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Encyclopedia > Judgement Day (Judge Dredd story)

Judgement Day was a Judge Dredd story published with alternating episodes in both 2000 AD and the Judge Dredd Megazine in 1992. It was the first crossover between the two publications; three more have since followed. It was also a crossover with another 2000 AD series, Strontium Dog, the second occasion when Judge Dredd confronted Johnny Alpha. It was written by Garth Ennis (based on an idea by John Wagner) and illustrated by Carlos Ezquerra, Peter Doherty, Dean Ormston and Chris Halls. Judge Dredd (Joe Dredd or Joseph Dredd) is a comics character whose strip in the British science fiction anthology 2000 AD is the magazines longest running (having been featured there since its second issue in 1977). ... Cover of the first issue of 2000 AD, 26 February 1977. ... Judge Dredd Megazine is a British magazine featuring comic strips set in the world of Judge Dredd, launched in October 1990. ... A fictional crossover occurs when otherwise separated fictional characters, stories, settings, universes, or media meet and interact with each other. ... Strontium Dog is a long-running comics series featuring in the British science fiction weekly 2000 AD, starring Johnny Alpha, a mutant bounty hunter with an array of imaginative gadgets and weapons. ... Garth Ennis Garth Ennis (born January 16, 1970 in Holywood, Northern Ireland) is a Northern Irish comics writer, best known for the DC/Vertigo series Preacher, co-created with artist Steve Dillon. ... John Wagner is a comics writer who has also written under the pseudonyms John Howard, T.B. Grover, Mike Stott, Keef Ripley, Rick Clark and Brian Skuter, among others. ... Carlos Sanchez Ezquerra (November 1947, Zaragoza), is a Spanish comics artist who works mainly in British comics and currently lives in Andorra. ... Dean Ormston is a british born comic book artist. ... Chris Cunningham is a British music video film director and video artist who was born in Reading, Berkshire in 1970, and grew up in Lakenheath, Suffolk. ...


Set mainly in 2114 it tells of how the Fourth World War took the lives of three billion people when a powerful necromagus called Sabbat raised all the corpses in the world as zombies. The series is mainly notable because it was Ennis' longest Dredd story, because it killed off most of the supporting cast of the Judge Dredd series, and because it was the first story to feature Johnny Alpha since he was killed off at the end of the Strontium Dog series (from Alpha's point of view it was set two years before his death). (21st century - 22nd century - 23rd century - other centuries) The twenty-second century comprises, for some, the years 2101 to 2200. ... World War IV is the name for a would-be global war following World War III. The name arises from the view that future wars would follow the pattern set by World War I and World War II — far-reaching multi-national conflicts. ... In fantasy and horror fiction, necromancers are often considered evil wizards and are sometimes said to have sold their soul to a demon or the Devil himself -- to worship demons and evil gods, or to have been otherwise tainted by their evil practices. ...

Contents


Plot

The story opens with Sabbat, in an unknown location underground, beginning to raise the dead. Judge Dredd is one of the first people to encounter the zombies while leading a group of cadets, on a training mission in the Cursed Earth. Although Dredd leads the cadets back to the relative safety of Mega-City One, Judge Perrier (Dredd's main sidekick during Ennis' tenure on writing for the strip) is killed only yards from home. On his arrival Dredd is informed that the dead are rising all over the world. Shortly later Dredd's protégé, Judge Dekker, is also killed. A participant in a Zombie Walk event in Calgary This article is about the living dead. ... Judge is a title held by several significant spores in the Judge Dredd series, which appears in the British comic book 2000 AD. In the fictional future history of the series, the role of Judge combines those of judge and police officer, thus avoiding long legal wrangles by allowing for... The Cursed Earth is a part of the fictional universe recounted in the Judge Dredd series that appears in the UK comic book 2000 AD. Following the Atomic Wars of 2070 most of the U.S.A. became a radioactive wasteland. ... Mega-City One is a huge fictional city covering much of what is now the Eastern United States in the Judge Dredd comic book series. ... Don Quixote and Sancho Panza unsuccessfully confront windmills. ...


Meanwhile in Hondo City (future Japan) bounty hunter Johnny Alpha arrives in pursuit of Sabbat, time-travelling from the year 2178. It later transpires that Sabbat is from Alpha's time and has already wiped out the entire population of another world, Bethsheba. Alpha has been sent to stop him. (It is never explained how the outbreak of a world war in 2114 does not seem to affect history in 2178.) However Alpha is apprehended by Judge Sadu (effectively Hondo's equivalent to Dredd), who assumes he is a criminal, and Alpha is forced to spend some considerable time proving his good intentions. Hondo City is a huge fictional city covering most of Japan in the Judge Dredd comic book series. ... The twenty-second century comprises, for some, the years 2101 to 2200. ...


The Hondo authorities organise and host an international conference of chief judges from all over the world to decide how to deal with the zombie threat. It is attended by Dredd and by Mega-City One's Chief Judge McGruder, who leaves Judge Hershey in charge of the city in her absence. Alpha and Sadu also attend, Sadu by now being convinced that Alpha is on the level. During the fifteen years of Judge Dredd stories which preceded Judgement Day, Dredd had met around a dozen judges from foreign mega-cities, and most of these attend the conference too. Judge Evelyn McGruder is a fictional character in the Judge Dredd stories published in the comic book 2000 AD. She was first female Chief Judge of Mega-City One, and the first Judge to become Chief Judge twice. ... Judge Barbara Hershey is a fictional character, part of the fictional universe recounted in the Judge Dredd series that appears in the UK comic book 2000 AD. Shortly after her graduation from the Academy of Law, Judge Hershey was the surprise choice to join the crew of the Justice 1...


The conference is interrupted by the unexpected intrusion of Sabbat himself, who teleports in to warn the judges not to interfere with his plans, which are to kill everyone in the world and then use the army of zombies to conquer the Galaxy. Dredd shoots Sabbat in the head, apparently causing a mortal wound, but to no effect, as Sabbat simply removes the bullet and vanishes. Judge is a title held by several significant spores in the Judge Dredd series, which appears in the British comic book 2000 AD. In the fictional future history of the series, the role of Judge combines those of judge and police officer, thus avoiding long legal wrangles by allowing for...


Reports come in that five mega-cities around the world have been overrun by the zombies, including Mega-City Two on North America's west coast (a city which Dredd had previously saved from destruction in "The Cursed Earth"). Dredd proposes that instead of allowing the cities' populations to serve as more undead soldiers for Sabbat, they should be annihilated with nuclear weapons, even though there may still be survivors trapped within them. Although horrified by the plan, the chief judges agree to carry it out, with the loss of two billion lives. (Another billion are lost in the cities which survive.) Mega-City Two is a huge fictional city covering five thousand square miles of the Californian West Coast in the Judge Dredd comic book series. ... The Cursed Earth was the second extended storyline of the Judge Dredd character to appear in 2000 AD. The series is most notable because it was written by Pat Mills and added many core elements to the backstory of the world of Mega City One. ...


Once scientists figure out where Sabbat is based, Dredd leads a suicide mission to assassinate him. He bans Alpha from attending because he is a mutant and a wanted criminal in Mega-City One, but Alpha knocks another judge unconscious and sneaks aboard Dredd's spaceship, his face concealed by the visor on the mechanised battle armour they all wear for the mission.


Dredd's team are forced to parachute from low orbit into Sabbat's lair, as Sabbat is using his powers to prevent all flying vehicles from working outside the mega-cities. They land in the radioactive Radlands of Ji (in post-nuclear China), where most of them are slaughtered. Out of twenty who started the mission, soon only Dredd, Alpha and Sadu are left, and are taken prisoner. Many characters from earlier stories are dead.


While Sabbat taunts his prisoners about his imminent victory, Sadu manages to escape and release Dredd and Alpha, but sacrifices his life in the process. After a lenghty fight, Dredd and Alpha eventually manage to decapitate Sabbat, and leave him helpless, powerless, but still alive (although a story published three months later reveals he has lost his mind and is reduced to a drooling vegetable). At the moment of Sabbat's defeat, his zombies instantly "switch off" and collapse all over the world at the eleventh hour.


In recognition of Alpha's help, Dredd recommends that he be pardoned for his earlier crimes. However they still face a long walk back to civilisation through hundreds of miles of radioactive desert populated with hostile mutants and outlaws.


Criticism

The crossover between the two comics was not popular with all readers, some of whom resented having to buy both or miss out on important episodes. The format made no concessions to those who only bought one publication, as the story was entirely linear, with two episodes a fortnight in the weekly 2000 AD followed by a third episode in the (then) fortnighty Megazine. The editors attempted to address this problem in the next two crossovers, "Wilderlands" (1994) and "The Doomsday Scenario" (1999), by having two seperate plot threads in each story, one in each comic, so that readers who only bought one could still follow the story.


The plot was also criticised for consisting of nothing more than mindless action, with none of the subtlety of the previous two epics, "Oz" and "Necropolis". However since some other recent Judge Dredd stories had provided precisely that (notably the conclusion of the "Democracy" story arc), the writer might be forgiven for aiming "Judgement Day" at the younger readership. Necropolis was created with the allegiance of the Dark Judges and the Sisters of Death. ...


Publication

It ran in both magazines:

As well as being collected by two different publishers: Garth Ennis Garth Ennis (born January 16, 1970 in Holywood, Northern Ireland) is a Northern Irish comics writer, best known for the DC/Vertigo series Preacher, co-created with artist Steve Dillon. ... Carlos Sanchez Ezquerra (November 1947, Zaragoza), is a Spanish comics artist who works mainly in British comics and currently lives in Andorra. ... Dean Ormston is a british born comic book artist. ... Chris Cunningham is a British music video film director and video artist who was born in Reading, Berkshire in 1970, and grew up in Lakenheath, Suffolk. ...

  • Judge Dredd Judgement Day:
    • Hamlyn, 1999, ISBN 0600599701
    • DC/Rebellion, also collects "The Kinda Dead Man" from prog 816, 2004, ISBN 1904265197

DC Comics is one of the largest American companies in comic book and related media publishing. ... Rebellion Developments is a British computer games company, based in Oxford, who are most famous for the first Aliens versus Predator game. ... This is a list of comics-related events in 2004. ...

External links

  • 2000 AD's Judge Dredd timeline entry

  Results from FactBites:
 
Timeline of fictional future events - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (8331 words)
It includes some events that were set in the future when the fiction containing them was first written but which have now been overtaken by real history, becoming a form of alternate history or failed prediction in the process.
It is rarely true that science fiction writers are seriously attempting prediction - the needs of the story are usually the primary concern, and science fiction stories are often more about the present in which they are written than the future in which they are supposedly set.
On the same date, according to the same story, the Earth becomes fully powered by solar energy, eliminating the need for consumption of fossil fuels.
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