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Tesseract

par Tony Lee, Blair Shedd (Illustrateur)

Autres auteurs: Al Davison (Illustrateur)

Séries: Doctor Who Ongoing (2), Doctor Who {non-TV} (Graphic Novel)

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The ongoing tales of Doctor Who continue as master storyteller Tony Lee puts the Doctor and Martha in one unpleasant situation after another! Collects issues #7-12.
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In one story, the TARDIS console room has been moved and the Doctor and his friends have to find "echoes" of old console rooms to get control back and in the other story, Dr. Martha Jones calls the Doctor to help out with some wild trees that are attacking Greenwich Park. This is a great installment - I particularly enjoyed that it took the previous installment to new levels. The Doctor is always entertaining and I like graphic novels, so it's never bad per se, but this one would have been better had the art not been an absolute mess - sometimes you can't even tell which characters is supposed to be the Doctor. ( )
  -Eva- | Jul 25, 2015 |
What's with the dreary covers on these collections? Anyway, it was a preview of the first issue collected here that back in the day convinced me I was right about my decision to skip the IDW ongoing. And on reading it in context, it's still awful. Though Al Davison's art in Fugitive was good, his characters are just ugly here, especially his David Tennant and his Matthew (even though he invented Matthew's appearance!). The dialogue is unnatural and awkward, and there are random, forced continuity references.

So, Tesseract completely squanders all the potential I saw being built up in Fugitive. We find out what the deal of the Shadow Advocate is, but it's just not satisfying: when Finch killed her, she was actually flung back into the Time War and she witnessed its final moments over and over again before escaping. Having seen what the Doctor did, she wants to kill him. But the only reason she got flung into the Time War is because after she escaped, she told Finch to send her back! Predestination paradoxes can sometimes drain the drama out of situations, and this is one of those cases: a writer can make a character do anything, no matter how implausible, on the pretext that they had to do it to maintain the loop. And though I kinda like the idea that someone seeing the Doctor use the Moment to wipe out the Time Lords and the Daleks would conclude that he's too dangerous to have around (the Doctor himself reaches that conclusion in "The Parting of the Ways," after all), she just acts like a generic scheming villain, using complicated plots to ensnare the Doctor for no readily apparent reason when she could just kill him multiple times. Also the plot requires a number of people who should know better (like UNIT) to trust the Shadow Advocate against all reason. What is it with the unlikeability of the new-series UNIT commanders? Until Kate Stewart, the show (and its spin-offs) seemed intent on giving us a series of assholes.

The new companions are not great, either. I liked them all right in Fugitive, but Tony Lee can't write them as people to save his life. I get what he's trying to do, but it doesn't work because it lacks all subtlety; Emily is all "I NEED A GUN TO FEEL SAFE" and Matthew is "I DON'T TRUST THE DOCTOR BECAUSE A WOMAN I JUST MET TOLD ME NOT TO." Why does Matthew listen to the Shadow Advocate? Who knows. The Doctor points out that the flaws in her story indicate she's manipulating him, and he basically goes, "She might be a manipulator, but she learned it from you, even though the only person who told me that was her, who we just established as an untrustworthy liar." I can't bring myself to care about either of these characters because there's nothing likeable or interesting about them. Also, Lee seems to keep forgetting they're from the 1920s, as Matthew explains he was too busy to read The Lord of the Rings (and not, perhaps, too from-the-past), and Emily does the "the TARDIS doesn't look like a proper spaceship" bit seemingly obligatory for new-series companions, but I'm not sure really makes sense for someone from the 1920s.

I haven't even talked about the stories here, but I didn't really like either of them. "Tesseract" is flimsy while "Don't Step on the Grass" is just an overcrowded mess of elements that don't work together.
  Stevil2001 | Jul 25, 2014 |
http://nwhyte.livejournal.com/2095687.html

I wasn't wild about the first two issues collected here, where I felt that Al Davison's art didn't quite match Lee's script of aliens invading the Tardis. But then things really take a turn for the better, with a four-issue story gorgeously illustrated by Blair D. Shedd, which has Martha Jones, walking trees, Greenwich Observatory and John Dee, and another joke about Belgium.

There's a reference to Martha having married Mickey, and I thought at first that this might have been anticipating The End of Time as they go off to chase Sontarans at the end. But in fact the comic was published in mid-2010, after The End of Time was broadcast, so no surprise for the reader who had been paying attention.

I hope Shedd does more Who work; I was really impressed. ( )
  nwhyte | Apr 27, 2013 |
The Tenth Doctor’s adventures from Fugitive continue with his new companions Emily and Matt heading on divergent paths. Emily becomes a stronger character driven to action while Matt consumed by jealousy is drawn to evil. There's also a 5D spaceship, Martha Jones and UNIT, and Greenwich Park under attack by trees. As I noted on the previous volume, the comic format allows for a visual imagination that would not likely be convincing in a televised format but on the other hand the dialogue seems spare and simplistic. ( )
  Othemts | Sep 3, 2012 |
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Nom de l'auteurRôleType d'auteurŒuvre ?Statut
Tony Leeauteur principaltoutes les éditionscalculé
Shedd, BlairIllustrateurauteur principaltoutes les éditionsconfirmé
Davison, AlIllustrateurauteur secondairetoutes les éditionsconfirmé

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The ongoing tales of Doctor Who continue as master storyteller Tony Lee puts the Doctor and Martha in one unpleasant situation after another! Collects issues #7-12.

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