The Celluloid Midas (comic story): Difference between revisions
From Tardis Wiki, the free Doctor Who reference
OttselSpy25 (talk | contribs) Tag: sourceedit |
OttselSpy25 (talk | contribs) Tag: sourceedit |
||
Line 63: | Line 63: | ||
:(Publication with page count and closing captions) | :(Publication with page count and closing captions) | ||
* TVA 23 (3 pages) To be continued! | * TVA 23 (3 pages) To be continued! | ||
* TVA 24 (2 pages) | * TVA 24 (2 pages) TO BE CONTINUED! | ||
* TVA 25 (2 pages) To be continued ! | * TVA 25 (2 pages) To be continued! | ||
* TVA 26 (2 pages) To be continued ! | * TVA 26 (2 pages) To be continued! | ||
* TVA 27 (2 pages) MORE NEXT WEEK ! | * TVA 27 (2 pages) MORE NEXT WEEK ! | ||
* TVA 28 (2 pages) TO BE CONTINUED! | * TVA 28 (2 pages) TO BE CONTINUED! |
Revision as of 13:36, 31 May 2017
The Celluloid Midas was a Third Doctor comic story published in TV Action.
Summary
to be added
Characters
- Third Doctor
- Inspector
- Joe
- Sir Oswald Holland, Minister of Defence
- Professor Nichols
- Franklin Hughes
- Jamie Ferguson
- Cedric Chambers
- Lord Summerford
- Denis Peters
- Ned
- Professor Midas
- Rufus Elmsworth
- Sergeant Roberts
- Mechanic
- Thatcher
- Field Commander
- O'Shea
References
- Puddlesfield
- The Squire of Crampton
- The Doctor is described as an ex-Time Lord.
- The Doctor stops Ned through the use of Venusian karate.
- According to the guard, many citizens in the village attempted to fight to stop Midas, including the Vicar, Squire Ferfuson, Doctor Sims, and others, but they all became statues in Midas' processing room.
- While searching for a way to reverse the process of Midas' gun ray, the Doctor deduces that the answer must be found in the emerald filament. He finds the solution to be simple, as he increases the input of the crystal generator and bypasses the circuit.
Notes
- Sir Oswald Holland is referred to as "Sir Oswald Rippon" in the first instalment.
- Bessie is called "Betsy" in this story.
- Denis Peters works for Department Three.
- The title possibly alludes to the mythical King Midas, a ruler who was cursed for his excessive greed with a touch that turned everything to gold.
Original print details
- (Publication with page count and closing captions)
- TVA 23 (3 pages) To be continued!
- TVA 24 (2 pages) TO BE CONTINUED!
- TVA 25 (2 pages) To be continued!
- TVA 26 (2 pages) To be continued!
- TVA 27 (2 pages) MORE NEXT WEEK !
- TVA 28 (2 pages) TO BE CONTINUED!
- TVA 29 (2 pages) TO BE CONTINUED!
- TVA 30 (2 pages) To be continued !
- TVA 31 (2 pages) More next week!
- TVA 32 (2 pages) Great new story next week!
Continuity
to be added
External links
|