

Whatever that would yield for her in her journey as a person, maybe her journey as a judge, I couldn't say. I think she's learned that the world is way too messy for her to have a personal investment in being shiny and important and in control. She's bowing out of a drive that she had to be an A student, to be perfect and to be the one who's doing it right. "What that gesture is about at the end, she's bowing out of her ambition. With that in mind, she would still hope to be very much involved in a potential Dredd 2. For her part, Olivia Thirlby doesn't interpret this to mean that Anderson is doing being a judge, even if it changes her outlook on life. In Dredd's closing scenes (warning: 9-year-old SPOILERS ahead), Judge Anderson seems to decide that this isn't the life for her by handing her badge over to her partner. If there is still talk of there being a sequel 10 years later, I am all for it." I love that movie and I love that character. "First of all, let me just say, I was always the number one advocate of getting a sequel for Dredd.
