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Judge Dredd Full Movie In Hindi Free Download Hd 720p

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  4. Judge Dredd Full Movie In Hindi Free Download Hd 720p
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  48. In a dystopian future, Joseph Dredd, the most famous Judge (a police officer with instant field judiciary powers), is convicted for a crime he did not commit and must face his murderous counterpart.
  49. In the future, the Earth transforms into a desert wasteland called the Cursed Earth. Crowds of people now live within walled Mega-Cities where crime is out-of-control and elite police forces (The Judges. Judge, Jury and Executioners all in one) enforces law and justice in the Mega-Cities. Judge Joseph Dredd, the greatest Judge in Mega-City One is framed for the assassination of a journalist and his wife by renegade Judge Rico. Learning the truth about himself from Chief Justice Fargo, head of the council of Judges. Dredd with help from colleague and trusted friend Judge Hershey and cowardly computer hacker Fergie sets out to take on Rico, corrupt council member Judge Griffin, genetics scientist Ilsa Hayden and the super-strong ABC robot and put a stop to their evil plan involving genetic engineering (The key to the secrets of Dredd's past) and unleashing chaos and destruction in Mega-City One.
  50. I was a big fan of the Judge Dredd comic strip when I was a kid, and yes,I waited with anticipation to watch the movie when it first came out back in '95.However,after Sly took his helmet off, I lost interest.......fast!!!!!! In the comic book series. part of the mysique surrounding Dredd is that he is never seen without his helmet,and if he does take it off, only his back or the lower part of his face is shown,BUT NEVER HIS ENTIRE FACE!!!!!!!!!Sure,the movie wasn't all that,but Stallone should have known better.That's like Spider-man doing his thing without the mask.....in public!!!!!!!Are there any other 200AD/Judge Dredd fans that agree with me?????
  51. Judge Dredd and 2000AD represent my childhood inspiration for all things creative, accumulating in my career in the creative industry (I still have a full set of early 2000ADs in my studio). So obviously the film holds very personal emotions for me and as such I have to admit that I had a negative bias from the start. Anyway enough about me.<br/><br/>The film started and I was very impressed with the visual effects and design. At first I thought Judge Dredd&#39;s uniform was way over the top, even more than the comic version. However after remembering the visual style of films like Flash Gordon (1980) I put that down to personal preference.<br/><br/>One of the problems is Sylvester Stallone&#39;s Performance. I am not one of Sly&#39;s detractors, I have enjoyed his performances in films such as Rocky, First Blood, Paradise Alley, Copland and even Demolition Man. However this performance bares no resemblance to the character of Judge Dredd.<br/><br/>Stallone&#39;s character lacks the authority and quiet confidence of Judge Dredd. Sly seems to have replaced these aspects with standing in a tough pose, looking intense and shouting were applicable. Needless to say I did not see the dark and gritty anti hero I was hoping for.<br/><br/>I realise that this is a tall order for any actor and Sly in not helped by the films biggest problem, the atrocious dialogue. Clichés and over dramatic speeches destroy any hope of realism.<br/><br/>My final comment... Judge Dredd&#39;s helmet.<br/><br/>This should stay on at all times. I know this seems superficial, but it is representative of certain aspects of Judge Dredd&#39;s personality. Firstly Dredd&#39;s lack of personal ego, secondly his almost robot like dedication, determination and &#39;perceived&#39; invulnerability and thirdly Dredd&#39;s function as an executioner.<br/><br/>There, I feel a little better now I&#39;ve got that off my chest. Cheers.
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  53. In the year 2139, the American judiciary system has collapsed and been replaced by &quot;judges&quot; who have the power to arrest, sentence and execute criminals at the scene of a crime. One such judge, Judge Joseph Dredd (<a href="/name/nm0000230/">Sylvester Stallone</a>), the greatest lawkeeper in the history of Mega City 1 (a region centered at former New York City and encompassing lands of the former United States eastern seaboard) is framed for the murder of a journalist and his wife. Dredd is found guilty based on his DNA being used to activate the Lawgiver gun used in the murder and he is sentenced to life in prison. Aided by colleague Judge Hershey (<a href="/name/nm0000178/">Diane Lane</a>) and by Herman &quot;Fergee&quot; Ferguson (<a href="/name/nm0001705/">Rob Schneider</a>), a cowardly computer hacker that Dredd once sentenced to prison, Dredd learns that the real killer is former Judge Rico (<a href="/name/nm0000800/">Armand Assante</a>), once his best friend. Dredd sets out to find Rico and learns a secret about his own past. Judge Joseph Dredd is a comic strip character whose series appears in the British comic 2000 AD. Dredd was created in 1977 by British writer John Wagner and Spanish artist Carlos Ezquerra and has been named the Seventh Greatest Comic Character by the British magazine Empire. The comic series was adapted for the movie by American screenwriters Michael De Luca, William Wisher Jr,. and Steven E. de Souza. The movie inspired two novelizations—Judge Dredd (1995) by American fantasy writer Neal Barrett, Jr and a children&#39;s book, Judge Dredd: The Junior Novelisation (1995), by Graham Marks—along with a DC Comics graphic novel Judge Dredd: Official Movie Adaptation (1995) by Andrew Helfer and Carlos Ezquerra. Dredd, Fergee and Hershey realize that they must shut down the Janus machine, but they are stopped by Rico and the ABC robot. Rico tries to entice Dredd to become the head of the Council and control the Janus clones. When Dredd refuses, Rico retaliates by ordering the robot to rip off Dredd&#39;s arms and legs, but Fergie hacks the robot&#39;s wiring and disables it. While Hershey fights hand-to-hand with Rico&#39;s assistant, Doctor Ilsa Hayden (<a href="/name/nm0001040/">Joan Chen</a>), chief scientist of the Janus project. Dredd goes after Rico who has ordered Central (the city&#39;s controlling computer) to release the clones even though they are only 60% complete. Rico gets hold of a gun and fires on Dredd but blows up the Janus machine instead, destroying all his clones. He attempts to get away, but Dredd follows him to the top of the Statue of Liberty where they continue the fight, Rico managing to knock Dredd off the Statue. As Dredd holds on to a railing, Rico points his Lawgiver at Dredd, judges him guilty for betraying his own flesh, and sentences him to death. When he fires, however, the Lawgiver informs him the he&#39;s out of lethal rounds. Dredd vocally activates the signal flare, which detracts Rico long enough for Dredd to pull him out of the Statue, sending Rico to his death. &quot;Court adjourned,&quot; says Dredd. Ilsa then attempts to fire on Dredd, but Hershey kills her first and helps Dredd back inside. Dredd is hailed as a hero by the remaining judges, having been cleared by Central, and is asked to take the position of Chief Justice. &quot;I&#39;m a street judge,&quot; he replies, &quot;and I&#39;m late for work.&quot; In the final scene, Hershey kisses Dredd and asks him, &quot;It feels good to be human, don&#39;t you think?&quot; Dredd grins and, as expected, replies, &quot;I knew you&#39;d say that.&quot; Due to the strict policy of the British Bord of Film Classification (BBFC) regarding some fighting techniques, the UK version of this Stallone flick has been censored, at least as far as any version classified as 15 is concerned. Scenes involving headbutts were altered. Yes. Sylvester Stallone had been interviewed a different times about the topic. He was never one too pleased with the film and his association with it. At the time that it came out, he was gladly cast in Cop Land (1997) and felt this would put some distance between him and the somewhat campy Judge Dredd film. In 2008, Stallone discussed his feelings about the movie in an issue of Uncut magazine: I loved that property when I read it, because it took a genre that I love, what you could term the &quot;action morality film&quot; and made it a bit more sophisticated. It had political overtones. It showed how if we don&#39;t curb the way we run our judicial system, the police may end up running our lives. It dealt with archaic governments; it dealt with cloning and all kinds of things that could happen in the future. It was also bigger than any film I&#39;ve done in its physical stature and the way it was designed. All the people were dwarfed by the system and the architecture; it shows how insignificant human beings could be in the future. There&#39;s a lot of action in the movie and some great acting, too. It just wasn&#39;t balls to the wall. But I do look back on Judge Dredd as a real missed opportunity. It seemed that lots of fans had a problem with Dredd removing his helmet, because he never does in the comic books. But for me it is more about wasting such great potential there was in that idea; just think of all the opportunities there were to do interesting stuff with the Cursed Earth scenes. It didn&#39;t live up to what it could have been. It probably should have been much more comic, really humorous, and fun. What I learned out of that experience was that we shouldn&#39;t have tried to make it Hamlet; it&#39;s more Hamlet and Eggs. a5c7b9f00b
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