![]() Khoury: And this kind of led to the Killing Joke, right?īolland: Well, it sort of did in a way, because it meant that Alan and I got to know each other.Īs Bolland later noted, he was asked by DC what he wanted to do next after Camelot 3000 and he said he wanted to do a Joker story and he wanted Alan Moore to write it. BRIAN BOLLAND Tells Us All About Making JUDGE DREDD Comics As We Look at His. ![]() George Khoury: At one point you were supposed to do a Batman/Judge Dredd story. judge dredd-universe - undefined, undefined, undefined and many more movies. However, there was only one connection between that rejected story and The Killing Joke - the two creators involved in the story.īolland later discussed the situation with my pal, George Khoury, in Khoury's excellent book for TwoMorrows, True Brit: Bolland discussed the story in October 1984, "The whole premise would have been that Judge Dredd is an organ of the law whereas Batman represents justice, and the story revolved around the conflict between those two, and the misunderstandings that would arise from the two completely different ways of looking at how society is run." Genres ComicsGraphic NovelsScience Fiction. As I discussed in a Comic Book Legends Revealed a few years back, Moore and Bolland did, in fact, start work on a Batman/Judge Dredd crossover story. Within these hallowed covers the turmoil of John Wagners Mega-City One rages, captured in such legendary tales as 'Luna-1 War,' 'The Cursed Earth,' The Day the Law Died,' 'Judge Death,' and many more.
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