Texarkana Gazette

Judicious use of 3-D makes beautifull­y bleak ‘Dredd’ pop

- By Christy Lemire

A wickedly dark comic streak breaks up the vivid violence and relentless bleakness of “Dredd 3D.”

The action extravagan­za from director Pete Travis and writer Alex Garland, based on the cultfavori­te British comic series “2000 A.D.,” offers a fully realized world with both intensity and tension. But after about an hour the claustroph­obia of it all—the dreary, concrete sameness and the overpoweri­ng electronic score—feels smothering and grows tiresome. Maybe that’s the point, though: to wear us down.

The visceral visuals, shot in 3D by Oscar-winning “Slumdog Millionair­e” cinematogr­apher and frequent Lars Von Trier collaborat­or Anthony Dod Mantle, feature extreme close-ups and sequences of super-cool slowmotion photograph­y, which wisely are spread sparingly throughout the course of the picture. A guy doesn’t just get shot in the face—we see the bullet enter his mouth and send blood spurting out his cheek through the screen in such deliberate, distinct fashion, you can practicall­y count the drops.

Karl Urban stars as the stoic Judge Dredd, the baddest badass of them all in a dystopian future where enforcers like him serve as judge, jury and executione­r, right on the spot. Dredd is the most fearsome of the judges in the squalid, densely populated Mega City One, with his ever-present helmet and a low, monotone grumble that recalls both Christian Bale’s Batman and Clint Eastwood’s Man With No Name. He acts entirely with his mouth and his sheer intimi- dating presence. He gets no poignant origin story.

(For the uninitiate­d, Dredd is actually much funnier than this descriptio­n makes him sound; his terse, deadpan responses to the most absurdly graphic and depraved situations provoke many of the biggest laughs.)

Olivia Thirlby, best known for indies and comedies like “Juno,” has a calm yet confident presence as the rookie Judge Anderson, who happens to have been assigned to Dredd for training upon one particular­ly bloody day. Her psychic abilities make her an asset when things get especially chaotic, and her slightly ethereal nature provides a welcome complement to Dredd’s intense groundedne­ss.

Dredd and Anderson respond to a gory triple homicide at the Peach Trees housing complex, a 200-story ghetto tower ruled from on high by the ruthless prostitute-turned-drug-lord MaMa. When the judges take one of her lieutenant­s into custody as a suspect (Wood Harris, best known as Avon Barksdale from “The Wire”), Ma-Ma puts the whole place on lockdown and insists she’ll keep it that way until someone shoots the judges dead.

Hardcore fans of the comic who hated the jokey 1995 “Judge Dredd,” starring Sylvester Stallone as the title character and featuring Rob Schneider, won’t just be relieved to see this incarnatio­n. They’ll be downright giddy.

“Dredd 3D,” a Lionsgate release, is rated R for strong bloody violence, language, drug use and some sexual content. Running time: 98 minutes. Three stars out of four.

 ?? Associated Press/lionsgate ?? Karl Urban in a scene from “Dredd 3D.”
Associated Press/lionsgate Karl Urban in a scene from “Dredd 3D.”

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