’t be a judge. She obviously respects Dredd but she’s just angry that all her hardwork is all for not. Nice work Olivia, I hope to see more from you.
  • Of the quartet of characters, I’d say Wood Harris’s Kay is by far the weakest, but it’s not at all a bad character, only a simple one. If you looked up the word thug in the dictionary, you’d like see a picture of him. He’s not terribly smart, but what he lacks in intelligence he makes up for in sadism. When Ma-Ma tells him and Caleb to skin the three pricks who were stepping on their territory he suggests that they give them slow-mo before they drop ‘em of the balcony so it’ll slow the process down even more. I like how whenever Dredd isn’t present he’s always trying to mess with Anderson, noting at one point that he ought to save her last bullet for herself so the clan won’t do anything to her while she’s still alive, and trying to freak her out by asking her to see what he’s thinking. I also appreciate how he’s not a complete idiot, while Dredd and Anderson are distracted by two kids threatening to shoot them, he uses this moment to get loose of his restraints, grab Anderson, and run back to Ma-Ma. He’s also responsible for my favorite moment of the movie when he, Ma-Ma, and the rest of the crew are watching Dredd take down a bunch of their guys after having snuck up on them trying to sneak up on him, leading for Kay to proclaim, “How the f*** are we gonna stop this guy?” If I were to describe his character I’d say he’s what you’d get if you made Jesse, from Breaking Bad, black and then surgically removed his heart. Then again, that show pretty much did surgically remove that poor man’s heart.
  • I really enjoy some of the aesthetic choices of the film, the slow-mo sequences are GORGEOUS, in fact I actually saw an interview on the blu-ray where the production team explained they actually built a new camera that actually filmed footage at TWO-THOUSAND FRAMES per second. To contextualize that, most cameras capture footage at 24 FPS. If you don’t understand what that means, just click here it’ll explain the whole thing. I also for some reason really enjoyed the scene where the three junkies who were trespassing on Ma-Ma’s territory was initally done from a first person perspective, that was kind of cool.
  • I really love some of the humor here, it’s not laughing non-stop like most Marvel films, but it’s all this sort of dry and occasionally crass humor, like this quick scene where Dredd and Anderson are taking an elevator down to the lobby with Kay in tow, after just doing a drug bust, and Anderson suddenly says “Sir he’s thinking about making a run for your gun.” Dredd replies with “Yeah?” Anderson then uses her psychic abilities on Kay and informs her senior that “He changed his mind.” To which Dredd replies “Yup.” It’s not laugh out loud hilarious, it’s just something worthy of a nice chuckle.
  • A superficial detail I really liked were the look of the helmets. They aren't pure metal or fiberglass, there’s a felt like fabric inside them like a motorcycle helmet
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    You see? It’s practical, it’s not just some fiberglass toy you can grab at Target, it’s a real helmet that will actually protect your noggin. Another detail I liked was how the guns were smart enough to know the difference between saying a word in conversation and actually giving a command, like during the beginning of the movie when a crook was threatening to kill a civilian and Dredd calls him a hotshot, the crook asks “What did you just call me?” And Dredd replies “I said… Hotshot.” His gun then recognizes that as a command and switches from normal rounds to hotshot rounds, and then Dredd launches a blast of plasma or something into the prick’s mouth and melts’s his freaking face off… God I love this movie! Another small detail I liked in the movie were the extras, now usually extras are just there to fill up the world, but these characters actually serve a point; they cement this place as a real world. America at the time this movie takes place in may be a desolate hellhole where no really WANTS to live, but the people are still people. The teenagers are still interested in things teens are normally interested in, when people see gorey in person, most of them cringe, but a couple say “Oh, that’s awesome! I gotta get a picture of that!” When a man in uniform points a gun at you, you don’t mouth off about how cops are such jerks, you put your freaking hands up and let them know “Woah, hey, I’m good! Don’t shoot!” And unlike, some very recent tragedies, these officers of course listen, but I really don’t want to get into that.
  • I really enjoy the callbacks to earlier in the film. At three points in the film Dredd asks Anderson “You ready, rookie?” To which she consistently replies “Yes.” The first time Dredd looks at her skeptically but moves on to their assessment. The second time, when their about to start their drug bust, he tells her that she doesn’t look ready, as if to tell her that she needs to get her game face on. And on the third time, when they’re about to take the fight to Ma-Ma, Dredd gives her a look and says “You look ready.” And what I really love, is the moment near the beginning of the film where Dredd tells the chief justice that even if Anderson barely failed her exam she still failed it, then at the end of the film the chief asks him if she passed or failed her assessment, Dredd replies that she did in fact pass despite the fact that he had told her early on in the film that losing your weapon is considered an automatic failure and Anderson lost her weapon when she was captured by Kay.
CONS:
  • I don’t really need for there to be satire, but knowing that the funny books this film is based on are often satirical in nature I would’ve definitely enjoyed some elements of that. Maybe they could’ve tackled that in a sequel. Oh well.
  • The exchange between Dredd and Ma-Ma has always bothered me, I get what’s going on there, but it always bugged me how Dredd tosses Ma-Ma out of a window after she tells that if he does a bomb above her room will explode killing everyone in the building. I really wish they’d explained it better to be honest.
I believe I first saw this movie when I rented it on RedBox the week I graduated from High School and my GOD did I love it! I loved the ultra-violence of it! I loved the gorgeous slow-mo visuals! I loved Karl Urban growling his way through the proceedings! I loved Lena Headey scarred up mug every second it was on screen! And I absolutely loved the score. I’m gonna give Dredd a 9.8 out of 10!
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This movie unfortunately only made $41 million against $45 million budget, so we’ll likely never see a true cinematic sequel thanks to LionsGate’s lousy marketing campaign. But Karl Urban and the film’s writer/producer, Alex Garland, having been working hard with fans of the film to a proper sequel made. So I urge you all, if you have Netflix stream this movie, if you have On Demand stream this movie, if you have a RedBox kiosk near you or still have a video store, rent this movie! Please, do everything in your power to help this movie get the second installment in so richly deserves! But, let us not dwell any longer on that crime, and instead dwell on the blessing that is
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Which I shall be tackling next, so stay tuned people!