2.5/5 Stars
Not
as 'fun' as The Expendables 2, but if you dig action films, go watch! (First Posted in MSN)
Shivom Oza
A drug lord ‘Ma-Ma’ wreaks
havoc at the 200-storey slum located at the dystopian metropolis Mega-City One.
It is up to Judge Dredd and the Trainee Anderson to bring the perpetrators to
justice.
Visually, the film is marvellous.
Action-packed to the hilt! Had it been a tad longer, would have been
unwatchable.
Based on the ‘Judge Dredd’ comics, the Pete
Travis-directed film ‘Dredd 3D’ is a British-South African production venture.
It revolves around Judge Dredd (Karl Urban), who has been given the “power of
judge, jury and executioner at Mega-City One, a vast metropolis located within
a post-apocalyptic wasteland”. Accompanying him is a trainee Anderson (Olivia
Thirlby) as both try to bring order to the 200-storey slum guarded by Peach Trees; drug lord Madeline Madrigal, known as Ma-Ma (Lena
Headey). Ma-Ma injects ‘Slo-Mo’ (an addictive new drug that slows the user's
perception of time to 1% of normal) into three men and throws them from the top
of the tower. Dredd and Anderson take it upon themselves to end Ma-Ma’s menace.
Ma-Ma’s henchmen seize the tower’s security control room and block the entire
building using its blast shields giving an excuse of a security test. This is
done to prevent the Judges from escaping the tower.
We don’t get to see Karl Urban at all as he is
masked throughout the film. However, his robotic demeanour, deadpan dialogue
delivery, relatively frail physique and flatly delivered ‘one-liners’ fail to
create any sort of impact. Olivia Thirlby is just about average as Trainee
Anderson. Her character is basically that of a psychic so for most of the film,
she is getting premonitions about a dreadful past or an impending danger. Some
of the scenes that she shares with Kay (Wood Harris), one of Ma-Ma’s henchmen,
are quite intriguing though. Lena Headey, who plays the antagonist, could have
done much more with her character. Sadly, in trying too hard to look like a
drug lord, the performance faltered. Overall, there was nothing noteworthy
about the cast.
The cinematography is exquisite. If you do end
up going for the film, watch the brilliant slow-motion sequences unfold on
screen in 3D. It gets to your nerves, undoubtedly, but looks great
nevertheless. The 3D effects too, are better than most of the recent fare that
has been churned out from the foreign films this year. The action sequences
have been shot very well. Writer Alex Garland wrote the script in 2006 and by
the end of the film, you do hope that it had gotten made around the same time.
It’s 2012 and we’ve seen better movies. Director Pete Travis has pulled off the
action sequences and the scenes involving the use of the drug ‘Slo-Mo’,
brilliantly. You’d wish there were more humane moments in the film. To their
credit, the film is short so if you do want to enjoy a good 90 minutes of
non-stop action, ‘Dredd 3D’ is it.
Shivom Oza
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