翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Walter Taylor (mathematician)
・ Walter Taylor Bridge
・ Walter Tello
・ Walter Tenney Carleton
・ Walter Tennyson
・ Walter Tennyson Swingle
・ Walter Terence Stace
・ Walter Terry
・ Walter Terry (baseball)
・ Walter Tetley
・ Walter Tevis
・ Walter Tewksbury
・ Walter the Chancellor
・ Walter the Farting Dog
・ Walter the Softy
Walter the Wobot
・ Walter theorem
・ Walter Thiel
・ Walter Thiel (chemist)
・ Walter Thijssen
・ Walter Thirring
・ Walter Thom
・ Walter Thomas
・ Walter Thomas (musician)
・ Walter Thomas James Morgan
・ Walter Thomas McGovern
・ Walter Thomas Mills
・ Walter Thomas Monnington
・ Walter Thompson
・ Walter Thompson (composer)


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Walter the Wobot : ウィキペディア英語版
Walter the Wobot

Walter is a fictional character from the ''Judge Dredd'' comic strip in British comic ''2000 AD''.
==Fictional character biography==

Walter was Judge Dredd's house robot. He is usually used in stories to provide comic relief, and he has a speech impediment which causes him to pronounce his R's as W's. (This was a defect caused by fear and stress.)
He was originally a robo-servant at the Grand Hall of Justice, and was drafted by Judge Dredd during the First Robot War to help him infiltrate the robot stronghold. Unlike the majority of the robots, Walter believed robots should be diligent slaves for humans. It was Walter who landed the final blow on rebel leader Call-Me-Kenneth, being used to override the city's Weather Control computers and unleash a lightning storm, and he was made a free robot (the first ever) with the rights of a human citizen in 2099 for his loyal services.〔"Robot Wars," ''2000 AD'' #10-17〕 However he was so devoted to Dredd that he chose to remain in Dredd's employ and even got rid of his freedom papers in exchange for a Deed of Ownership giving him to Dredd.〔"Firebug," ''2000 AD'' #60〕 (A later story would retroactively reveal he was granted his freedom again for services against the insane Judge Cal.〔"The Sleeper," ''Judge Dredd Yearbook'' 1992〕).
He remained a major recurring character – in the run of stories set on the Moon, he was in fact the only supporting character from Mega-City One – and several stories were even told from his point of view. In some strips, he assisted Dredd in his cases.〔Prog 191〕 Walter also was involved in the mega-epics ''The Day The Law Died'', where he went undercover to help bring down Judge Cal, and the ''Apocalypse War'', where he assisted Dredd in escaping the enemy-occupied Grand Hall of Justice.
Whatever Dredd did, Walter remained pathologically loyal: even when he saved Dredd's life but was still sentenced to a month in jail (as he had struck a human in the process), Walter agreed he deserved the sentence. 〔Prog 119〕 Dredd was forever irritated by the robot but, although he would never admit it, he developed a small fondness for the robot.
He left Dredd's service after he sustained serious damage at the hands of Mean Machine Angel.〔"Destiny's Angels," ''2000 AD'' #281-288〕 This was an effort by the writers to kill him off when ''Judge Dredd'' stories were becoming grittier and more mature; in the same story, Dredd's landlady Maria was also written out.〔''ibid.''〕
However, the character was brought back by John Wagner in the early '90s, following the ''Necropolis'' storyline; he now ran his own used-droid company, taking ownership of robots who had lost their masters to the Dark Judges, and on the surface appeared to be a success (including partially overcoming his speech impediment) who'd grown to loathe Dredd for how he'd treated him. By the end of the story though, it was revealed Walter was still infatuated with Dredd and desperately wanted to be taken back as his servant. Dredd bluntly rejected him and told him to see a shrink. 〔"The Sleeper," ''Judge Dredd Yearbook'' 1992〕
He met Dredd again in 2115, helping him escape the forces of Judge Grice and wielding a vast amount of deadly weaponry, killing many ex-convict Judges in the process, but was ignored after he got Dredd to the safety of the other judges.〔"Inferno," ''2000 AD'' #842-853〕 The next year, Walter snapped over these two encounters and formed a cult around Call-Me-Kenneth, proclaiming he'd been wrong to betray him. He attempted to start a second Robot War and actually shot Dredd to punish him for Dredd's harsh treatment of him over the years. He was arrested by Rookie Judge Giant and sentenced to thirty years.〔"Giant," ''Judge Dredd Megazine'' vol. 2 #50-52〕
However he was freed from jail during the actual Second Robot War in 2121. Reformed, he sought out Dredd and surrendered to him, asking to be reprogrammed so he could not commit crimes again. Instead, Dredd put him on probation and ordered him to work as a helper for the elderly Mrs Gunderson.〔"Incident at Rowday Yates," ''2000 AD'' #1169〕 Walter lives with Gunderson, helps run her Judge Death-based tourist attraction (and dealing with the Death actors who go insane playing the role〔Judge Dredd Megazine #203〕), and attempts to keep her out of trouble (with great difficulty); he has made several reappearances alongside her.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Walter the Wobot」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.