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Post by Deleted on Feb 9, 2016 22:01:50 GMT -5
I am a big Doctor Who fan.
I have "seen" every episode of Classic Doctor Who. I own every episode on DVD and the ones that are still lost I have those on DVD too but with all the original dialog incorporated with stills.
Never read any of the comics though but I always wanted to. Can you recommend any good ones to start off with?
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Post by tingramretro on Feb 10, 2016 2:43:11 GMT -5
I am a big Doctor Who fan. I have "seen" every episode of Classic Doctor Who. I own every episode on DVD and the ones that are still lost I have those on DVD too but with all the original dialog incorporated with stills. Never read any of the comics though but I always wanted to. Can you recommend any good ones to start off with? Well, I personally still think the early Marvel UK stuff I've just been mentioning is unbettered by anything before or since, and those stories have all been made available in collected editions by Panini (starting with The Iron Legion). But much of the current material from Titan is pretty good, too, particularly the ongoing twelfth Doctor series. So, I'm guessing the reconstructions of lost episodes you have are the Loose Cannon ones? I have a couple of those, but I prefer the soundtrack CDs myself.
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Post by String on Feb 11, 2016 10:43:19 GMT -5
Ah, PBS back in the day. Every Saturday afternoon, from 1-4pm, they'd show Doctor Who. Pertwee, Tom Baker, Davison, Colin Baker, McCoy. Heck, they even aired Troughton during the week at 11pm.
So imagine my joy back then to discover a DW comic released by Marvel on the racks. I loved that series and it's reprints.
Great retro pieces on the history of the comic series. Absalom Daak is one of the my favorite characters. In fact, I nearly wore out the pause button on my TV remote trying to catch that glimpse of him in the NuWho episode Time Heist. (Well worth it. Bravo Moffat!)
I'm glad Titan is having such success with the new license. It seems like there's a new DW comic being released each week nowadays which isn't a bad thing, but man, it sure hurts on the budget. Which is why I wait for the trades to be released for I've heard nothing but good reviews about all the titles.
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Post by tingramretro on Feb 11, 2016 10:56:22 GMT -5
Ah, PBS back in the day. Every Saturday afternoon, from 1-4pm, they'd show Doctor Who. Pertwee, Tom Baker, Davison, Colin Baker, McCoy. Heck, they even aired Troughton during the week at 11pm. So imagine my joy back then to discover a DW comic released by Marvel on the racks. I loved that series and it's reprints. Great retro pieces on the history of the comic series. Absalom Daak is one of the my favorite characters. In fact, I nearly wore out the pause button on my TV remote trying to catch that glimpse of him in the NuWho episode Time Heist. (Well worth it. Bravo Moffat!) I'm glad Titan is having such success with the new license. It seems like there's a new DW comic being released each week nowadays which isn't a bad thing, but man, it sure hurts on the budget. Which is why I wait for the trades to be released for I've heard nothing but good reviews about all the titles. I'm afraid there's more bad news for your wallet: on top of the three ongoing titles and the current eighth Doctor miniseries, Titan are shortly launching both a new ninth Doctor title and a fourth Doctor miniseries. I'm hoping they'll get around to all the others in time, too.
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Post by tingramretro on Feb 27, 2016 12:13:26 GMT -5
The sixth Doctor arrived in comics in Doctor Who Magazine #88 in May 1984, in the first installment of The Shape Shifter, the story which introduced his new shape changing companion, Frobisher: a Whifferdill, able to assume any form at will, who used his talents to make a living as a private detective (his real name was Avan Tarklu, he adopted the name Frobisher because he thought it sounded British and would therefore appeal to the Doctor). Frobisher was initially hired to infiltrate the Doctor's TARDIS by his old foe Josiah W. Dogbolter, a froglike alien businessman who had first appeared in the fifth Doctor strips, but the shape changer quickly decided he liked the Time Lord and the pair stole Dogbolter's money before heading off to new adventures. Those adventures, mostly illustrated by new regular artist John Ridgway, included Steve Parkhouse's surreal epic Voyager, a truly bizarre storyline which began an arc that also included Polly the Glot and Once Upon a Time Lord, all of which pitted the Doctor and Frobisher against the renegade Time Lord Astrolabus. The collected edition of Voyager.Following this, Parkhouse departed the strip to be replaced by other writers including the magazine's editor Alan McKenzie, Jamie Delano, Simon Furman, and most notably Grant Morrison (who crafted an incredibly convoluted story which asserted that the Cybermen were descended from the Voord (from 1960s story The Keys of Marinus) and ended with the death of former companion Jamie McCrimmon). From DWM #104 the Doctor and Frobisher (now stuck permanently in the form of a penguin after the writers decided that his shape changing powers were a bit too convenient and tended to dilute the drama) were joined by TV companion Peri, Marvel having obtained the rights to her image. The terrific trio's adventures continued until DWM #129, cover dated October 1987-the sixth's Doctor's comics incarnation having outlasted his TV incarnation by almost a year! Six of the stories, in heavily edited form, were reprinted in issues of the Doctor Who Marvel Adventures Comic, given away free with packets of Golden Wonder crisps. Whie DWM #129, and the conclusion of Morrison' s earlier alluded to The World Shapers, marked the end of the sixth Doctor's regular comics adventures, there was still one rather special postscript to this era still to come. It arrived in October 1994, in the form of the graphic novel Doctor Who: The Age of Chaos, which saw the Doctor and Frobisher engage in a hazardous adventure to pay off a debt to an old friend, the now long departed Peri. Drawn by John M. Burns and Barrie Mitchell, it was the first original graphic novel in Doctor Who history, the first full colour Doctor Who story to be published by Marvel UK, and the first Marvel UK graphic novel. And it was written by the sixth Doctor himself, Colin Baker, the first (and, to date, only) time that a Doctor Who comic story has actually been written by an actor who played the Doctor!
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Post by tingramretro on Mar 12, 2016 11:30:52 GMT -5
While 1986 is probably most noticeable to Who fans for having marked the end of the sixth Doctor's televised life, it also marked another ending, one that went pretty much unnoticed but which was actually quite significant in terms of the Doctor's published adventures. Ever since 1965, World Distributors-a publishing company which specialised in hardcover "annuals" based on popular TV and film properties-had published a Doctor Who Annual almost every year, spanning six incarnations of the Time Lord, twenty books in total over the course of twenty one years (for some reason, no Annual was published in 1971). Some of these annuals featured only illustrated text stories featuring the Doctor and (from the 1968 edition onwards) his various TV companions, but most had also featured comic stories, which have sadly gone largely unnoticed and, worse, unappreciated by fans of the medium. Often, the stories in these annuals were far more in tune with what was going on in the TV series itself than the continuing strips in TV Comic, Countdown or DWM, which usually featured none of the official companions; characters such as Jo Grant, Romana, Adric and Tegan all made their comics debuts in the World Distributors annuals. But the TV show's eighteen month hiatus in 1985 seems to have impacted on Doctor Who's place in the public consciousness, and so the 1986 edition, published for Christmas 1985, was the last that World ever produced, without fanfare, or even an acknowledgement that this was the end of a twenty year tradition. The Doctor Who Annual would not return for quite some time... The first annual, published 1965 for 1966. The first third Doctor annual, published 1970 for 1971.
The Vampire plants, from the 1970 annual, released 1969. Art from 'Emsone's Castle' in the 1979 annual. Sadly, as with most of the annual stories, the artist is uncredited, but it's probably Paul Crompton.
Art from The Power, also in the 1979 annual. Same artist.
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Post by tingramretro on May 15, 2016 4:37:51 GMT -5
Freedom by Fire from the 1969 annual, in which the Doctor, Jamie and Victoria save a peaceful tribe from man eating plants by...er...setting fire to the jungle they live in (!)
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Post by tingramretro on May 15, 2016 5:32:30 GMT -5
Doctor Who Magazine #130 (November 1987) marked the beginning of the seventh Doctor's life in comics, and like his televised life, it got off to a shaky start. As with most of the earlier comic stories, initially no real attempt was made to fit into the TV continuity, and the seventh Doctor actually began his strip adventures still accompanied by Frobisher from the sixth Doctor strips (along with, for a time, the treacherous "heat vampire", Olla, a short lived "companion" who quickly turned on them). Later, the Doctor would fly solo for a time, both in DWM and in short stories in the Marvel UK anthology title The Incredible Hulk Presents (the Doctor would also guest star in Death's Head #8 during 1989, firmly establishing him as existing in the Marvel Universe, at least some of the time). After the TV series ended in 1989, though, the decision was taken to tie the strip (by now featuring the Doctor and TV companion Ace) into the new line of licensed spin-off novels from Virgin publishing in late 1992, even bringing in new companion Bernice Summerfield (created by Paul Cornell, who made his comics debut on the Who strip). The experiment ended when, in the story Ground Zero (August 1996), Marvel killed off Ace, deliberately separating their continuity from Virgin's. Following this, the seventh Doctor strips ceased (seven years after his last televised appearance!) as the DWM strip began to jump around in the Doctor's history, featuring past Doctors more or less at random for a time... The Doctor Who Classic Comics Special 1993, featuring "Evening's Empire" by former Doctor Who TV writer Andrew Cartmel, a story which had begun in DWM #180 in 1991 but been shelved due to production problems; it was reprinted and concluded two years later. Art by Richard Piers Rayner.
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Post by tingramretro on May 17, 2016 5:37:57 GMT -5
Death's Head #8, as mentioned earlier, contained a rare appearance of the Doctor outside his own title, which placed him firmly in the mainstream Marvel Universe. Death's Head himself made one of his earliest appearances in the DWM strip (and another in Transformers) before finally getting his own book, and this story built on that by having the mechanoid freelance peacekeeping agent hired by the Doctor's old enemy Josiah W. Dogbolter to kill him and steal his TARDIS, a nice piece of direct continuity with the DWM strip itself. The story is notable in a number of ways, not least the fact that a computer file shown in this issue finally gives the fourth Doctor's long departed former companion, Sharon (from the Doctor Who Weekly/Monthly days) a second name, "Davis", but the real twist comes at the end, when the Doctor drops Death's Head off on the roof of the Fantastic Four's headquarters, Four Freedom's Plaza. This not only establishes the Doctor himself as being able to visit Earth 616, it also establishes DH as an inhabitant of the Marvel Universe proper for the first time! The following issue would feature a full-on FF/Death's Head battle.
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Post by tingramretro on May 18, 2016 6:08:18 GMT -5
Oddly, the early-mid 1990s, the period when Doctor Who as a TV show was most conspicuous by its absence, saw a sizeable surge of interest in the good Doctor which led to him and his various allies and enemies having numerous adventures in other mediums; in the Virgin New Adventures novels, in unlicensed video spin-offs (such as Downtime, produced by Reeltime Pictures in 1995, which introduced the character of Kate Lethbridge-Stewart, who would later be incorporated into the revived TV show in 2013) and audio dramas, and of course in comics. In December 1992, Marvel UK launched a companion title to DWM in the shape of Doctor Who Classic Comics, a 52 page monthly title which reprinted, cleaned up and recoloured, not just the best of Marvel's own Doctor Who strips but also as many as they could lay their hands on from both TV Comic and Countdown/TV Action, as well as the Daleks strip from TV21. It ran for 27 issues until December 1994, and in that time managed to reprint a phenomenal amount of material which had mostly gone unseen for decades, eventually being cancelled when Marvel basically ran out of stuff to reprint (sadly, they never got the rights to the strips from the old World Distributors annuals).
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Post by tingramretro on May 18, 2016 6:19:46 GMT -5
The ninth issue of DWCC treated British comics audiences to something they'd never seen before: it reprinted in full the 1966 Dell Comics adaptation of the first of the two Dalek movies starring Peter Cushing. The original American title had never been distributed in the UK.
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Post by tingramretro on May 18, 2016 6:34:47 GMT -5
Marvel weren't content with just DWM, DWCC and the Doctor's inexplicable appearances in The Incredible Hulk Presents and the Marvel Bumper Comic, though-in 1991, they also brought back the by now long absent Doctor Who Annual, with its customary quota of new comics content. Just to be diffent though, they didn't call it an annual; instead, the five editions published between 1991 and 1995 (but dated 1992-1996) were all labelled The Doctor Who Yearbook (rival publishers Fleetway, oddly enough, replaced their customary 2000 AD Annual with a yearbook from 1992, as well). The fifth yearbook is particularly noteworthy, as it brought back one of Marvel's earliest original Doctor Who villains, Beep the Meep, in 'Star Beast II'.
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Confessor
CCF Mod Squad
Not Bucky O'Hare!
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Post by Confessor on May 18, 2016 11:44:38 GMT -5
Really interesting updates, tingramretro. This thread never fails to fascinate me...and I'm not even a fan of Dr. Who really. Keep up the good work.
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Post by tingramretro on May 18, 2016 11:54:32 GMT -5
and I'm not even a fan of Dr. Who really. Would more bipedal green rabbits help? Because I'm sure Steven Moffat would oblige if asked nicely... He's already managed to squeeze a cantina scene into the last series!
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Confessor
CCF Mod Squad
Not Bucky O'Hare!
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Post by Confessor on May 18, 2016 15:04:58 GMT -5
and I'm not even a fan of Dr. Who really. Would more bipedal green rabbits help? Always.
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