Abzorbaloff: Difference between revisions

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=== Legacy ===
=== Legacy ===
When [[Davros]] asked the Doctor, "How many have died in your name?", the Abzorbaloff's victims were among those he remembered. ([[TV]]: ''[[Journey's End (TV story)|Journey's End]]'')
Two years following the Abzorbaloff's untimely death, [[Abzorbaloff (The Genuine Article)|his father]] sought revenge against the [[Tenth Doctor]], using the [[Krakanord]] to kill him. The Krakanord turned against him however, killing him on the spot with its [[acid]] [[blaster]]. ([[WC]]: ''[[The Genuine Article (webcast)|The Genuine Article]]'')
Two years following the Abzorbaloff's untimely death, [[Abzorbaloff (The Genuine Article)|his father]] sought revenge against the [[Tenth Doctor]], using the [[Krakanord]] to kill him. The Krakanord turned against him however, killing him on the spot with its [[acid]] [[blaster]]. ([[WC]]: ''[[The Genuine Article (webcast)|The Genuine Article]]'')


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== Behind the scenes ==
== Behind the scenes ==
[[File:Abzorbaloff by William Grantham.jpg|thumb|Abzorbaloff drawing by William Grantham]]
* The name and basic design for the Abzorbaloff came from a drawing by then nine-year-old [[William Grantham]], an entrant to a ''[[Blue Peter]]'' competition to design a monster for ''[[Doctor Who (TV series)|Doctor Who]]''. The on-screen Abzorbaloff remained mostly faithful to the drawing, with only a few changes. The drawing had depicted the Abzorbaloff as about the size of a "double-decker bus", rather than the human size it was depicted as in the episode.
* The name and basic design for the Abzorbaloff came from a drawing by then nine-year-old [[William Grantham]], an entrant to a ''[[Blue Peter]]'' competition to design a monster for ''[[Doctor Who (TV series)|Doctor Who]]''. The on-screen Abzorbaloff remained mostly faithful to the drawing, with only a few changes. The drawing had depicted the Abzorbaloff as about the size of a "double-decker bus", rather than the human size it was depicted as in the episode.
** Grantham, as an adult, set up the YouTube channel "[[ChannelPup]]" in which he released several videos about his creation.
** Grantham, as an adult, set up the YouTube channel "[[ChannelPup]]" in which he released several videos about his creation.

Latest revision as of 15:17, 24 August 2024

The "Abzorbaloff" was the name given by both the Tenth Doctor and Elton Pope to an Abzorbalovian (WC: Monster File: Slitheen) who disguised himself as a human under the name Victor Kennedy, by one account known as Victor Klum. (PROSE: The Visual Dictionary [+]Loading...["The Visual Dictionary (2007 reference book)"]) Elton and the Doctor had coined the name separately, with Elton initially suggesting Abzorbathon and Abzorbaling and the Doctor suggesting Abzorbatrix and Abzorbaclon.

He could absorb his victims' bodies, along with their memories and consciousnesses, into himself at a simple touch.

Biography[[edit] | [edit source]]

Origin[[edit] | [edit source]]

By his own word, the Abzorbaloff was born on Clom, the twin planet of Raxacoricofallapatorius. Despite a passing resemblance to them, he spoke of the Raxacoricofallapatorians with contempt — emphatically denying being one of them, calling them "swine", and saying that he "spit[s] on them". (TV: Love & Monsters) He was his father's firstborn son. (WC: The Genuine Article)

Using LINDA[[edit] | [edit source]]

By 2007, the Abzorbaloff lived the lifestyle of a wealthy human gentleman named Victor Kennedy. His personal items, a laptop and a briefcase, were branded VK. (TV: Love & Monsters) When he discovered the Doctor's picture on LINDA's website, (WC: Tardisode 10) Kennedy recruited them to locate the Doctor with the aid of Torchwood files that he had somehow obtained.

Feigning a common interest in this mystery figure, the Abzorbaloff picked off members of LINDA one by one, feasting on them until he could acquire his real quarry. He planned to absorb the Doctor's memories and knowledge. He was defeated when the remnants of the absorbed members of LINDA rallied together to pull him apart from inside. When Elton Pope broke his cane, the limitation field within it was destroyed. The Abzorbaloff's absorption ability went out of control, and his body collapsed into a gooey puddle and seeped into the ground. (TV: Love & Monsters)

Legacy[[edit] | [edit source]]

When Davros asked the Doctor, "How many have died in your name?", the Abzorbaloff's victims were among those he remembered. (TV: Journey's End)

Two years following the Abzorbaloff's untimely death, his father sought revenge against the Tenth Doctor, using the Krakanord to kill him. The Krakanord turned against him however, killing him on the spot with its acid blaster. (WC: The Genuine Article)

Whilst trapped in the Matrix, the Thirteenth Doctor remembered, amongst many others, the Abzorbaloff in order to break out of the computer system. (TV: The Timeless Children)

Personality[[edit] | [edit source]]

Historians who had been allowed access to the "Monster Vaults" of the databanks in the Doctor's TARDIS characterised the Abzorbaloff as a "ruthless, arrogant creature". (PROSE: The Monster Vault)

Abilities[[edit] | [edit source]]

"Victor" reveals his true form. (TV: Love & Monsters)

The physical absorption process was begun by a simple touch and was irreversible. Once fused into Victor's body, the faces of his victims would stretch out and could be seen embedded anywhere in his flesh (from his buttocks to his shoulders) and retained their identities and consciousnesses for several weeks at least. They could access the creature's own thoughts. Even after that time, remains of their faces were still visible and one appeared to have some movement in its lips. Victor also required the use of a limitation field, disguised as part of Kennedy's cane or the cane itself, to keep his absorption ability in check.

It would also seem that Victor possessed some kind of ability or technology that allowed him to change his appearance as he was able to take on the form of Victor Kennedy. (TV: Love & Monsters)

Victor Kennedy possessed a Vaio brand laptop which he used in his office. By using a handheld device, Victor was able to trace LINDA's location to Maccateer Street through their website. (WC: Tardisode 10) Later, when he met with LINDA in basement unit 4b, Victor was using a PowerBook G4 laptop. (TV: Love & Monsters) Victor also owned a pair of cufflinks. (PROSE: The Visual Dictionary [+]Loading...["The Visual Dictionary (reference book)"], TV: Love & Monsters [+]Loading...["Love & Monsters (TV story)"])

Behind the scenes[[edit] | [edit source]]

Abzorbaloff drawing by William Grantham
  • The name and basic design for the Abzorbaloff came from a drawing by then nine-year-old William Grantham, an entrant to a Blue Peter competition to design a monster for Doctor Who. The on-screen Abzorbaloff remained mostly faithful to the drawing, with only a few changes. The drawing had depicted the Abzorbaloff as about the size of a "double-decker bus", rather than the human size it was depicted as in the episode.
    • Grantham, as an adult, set up the YouTube channel "ChannelPup" in which he released several videos about his creation.
  • Dean Harris played Victor Kennedy in Tardisode 10. Only his hands were shown.[1]
  • On wide shots of the Abzorbaloff, the human faces on the body rubber; whenever one of the faces talks, there is either a CGI render of the actor's face over the rubber face or a close-up on it, with the actor's actual faces in green makeup.
  • As part of the "Insane Invasions" feature of Doctor Who Adventures, DWA 20 humourously contemplated a scenario in which the Abzorbaloff and the Wire, while attempting to invade the same planet, tried to absorb each other in a tug of war. Ultimately, the Abzorbaloff succeeds in absorbing the Wire, resulting in his stomach sporting a television screen with the Wire's image. In a clear reference to the Teletubbies, the Abzorbaloff exclaims "Eh-oh!" and is said to be getting his own show on CBeebies.
  • A occasional feature in Doctor Who children's magazines were games which depicted the Abzorbaloff absorbing several Doctor Who characters or aliens, who were to be identified by the reader.
  • In Kate Gordon's 2017 novel Twenty-five Memories of Viggo MacDuff, Jed complains to Connie Chase that the Beezus-juice "smells like the fart of an Abzorbaloff", a reference to the scene from Love & Monsters in which the Abzorbaloff farts on Bliss's absorbed face.

Footnotes[[edit] | [edit source]]