“Yesterday’s” Comic> The Doll Man Quarterly #1

At least today’s covers are trying to look like something.

The Doll Man Quarterly #1

Comic Favorites, Inc (Autumn, 1941)

Technically DC owns Doll Man, the pint-sided hero predating the Ray Palmer Atom. All the stories in this comic features Doll Man, so while there are multiple stories it’s not an anthology. That should work into the rotation. I have enough trouble getting time to do everything without all of these anthologies in the retro comic review. They take longer to review than they do to read due to formatting and tagging.

We are, however, ignoring the lame comedy pages, one of which features a midget named Poison Ivy for some reason wearing nothing but a toga and bowler hat, with the gag being about how he has super strength. I didn’t find it or the others funny.

[Read along with me here]

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BW’s Daily Video> Stop Killing Games Heads To Brussles

Follow these event at the Accursed Farms YouTube channel.

 

Chapter By Chapter> Doctor Who: The Rescue (novelisation) chapter 11

Chapter by Chapter features me reading one chapter of the selected book at the time and reviewing it as if I were reviewing an episode of a TV show or an issue of a comic. There will be spoilers if you haven’t read to the point I have, and if you’ve read further I ask that you don’t spoil anything further into the book. Think of it as read-along book club.

Last time we got more scenes not in the episode, or at least not in the episode we recently watched before starting this review of the novelisation.

This is where we should start talking about Vicki, Susan’s replacement. Problem is I barely knew her. It wasn’t long after this episode that Ian and Barbara would leave and where the lost episode count came into play. So what few episodes I’ve seen with Vicki are few and I’ve only seen them once. Thanks to Tubi losing the license before I could get to them, Sling coming out with them in the same way as YouTube, and the 24/7 streaming channel jumping between Doctors even if I had time to sit there and watch them live, I probably won’t get to for a very long time. What little I’ve seen shows she was a lot more bubbly than Susan, if I’m using the right word, and she did fulfill the “granddaughter” role without Susan’s knowledge as a space/time traveler (the show writers not yet deciding they were aliens called Time Lords). Apparently the actress got along well enough with William Hartnell.

You may have also noticed if you actually read the tags she’s listed with a last name she never had in the show, Pallister. This first appeared in one of the later non-adaptation original novels, Byzantium!, and later novels and Big Finish all ran with it as her now semi-official last name. According to the TARDIS fandom wiki they were going to name her Tanni at first, and later considered Millie (after a pop singer of the time), before finally settling on Vicki. Another piece of trivia:

She was written out of the show after Maureen O’Brien complained about her dialogue. This came as a shock to O’Brien, as she had not expressed any desire to leave. Both William Hartnell and Peter Purves (who played later Companion Steven) were upset at her departure and (script editor) Donald Tosh later admitted that it could have been handled better.

But enough trivia. We last left the Doctor about to have his throat cut out, so we really should check on that.

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“Yesterday’s” Comic> Hardcase #13

“Dang it, I DID leave a cake in the oven!”

Hardcase #13

Malibu Comics/Ultraverse (June, 1994)

“Turning Point”

WRITER: James Hudnall

PENCILER: Kelly Krantz

INKER: Jeff Whiting

COLORING: Moose Baumann & Foodhammer!

COVER ART: Scott Benefiel (penciler), Jasen Rodrigues (inker) & GCOX3 (colorist)

LETTERER: Dave Lanphear

EDITOR: Hank Kanalz

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BW’s Daily Video> The Peter Cushing Doctor Who Explained

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Jake & Leon #673> Because I Can

I didn’t have reference for Damian’s current costume, but I like the traditional Robin look anyway.

Over at The Clutter Reports this week I took my old reviews of the first Marvel G.I. Joe crossover with the Transformers and combined them into one updated article.

Time is short for me today, so just a quick update. It’s the same old stuff, really: Chapter By Chapter review of the novelization of Doctor Who: The Rescue and more from the second pitch for a CBS aired Transformers cartoon that never happened. Plus whatever else comes up during the week, the usual comic review lineup, and a bunch of videos from other people.

Have a great week, everyone!

Saturday Night Showcase> Babylon 5

In the 1990s J. Michael Straczynski, who worked on kids shows like He-Man & The Masters Of The Universe and The Real Ghostbusters, made a sci-fi show for adults that would become a classic in science fiction. Babylon 5 began as part of the Prime Time Entertainment Network, a failed attempt at creating a new television network. It came off more like a programming block, and in my area the shows aired late nite on the Fox affiliate, which I’m sure didn’t help. Babylon 5 would be one of the few shows in the lineup, Kung Fu: The Legend Continues being the closest thing to another success, while Time Trax is mostly known to people like me and I couldn’t even tell you what Pointman was outside of not about a superhero. I could have sworn the Tekwar TV movies that adapted William Shatner’s novels and led to a series on the USA Network aired here, but I can’t find evidence of that.

By now you know the deal. It’s the future. It takes place on a space station that’s become a gathering place for races across the galaxy. It has a tough commander, a no-nonsense but likable second in command and security chief…and that’s where you can compare it to a similar show from around that time: Star Trek: Deep Space Nine. Both series would also end up in a war and have a main character go off to be part of some cosmic event, but the details differ. Also, B5 was an intergalactic UN while DS9 was more of a waystation that ended up near a stable wormhole to another quadrant.

If you only know the show when it had left syndication for Turner Network Television, which started on the final season and a bunch of spinoffs, and those later episodes where all the big events happened, you’ll notice differences. Commander Jeffrey Sinclair you’ll be ready for given the future of Valen. Instead of Ivanova we have Takashima, since Tamlyn Tomita opted not to return for the series. Yes, Daniel’s love interest in the second Karate Kid movie. Doctor Kyle shares a skin color with Doctor Franklin and that’s it, with Johnny Sekka leaving for health reasons according to Wikipedia. Thus both characters wouldn’t make it past the pilot. Delenn has a bigger chin than you’ll be ready for because she didn’t do the cocoon bit yet and changes were made to various prosthetics for the series. I had forgotten what her make-up looked like in the old days. Wikipedia said they first planned her as male but the actress couldn’t get her voice low enough so she stayed female instead of transitioning, which is for the best, frankly. Garibaldi and all your other favorites are still here, though our first telepath, Lyta, makes her debut here. The series would take place a year later from “The Gathering”, the name of this TV movie pilot.

Enough about that, though. You came for the movie, and here it is. Note that they’re starting to roll this out on YouTube (odd given the current state of Warner Brothers and the bidding war) but there are places to watch the whole series online already, which I highly recommend. This version is actually a rework by TNT after the series was done. The original PTEN version is sadly not available, with different scenes cut and no references to what’s coming for Sinclair and company. Not much of a special edition since it still has the video game quality special effects. Apparently outer space runs on a PS2 and the original Playstation wasn’t even in stores yet. It was 2257. Enjoy.

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