TV Action: Difference between revisions

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|release date = 1971 - 1973
|release date = 1971 - 1973
}}{{you may|Countdown|n1=the game show|TV Action! (comic story)|n2=the comic story}}
}}{{you may|Countdown (disambiguation)|n1=another thing named "countdown"}}
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{{Big toc}}
'''''TV Action''''' was the final name of a weekly [[Polystyle Publications, Ltd.|Polystyle]] comics magazine that began its run under the name, '''''Countdown'''''. Published in Britain from 1971 to 1973, the magazine contained comic adaptations of television programmes, but targeted a slightly older audience than its sister publication, ''[[TV Comic]]''. The ''[[Doctor Who]]'' strip moved to ''Countdown''. 
'''''TV Action''''' was the final name of a weekly [[Polystyle Publications, Ltd.|Polystyle]] comics magazine that began its run under the name, '''''Countdown'''''. Published in Britain from 1971 to 1973, the magazine contained comic adaptations of television programmes, but targeted a slightly older audience than its sister publication, ''[[TV Comic]]''.


== Overview ==
== Overview ==
In the late 1960s, Polystyle was eager to start a magazine that appealed to a slightly older audience than its ''de facto'' television adaptation flagship, ''[[TV Comic]]''. Whereas that publication had debuted with "funny animal" comics and adaptations of young childrens' shows like ''[[Muffin the Mule]]'', they wanted something to compete with ''[[TV Century 21]]'', which had been replete with comics based on [[Gerry Anderson]] properties. When that magazine folded, the license to print Gerry Anderson comics became available. Polystyle seized on it, buying not just the right to do new comics, but to reprint what had come before in ''TV21''. SInce shows like ''Stingray'', ''Thunderbirds'', ''UFO'' and ''Fireball XLV'' all had a kind of space-age theme, a natural title was ''Countdown''. To reinforce the theme, Polystyle unusually numbered the pages backward, so that readers were "counting down" to 1 as they read.
In the late 1960s, Polystyle was eager to start a magazine that appealed to a slightly older audience than its ''de facto'' television adaptation flagship, ''[[TV Comic]]''. Whereas that publication had debuted with "funny animal" comics and adaptations of young children's shows like ''[[Muffin the Mule (series)|Muffin the Mule]]'', they wanted something to compete with ''[[TV Century 21]]'', which had been replete with comics based on [[Gerry Anderson]] properties. When that magazine folded, the license to print Gerry Anderson comics became available. Polystyle seized on it, buying not just the right to do new comics, but to reprint what had come before in ''TV21''. Since shows like ''[[Stingray (series)|Stingray]]'', ''[[Thunderbirds (series)|Thunderbirds]]'', ''UFO'' and ''[[Fireball XL5 (series)|Fireball XL5]]'' all had a kind of space-age theme, a natural title was ''Countdown''. To reinforce the theme, Polystyle unusually numbered the pages backward, so that readers were "counting down" to 1 as they read.


Unfortunately for Polystyle, public enthusiasm for Anderson properties was drying up. All these shows, except for ''UFO'', had been cancelled by the time ''Countdown'' debuted. Dwindling sales figures quickly reflected the market's lack of appetite for a comic based mostly on programming that was no longer on the air. The publisher had to move to re-orient the publication. Polystyle sought licenses to produce wholly original comics based on popular action shows still in production. As the Gerry Anderson material gradually faded, so too did the ''Countdown'' name. At issue 59, they started numbering the pages in normal order. By the time the magazine became ''TV Action'' it had little to do with science fiction and much more to do with shows like ''Hawaii 5-0'', ''Tightrope'', ''Mission: Impossible'' and ''The Pretenders''. Unfortunately, the changes never put the magazine on solid financial footing and it folded after only a little more than two years.
Unfortunately for Polystyle, public enthusiasm for Anderson properties was drying up. All these shows, except for ''UFO'', had been cancelled by the time ''Countdown'' debuted. Dwindling sales figures quickly reflected the market's lack of appetite for a comic based mostly on programming that was no longer on the air. The publisher had to move to re-orient the publication. Polystyle sought licenses to produce wholly original comics based on popular action shows still in production. As the Gerry Anderson material gradually faded, so too did the ''Countdown'' name. At issue 59, they started numbering the pages in normal order. By the time the magazine became ''TV Action'' it had little to do with science fiction and much more to do with shows like ''Hawaii 5-0'', ''Tightrope'', ''[[Mission: Impossible (franchise)|Mission: Impossible]]'' and ''The Protectors''. Unfortunately, the changes never put the magazine on solid financial footing and it folded after only a little more than two years.


In the end, ''Doctor Who'' proved the longest-running strip of the magazine, having been left out of about five issues along the way. Although it failed to make the final issue of ''TV Action'', it survived by returning to the pages of ''TV Comic''.
In the end, ''[[Doctor Who]]'' proved the longest-running strip of the magazine, having been left out of about five issues along the way. Although it failed to make the final issue of ''TV Action'', it survived by returning to the pages of ''TV Comic''.


== Title ==
== Title ==
The oft-changing title of this publication has created confusion amongst fans of ''Doctor Who'', who are generally uninterested in the broader contents of the magazine. Some have mistakenly believed that ''TV Action'' and ''Countdown'' were two separate magazines. In fact, the change was too gradual to produce a bright dividing line between what was ''Countdown'' and what was ''TV Action''. The plurality of issues were actually published under ''both'' names. Moreover, the numbering system was preserved throughout the transformation.  
The oft-changing title of this publication has created confusion amongst fans of ''Doctor Who'', who are generally uninterested in the broader contents of the magazine. Some have mistakenly believed that ''TV Action'' and ''Countdown'' were two separate magazines. In fact, the change was too gradual to produce a bright dividing line between what was ''Countdown'' and what was ''TV Action''. The plurality of issues were actually published under ''both'' names. Moreover, the numbering system was preserved throughout the transformation.
 
=== Cover titles ===
=== Cover titles ===
Although the title on the cover changed every few months, it was stylistically similar throughout the first hundred issues. While the word ''Countdown'' appeared on the cover, the title was always placed in a red banner across the top sixth of the page. After the title became just ''TV Action'', this practice was abandoned. On the final thirty-two issues, ''TV Action'' became merely a logo at the top of a full page of art..
Although the title on the cover changed every few months, it was stylistically similar throughout the first hundred issues. While the word ''Countdown'' appeared on the cover, the title was always placed in a red banner across the top sixth of the page. After the title became just ''TV Action'', this practice was abandoned. On the final thirty-two issues, ''TV Action'' became merely a logo at the top of a full page of art..
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== Stories by issue ==
== Stories by issue ==
* 1-5: ''[[Gemini Plan (comic story)|Gemini Plan]]''
{| {{prettytable}}
* 6-13: ''[[Timebenders]]''
|-
* 15-22: ''[[The Vogan Slaves]]''
! Title
* 23-32: ''[[The Celluloid Midas]]''
!Featuring
* 33-39: ''[[Backtime]]''
!Printed in||Released
* 40-46: ''[[The Eternal Present]]''
|-
* 47-54: ''[[Sub Zero (comic story)|*Sub Zero]]'' (later collected in ''[[Sub Zero (graphic novel)|*Sub Zero]]'')
|''[[Gemini Plan (comic story)|Gemini Plan]]''
* 55-62: ''[[The Planet of the Daleks]]''
| rowspan="4" |
* 63-70: ''[[A Stitch in Time (comic story)|A Stitch in Time]]''
|1-5
* 71-78: ''[[The Enemy from Nowhere]]''
|[[20 February (releases)|20 February]] - [[20 March (releases)|20 March]] [[1971 (releases)|1971]]
* 79-88: ''[[The Ugrakks]]''
|-
* 89-93: ''[[Steelfist]]''
|''[[Timebenders (comic story)|Timebenders]]''
* 94-100: ''[[Zeron Invasion]]''
|6-13
* 101-103: ''[[Deadly Choice]]''
|[[27 March (releases)|27 March]] - [[15 May (releases)|15 May]] 1971
* 104: ''[[Who is the Stranger]]''
|-
* 107-111: ''[[The Glen of Sleeping]]''
|''[[The Vogan Slaves (comic story)|The Vogan Slaves]]''
* 112: ''[[The Threat from Beneath]]''
|15-22  
* 116-119: ''[[Back to the Sun]]''
|[[29 May (releases)|29 May]] - [[17 July (releases)|17 July]] 1971
* 120: ''[[The Labyrinth]]''
|-
* 123: ''[[The Spoilers]]''
|''[[The Celluloid Midas (comic story)|The Celluloid Midas]]''
* 125-129: ''[[The Vortex]]''
|23-32
* 131: ''[[The Unheard Voice]]''
|[[24 July (releases)|24 July]] - [[25 September (releases)|25 September]] 1971
|-
|''[[The Plant Master (comic story)|The Plant Master]]''
|[[Dave Lester]]
|[[Countdown Annual 1972|Annual 1972]]
|[[1 September (releases)|1 September]] 1971
|-
|''[[Backtime (comic story)|Backtime]]''
|[[Charlie Fisher]]
|33-39
|[[2 October (releases)|2 October]] - [[13 November (releases)|13 November]] 1971
|-
|''[[The Eternal Present (comic story)|The Eternal Present]]''
|[[Theophilus Tolliver]]
|40-46
|[[20 November (releases)|20 November]] 1971 - [[1 January (releases)|1 January]] [[1972 (releases)|1972]]
|-
|''[[*Sub Zero (comic story)|*Sub Zero]]''
|[[Dalek]]s
|47-54, ''[[Sub Zero (graphic novel)|*Sub Zero]]''
|[[8 January (releases)|8 January]] - [[26 February (releases)|26 February]] 1972
|-
|''[[The Planet of the Daleks (comic story)|The Planet of the Daleks]]''
|[[Finney]], [[Dalek]]s
|55-62
|[[4 March (releases)|4 March]] - [[22 April (releases)|22 April]] 1972
|-
|''[[A Stitch in Time (TVA comic story)|A Stitch in Time]]''
|[[Brod (A Stitch in Time)|Brod]]
|63-70
|[[29 April (releases)|29 April]] - [[17 June (releases)|17 June]] 1972
|-
|''[[The Enemy from Nowhere (comic story)|The Enemy from Nowhere]]''
|[[Davie Jenkins]]
|71-78
|[[24 June (releases)|24 June]] - [[12 August (releases)|12 August]] 1972
|-
|''[[The Ugrakks (comic story)|The Ugrakks]]''  
|[[Lammers]]
|79-88
|[[19 August (releases)|19 August]] - [[21 October (releases)|21 October]] 1972
|-
|''[[Ride to Nowhere (comic story)|Ride to Nowhere]]''
| rowspan="2" |
|[[Countdown for TV Action Annual 1973|Annual 1973]]
|[[1 September (releases)|1 September]] 1972
|-
|''[[Steelfist (comic story)|Steelfist]]''
|89-93
|[[28 October (releases)|28 October]] - [[25 November (releases)|25 November]] 1972
|-
|''[[Zeron Invasion (comic story)|Zeron Invasion]]''
|[[Nick Willard]]
|94-100
|[[2 December (releases)|2 December]] 1972 - [[13 January (releases)|13 January]] [[1973 (releases)|1973]]
|-
|''[[Deadly Choice (comic story)|Deadly Choice]]''  
| rowspan="2" |
|101-103
|[[20 January (releases)|20 January]] - [[3 February (releases)|3 February]] 1973
|-
|''[[Who is the Stranger (comic story)|Who is the Stranger]]''
|104
|[[10 February (releases)|10 February]] 1973
|-
|''[[The Glen of Sleeping (comic story)|The Glen of Sleeping]]''
|{{Delgado|n=The Master}}
|107-111
|[[3 March (releases)|3 March]] - [[31 March (releases)|31 March]] 1973
|-
|''[[The Threat from Beneath (comic story)|The Threat from Beneath]]''  
|[[Dalek]]s
|112
|[[7 April (releases)|7 April]] 1973
|-
|''[[Back to the Sun (comic story)|Back to the Sun]]''
| rowspan="6" |
|116-119
|[[5 May (releases)|5 May]] - [[26 May (releases)|26 May]] 1973
|-
|''[[The Labyrinth (comic story)|The Labyrinth]]''
|120
|[[2 June (releases)|2 June]] 1973
|-
|''[[The Spoilers (comic story)|The Spoilers]]''
|123
|[[23 June (releases)|23 June]] 1973
|-
|''[[The Vortex (comic story)|The Vortex]]''
|125-129
|[[7 July (releases)|7 July]] - [[4 August (releases)|4 August]] 1973
|-
|''[[The Unheard Voice (comic story)|The Unheard Voice]]''
|131
|[[18 August (releases)|18 August]] 1973
|-
|''[[The Hungry Planet (comic story)|The Hungry Planet]]''
|[[TV Action Annual 1974|Annual 1974]]
|[[1 September (releases)|1 September]] 1973
|}


== Special issues ==
== Special issues ==
* TV Action Holiday 1971: ''[[The Thing from Outer Space]]''
=== Holiday specials ===
* TV Action Holiday 1972: ''[[And Now for My Next Trick...]]''
* Countdown Holiday Special 1971
* TV Action Annual 1972: ''[[The Plant Master]]''
** [[PROSE]]: ''[[The Thing from Outer Space (short story)|The Thing from Outer Space]]''
* TV Action Annual 1973: ''[[Ride to Nowhere]]''
* TV Action + Countdown Holiday Special 1972
* TV Action Annual 1974: ''[[The Hungry Planet]]''
** [[PROSE]]: ''[[And for My Next Trick... (short story)|And for My Next Trick...]]''
* TV Action Holiday Special 1973
** [[PROSE]]: ''[[The One Second Hour (short story)|The One Second Hour]]''
 
=== Annuals ===
* Countdown Annual 1972
** [[COMIC]]: ''[[The Plant Master (comic story)|The Plant Master]]''
* Countdown for TV Action Annual 1973
** [[COMIC]]: ''[[Ride to Nowhere (comic story)|Ride to Nowhere]]''
* TV Action Annual 1974
** [[COMIC]]: ''[[The Hungry Planet (comic story)|The Hungry Planet]]''


== External links ==
== External links ==
{{dwrefguide|tvaction3.htm|Countdown/TV Action - Comic Strips}}
{{dwrefguide|tvaction3.htm|Countdown/TV Action - Comic Strips}}
{{Third Doctor Polystyle comics}}


[[Category:Comic magazines]]
[[Category:Comic magazines]]
[[Category:Polystyle Publications]]
[[Category:Polystyle Publications]]

Latest revision as of 20:49, 3 November 2024

RealWorld.png

You may be looking for another thing named "countdown".

TV Action was the final name of a weekly Polystyle comics magazine that began its run under the name, Countdown. Published in Britain from 1971 to 1973, the magazine contained comic adaptations of television programmes, but targeted a slightly older audience than its sister publication, TV Comic.

Overview[[edit] | [edit source]]

In the late 1960s, Polystyle was eager to start a magazine that appealed to a slightly older audience than its de facto television adaptation flagship, TV Comic. Whereas that publication had debuted with "funny animal" comics and adaptations of young children's shows like Muffin the Mule, they wanted something to compete with TV Century 21, which had been replete with comics based on Gerry Anderson properties. When that magazine folded, the license to print Gerry Anderson comics became available. Polystyle seized on it, buying not just the right to do new comics, but to reprint what had come before in TV21. Since shows like Stingray, Thunderbirds, UFO and Fireball XL5 all had a kind of space-age theme, a natural title was Countdown. To reinforce the theme, Polystyle unusually numbered the pages backward, so that readers were "counting down" to 1 as they read.

Unfortunately for Polystyle, public enthusiasm for Anderson properties was drying up. All these shows, except for UFO, had been cancelled by the time Countdown debuted. Dwindling sales figures quickly reflected the market's lack of appetite for a comic based mostly on programming that was no longer on the air. The publisher had to move to re-orient the publication. Polystyle sought licenses to produce wholly original comics based on popular action shows still in production. As the Gerry Anderson material gradually faded, so too did the Countdown name. At issue 59, they started numbering the pages in normal order. By the time the magazine became TV Action it had little to do with science fiction and much more to do with shows like Hawaii 5-0, Tightrope, Mission: Impossible and The Protectors. Unfortunately, the changes never put the magazine on solid financial footing and it folded after only a little more than two years.

In the end, Doctor Who proved the longest-running strip of the magazine, having been left out of about five issues along the way. Although it failed to make the final issue of TV Action, it survived by returning to the pages of TV Comic.

Title[[edit] | [edit source]]

The oft-changing title of this publication has created confusion amongst fans of Doctor Who, who are generally uninterested in the broader contents of the magazine. Some have mistakenly believed that TV Action and Countdown were two separate magazines. In fact, the change was too gradual to produce a bright dividing line between what was Countdown and what was TV Action. The plurality of issues were actually published under both names. Moreover, the numbering system was preserved throughout the transformation.

Cover titles[[edit] | [edit source]]

Although the title on the cover changed every few months, it was stylistically similar throughout the first hundred issues. While the word Countdown appeared on the cover, the title was always placed in a red banner across the top sixth of the page. After the title became just TV Action, this practice was abandoned. On the final thirty-two issues, TV Action became merely a logo at the top of a full page of art..

  • 1-18 Countdown
  • 19-45 Countdown The Space-age Comic!
  • 46-56 Countdown for TV Action!
  • 57-58 TV Action in Countdown
  • 59-100 TV Action + Countdown
  • 101-132 TV Action

Indicia titles[[edit] | [edit source]]

The situation is even more confusing if one looks at the indicia, or legal, title:

  • 1-45 Countdown
  • 46-56 Countdown to TV Action
  • 57-58 TV Action incorporating Countdown
  • 59-100 TV Action & Countdown
  • 101-132 TV Action

Stories by issue[[edit] | [edit source]]

Title Featuring Printed in Released
Gemini Plan 1-5 20 February - 20 March 1971
Timebenders 6-13 27 March - 15 May 1971
The Vogan Slaves 15-22 29 May - 17 July 1971
The Celluloid Midas 23-32 24 July - 25 September 1971
The Plant Master Dave Lester Annual 1972 1 September 1971
Backtime Charlie Fisher 33-39 2 October - 13 November 1971
The Eternal Present Theophilus Tolliver 40-46 20 November 1971 - 1 January 1972
*Sub Zero Daleks 47-54, *Sub Zero 8 January - 26 February 1972
The Planet of the Daleks Finney, Daleks 55-62 4 March - 22 April 1972
A Stitch in Time Brod 63-70 29 April - 17 June 1972
The Enemy from Nowhere Davie Jenkins 71-78 24 June - 12 August 1972
The Ugrakks Lammers 79-88 19 August - 21 October 1972
Ride to Nowhere Annual 1973 1 September 1972
Steelfist 89-93 28 October - 25 November 1972
Zeron Invasion Nick Willard 94-100 2 December 1972 - 13 January 1973
Deadly Choice 101-103 20 January - 3 February 1973
Who is the Stranger 104 10 February 1973
The Glen of Sleeping The Master 107-111 3 March - 31 March 1973
The Threat from Beneath Daleks 112 7 April 1973
Back to the Sun 116-119 5 May - 26 May 1973
The Labyrinth 120 2 June 1973
The Spoilers 123 23 June 1973
The Vortex 125-129 7 July - 4 August 1973
The Unheard Voice 131 18 August 1973
The Hungry Planet Annual 1974 1 September 1973

Special issues[[edit] | [edit source]]

Holiday specials[[edit] | [edit source]]

Annuals[[edit] | [edit source]]

External links[[edit] | [edit source]]