With over half a million copies sold and featuring the best British comics talent of the 21st century, The Complete Case Files is the comprehensive collection of Judge Dredd, the lawman of the future!
John Wagner
John Wagner has been scripting for 2000 AD for more
years than he cares to remember. His creations include Judge Dredd,
Strontium Dog, Ace Trucking, Al’s Baby, Button Man and Mean
Machine. Outside of 2000 AD his credits include Star
Wars, Lobo, The Punisher and the critically acclaimed A
History of Violence.
Gordon Rennie
Gordon Rennie is one of 2000 AD's most prolific
creators, with co-creative credits for Caballistics, Inc.,
Missionary Man, Necronauts, Storming Heaven, Rain Dogs and
Witchworld. Rennie has written for Heavy Metal and
Warhammer, as well as Species, Starship Troopers and
White Trash.
Ian Edginton
Ian Edginton is a New York Times bestselling author
and multiple Eisner Award nominee. He is currently writing
Batman’66 meets The Avengers (Steed and Mrs Peel, not the
other ones!) for DC Comics as well as Judge Dredd, Stickleback,
Helium, Kingmaker and Brass Sun for 2000 AD. He lives
and works in Birmingham, England.
Simon Spurrier
Simon "Si" Spurrier writes novels and comics. His work in
the latter field stretches from award winning creator-owned books
such as Numbercruncher, Six-Gun Gorilla and The Spire
to projects in the U.S. mainstream like Hellblazer, The
Dreaming, and X-Men. It all began with a series of
twist-in-the-tail stories for the UK's beloved 2000 AD,
which ignited an enduring love for genre fiction. His latest book,
Coda, is being published by Boom! Studios at present. His
prose works range from the beatnik neurosis-noir of Contract
to the occult whodunnit A Serpent Uncoiled via various
franchise and genre-transgressing titles. In 2016 he took a foray
into experimental fiction with the e-novella Unusual
Concentrations: a tale of coffee, crime and overhead
conversations. He lives in Margate, regards sushi as part of the
plotting process, and has the fluffiest of cats.
Carl Critchlow
Carl Critchlow is another 2000 AD artist whose
popularity is rising, thanks primarily to his work on the
co-created semi-comic sci-fi strip Lobster Random. He made his
debut some years previously, however, working on Nemesis and
Deadlock, then moving on to Batman/Judge Dredd, Flesh, Flesh
3000 AD, Future Shocks, Judge Dredd, Mean Machine and Tales of
Telguuth. Outside of 2000 AD, Critchlow is well known for
his work on Thrud The Barbarian.
Arthur Ranson
Arthur Ranson has long been one of 2000 AD’s most
popular artists; having made his initial impact working on Judge
Anderson, he teamed up with John Wagner to create the highly
acclaimed Button Man series, and later with Alan Grant for
Mazeworld. He has also co-created the character of pyrokinetic
Mega-City One citizen Juliet November, and illustrated both Judge
Dredd and several Future Shocks. Ranson’s most recent non-2000
AD work has been for Marvel Comics on X-Factor and
latterly X-Treme X-Men X-Posé.
Henry Flint
Henry Flint, winner of the National Comics Awards for Best
Comic Artist 2004, is one of the Galaxy’s Greatest Comic’s rising
superstars. Co-creator of Sancho Panzer, Shakara, and the
fan-favourite strip, Zombo, his incredibly versatile pencils have
also graced A.B.C. Warriors, Judge Dredd/Aliens, Deadlock, Judge
Dredd, Rogue Trooper, Nemesis the Warlock, The V.C.’s and Venus
Bluegenes. He has even written a Tharg’s Alien Invasions strip! He
has also worked on several American comics, including Omega Men,
Haunted Tank and Fear Itself: Fearsome Four. Away from
the comics industry, Henry produced art of the cover of DJ Food’s
2012 album, The Search Engine.
Patrick Goddard
Patrick Goddard’s clean art style has graced many strips in
the Galaxy’s Greatest Comic. Co-creator of the Megazine series
Wardog, he has penciled Judge Dredd, Mean Machine, Middenface
McNulty, Sinister Dexter and took over the art duties on Savage
from Charlie Adlard.
D'Israeli
Under the pen name D’Israeli, Matt Brooker has been a comic
artist since 1988. He is perhaps best known for his collaborations
with writer Ian Edginton, including Leviathan, Kingdom of the
Wicked, The War of the Worlds, Scarlet Traces, and
Batman. Other career highlights include work on
Sandman, collaborations with Warren Ellis, including
Lazarus Churchyard and the cryptic SVK, and his
colouring on the later Miracleman stories, to which he’ll be
returning in 2015.
Since 2003, he’s been a regular contributor to 2000 AD, mostly as
series artist on Stickleback with Ian Edginton and Low Life with
Rob Williams. His and Rob’s creator owned series, Ordinary, was
published in the Megazine and is now available as a graphic
novel.
He lives in Nottingham, UK and wishes he had a cat.
Cam Kennedy
Cam Kennedy is another hugely popular 2000 AD artist,
having illustrated many Judge Dredd strips and co-created
luckless wannabe creator Kenny Who? and the Taxidermist. A key
early Rogue Trooper artist, he has also drawn Batman/Judge
Dredd: Vendetta in Gotham, Judge Dredd, Tharg the Mighty,
Tharg’s Future Shocks, and The V.C.’s. His extracurricular work
includes Axel Pressbutton, Batman, Lobo, Nick Fury: Agent of
S.H.I.E.L.D., and Star Wars.
Steve Yeowell
Steve Yeowell has been a massively popular 2000 AD
artist, since his debut as artist of the classic Zenith. He is also
co-creator of Maniac 5, Red Fang, Red Razors and The Red Seas, and
has pencilled Armitage, Black Light, DeMarco, Devlin Waugh, Future
Shocks, Judge Dredd, A Life Less Ordinary, Nikolai Dante, Pussyfoot
5, The Scarlet Apocrypha, Sinister Dexter, Tharg the Mighty, Vector
13 and Black Shuck. His work outside the Galaxy’s Greatest Comic
includes Batman, Doom Patrol, The Invisibles, Sebastian O,
Skrull Kill Krew, Starman and X-Men.
Laurence Campbell
As well as illustrating Judge Dredd, Laurence Campbell’s
extensive work for 2000 AD includes Synnamon, DeMarco,
Breathing Space and being one of the co-creators of Bison. Beyond
2000 AD he has also worked on a Punisher story and
Deadpool Pulp for Marvel.
Anthony Williams
Anthony Williams is the co-creator of both Babe Race 2000
and Kola Kommandoes. During his 2000 AD career, he has
illustrated Big Dave, Future Shocks, Judge Anderson, Judge Dredd,
Mean Arena, Mean Machine, Robo-Hunter, Sinister Dexter, Sláine,
Tharg the Mighty and most recently, The V.C.s. Williams’ work
beyond 2000 AD includes Batman, Fate, Green Lantern,
Superman, The Unfunnies, and Games Workshop’s Titan.
Boo Cook
Boo Cook’s 2000 AD debut came some years before he
was to provide pencils for the comic proper – as a young man, he
sent a fan sketch in to the letters page! Thankfully he continued
to hone his art, working on a number of Future Shocks before
landing a guest spot on the fan-favourite A.B.C. Warriors series.
Cook’s facility with huge crowd scenes and alien designs has
quickly established him as a talent to watch, and with three
co-created series — Asylum, Dead Men Walking, Harry Kipling
(Deceased) — under his belt, he is one of the Galaxy’s Greatest’s
brightest hopes for the future.
John Ridgway
John Ridgway’s graceful linework has brought many 2000
AD strips to life, not least his own co-creations Darkness
Visible, Journal of Luke Kirby and Junker. His long career with the
Galaxy’s Greatest Comic has also included work on Armitage, Judge
Dredd, Missionary Man, and Vector 13. Beyond 2000 AD,
Ridgway’s work includes Age of Heroes, Babylon 5, Espers,
Hellblazer, The Invisibles, Miracleman and Swamp Thing.
PJ Holden
Paul J. Holden has illustrated The 86ers, Judge Dredd,
Tharg’s Future Shocks, Rogue Trooper and Johnny Woo for 2000
AD and the Judge Dredd Megazine. P.J. lives and works in
Belfast, and is married with two children.
Paul Marshall
Paul Marshall co-created The Corps and Firekind, and has
also pencilled Judge Dredd, Mean Machine, One-Offs, Sinister
Dexter, Tharg’s Future Shocks, Tyranny Rex and Vector 13. His other
work can be seen in Harris Comics’ Avalon.
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