Photo de l'auteur

Geoff Senior (1) (1960–)

Auteur de A Cold Day in Hell!

Pour les autres auteurs qui s'appellent Geoff Senior, voyez la page de désambigüisation.

61+ oeuvres 133 utilisateurs 39 critiques

Séries

Œuvres de Geoff Senior

A Cold Day in Hell! (2009) — Illustrateur — 33 exemplaires
Transformers: Matrix Quest (2002) — Illustrateur — 25 exemplaires
Death's Head: Freelance Peacekeeping Agent (2020) — Illustrateur — 8 exemplaires
The Transformers #75 - On the Edge of Extinction! (1990) — Illustrateur — 3 exemplaires
The Transformers #66 - All Fall Down (1990) — Illustrateur — 2 exemplaires
The Transformers #61 - Primal Scream (1989) — Illustrateur — 2 exemplaires
The Transformers 101: Fallen Angel (part 1) (1987) — Illustrateur — 2 exemplaires
Transformers: Generation 2 #12 - A Rage in Heaven! (1994) — Illustrateur — 2 exemplaires
Regeneration One 100: The War to End All Wars, Part 5 (2014) — Illustrateur; Illustrateur — 2 exemplaires
Regeneration One 0: Less Than Zero (2013) — Illustrateur; Illustrateur — 2 exemplaires
Transformers 293: Dark Creation (part four) (1990) — Illustrateur — 1 exemplaire
Transformers 295: All Fall Down (part two) (1990) — Illustrateur — 1 exemplaire
Transformers 294: All Fall Down (part one) (1990) — Illustrateur — 1 exemplaire
Transformers 290: Dark Creation (part one) (1990) — Illustrateur — 1 exemplaire
Transformers 292: Dark Creation (part three) (1990) — Illustrateur — 1 exemplaire
Transformers 291:Dark Creation (part two) (1990) — Illustrateur — 1 exemplaire
Transformers 297: All Fall Down (part four) (1990) — Illustrateur — 1 exemplaire
Transformers 263: Break-Away! / Bird of Prey! (part two) (1990) — Illustrateur — 1 exemplaire
Transformers 296: All Fall Down (three) (1990) — Illustrateur — 1 exemplaire
Action Force 24: Ancient Relics! (part two) (1987) — Illustrateur — 1 exemplaire
Transformers 319: On the Edge of Extinction! (part one) (1991) — Illustrateur — 1 exemplaire
Transformers 320: On the Edge of Extinction! (part two) (1991) — Illustrateur — 1 exemplaire
Transformers 321: On the Edge of Extinction! (part three) (1991) — Illustrateur — 1 exemplaire
Transformers 322: On the Edge of Extinction! (part four) (1991) — Illustrateur — 1 exemplaire
Collected Comics 8: Crisis of Command! (1988) — Illustrateur — 1 exemplaire
Collected Comics 12: Hunter... Hunted! (1989) — Illustrateur — 1 exemplaire
Collected Comics 14: Enemy Action! (1989) — Illustrateur — 1 exemplaire
Transformers 262: Two Steps Back! / Bird of Prey! (part one) (1990) — Illustrateur — 1 exemplaire
The Transformers #65 - Dark Creation (1990) — Illustrateur — 1 exemplaire
Dragon's Claws #2 — Illustrateur — 1 exemplaire
The best of Library of Death — Illustrateur — 1 exemplaire
Hell's Angel #1 - Hell's Angel (1992) — Illustrateur — 1 exemplaire
Hell's Angel #2 - Operation Psycho-Warrior! (1992) — Illustrateur — 1 exemplaire
Hell's Angel #3 - Subterfuge (1992) — Illustrateur — 1 exemplaire
Hell's Angel #4 - Hell and High Water (1992) — Illustrateur — 1 exemplaire
Hell's Angel #5 - Judgement Day (1992) — Illustrateur — 1 exemplaire
Transformers Annual 1991 (1990) — Artiste de la couverture — 1 exemplaire
The Transformers 42: Crisis of Command! (Part 1) (1986) — Illustrateur — 1 exemplaire
The Transformers 84: Target: 2006 (Part 6: "Trios!") (1986) — Illustrateur — 1 exemplaire
The Transformers 86: Target 2006: (Part 8: "You Haveta Ask?!") (1986) — Illustrateur — 1 exemplaire
The Transformers 98: ...The Harder They Die! (1987) — Illustrateur — 1 exemplaire
The Transformers 116: Burning Sky (part two) (1987) — Illustrateur — 1 exemplaire
The Transformers 120: Fire on High! (part two) (1987) — Illustrateur — 1 exemplaire
The Transformers 146: The Legacy of Unicron! (part one) (1988) — Illustrateur — 1 exemplaire
The Transformers 147: The Legacy of Unicron! (part two) (1988) — Illustrateur — 1 exemplaire

Oeuvres associées

Transformers: All Fall Down (2002) — Illustrateur — 36 exemplaires
Transformers: End of the Road (2002) — Illustrateur — 35 exemplaires
Transformers: Target: 2006 (2002) — Artiste de la couverture, quelques éditions31 exemplaires
Nemesis of the Daleks (2013) — Illustrateur — 28 exemplaires
Transformers: Rage in Heaven (2002) — Illustrateur — 26 exemplaires
Transformers: Dark Designs (2002) — Illustrateur — 23 exemplaires
The Transformers Classics UK, Volume 1 (2011) — Illustrateur — 14 exemplaires
Judge Dredd Yearbook 1992 (1991) — Illustrateur — 12 exemplaires
Transformers: Fallen Star (2005) — Illustrateur — 11 exemplaires
The Transformers Classics UK, Volume 3 (2012) — Illustrateur — 11 exemplaires
The Transformers Classics UK, Volume 2 (2012) — Illustrateur — 9 exemplaires
Transformers: Aspects of Evil! (2005) — Illustrateur — 9 exemplaires
The Transformers Classics, Volume 5 (2009) — Illustrateur — 8 exemplaires
Transformers: The Wreckers Saga (2018) — Illustrateur — 8 exemplaires
Transformers: Prey (2004) — Illustrateur — 8 exemplaires
Transformers: Perchance to Dream (2006) — Illustrateur — 7 exemplaires
The Transformers Annual 1986 (1986) — Illustrateur — 7 exemplaires
The Transformers Classics UK, Volume 5 (2014) — Illustrateur — 7 exemplaires
Transformers: Way of the Warrior (2005) — Illustrateur — 6 exemplaires
Transformers: Requiem of the Wreckers (2018) — Illustrateur — 5 exemplaires
The Transformers Classics UK, Volume 4 (2013) — Illustrateur — 5 exemplaires
Best of UK: Dinobots (2008) — Illustrateur — 4 exemplaires
2000 AD Prog 463 (1986) — Illustrateur — 3 exemplaires
2000 AD Prog 478 (1986) — Illustrateur — 2 exemplaires
Transformers 233: A Small War 2 / King Con! (part two) (1989) — Illustrateur — 2 exemplaires
The Transformers 102: Fallen Angel (Part 2: A Kind of Madness!) (1987) — Artiste de la couverture — 2 exemplaires
2000 AD Prog 481 (1986) — Illustrateur — 2 exemplaires
Regeneration One 97: The War to End All Wars, Part 2 (2013) — Artiste de la couverture, quelques éditions2 exemplaires
Alignment (2002) — Illustrateur — 2 exemplaires
Time Twisters No 2 — Illustrateur — 1 exemplaire
Ancient Relics (part three) (1987) — Illustrateur — 1 exemplaire
Transformers 228: [Double] Deal of the Century! (1989) — Illustrateur — 1 exemplaire
Transformers 301: Rhythms of Darkness! (part four) (1990) — Illustrateur — 1 exemplaire
Transformers 300: Rhythms of Darkness! (part three) (1990) — Illustrateur — 1 exemplaire
Transformers 260: ...Perchance to Dream part six: Galvatron / Primal Scream (part two) (1990) — Artiste de la couverture; Illustrateur — 1 exemplaire
Transformers 248: Fallen Star / All the Familiar Faces! (part three) (1989) — Artiste de la couverture — 1 exemplaire
Transformers 241: Rage! / Back from the Dead (part two) (1989) — Artiste de la couverture — 1 exemplaire
Transformers 229: The Hunting Party (1989) — Artiste de la couverture — 1 exemplaire
The Transformers 117: Hunters (part one) (1987) — Artiste de la couverture — 1 exemplaire
Transformers 227: Aspects of Evil! (part five: Unicron) (1989) — Illustrateur — 1 exemplaire
The Transformers 97: Prey! ( Part 2: "Running Scared!") (1987) — Artiste de la couverture — 1 exemplaire
Conan: Nattens skog — Illustrateur — 1 exemplaire
The Transformers 49: Dinobot Hunt! (Part 3: "Robot Rustlers!") (1986) — Artiste de la couverture — 1 exemplaire
The Transformers 51: Shooting Star! (part one) (1986) — Artiste de la couverture — 1 exemplaire
The Transformers 59: Robot Buster! (part 1) (1986) — Artiste de la couverture — 1 exemplaire
The Transformers 64: Second Generation! (Part 2: "Electric Dreams!") (1986) — Artiste de la couverture — 1 exemplaire
The Transformers 72: Showdown! (part one) (1986) — Artiste de la couverture — 1 exemplaire
The Transformers 88: Target: 2006 (Epilogue: "Aftermath!") (1986) — Artiste de la couverture — 1 exemplaire
The Transformers 99: Under Fire! (1987) — Illustrateur — 1 exemplaire
Transformers 224: Aspects of Evil! (part two: Galvatron) (1989) — Artiste de la couverture — 1 exemplaire
The Transformers 104: Resurrection! (Part 2: "Whose Death Is It Anyway?") (1987) — Artiste de la couverture — 1 exemplaire
Transformers: Saga of the Allspark #1 (2007) — Illustrateur — 1 exemplaire
The Transformers 125: Ancient Relics! (part one) (1987) — Illustrateur — 1 exemplaire
The Transformers 130: Worlds Apart! (part one) / Ring of Hate! (part one) (1987) — Artiste de la couverture — 1 exemplaire
The Transformers 151: The Legacy of Unicron! (part six) (1988) — Illustrateur — 1 exemplaire
Transformers 209: Dark Star (part two) (1989) — Artiste de la couverture — 1 exemplaire
Transformers 221: Survivors (part three) (1989) — Illustrateur — 1 exemplaire
Transformers 222: Survivors (part four) (1989) — Illustrateur — 1 exemplaire
Transformers 223: Aspects of Evil! (part one: Scorponok) (1989) — Artiste de la couverture, quelques éditions1 exemplaire

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Date de naissance
1960

Membres

Critiques

A fine package for one of the classic transformers time travel epics. Whilst the art is pretty shonky by today's standards there are some fantastic images here and some great moments. The drama moves along nicely, with action bits and quiet bits fitting together nicely. Also includes some American G1 stories from the same time that aren't as good but still have some good bits. Please don't ever mention Skids' off switch again.
 
Signalé
elahrairah | Sep 10, 2022 |
Access a version of the below that includes illustrations on my blog here and here.

I had always intended to follow Death's Head out of A Cold Day in Hell! and into his solo series. If I had been smart, though, I would have picked up Panini's two-volume collection of his adventures; since Panini has (had?) the UK reprint rights to both Marvel and Doctor Who, they could include both Death's Head stories with Doctor Who elements and ones with Marvel elements. Alas, I did not, and that collection is now prohibitively expensive and/or just unavailable. Instead, I picked up this Marvel collection, which has to skip over, for example, Death's Head #8 because both the Doctor and Josiah W. Dogbolter appear in it.

So: in the Transformers storyline "The Legacy of Unicron!", Death's Head was lost in a time portal; in the Doctor Who Magazine story The Crossroads of Time, he emerged in the Doctor Who universe. At the end of that story, the Doctor sent him to Earth in the year 8162, setting up his appearances here. That means all the stories in the first half take place in the Doctor Who universe, and thus also Marvel UK's Dragon's Claws series must take place in the Who universe, though neither Lars Pearson's Ahistory nor the Tardis wiki seem to buy this argument. As I discussed in my review of A Cold Day in Hell!, the fact that Dragon's Claws is set in the 82nd century is actually what allows us to date a significant number of DWM stories: Dreamers of Death, The Free-Fall Warriors, The Moderator, The Shape Shifter, Polly the Glot, War-Game, the Kane's Story sequence, A Cold Day in Hell!, Redemption!, and many I haven't gotten to yet must take place in the 82nd century because Death's Head #8 established that Dogbolter was from the same era as Dragon's Claws. Yet, as far as I know, we never see Earth in DWM during what Lars Pearson calls "the Mazuma Era"; the status of humanity's homeworld in this time is only fleshed out in Dragon's Claws and in Death's Head #1-8. (I think? It may have appeared in passing in the Kane's Story sequence now that I think about it.)

Okay, okay, enough context, what about the stories? Reading this, at first I wondered if Death's Head could actually work as a solo character. What made him fun in The Transformers was the way he was above it all-- or rather, beneath it all. Here's this vast cosmic war happening, and especially in the 2006-set stories he originated in, it features titans of the universe. But Death's Head doesn't give a crap: he just cares about money, and if someone is going to call him a "bounty hunter" instead of a "freelance peacekeeping agent." The fun derives from the fact that Death's Head is basically operating in a totally different story to that of our usual protagonists and antagonists. But can that be maintained when he becomes the star of the show?

Most of the time, Simon Furman seemingly can't figure out how to do it. At first, this title really struggles because of Dragon's Claws. The first issue collected here is Dragon's Claws #5, and the story drops you right in, with no context for who these people are or why you should care about them. Which, okay, to be fair, it was their series and Death's Head was a guest star. Why should they be explained? But Death's Head was the breakout star of Marvel UK, and surely Death's Head fans followed him from The Transformers into this without picking up issues #1-4? Yet no concession is made for them. This is also true of some of the individual issues of the actual solo series once it gets started, especially #2, which really strongly assumes I understand who all these characters are and what they are doing when I just don't.

In issues #3-7, the series moves into its short-lived status quo, where Death's Head with his assistant Spratt set up a business in the Los Angeles Resettlement. There are two I particularly liked, two that make the format work. The first is #5, which brings back self-interested space trash Keepsake from the Doctor Who Magazine story Keepsake. Now, when I saw this, my reaction was, "uh, really?" because Keepsake wasn't exactly a noteworthy story where I was thinking, "let's bring back that guy." But when I read it, I finally saw what this series was doing and could do. In this one, Keepsake returns to L.A. to meet up with an old partner; between the two of them, they have a complete map to a buried treasure. Only Keepsake-- who now has a new girlfriend in tow-- ran out on his wife so that she wouldn't get part of his half, and so the wife hires Death's Head to get Keepsake. The result of this is a confusing panoply of Keepsake vs. ex-partner and Keepsake vs. ex-wife. But just like the Autobot/Decepticon war, Death's Head doesn't give a hoot, he just wants a payday. It's dumb, and it's fun because Death's Head agrees with us that it's dumb, and doesn't give the interpersonal dynamics any real thought if he gets his money.

Similarly, #7 is about Death's Head and Spratt chasing a mark-- but what they don't know is that two different bounty hunters are chasing down Death's Head. So these two bounty hunters are trying to kill him, which he doesn't know, and also trying to kill each other so that the other one doesn't get the credit. Again, this sense that Death's Head attitude means that he's just above it all is where these stories are the most fun.

But when they expect you to take these things seriously, they don't work, because much of the time, they are impossible to: a lot of macho early 1990s stuff, even though it's still the late 1980s. Too many stories are dependent on action, which I don't care about, or keeping track of a bunch of interchangeable nobodies. There are occasional flashes of wit and color, but overall the effect is drab.

(I did also like #1, where we get a series of flashbacks each of which ends with Death's Head laying down one of his principles of being a freelance peacekeeping agent.)

Still, I think the comic was getting somewhere and figuring itself out, which is why it's a bummer that #8 totally shifted the direction of the comic, though I'm sure there were good sales-related reasons for this. Due to rights issues, though, issue #8 can't be printed in this collection! Suffice it to say that the Doctor takes Death's Head out of the Doctor Who universe in 8162 and plops him in the Marvel universe in the present day; I will eventually read it when I pick up The Incomplete Death's Head. So now Death's Head is in his third universe thus far!

Issue #9 picks up with Death's Head on the roof of Four Freedoms Plaza, where the Fantastic Four live. At first they fight, of course, but then they must team up the Fantastic Four's security system goes haywire. At the end of this issue, the Fantastic Four try to send Death's Head back to 8162 (I guess no one knows he's in the wrong universe), but when Reed Richards realizes he's a paid killer, he switches it off, which ejects Death's Head in the far-off year of, um, 2020. (Iron Man 2020 had been a feature of some Marvel comics, so this was an established setting.) The set-up is a bit confusing, as Death's Head is already established, and trying to find money to fix up his spaceship... which didn't come with him... and which doesn't appear in 2020 until the issue's end!

These two issues are basically fine. There's some fun interplay between Death's Head and the FF, and the Iron Man 2020 has some great Death's Head moments, but on the other hand falls foul of the dull convolutions that bedevilled a number of the pre-time-jump stories. Overall though, one can sense a comic frantically searching for a new direction... and getting cancelled abruptly, as an obviously hastily final two pages in #10 sum up a lot.

After this, Death's Head doesn't have a status quo. The graphic novel The Body in Question (which has three parts; book one is set between the antepenultimate and penultimate pages of #10, and then books two and three after #10) makes the mistake of delving into the history of Death's Head, though it does reunite him with his supporting cast from his ongoing. No one cares about where Death's Head came from; what makes him interesting is what he does. Unfortunately this story gives us very little of that, instead spending time on a lot of cod mysticism. There is one good joke, though.

I don't know why Furman bothered bringing the supporting cast back, because they never appear again. We next follow Death's Head into Fantastic Four #338, when he's starting freelancing for the Time Variance Authority. This is not much of a Death's Head story; it's just a Fantastic Four one he happens to be in. Better use is made of him in Sensational She-Hulk #24; he's back in New York 2020... but in a grave for some reason. (He still has his TVA time-bike, though, because he never returned it.) The story is goofy, but enjoyable, and actually makes good use of the 2020 setting in that something She-Hulk does in 1991 has repercussions thirty years later... and vice versa. Then in 2011, he's being hired by aliens to fight on their behalf (against the Hulk, as Earth's champion). (I assume because of time travel again, but I don't think anyone says.) Each of these is probably fine as a guest appearance, but it is a pretty disappointing way for the character to go out. He's brought into the Marvel universe... and promptly amounts to nothing!

Part of the reason was that in 1992, he was killed off and replaced by Death's Head II, an "extreme" 1990s character. So Death's Head makes it into a new universe, and is killed off for his troubles. Simon Furman got the opportunity to kind of undo this in an issue of What If..., which has him uniting a team of 1992 superheroes to take down a villain in 2020. It probably would have been much more interesting if I was familiar with the story it was rewriting... but I also can't imagine I would enjoy reading that story either! Geoff Senior's usually solid art seems compromised in pursuit of the mediocre 1990s aesthetic, to boot.

So, I wish Furman had left Death's Head in Los Angeles 8162 and perfected that set-up instead. This was a pretty dismal way for a once-great character to go out. (Though, in my marathon at least, there is more Death's Head to come.)

(Also it seems like a bummer that this doesn't contain the 2011 Revolutionary War: Death's Head one-shot... I haven't read it, though, so maybe there's a good reason for that.)

Death's Head and Marvel UK: « Previous in sequence | Next in sequence »
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
Stevil2001 | Nov 30, 2021 |
Access a version of the below that includes illustrations on my blog.

This is the first DWM graphic novel (in strip order) that has bonus features beyond an archival interview; it contains a new introduction by Richard Starkings (the strip's editor for much of this era) and a set of interviews with the writers and artists put together by John Freeman (the magazine's editor for much of this era). This means I have more insight into the production decisions behind the strip than in previous eras.

The big difference between this run and previous ones is that it has neither a consistent writer (as the strip did from #1 to #110) nor a consistent artist (as the strip did from #1 to 69 and #88 to 133). Starkings explains the decision: "it had often occurred to me that the strip should reflect the series and feature a different writer and director for each story" (p. 6). But I think this neglects a way in which television is a different medium than tv. On screen, the writer and director might always change, but the performance stays the same. Every episode has got Sylvester McCoy in. But in a comic, the artist isn't just the director, they're also every actor. This means that even when the strips are good, there's no throughline, and the lack of consistency leaves it all feeling like less than the sum of its parts. From #70 to 87, you had a consistent tone and style from Steve Parkhouse even if the art was always different; from #111 to 133 you had a consistent tone and style from John Ridgway even if the writing was always different. Here you have neither. And no companion! (The strip was last companion free from #49 to 77.) I cannot think of any other ongoing non-anthology comic that took an approach like this.

Now, this might all be rubbish, because I read this all in one go, whereas it would have come out across two years. Maybe it reads fine when you have a month gap every time the creative team changes? But this is how I read it!

A Cold Day in Hell! / Redemption!
These two strips transition out of the trappings of the sixth Doctor era: Frobisher departs the Doctor; when he leaves, new companion Olla is introduced, but she's gone within one more strip herself! The actual stories here are so-so, the Doctor running around after Ice Warriors and such, and doing a lot of goofy stuff that makes you suspect all Simon Furman had to go off was the script for Time and the Rani. Frobisher's writing-out is pretty perfunctory, as is Olla's.

The Crossroads of Time
So I've been reading the Marvel UK Transformers comics in parallel with the DWM strips, all because here they collide. At the end of the Transformers story "The Legacy of Unicron!" (in Transformers Classics UK, Volume Five), the robot mercenary Death's Head is tossed into a malfunctioning time portal; here we find out where he went, as he emerges in the Doctor Who universe. I don't object to this on principle; indeed, it strikes me as one of the USPs of reading the strip, and I was curious to see how this whole crossover thing would shake out.

Alas, in practice, it's freaking terrible. Death's Head, who in Transformers was a "principled" freelance peacekeeping agent in that he killed for money-- and not for pleasure-- here attacks the Doctor for no real good reason, just an accidental collision in the Time Vortex. The Doctor fights him with lethal force! It doesn't kill Death's Head, but he doesn't know that; I get that Death's Head had to be shrunk down to human scale if he was going to interact with other Marvel UK characters, but maybe the Doctor could have done it on purpose? And then the Doctor sends this homicidal bounty hunter to Earth in the year 8162 and is just like, "Ah, oh well, I'm sure it'll be fine." I think there could have been a great story about a clash of values between the Doctor and Death's Head... but this is manifestly not it. I can only hope that Death's Head's solo feature, which I plan on following him into, is better than this.

Claws of the Klathi!
This is a decent piece of Victoriana by stalwart DWM contributor Michael Collins. It feels to me like it has a bit too much going for its three parts: a freakshow escapee, a pair of alien refugees, a giant robot, a gathering of men of science, and the Crystal Palace struggle for space. The men of science, for example, kind of feel pointless. But it's certainly the best story in this volume thus far, and Kev Hopgood is one of DWM's better post-Ridgway artists.

Culture Shock! / Keepsake / Planet of the Dead / Echoes of the Mogor! / Time and Tide
This run of strips reminded me a lot of Steve Moore and Steve Parkhouse's run from #46 to 60 (back in Dragon's Claws): it's all one- and two-part stories, often hinging on some kind of highbrow science fictional concept taken to a depressing conclusion. In Culture Shock!, the Doctor discovers a sentient race of bacteria who need his help; in Keepsake he (accidentally?) bullies a mercenary into helping him out; in Echoes of the Mogor!, he finds a long-dead species who embody their memories in crystal; in Time and Tide, he comes upon a dying species on a water planet. They are all varying degrees of fine, and the artists all have varying degrees of command over Sylvester McCoy's likeness. Culture Shock! had a cool hook, but I didn't really buy the Doctor's depression; I liked the idea of Keepsake but thought the humor didn't quite come off; Time and Tide was crazy depressing, and am not convinced it really fits the character of the Doctor. (There's a lot of standing around watching people die!)

Planet of the Dead has the Doctor encountering first dead companions, and then his own previous selves. I didn't think John Freeman really captured the voices of the companions and Doctors enough to pull this off, but Lee Sullivan was an excellent choice for illustrating it.

Follow That TARDIS!
The Doctor is forced by the Sleeze Brothers, a pair of private investigators, to chase the Monk's TARDIS throughout a series of historical disasters. I am convinced this could be funny, but I did not think the joke actually came off.

Invaders from Gantac!
Going into this, I was like, "Oh no... another comedy story." But it turned out to be the best story in the whole volume! The Doctor lands on Earth in the far future year of 1992 to find out that it's been taken over by aliens, and his only ally is a homeless man named Leapy. In its mix of big events and light comedy, it very much felt like something I could imagine Russell T Davies putting on screen as a big, bright two-parter in the Aliens of London/Rise of the Cybermen/Daleks Take Manhattan/The Sontaran Stratagem slot. There's some good comedy, but also a serious edge: more than any other story, I could imagine McCoy doing this on screen. It's pacey and twisty, and the only thing I didn't like was the kind of perfunctory ending. That said, Griffiths and Smith don't exactly nail McCoy's likeness. (But then, who does!?)

Stray Observations:
  • If you were a hypothetical reader who never watched the show, I think you would imagine that after The World Shapers, the sixth Doctor, Frobisher, and Peri all went on an adventure where Peri left with Yrcanos and the Doctor regenerated. There's no indication here that, say, Frobisher was dropped off or anything.
  • I read The Age of Chaos, even though it was written many years later, between The World Shapers and A Cold Day in Hell! Doing so revealed an inconsistency; the way Frobisher mopes over Peri in Cold Day makes it clear he hasn't been visiting her and her descendants as Age of Chaos established, and wound of her departure is obviously quite raw. But if you wanted to get quite convoluted, I think you could solve it by imagining that for Frobisher, Age of Chaos takes place after A Cold Day in Hell!! The sixth Doctor and Peri drop off Frobisher and experience the events of Trial of a Time Lord. Frobisher is then picked up by the seventh Doctor, who tells him what happened, and then he gets dropped off again on A-Lux. Then he gets picked up by the sixth Doctor, who takes him to Krontep and meet Peri again, along with the kids. Easy!
  • Poor Olla: I am reasonably sure she is the only DWM-original companion to never appear or even be mentioned again. The Doctor doesn't call her up for help in The Stockbridge Showdown!
  • I did notice that in A Cold Day in Hell!, Furman did something he also does in his Transformers strips: so that reading the recap isn't dull, it usually also includes new information. But that means if you only skim the recap, you might miss the new information! However, I am used to it now, and it doesn't throw me as much.
  • Richard Starkings says the first thing he did when taking over as editor was fire John Ridgway because he cost so much... but back in the introduction to Voyager, Ridgway said he quit when the strip switched to McCoy so that he could focus on the steadier income from drawing DC's Hellblazer.
  • Fun fact: In The Crossroads of Time, the Doctor sends Death's Head to the year 8162. This is because that was the setting of Marvel UK's Dragon's Claws series, but because Dogbolter showed up in the Death's Head solo series that span out of Dragon's Claws, that means a significant chunk of the DWM mythos must also date to the 82nd century. If that's when Dogbolter is from, it must also be when Frobisher is from; we know the Free-Fall Warriors are from the same era as Dogbolter; and we know Ivan Asimoff is also from that era. It also seems likely that Olla is from the era. Abel's Story and War-Game also go in this era. Much much later, The Stockbridge Showdown would place Sharon's new home era in the same time as all the others as well. All because Marvel UK wanted to spin Death's Head into his own series! Plus, this means Dragon's Claws takes place in the Doctor Who universe...
  • Claws of the Klathi! commits one of my neo-Victorian pet peeves: there is no way a man of means who dabbled in science would call himself a "scientist" in 1851 as the gentlemen do here. It sounds like a job one might have!
  • Culture Shock! was the last Doctor Who Magazine contribution from Grant Morrison, who is arguably the most famous person to have worked on the strip other than Dave Gibbons. (Alan Moore only wrote for the back-ups.) He would write creator-owned stuff like We3 (Homeward Bound with killer cyborgs) later on, but I know him best as a prolific DC contributor, writing things like JLA, Seven Soldiers of Victory, All-Star Superman, 52, Final Crisis, and The Multiversity.
  • Bryan Hitch illustrates just one strip, but still gets cover credit; he would do some genre-redefining work in the 2000s on The Ultimates for Marvel and The Authority for Wildstorm.
  • Doctor Who tie-ins often like to do a thing where the Doctor remembers his companions who died while travelling with him, but are hamstrung in this by the fact that on screen, that amounts to unmemorable and/or terrible ones like Katarina, Sara, and Adric. So DWM gains a slight boost from the events of The World Shapers in that stories like Planet of the Dead can now use Jamie, a dead companion who is both good and memorable.
  • Echoes of the Mogor! is the first story to establish that the Doctor is trying to get to the planet Maruthea; in Invaders from Gantac! we learn he's attempting to attend the birthday of someone called Bonjaxx, but he doesn't make it within the confines of this volume.
  • It also introduces the Foreign Hazard Duty team, a sort of future space police; evidently we will see them in future volumes.
  • "Richard Alan" is a pseudonym for strip editor Richard Starkings; so is "Zed."
  • Follow That TARDIS! is, I believe, the only DWM contribution of Andy Lanning, who would become a prolific contributor to Marvel and DC in the 2000s. My favorite work of his is a run on Legion of Super-Heroes, but he also contributes to basically every DC event, including Infinite Crisis, 52, and Flashpoint. He strikes me as one of those guys who is capable of great work, but will also happily contribute to drek if that's what you need.
  • So far the Master has never appeared in a DWM strip; the Meddling Monk has appeared twice. Who is the real Time Lord nemesis of the Doctor?
  • This volume contains the only Doctor Who Magazine contributions of Kev Hopgood, but he must have made a good impression on someone for his Sylvester McCoy likeness, as twenty-five years later he returned to Doctor Who to illustrate the seventh Doctor segment of Prisoners of Time! I liked his art here, but in my review of that volume I called it "stiff."
  • The Sleeze Brothers went on to have their own comic series from Marvel. The Tardis wiki doesn't count it as part of the Doctor Who universe, but who knows why. Their rules for "inclusion" are typically pretty asinine, anyway. You can get it pretty cheap on the secondary market, but I am not sure I am motivated to do so...
  • Alan Grant never contributed to DWM again, and hilariously he doesn't even remember that he did this strip. I know him best as the co-writer of L.E.G.I.O.N. from DC, with fellow Marvel UK contributor Barry Kitson. But of course his greatest contribution to comics was the seminal and influential Bob the Galactic Bum.
  • Yes, that's a lot of "where are they now?" updates in this one! If your comic collection has twenty-one individual contributors (not counting letterers), I guess odds are a lot of them will go on to be famous.
Doctor Who Magazine and Marvel UK: « Previous in sequence | Next in sequence »
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
Stevil2001 | 1 autre critique | Aug 13, 2021 |
Grimlock getting his arse kicked by Megatron again, and Action Force decide the blow up a gasworks to stop Megatron, apparently forgetting they're supposed to be in central London. Think of the house prices!
 
Signalé
elahrairah | Aug 11, 2021 |

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