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I wrote the last story in this collection and colored a few others so I may be a bit biased. :)
Pour ce tome là, les choses sont clairement présentées, il s’agit de six histoires indépendantes, ce qui n’est pas plus mal.Mais ça veut aussi dire six dessinateurs différents et autant de styles à appréhender. La galerie des soupirsMartha et Ten arrivent sur Grȧtt, un monde sur lequel les émotions sont interdites.Le Docteur y retrouve la tombe de Grayla, une de ses anciennes compagnes qui avait pourtant l’intention de ne jamais retourner sur son monde d’origine.J’ai beaucoup aimé cette histoire...
This book varies in quality, the stories are exceptionally high quality and the whispering gallery and room with a déjà view especially amaze. The artwork is what in my opinion hinders this book at times. Although the whispering gallery is an amazing story I'm not a big fan of the abstract artwork they've used for the story. But in terms of inventiveness it's a great collection of doctor who stories, which really show some depth to the main characters and is a welcome addition to the doctor who
Good stories with The Doctor alone, with Martha, and with Donna. Lots of shout-outs to the original series (specifically Tom Baker and Leela). The illustration of the first story was not to my liking, but the others were well drawn. All the stories were good overall and all seemed to capture the patter and spirit of Tennant's Doctor. A nice read for Doctor Who fans.
I really liked this one. Each story was like having another episode from the show. All very well done. And the Donna Noble one was priceless! Leave it to Donna to point out how the Draconians have had women in charge of them their whole lives and they never realized it so why all this fuss over having a Queen instead of a King. It was great!
This IDW collection of a half dozen Doctor Who comic book one-shot adventures featuring the Tenth Doctor (David Tennant) is a bit hit and miss. The hits include the simplistically beautiful plot and gorgeous art in “The Whispering Gallery” (artist Templesmith is now another of this fan’s favorites) and the retcon-style story “The Time Machination” co-starring the original dreamer time-travel H. G. Wells (brilliantly realized by Tony Lee and visualized by Paul Grist’s perfectly-matched quirky sty...
A collection of six single stories featuring the tenth Doctor. The art was overall disappointing, and the stories, while fine, were not terribly interesting with the exception of Rich Johnston's Room with a Déjà View. It was nice to have two more Martha Jones stories; however, given her prominence on the cover, I had actually expected her to be featured throughout. CONTENTS: The Whispering Gallery by Leah Moore & John Reppion3 starsThe Time Machination by Tony Lee3 starsAutotopia by John Ostra...
http://nwhyte.livejournal.com/1365198.htmla nice half-dozen Tenth Doctor stories, originally published as separate comics and here as a single volume by IDW. I really bought it to read the first story, "The Whispering Gallery", which is by Leah and John, and am glad to say that I enjoyed it and most of the others (the exception being a typically cliched cute robot story in the middle). The standout, however, is Tony Lee's "The Time Machination", featuring Ten teaming up with H.G. Wells against T...
CUPID BOOK.👎
"The Whispering Gallery" is a nice, quiet peace exploring the Doctor's regrets as he travels through time [7/10]. "The Time Machination" is even better, with its intricate interrelations of time travel, historic personas, and relations to both the new and old shows [8/10]. "Autopia" is a fun and somewhat thoughtful story [7/10]. "Cold Blooded War" had some fun continuity but the story wasn't notable [5/10]. "Room with a Deja View" is a confusing but thoughtful story. [6/10]. Unfortunately the la...
I am a major fan of Doctor Who. Have been ever since the fourth Doctor was playing on PBS back in the 80's. When the series came back a few years ago, I was very happy and the stories were all topnotch. This graphic novel is full of terrific stories (if not always terrific art). The tenth Doctor's personality shines through clearly. And that personality made reading this book a lot of fun.
Note: (view spoiler)[I usually have no problems with written works/media tie-ins in the Doctor Who universe, as their characterizations are spot-on. It's often the plot and/or art which makes-or-breaks it. So I will be commenting on those.I'm picky about consistent art: meaning, the art style and quality is consistent throughout the story, and not the anthology. Different art styles for different stories are fine. (hide spoiler)]The Whispering GalleryConsistent art/style: ✖Story: ✔, but I though...
Probably the best of the IDW Doctor Who comics I've read thus far -- the fact that this is a collection of one-shots rather than a longer story arc works to its advantage. The artwork is more striking and experimental, and the stories are tighter and more interesting, with a reasonable mix of new-series flavor and old-series references. Not to say that all of this is wonderful -- I could have happily skipped a couple of the stories -- but there's definitely some entertainment to be found here.
I've giving this collection four stars because a couple of the stories really stood out for. I particularly liked the adventure with H. G. Wells and a couple others had some either darker themes or fairly creative narrative twists. I really probably should have given it three-stars, but those two or three stories really stood out for me.
This GN is a collection of short stories and each one features a different art style depicting the David Tennent Doctor. It was fun, the stories depend on a prior knowledge of Doctor Who. As a Doctor Who fan, this was kettlecorn reading: small bits of a specific kind of delight that doesn't have much impact on overall satiety. I won't be recommending this particular GN, but I do tend to recommend Doctor Who in general for scifi reading/viewing. It is kid friendly yet holds adult interest and off...
A mixed bag. Nothing really bad but nothing terribly exciting. The highlights were John Ostrander's "Autopia" and Rich Johnston's "Room with a Deja View". Donna is as fun in print as she is on the screen in the stories that feature her. I'd recommend some other Doctor Who volumes from IDW before this one, however.
This collection of six previously published comics featuring The tenth doctor is definitely worth your time. I especially enjoyed the stories with H.G. Wells embroiled with Torchwood and Donna taking on Draconian society.
800+ years ago, a man ran away; far, far away. Away from his people, from the responsibilities they wanted to heap upon him and from whatever destiny they saw for him that he didn’t want for himself. He stole a ship, a fantastic ship that allows him to travel not only through space, but through time. You see, his people, they mastered time long ago. They are called the Timelords and they live on the planet Galifrey.Well, they lived on the planet Galifrey. Still do though no one can visit them an...