

Produced by Arthur Wyatt, Alex De Campi, and Henry Flint, Final Judgement functioned as a direct follow-up to Dredd and finally realized Garland's vision of pitting Urban's law enforcer against the Dark Judges. In 2018, 2000 AD released Dredd: Final Judgement, a two-part miniseries set in the same universe as the movie. Related: How a Kids’ Tie-In Comic Redeemed Sylvester Stallone’s Box Office Bomb Judge DreddĪlthough Judge Dredd: Mega-City One is apparently still in the early stages of development, comic book readers have already been treated to an official Dredd sequel. The actor is not yet officially attached to the production, however, he has repeatedly expressed his willingness to be involved. That said, Urban later confirmed that Judge Dredd: Mega-City One's producers have approached him about reprising the Judge Dredd role. Titled "Judge Dredd: Mega-City One," the series' exact connection to the Dredd movie was (and still is) unclear. The franchise's future started looking brighter in May 2017, after IM Global and 2000 AD publisher Rebellion announced that a Judge Dredd TV show was in the works. Garland later revealed that he had already mapped out the rest of the Dredd trilogy, which would have culminated in a showdown between Judge Dredd and his deadliest enemies, The Dark Judges. This scuttled plans for a further two films headlined by 2000 AD magazine's most well-known character. The film opened to broadly positive reviews, however, it ultimately underperformed at the box office.

Released in 2012, Dredd was directed by Pete Travis working from a screenplay by Alex Garland. Related: The X-Men's Darkest Future Turned X-Force into Marvel's Judge Dredd
