
Preview:
- Taika Waititi is putting a ‘Judge Dredd’ movie together.
- Drew Pearce is attached to write the script.
- The package is out to studios.
UK comics icon Judge Dredd –– the muscular, gruff dystopian lawman who rides a hulking bike and dishes out justice while calling perps “creeps” –– is no stranger to movie screens, having been adapted twice before.
1403Now, though, according to The Hollywood Reporter, ‘Thor: Ragnarok’ and ‘Jojo Rabbit’ director Taika Waititi is looking to bring his own idiosyncratic style to the character for a new movie.
And he’s recruited Drew Pearce, the writer/director behind ‘Hotel Artemis’ but more known for scripting movies such as ‘The Fall Guy’ and ‘Iron Man 3’, to handle the writing side of things.
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What’s the story of ‘Judge Dredd’?

Created in the late 1970s by writer John Wagner and artist Carlos Ezquerra, the character of Dredd debuted in the pages of weekly British anthology 2000 AD.
He is a police officer in the bleak future metropolis of Mega-City One, part of a law enforcement corps that empowers officers to be judge, jury, and executioner.
The character and his stories were a satire on a judicial system taken to the extreme. Dredd proved hugely popular, engendering several more comics and comics strips, video and board games, books, and even postage stamps in the United Kingdom.
Given what’s happening on America’s streets right now, the concept feels less like satire and more like documentary, but it’s also certainly rich territory for Waititi, who has put his own stamp on even the MCU.
As mentioned above, if it goes through this would represent the third produced version of the character, following the big-budget 1995 adaptation ‘Judge Dredd’ starring Sylvester Stallone that was harshly judged by critics and audiences.
More warmly was the reception for ‘Dredd,’ a 2012 adaptation that starred Karl Urban with a script by ‘28 Days Later’ and ‘Civil War’s Alex Garland.
There are few official details for how Waititi and Pearce’s version will differ, but they apparently both grew up on the comics. Dredd might be more of a risk, though, as Waititi has tried to tackle classic sci-fi in the past, with ‘Akira’ slipping through his fingers.
What else does Taika Waititi have in development?

Waititi has been a little quieter of late since 2023’s soccer comedy drama ‘Next Goal Wins’, but he has new movie ‘Klara and the Sun’ on the way this year.
He’s also attached as a director to a planned prequel series based on ‘Young Frankenstein’.
As an actor, he’ll show up in fantasy adventure ‘Fing!’ and drama ‘Place to Be’.
When will ‘Judge Dredd’ be on our screens?
While we’re sure this will be snapped up by a studio quickly, the Dredd project will likely still take a while to properly come together.

Other Taika Waititi Movies:
- ‘Eagle vs Shark‘ (2007)
- ‘Boy‘ (2010)
- ‘What We Do in the Shadows‘ (2014)
- ‘Hunt for the Wilderpeople‘ (2016)
- ‘Thor: Ragnarok‘ (2017)
- ‘Jojo Rabbit‘ (2019)
- ‘Thor: Love and Thunder‘ (2022)
- ‘Next Goal Wins‘ (2023)
Buy Taika Waititi Movies on Amazon
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When “
1. Judge Dredd originated in 1977, in the pages of British sci-fi magazine 2000 A.D., the creation of writer John Wagner and artist Carlos Ezquerra. The
3. Garland (above, on the set of “Ex Machina”) consulted with Wagner early on. The Shrewsbury, England restaurant where they met, The Peach Tree, gave its name to the 200-story slum where most of Garland’s movie would take place.
5.
7. Urban became that rare movie star who actually wanted fewer lines of dialogue than he was given. He worked with Garland to revise the script so that he could say less, partly because Dredd is supposed to be a man of few words, and partly because the
9. Originally, Ma-Ma was going to be a lot older and fatter, until the filmmakers cast lithe Game of Thrones.”
11. Even the music was slowed down, with composer Paul Leonard-Morgan simulating the sounds he’d heard on a Justin Bieber track that had been slowed down to 1/800th of normal speed. Getting the effects right was one reason post-production on the film took nearly two years.
13. To save money, the production shot in Cape Town and Johannesburg in South Africa. The production was frugal in other ways, too. The rippling-flesh effect when characters get shot was achieved without digital trickery, just by using blasts of compressed air. And for the motorcycle scenes, the filmmakers saved money on a stunt driver; that’s really Urban on the bike.
15. With figures like that, a sequel seemed out of the question. Yet “Dredd” found a following on home video, where it earned at least $20 million. A petition on a Facebook fan site calling for a sequel reached 80,000 signatures. Finally, in May 2017, a “Dredd” follow-up TV series was announced, with Urban revealing in August that he was in talks to reprise his starring role. Fingers crossed, Dredd-heads.