The excellent Worlds of Wonder Exhibition, previously in Liverpool and Edinburgh, and currently in New Zealand, is heading for the United States next - to the San Diego ComicCon Museum to be exact. It will open there in March 2025. Since I visited it in Edinburgh, 60th Anniversary and Series 14 items have been added.
I'm not a big comics reader, other than the strip in DWM and the old TV Comic / TV Action / Countdown material. I've had a look at the first chapter of this and looks interesting, so will certainly give it a go.
ReplyDeletehttps://doctorwhopaneltopanel.blogspot.com/
DeleteIt also being preserved here.
I highly recommend it; it can be considered the unofficial 45th anniversary special
ReplyDeleteIf you were curious, you can also check out thr Doctor Who fan film "El Mundo Imperfecto" on YouTube. It is in Spanish so you have to turn on the captions. The acting is good.
ReplyDeleteWill check that out too. You might not see me mention anything about these on the blog, as I tend to concentrate exclusively on televised Doctor Who.
ReplyDeleteI don't know how far you may have read, but the "Ten Doctors" comic by Rich Morris might just be the best multi-Doctor story. It somehow manages to keep the first 10 Doctors and their companions busy with a huge storyline that somehow, at least to me, never gets to big to comprehend yet covers basically everyone and everything in the Doctor Who universe up to that point. It's grandiose and yet small at the same time, with the time spent with careful attention to the personalites of the Doctors and friends. With all the weight of a TV multi-Doctor story, you don't usually get to see these sorts of interactions because the bigger plot takes up the runtime. Here, we have time for both. And that's just fantastic
ReplyDeleteThe comic is *fantastic*. It’s amazing how Rich not only weaves together the stories of dozens of characters and slots them neatly into the overall plot, but also manages to nail the personalities of every memorable character (Doctors, companions, Sabalom Glitz) and cartoonify them so well that most of the characters are instantly recognizable. I read this a few years ago, and had a hard time trying to *not* turning another page (well, loading the next page anyway) in this epic-sized labor of love.
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