MovieChat Forums > Judge Dredd (1995) Discussion > This or Demolition Man?

This or Demolition Man?


Looking for some 90's movie fun!

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Both.

And add in Cliffhanger for some awesome Lithgow moments.

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Agreed!!! All 3 top films!

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demolition man, but i watch judge dredd right after like a sequel.

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Rat burger and shells... well, demolition wins!

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Demolition Man is by far a better movie. It's basically a better more polished version of Dredd. The action is great, the comedy is on-point, and the plot, subtext, etc. are so relevant today it's insane. It's like we're living in the early years of the Cockteau Era.

Now I do enjoy Judge Dredd. I think it was a little misunderstood - it's clearly trying to be funny and hokey at times much like Demolition Man - but I wouldn't call it a good movie. It's fun and amusing. It could have been better, but it's still a decent comic book flick, especially in an era where they weren't made often.

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DM for sure.

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Wesley Snipes ftw.

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They're both essential. The following info about the connections between the two is from the below article: "The people behind Judge Dredd had to rewrite the script so as to cut down on the similarities if not remove them wholesale. The premise was still going to involve a bad man who escapes prison thanks to a corrupt politician who is then betrayed by the bad man. There’s also the same voice actress – Adrienne Barbeau. Then there are other elements like a policewoman who helps the hero go rogue, and a lab being used to create soldiers."

"It was like they left those bits in so that the general public would seek out the connection i.e. both movies share a producer in the form of Tony Munafo – Sly’s bodyguard. He’s acted in quite a number of Sly’s movies, and he’s produced 13 of them. In fact, every movie that he has ever produced was a Stallone movie. Besides the casting of Rob Schneider as the comic relief, both movies have two other things in common – concept illustrator Simon Murton and storyboard artist Robert Consing."

"Both movies were par for the course for Sly anyway since he had already been in a movie where he played a cop who was imprisoned for a crime that he didn’t commit i.e. Tango & Cash. Here’s the thing – Tango & Cash has already been exposed as a homoerotic action movie, but Sly seems to be have an obsession with prisons with or without that movie. In Lock Up, he played a mechanic who was rightfully convicted whereas he played a wrongly incarcerated professional in Escape Plan."

https://popcultmaster.com/2018/03/07/the-replicant-effect/

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There was a Demolition Man sequel planned on the same year of this Judge Dredd movie.

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