Da Vinci's Robots (comic story): Difference between revisions

From Tardis Wiki, the free Doctor Who reference
m (INFOBOX CLEANUP: Getting rid of appending pipe in an infobox line)
m (linking to days of release or creating a single link from separate date and month links)
Line 16: Line 16:
|editor= [[Claire Lister]]
|editor= [[Claire Lister]]
|publication= [[DWBIT 61]]  
|publication= [[DWBIT 61]]  
|release date= [[7 January]] [[2009]]
|release date= [[7 January (releases)|7 January]] [[2009]]
|publisher= [[GE Fabbri Ltd]]
|publisher= [[GE Fabbri Ltd]]
|format= Comic - Part 1 of 2 (4 pages)
|format= Comic - Part 1 of 2 (4 pages)

Revision as of 03:53, 13 June 2013

RealWorld.png

Opening narration box

The Doctor drops in on Leonardo da Vinci and uncovers a mystery ...

Summary

Whilst leaving a many-tentacled, green creature to be blown up, the Doctor, having arrived in 15th Century Italy, decides to pop in and visit his friend Leonardo da Vinci. At the house, the Doctor is greeted by Leonardo's understudy Ludovico, who explains his master has locked himself away, leaving shopping lists out overnight.

The list contains a number of items that the Doctor finds puzzling and together they climb a back wall to reach Leonardo. The wall has been electrified - two hundred years before its time! In a workshop they find Leonardo in some sort of trance, building robots from suits of armour and components. When the Doctor tries to intervene, one of the robots grabs him by the throat...

Characters

Original print details

  • 1/2 DWBIT 61 (4 pages) TO BE CONTINUED…!
  • No reprints to date.

Notes

  • Supporting the series of collectable Doctor Who trading cards, the magazine carried a regular four-page comic strip series of the Tenth Doctor’s adventures.
  • The limitation of only four pages meant that stories often lacked depth compared to other regular comic strips running at the same time.
  • The artwork and colours were bold and bright, reflecting the tone of the magazine and, as did Doctor Who Adventures, reflected the appeal to readers younger than those catered to by Doctor Who Magazine.
  • The title of this story contains a grammatical error. "Da Vinci" was not Leonardo da Vinci's surname, but in fact a term simply referring to where Leonardo was from, so it is incorrect to refer to the artist as simply "Da Vinci."

References

  • The Battles in Time comic strip sought to reinforce the association of its Doctor with the one seen on screen with ‘props’ from the TV series: his blue/brown suit, sonic screwdriver, psychic paper and his intelligent glasses.

Continuity

to be added

External links