The Dead Man
"The Dead Man" | |
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The Dead Man (foreground) and Yassa (drawn by John Ridgway) | |
Publisher | Fleetway Publications |
Publication date | 28 October 1989 – 20 January 1990 |
Genre | |
Title(s) | 2000 AD prog 650–662 |
Creative team | |
Writer(s) | John Wagner |
Artist(s) | John Ridgway |
Editor(s) | Tharg (Richard Burton) |
Collected editions | |
The Dead Man | ISBN 978-1-906735-19-7 |
The Dead Man was a science fiction strip in the British comic 2000 AD by writer John Wagner and artist John Ridgway, published in black and white in 1989–90. Although it was not billed as a Judge Dredd story, it featured Dredd as the amnesiac protagonist known only as the Dead Man. It was part of a series of stories that set the scene for the main Judge Dredd story of 1990, "Necropolis."
Plot
The story is told from the point of view of Yassa Povey, a young boy living in the Cursed Earth, a radioactive desert in post-nuclear war America where the whole story takes place. Yassa discovers the body of a man with appalling injuries caused by acid burns, leaving him so badly disfigured that he effectively has no face left. At first believing the man to be dead, Yassa is startled when the man regains consciousness, and he runs home to get help. The townsfolk collect the injured man and take him back with them, fully expecting him to die during the night, but he survives. When he has finally recovered enough to talk, it transpires that the mental trauma caused by his injuries has caused him to lose his memory, and he has no idea of who he is. Therefore Yassa nicknames him "Dead Man," and for want of a better alternative the name sticks.
Once the Dead Man has finished recuperating, he resolves to set out on his own and retrace his steps in an effort to find out who he was. Yassa's father gives him a rifle and some clothes: a brown overcoat and a wide-brimmed hat, giving him the appearance of a character from a Western. The Dead Man sets out alone, but is followed by Yassa and his dog. When the Dead Man discovers Yassa, he forbids him to accompany him any further due to the exceptionally dangerous terrain they will be passing through, but Yassa disobeys and the Dead Man gives up trying to stop him.
The rest of the story tells of their hazardous journey through the Cursed Earth, during which they are attacked by various hostile inhabitants. Throughout the story the Dead Man is plagued by enigmatic nightmares and half-memories of the circumstances of his near-fatal injuries.
During their journey they not only encounter the usual Cursed Earth mutants, but also are occasionally visited by a strange, supernatural presence: a woman dressed in black. At first beautiful, she later transforms into a terrifying monster before disappearing.
Eventually the pair reach a river of acid, where the Dead Man finds traces of the clothing he was wearing when Yassa first found him. His memory slowly begins to return as he recalls running through the river, pursued by an unseen foe, and then losing his footing and falling into the acid. Soon after they reach a small town called Crowley, where they both sense the presence of some great evil and Yassa's dog refuses to go any further. Entering the town, they find the whole place has been burned down, and the streets littered with corpses. There are no survivors.
The Dead Man discovers more artifacts which belonged to him and which help to jog his memory: a wrecked motorbike, an irreparably damaged handgun, and pieces of an old uniform, including a badge. As the memory of his identity finally returns, the Dead Man shows Yassa the name on the badge: Dredd.
The Dead Man recalls that he resigned from the Justice Department and took the Long Walk into the Cursed Earth, leaving Mega-City One behind for ever. After one hundred days of bringing law to the lawless outside the city walls, he reached Crowley, where he was attacked by the Sisters of Death, who incinerated everyone, chased him into the acid river and left him for dead.
At the very moment of this revelation, the two Sisters of Death – Nausea and Phobia – manifest themselves in their hideous true forms, and burn Yassa's eyeballs out of his skull. They try to kill Dredd, but this time Dredd realises what he did not understand before: the Sisters are not physically present, but are only psionic projections, illusions which can only harm him if he believes they can. By refusing to believe they can hurt him, Dredd survives their assault, but Yassa is too terrified to heed his warning and is therefore blinded.
Once the Sisters have vanished, Dredd takes Yassa back home, where he is denounced by Yassa's mother for allowing her son to be exposed to such peril. Dredd is remorseful, realising too late that he should have done more to stop Yassa from following him in the first place. However he must travel to Mega-City One to investigate what is happening there, since if the evil Dark Judges have returned then the whole city is at risk.
Left behind, Yassa struggles to cope not only with his blindness, but also with the nightmares about that fateful encounter which wake him screaming every night. Unable to forget that terrible day, he becomes envious of the Dead Man's loss of memory, wishing that he could forget too.
Significance
The Dead Man was a major event in the history of the Judge Dredd strip, as it heralded the onset of the 26-episode epic "Necropolis" in 1990. So important were the surprise revelations of the Dead Man's identity and of Dredd's resignation from the force in the penultimate episode that writer John Wagner used a pseudonym, Keef Ripley, to impede readers in guessing the answer, rightly reasoning that readers would assume that a new and unknown writer would not be allowed to make such major changes in the continuity of 2000 AD's star character. (2000 AD had already published several spin-offs from the Judge Dredd strip before, without Dredd appearing in them, so the fact that the story was set in Dredd's universe was not the give-away it might otherwise have been.)
The Dead Man was immediately followed in the regular Judge Dredd strip by a prequel, "Tale of the Dead Man," told almost entirely in flashback, which recounted how and why Dredd resigned and took the Long Walk. This was then followed by the five-episode "Countdown to Necropolis" which set the scene for "Necropolis" proper. "Necropolis" and its numerous prologues and epilogues brought together and resolved hitherto separate plot threads that had been running through the Judge Dredd strip for the preceding four years, and collectively had repercussions that were still being felt another four years later, ending at the conclusion of the "Mechanismo" storyline.
The Dead Man is also notable for containing a rare depiction of Judge Dredd in which he is not wearing his feature-obscuring helmet, although he is instead disfigured by his earlier falling into an acid river.
Tale of the Dead Man
"Judge Dredd: Tale of the Dead Man" | |
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Publisher | Fleetway Publications |
Publication date | 20 January – 3 March 1990 |
Genre |
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Title(s) | 2000 AD #662–668 |
Creative team | |
Writer(s) | John Wagner |
Artist(s) | Will Simpson, Jeff Anderson |
Editor(s) | Tharg (Richard Burton) |
Collected editions | |
Judge Dredd: The Complete Casefiles 14 | ISBN 978-1-906735-29-6 |
As soon as The Dead Man finished, "Tale of the Dead Man" began in the same issue (by John Wagner and artists Will Simpson and Jeff Anderson). It was preceded by a one-episode prologue, "A Letter to Judge Dredd" by Wagner and Simpson, a notable story in its own right which also had a significant impact on the events which unfolded in the "Tale of the Dead Man."
Besides its immediate importance in the build-up to "Necropolis," the "Tale" is notable for a number of other reasons: it features Dredd's resignation from the force; the death of his mentor, Judge Morphy; and it significantly developed the supporting character Judge Kraken, who was to have a major role in "Necropolis." Its epilogue, "By Lethal Injection," saw Kraken being ordered to impersonate Dredd to cover up Dredd's resignation, a deception which ultimately was instrumental in bringing about the conquest of Mega-City One and the deaths of over 60 million people.
See also
Yassa Povey returned in two sequels to "Necropolis."
Publication
- The Dead Man first appeared in 2000 AD #650-662. It has been collected in trade paperbacks twice:
- By Titan Books, 1991 (ISBN 1-85286-381-1)
- By Rebellion, 2009 (ISBN 978-1-906735-19-7)
- Judge Dredd: "Tale of the Dead Man" first appeared in 2000 AD #662-668. It was collected in Necropolis Book One and Judge Dredd: The Complete Casefiles 14, but it has also had its own release:
- Judge Dredd: Tale of the Dead Man (by John Wagner, Fleetway, July 1991, ISBN 1-85386-245-2):
- "A Letter to Judge Dredd" (with Will Simpson, in 2000 AD #661, 1990)
- "Tale of the Dead Man" (with Will Simpson (1-4) and Jeff Anderson (5-7), in 2000 AD #662-668, 1990)
- Judge Dredd: Tale of the Dead Man (by John Wagner, Fleetway, July 1991, ISBN 1-85386-245-2):
External links
The Dead Man
Tale of the Dead Man
Preceded by Oz |
Major Judge Dredd stories 1989–90 |
Succeeded by Necropolis |
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