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Chained Heat!
In the future metropolis of Mega-City One, the judges keep order. Empowered to dispense summary justice, these 22nd-century cops enforce the law in a society riven by violence and rampant crime. Toughest of them all is Judge Dredd, a man who has dedicated his life to stemming the tide of chaos...

...But in a shocking turn of events Dredd is himself about to be arrested and sentenced to Titan. Find out the full cataclysmic story in this 21st volume of the bestselling Case Files series.

Collects:

- Accidental Culprit (Prog #888)
- Time Machine (Prog #889-#890)
- Conspiracy of Silence (Prog #891-#894)
- Rad Blood (Prog #895-#896)
- Moving Violation (Prog #897)
- TV Babies (Prog #898)
- A Guide To Mega-Speak (Prog #899)
- Casualties Of War (Prog #900)
- The True Story (Prog #901-#902)
- Part Exchange (Prog #903)
- Wilderlands (Prog #904-#914)
- Parting Shots (Prog #915)
- Prologue (Meg #2.57)
- The Tenth Planet (Meg #2.58-#2.62)
- Wilderlands (Meg #2.63-#2.67)
- Farewell to the Chief (Meg #2.68)

320 pages, Paperback

First published October 10, 2013

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About the author

Alan McKenzie

63 books3 followers

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5 stars
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3 stars
27 (17%)
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Displaying 1 - 17 of 17 reviews
Profile Image for Christopher M..
Author 2 books5 followers
October 25, 2025
The Judge is back to business as usual after a rough patch. Most of this volume is the Wilderlands epic in which an accident strands a disgraced Dredd and a mismatched group of survivors on the inhospitable planet Hestia. The art is wildly inconsistent as it hops between the monthly and weekly editions, but the story wraps up all kinds of ongoing threads within an exciting survival/murder mystery plot.
Profile Image for Bryn.
131 reviews4 followers
October 10, 2017
This volume is split up into two sections. The first half of the book is the usual collection of quirky Dredd stories; accident prone criminals, a promising time travel story that goes nowhere, the strikingly drawn and gripping Conspiracy Of Silence which sets up a future story but ultimately has trouble standing on its own, the entertaining but disposable Cursed Earth monster yarn Bad Blood, goofy one-offs Moving Violation, TV Babies and A Guide To Mega-Speak, a misjudged tone for a Judge Death two-parter and the Rogue Trooper crossover Casualties Of War.

The second half of the book is devoted to the excellent Wilderlands epic, a story which has Chief Judge McGruder sentence Dredd to Titan for perjury, only to wind up seeing him lead a group of crash survivors off the solar system's tenth planet Hestia instead. An episode which begins with the return of the Mechanismo program (robotic Judges) readers could be forgiven for groaning as they expect it to be the most recent rehash of a previously successful story, but soon find themselves pleasantly surprised at the way it unfolds. It is not an entry without flaws, but overall the mix of great action, sci-fi, political intrigue, the introduction of the introspective and likable Judge Castillo, dazzling artwork and an intriguing new setting make it one of Dredd's finest episodes yet, or at least one of the best in a very long time.

With a couple of exceptions, the first half of Case Files 21 is standard, plodding Dredd, but the second half is a bright reminder of what Dredd can be at its best. Readers who have faded away from engaging with more recent Case Files may want to consider this a great point for re-entry.
Profile Image for Darik.
217 reviews11 followers
May 16, 2025
Oh thank GRUD, Dredd's back in good form!

This collection is a solid selection of Dredd yarns, most penned by the returned John Wagner, and including the big Megazine crossover "The Wilderlands"-- which sees Dredd stranded with shipwreck survivors on the planet Hestia, and resolves both the lingering Robot Judges plotline and the Chief Judge MacGruder plotline.

It... is... GOOD. I dunno if I'm just starved for quality writing on this book after slogging through Garth Ennis's run, but this whole volume felt like a breath of fresh air. "Wilderlands" makes some solid points about imperialism, ecology, and the dangers of automating decision-making without ever losing its thrilling edge. Hell, even the stand-alone progs have their deliberate, satirical bite back... and a couple of 'em are written by Dan Abnett, so you KNOW they're rock-solid!

I am officially back on the Dredd-train.
Profile Image for Chris Browning.
1,449 reviews17 followers
August 28, 2023
The writing is good, and sometimes actively very good indeed, but the art is terrible and sometimes actively very, very bad indeed. Wilderlands is a perfect example - narratively it’s fine, but Ezquerra attempts to make the landscape garish and horrible to look at and while doing so makes the comic sometimes actively unpleasant to read. The whole volume struggles with this - the stories are never terrible but the artwork feels like a sort of existential panic at the dawn of digital art and results in just mucky, muddy looking pages. Even the more classically painted issues seem off - there’s a page by Mark Harrison where Dredd’s chin looks like some sort of huge ripe fruit for no apparent reason. It’s all over the place
Profile Image for Nigel.
Author 12 books68 followers
September 16, 2024
Got this mostly for the Wilderlands serial which appeared some time after I stopped collecting 2000AD. I was always fascinated by it, since it was another tale of Dredd and a bunch of hapless supporting characters travelling through a relentlessly hostile landscape that kills most of them in various gruesome ways, a 2000AD staple. The red palette of Ezquerra's epsidodes are amazing, how come it wasn't also used in Trevor Hairsine's? Anyway, fun stuff.
23 reviews
May 28, 2019
This case file has a bit of everything. Judge Death. Rogue Trooper. Assassination conspiracies. The book closes with a multi prog long story with Dredd trying to keep crash survivors alive on a hostile planet while they're stalked by a murderous saboteur.
Profile Image for Daniel Kelly.
131 reviews7 followers
June 13, 2019
This case files collection features some great stories, including one long story with the long serving Chief Judge McGruder bringing back the Mechanismo for another try. Friday, AKA Rogue Trooper, also makes a visit to Mega-City One.
Profile Image for Mat Davies.
419 reviews4 followers
September 5, 2024
After the disappointing case file 20, this one is a return to form. Wagner is back writing and we get the usual suspects doing the art. There is one epic story and a multitude of entertaining progs. Just when I was out, they pulled me back in!
Profile Image for Simon.
1,032 reviews9 followers
March 21, 2018
This was the volume where I stopped reading 2000AD back in the day, the WIlderlands story just drained my enthusiasm. And... still not great.
Profile Image for Timo.
Author 3 books16 followers
September 6, 2022
Such a good collection of stories. From shorties to epic of Wilderlands. With a great deal of Esquerra art.
A really good edition.
Profile Image for Andy.
172 reviews16 followers
February 25, 2023
Not a classic Dredd, but good solid stuff. Good blend of comedy, action and long term storytelling.
Profile Image for Alan Fricker.
849 reviews8 followers
April 17, 2024
Hugely better than the last installment. Extended off world story with plenty of chief judge mcgruder
Profile Image for Alfred  Taylor.
58 reviews
January 18, 2023
Wilderlands started to grate on me a bit near the end - felt like a humourless version of Cursed Earth although I enjoy the progress made with the actual Judge characters.
Profile Image for Paul Finch.
86 reviews1 follower
April 12, 2014

The biggest story in here; indeed it takes up almost the entire volume; is Wilderlands which is the the story, incidentally, that was running when I first started buying 2000AD. This is the first time I've read it in it's entirety, since I came in late (and missed all of the episodes printed in the Judge Dredd Megazine, because my paper round money didn't stretch to buying TWO comics)and I have to say that it works much better when you a) know the backstory, b) read the whole story and c)don't have the attention span of a young teen with, well, a really short attention span.

In all, a definite step up from the last couple of casefiles, due mainly to the return of John Wagner to the regular scripting gig, but still not quite up there with the best of them. That will come though, and the series will surpass even it's golden age, once Wagner settles back into his groove (and the last remnants of his various short lived replacements have been dragged out of the drawer they'd been hidden in and burned off.) I'm looking forward to reliving some glory days.
Profile Image for Keith.
166 reviews8 followers
January 23, 2014
This volume really sees the series back on top form. The Mechanismo judges make a return, Wagner is firmly back as regular writer, Ezquerra's art is on fire, there's even a Rogue Trooper crossover at one point. The main event is probably Wilderlands, a story that ran concurrently in 2000AD and the Megazine. All parts are included here and it reads a treat (I don't recall ever reading it at the time so must have been during my own Dredd wilderness years).
Displaying 1 - 17 of 17 reviews

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