by: Jason Vaughn

If you’re not already a fan of what the Guinness World Records has deemed the most successful and longest running sci-fi series of all time, allow me to introduce you to the “Doctor.”  I think the 10th Doctor, David Tenant, said it best:

“I’m the Doctor. I’m a Time Lord. I’m from the planet Gallifrey in the Constellation of Kasterborous. I’m 903 years old and I’m the man who is gonna save your lives and all 6 billion people on the planet below. You got a problem with that?”

Unless you’re slow, you’ve already caught on to the fact the Doctor is an alien, and the last of one of the most powerful races in the galaxy, the Time Lords. The Doctor travels through time and space armed with only his wit, a sonic screw driver, a time traveling spacecraft in the shape of a 1950’s style London police call box, and the occasional traveling companion (a.k.a. the obligatory damsel in distress.) As you’d expect, an entity as old and as powerful as the Doctor amasses a vast collection of enemies as he travels the universe fighting for the little people (which more often than not is the planet Earth.) Oh, and his being burdened with constant guardianship over the time stream is kind of a pain in the ass, too.

Terms like “it’s bigger on the inside” and “behind the sofa” entered into my childhood lexicon at an early age as I fell in love with the classic series played on Saturday mornings after my cartoon faves “Dragon’s Lair” and “The Real Ghostbusters.” So needless to say, I was completely stoked when I heard in 2005 that a new season of the hit BBC series was going to be airing on the Sci-Fi Channel. I was equally as thrilled to learn there would be an accompanying comic series as well.

IDW continues their current series based on the show with the first issue of “Doctor Who” arriving on the shelves this Wednesday. But hold on a sec, I bet you’re saying to yourself, “Wait a minute, how can this be the first issue of a series that’s been ongoing for years?”  Ah, now see, that’s because the Doctor has changed over the years and the creators of the show had the forethought to instill a little bit of mythology into the Doctor’s physiology to cover their own rear-ends in case their lead ever left the show, or started to develop an ego the size of the Tardis’ interior. It’s fairly ingenious because if the Doctor is ever gravely injured, he can regenerate, but it results in his appearance and personality changing. It’s one of these types of regenerations that has lead us from IDW’s previous book starring the much beloved 10th Doctor, exuberantly performed by the talented thespian David Tenant, to our current 11th Doctor played by newcomer Matt Smith.

In this inaugural issue, we catch up with the Doctor and his two current companions from the show Amy Pond and her fiancé Rory Williams (who we all know is just an obstacle the writers put in between the attractive “damsel” Amy and the newly young Doctor) as they’re forced to land on an alien planet after the Tardis is infected with spam like holographic images and phisher like emails personified. But as is par for the course when traveling with the Doctor, the trio find themselves in the midst of an invasion by intergalactic mercenaries. Scribe Tony Lee’s story feels like it was lifted straight from the show, as if somehow the idea was pitched and the powers that be turned it down for budget issues but said, “That’d make a good graphic novel though.” And I’m digging how artist Andrew Currie has managed to capture the likeness of the leads so accurately, the panels feel as if he had the cast stand in as models while he was working. Currie seems to have duplicated Matt Smith’s wide gamut of emotions from that of an exasperated baby sitter, to contemplative scholar, to mischievous alien, with what appears to be great ease.

My only problem with the issue, and the series before it as well, is there are certain elements in the show which are naturally lost in print translation, and their loss lessen my enjoyment of the book as a “Dr. Who” property. To me, one of the reasons “Dr. Who” is such a time honored property is due, in large part, to the “cheese factor” of the show. You just don’t get the same effect in print as you do on film when it comes to low budget effects. Nothing can replicate watching a grown man walk around in a tin can screaming “Exxteerrrminaaate!” (I don’t know. How would you make special effects in a comic book seem cheesy? Put glitter on the paper?) Another small issue is the absence of the Doctor’s delivery. We can all agree that 90% of the time we have no idea what the hell the Doctor is talking about. It’s not so much the incomprehensible techno babble which tickles our inner nerd as it is the delivery of those lines from Tenant and now Smith. They both have their own unrestrained way of piping us like the Piper himself into the Doctor’s outlandish adventures keeping us coming back for more.

But with my completely unreasonable complaints aside, I’m sure long time fans of both the book and the show will describe this first issue in one word, “brilliant!”

Follow me on Twitter: @GoTodash.

 

For those of you mere mortals that don’t know your Heimdall from your Fandral, or the fact that “The Bard’s” bff Kenneth Branagh has been playing in an Asgardian sandbox lately, shame on you.  If you don’t know the Thunder God as the powerhouse Avenger, have no fear, for here’s a little peak of Thor’s origin story headed into theaters next year.   (Yes, the silly 80′s rocker hair aside, the guy was always pitted against Superman in all of those DC/Marvel crossover events.) Click on the link below to check out Marvel’s teaser site for the upcoming film along with the trailer.

Thor Movie Site!

Follow on twitter: Jason -@GoTodash

 

by: Jason Vaughn

It’s that time of year again where the bravest of us venture to malls filled to the brim with over-caffeinated parents trying to get that last talking Elmo plush.  Or maybe you’re trying your best not to drink too much eggnog (what’s really in that stuff anyway) while suppressing an overwhelming desire to snicker at your girlfriend’s mother’s overly festive sweater.  I don’t know about you guys, but I would rather spend my holiday season knocking back a few cold ones and picking the brains of some of the most talented people working in the industry.   Wait a minute, what did I just hear?  Was that a jolly fat man and eight tiny reindeer ?  Not quite, but it’s a holy Christmas miracle, Batman.  The fine peeps at Boom! Studios are giving me exactly what I wanted for the holidays!  Check out their latest announcement.

COME ONE, COME ALL TO THE BOOM! STUDIOS 2010 HOLIDAY PARTY @ MELTDOWN COMICS DECEMBER 13, 2010!

IT’S A PARTY AND EVERYONE’S INVITED!

December 1, 2010 – Los Angeles, CA – Can you believe it’s been a year since our last celebration? Neither can we! But it’s true. It’s time again for the BOOM! Studios holiday party at Meltdown comics, happening Monday, December 13 at 8pm! So won’t you join us? No guests lists, no velvet rope, if you’ve got the gas or the bus fare to make it to Meltdown Comics, you’re invited!

Who: Mix and Mingle with the BOOM! Crew!

When: Monday, December 13th, 8:00pm – till they kick us out!

Where: Meltdown Comics & Collectibles
7522 Sunset Blvd.
Los Angeles, CA, 90046

Why: FREE BEER while supplies last!
About BOOM! Studios
BOOM! Studios (www.boom-studios.com) 2009 “Best Publisher” of the year, generates a wide-ranging catalog of multiple Eisner and Harvey Award-nominated comic books and graphic novels featuring some of the industry’s top talent, including Philip K. Dick’s DO ANDROIDS DREAM OF ELECTRIC SHEEP?, 20th Century Fox’s 28 DAYS LATER and DIE HARD, The Henson Company’s FARSCAPE, and the original Mark Waid series IRREDEEMABLE. This fall sees BOOM! teaming up with the legendary Stan Lee, creator of Marvel Comics’ characters Spider-Man, The Hulk, and The X-Men for a line of original superhero series, the legend’s first new superhero creations in nearly 20 years. BOOM!’s youth imprint, BOOM Kids!, is an undisputed industry leader publishing Disney/Pixar’s THE INCREDIBLES, CARS, and TOY STORY, as well as Disney’s THE MUPPETS, DONALD DUCK, UNCLE SCROOGE and WALT DISNEY’S COMICS AND STORIES. This year, BOOM! Studios celebrates its fifth anniversary.

Follow on twitter: Jason -@GoTodash

 

by: Jason Vaughn

“It is a time of magic and monsters, a time when the civilized world has been reduced to a few scattered points of light glowing with stubborn determination amid a rising tide of shadows. It is a time when only the bravest dared to tread the wilds of the unknown…”

Welcome back, D&D!  Thanks to IDW Publishing, under license from Hasbro, Inc. and Wizards of the Coast, an all-new comic book series based on the crazy popular game launches next week.  For those who don’t know anything about “Dungeons & Dragons” (although you literally would had to have been living under a huge, all-consuming rock), it’s the biggest fantasy role-playing game ever.  It defined the genre, the industry and provided the social backdrop for countless number of fans for decades.   IDW’s “Dungeons & Dragons #1” is the inaugural issue of the first ongoing “Dungeons & Dragons” series in more than 20 years.

Ok, firstly, let me admit (much to the great relief of my internal teenage jock) that I didn’t play “Dungeons and Dragons” as a kid.  I missed out on the days of sitting in a dank basement in someone’s mother’s house with cardboard cutout swords, twelve-sided die and Led Zepplin playing in the background under a black light poster.  Fine, maybe not the Led Zep part – what?  Don’t look at me like that, it was college!  Now before you go and blow your helm and say that I’m just a role-player bashing troll, I’ll confess that much like Christine O’Donnell, “I too, am just like you.”  I may not have been into fantasy games as a kid, but as an adult, I‘ve completely embraced my inner nerd rage.  With the advent of MMORPGs, we now have the opportunity to pawn someone from half a world away… silly, silly newb.  Games like “World of Warcraft,” “Everquest,” and “Final Fantasy” owe their very existence to the grandfather of all role-playing games, D&D.  Jumping on to the bandwagon of RPG resurgence, the elven horde over at IDW is about to catapult a new ongoing “Dungeons & Dragons” title on to the shelves of Meltdown next week.  So until you’re able to loot a copy for your very own, let’s take a peek at the GM’s story page and see what’s in store for our not-so-merry band of adventurers.

Speaking of adventurers, no D&D campaign is complete without a diverse group of strangers from across the land coming together to fight for a common goal… or for common gold as often is the case .  (It’s a lot like the United Nations in that way, but I digress.)   The series artist Andrea Di Vito from Marvel’s “Thor” and “Nova,” renders such sharp characters that they look as if they just jumped out of a “Lord of the Rings” flick.  Adric Fell, a pirate like soldier-of-arms, leads a group consisting of a dwarven paladin named Kahl, the elven hunter Varis, the roguish halfling Bree, and the tiefling warlock Tisha (who resembles an unnatural breeding between a ram and elf.)   Having slayed the young black dragon and freed the human slaves in the Underdark (issue #0), we join our heroes as they enjoy a moment of relaxation in celebration of their recent victory.  The revelry doesn’t last long, however, as the group suddenly find themselves besieged upon by the walking dead.   (No, not the TV show, but yes they’re zombies).  In the course of defending himself, Adric slays several of the zombies only to find out a little too late they’re not the undead at all, but local villagers under a spell.  Now on the run for murder, Adric and his band of reluctant heroes must find out who’s behind a spell that’s turning normal folks into George A. Romero rejects all the while keeping their own skin intact in the process.

Writer John Rogers, “Transformers” screenwriter and co-creator of the television series “Leverage,” crafts an excellent introductory issue.  For those of us who might have missed the actual first issue “Dungeons and Dragons #0,” what I dig most about how this issue unfolds is Rogers’ avoidance of the overdone origin element.  Instead, he opts to throw us right into the middle of the story of Adric’s small band of adventurers.  This allows for a wide range of potential back story for future issues which is part and parcel for the D&D cannon.  And let’s face it, we’re all tired of the constant carbon copy “Avengers Assemble” feeling that most new team oriented books have.  The pacing was quick and the story moved along from page one.

I hope everyone has on their +5 dexterity cloaks when the “Dungeons & Dragons – Dark Sun” limited series releases right on the heels of this title in January because it’s going to be one wild ride full of gold, goblins, and gear.  And for all of you actual D&D players out there, don’t forget to check out the last two pages of the issue for a cool treat.

If anyone can guess where the title of this column originated from, then congratulations, you just won yourself Meltdown’s very own version of a “no-prize!”  Stephen Lynch has to be the funniest person with a guitar and too much time on his hands since Adam Sandler’s days with SNL.  (Now there’s an idea for “Comics on Comics.”)  Check out his album “Superhero” which includes the aforementioned “D&D,” then follow Stephen on twitter @TheStephenLynch and myself @GoTodash.

 
dollhouse

As you flip around the television looking for something to watch, do you find yourself missing the days of Joss Whedon’s cool Dollhouse on FOX?  Yeah, us, too… but cheer up, Meltheads, because Dollhouse lives on in our favorite medium!  Dark Horse Publishing and the little marketing elves at FOX came up with a great plan and a new, limited edition comic entitled “Epitaphs” is being exclusively packaged with the Dollhouse Season 2 DVD.

But wait, there’s more!  “Epitaphs” is written by none other than Dollhouse series writers Jed Whedon & Maurissa Tancharoen who also wrote the key epilogue episodes of the series, Epitaph 1 and 2.  And yes, Jed and Maurissa are two of the brains behind the genius “Dr. Horrible” musical.  In both the series and the comic, the “Epitaphs “stories tell how the destructive Dollhouse technology went from being just used on Actives to going global and destroying the world.  The comic, like the show, features the popular characters of “Mag” (Felicia Day) and “Zone” (Zack Ward.)

But wait, there’s still more!  While the first issue of the Dollhouse comic series is featured with the DVD, the good folks at Dark Horse will also be releasing a one-shot follow up and later down the line, a mini-series of the title.  So, to get a little more info on it all, Jason and I went straight to the source – Jed and Maurissa themselves.

S – While the show was in production, was there a plan for a DH comic?

J&M – Originally, a Dollhouse comic was out of the question.  As a new show, we were already off to a rough start… Joss didn’t want to complicate issues by adding anything to his already packed plate.  And with Dollhouse’s intricate premise, it was a bit challenging to envision it in a comic book format.  But as the series progressed and we discovered the apocalyptic world of the Epitaphs, the idea began to appeal to us.  Slowly but surely.

S – Who approached you to write it?  Joss?

J&M – Scott Allie at Dark Horse always kept the idea for the comic alive.  So pushy, that Scott!  But good on him, because here we are.  We started brainstorming together, presented our ideas to Joss, and he gave us the go ahead.

S – Is any of the story to come something we would have seen in a season 3 of the series?

J&M – Possibly.  The very mention of a Season Three is giving us the giggles.  Giggles that are suppressing our tears.

J – How many of the DH characters will make an appearance or have an arc?

J&M – Some of the main characters established in the series will appear in the comics.  And we’ll introduce some new faces as well.

J – How many issues of this run are planned?

J&M – Six altogether, including the issue that was featured in the Season Two dvd.

J – Now that you’re officially comic writers, any plans for original titles?

J&M -Doing an original title would be fun, but we have a lot of TV writing keeping us busy right now…

S – Aside from the DH comic, what other projects are you working on?

J&M – We’re currently writing on the prequel and Season Two of Spartacus on Starz.  We’re also working on a few feature and pilot ideas that we’ve been wanting to conquer for a while now.  And of course we’re always working on material for Dr. Horrible 2.  Joss has a few songs that he’s going to play for us some point soon, but his schedule is a kind of tight right now.  He’s writing some indie feature called “Avengers”?  We’re always like, “Joss, do your career a favor and think bigger.  Reach higher.”  But he doesn’t listen.


We want to thank Jed and Maurissa for giving us a little insight into the upcoming DH series.  These are definitely two writers to keep your eyes on as they continue to build upon their impressive credits.  We’ll be watching Spartacus, and like most of the free world, be eagerly awaiting a follow-up to “Dr. Horrible.”  Can’t wait to see what projects are coming up next!

Follow us on twitter: Stacey – @TVStaceyLevin; Jason – @GoTodash.


©2012 Meltdown, Inc. WP retouched by the hand of FD for Meltdown, Inc.