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Judge Anderson: Anderson, PSI-Division - VOL 01

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Cassandra Anderson is a member of Psi-Division, the psychic section of the Justice Department. A precognitive telepath and empath, she can detect crimes before theyre even committed! In this volume, Cassandra must face the horror of the Dark Judge, enter a demonic realm in a quest to save a young boys life and face Orlok, the terrifying assassin who nearly destroyed Mega-City One!

192 pages, Paperback

First published June 1, 2005

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About the author

John Wagner

1,289 books191 followers
John Wagner is a comics writer who was born in Pennsylvania in 1949 and moved to Scotland as a boy. Alongside Pat Mills, Wagner was responsible for revitalising British boys' comics in the 1970s, and has continued to be a leading light in British comics ever since. He is best known for his work on 2000 AD, for which he created Judge Dredd. He is noted for his taut, violent thrillers and his black humour. Among his pseudonyms are The best known are John Howard, T.B. Grover, Mike Stott, Keef Ripley, Rick Clark and Brian Skuter. (Wikipedia)

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for Skjam!.
1,643 reviews52 followers
October 15, 2017
The Judge Dredd series in 2000 AD has spawned quite a few interesting supporting characters in forty-plus years, several of whom have gone on to their own solo adventures. One of the most popular has been Judge Anderson. Full name Cassandra Anderson, she has psychic powers, including being the strongest telepath on the Judge force of Mega-City One.

She was first introduced in 1980, during the “Judge Death” storyline. Judge Death and his cohorts, the Dark Judges, are from an alternate Earth where it was noticed that all crimes are committed by the living, and therefore life itself was declared a crime. As a Psi-Judge, Anderson was uniquely qualified to help Judge Dredd battle the undead menace, though at the cost of being possessed by Death for some time.

To the extent that Judge Dredd has friends, she’s one of the closest and longest lived, being one of the few people who can call him “Joe.” Judge Anderson is more sarcastic and openly emotional than Dredd, and more willing to admit the faults in the dystopic Judge system, but is also very much an effective and determined Judge.

This volume contains three of her solo stories, originally printed as weekly serials in 2000 AD.

We open with “Four Dark Judges”, a follow-up to the previous Judge Death stories. The last time she’d met Death, Fear, Fire and Mortis, Anderson had destroyed the Dark Judges, supposedly for good. But now Judge Death is on/in her mind, claiming that he is still alive back on Deadworld.

This turns out to be a bluff to trick Anderson into going to Deadworld, where the disembodied spirits of the Dark Judges mind control her into creating new bodies for them. The Dark Judges then proceed to Earth and Mega-City One, where they resume their mass-murdering ways. This time, they have brought along teleportation technology which allows them to retreat before the Mega-City Judges can bring effective weaponry to bear.

Judge Anderson must return to her own world and persuade a dubious Chief Judge to allow her to join the hunt, as only she has an idea of a new way to imprison the Dark Judges securely.

As in other Judge Dredd-related stories, there are moments of dark humor, such as when the Dark Judges attack the Ronald Reagan Block for the Aged. “Dodder for it!” And despite having unleashed horror on the city, Judge Anderson is restored to duty without penalty.

“The Possessed” starts at Ed Poe Block, where innocent child Hammy Blish has been possessed by the demon Gargarax. This proves to be because a black magic cult had summoned it so they could gain ultimate power. The cult is initially unaware they’ve succeeded as they had assumed Gargarax would appear at the gate they opened.

As it turns out, Gargarax actually needs the gate to take Hammy’s possessed body back to its Hell dimension. There, it will be able to use a ritual involving the child’s innocent blood to make the gate permanent, allowing the demons to invade Earth. Judge Anderson is able to follow Gargarax through the gate before it closes, and must battle the demonic hordes alone before they gain their invasion foothold.

This story is helped by having a single artist, Brett Ewins, who creates a hellscape where the scenery and architecture are themselves immobile demons. We learn that the Judges have exorcists on the payroll, though they aren’t much use, and Judge Anderson eventually must make a hard choice.

“Hour of the Wolf” is a return story for Orlock the Assassin, Sov agent who had been responsible for poisoning Mega-City One with the maddening Block Mania to soften it up for the Apocalypse War. (In the Judge Dredd timeline, the Soviet Union never fell as such, but mutated into the Sov-Cities. How Communist they were exactly is unclear.)

A coded telepathic signal involving a giant wolf is sent to several Sov sleeper agents; this is the order to free Orlock from Judge captivity. Judge Anderson is able to pick up the signal, but the Sov agents were aware that she could do so, and their first order of business is to assassinate her before she can figure out what the signal means.

This isn’t a very satisfying story to end the volume on–Judge Anderson spends much of it in a coma, and Orlock gets away in the end. (There would be two sequels involving Anderson’s search for Orlock before he returned to battle Judge Dredd in the main series.)

This volume was the result of a brief joint venture of the 2000 AD company and DC Comics, so there was no second volume; Anderson’s full adventures have been collected elsewhere. Still, worth looking into if you spot it at a garage sale or discount bin.
Profile Image for Max Z.
332 reviews
June 21, 2020
This is my first encounter with the character in her own stories (before that I only saw her in the Judge Dredd/Batman crossover) and this book is excellent. Gorgeous black and white inkwork remastered from 1984-86 for the 2005 release looks absolutely amazing, especially the stories that were illustrated by Brett Ewins. This guy made everyone scowl way before the Image guys did that in the 90s. Anderson scowls pretty much even when she talks about the groceries, I guess. Not that anyone talks about groceries in the grim darkness of the Mega-City One.

This book collects three stories. The first one is called The Four Dark Judges and has Anderson duped into releasing them from their dimensional prison into the city to wreak havoc. This one has the best art, in my opinion. The second one is called The Possessed. This one is about the dark cultists summoning a demon that Anderson has to follow back into the demon realm. And the last one is named Hour of the Wolf and has a bunch of psi spies rescuing some evil Soviet guy named Orlok from the prison. It also has a character named Natasha Gulag, and I like how in the dark grimness of the future the Soviets are still as grim and dark as before. All of these are short and to the point, and offer a somewhat different perspective on the same setting. As usual with 2000AD Prog stuff, it all develops very fast due to the constraints of the format, there's never a dull moment. If you want something that looks distinctly different from the American comics of the same era, is very readable, brutal, and action-packed, this is the thing. Then again, you're probably already reading Judge Dredd at this point.
Profile Image for Rex Hurst.
Author 22 books38 followers
January 11, 2022
This one doesn't feel like it should be part of the Judge Dredd universe as it isn't ultraviolent and the ending is a bit esoteric, but it's still a fun story and connects all parts of the Cursed Earth. A lot of fun to read, with a tragic ending.
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