The Forgotten (comic story): Difference between revisions

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*Due to an unknown error, the dialogue on Page 1 of Issue 6 didn't print. The absence of the dialogue has caused confusion over whether the villain was meant to be the [[Meta-Crisis Tenth Doctor]] or [[The Valeyard]], since most references to it were on this page (although the Doctor refers to the villain as the Valeyard on a later page). The dialogue was later fixed in the trade paperback release. [http://forum.idwpublishing.com/viewtopic.php?t=5303&highlight=]
*Due to an unknown error, the dialogue on Page 1 of Issue 6 didn't print. The absence of the dialogue has caused confusion over whether the villain was meant to be the [[Meta-Crisis Tenth Doctor]] or [[The Valeyard]], since most references to it were on this page (although the Doctor refers to the villain as the Valeyard on a later page). The dialogue was later fixed in the trade paperback release. [http://forum.idwpublishing.com/viewtopic.php?t=5303&highlight=]
*The fact the villain takes the form of the Meta-Crisis Doctor, and refers to himself as the [[Valeyard]], has added credence to the rumour that the Meta-Crisis Tenth Doctor could be destined to become the Valeyard. The Doctor himself however laughs at this idea in the story. Until such a time as a connection is actually made, the fact the villain chooses "The Valeyard" as his alias means that's the villain being impersonated here, no matter what he actually looks like.
*The fact the villain takes the form of the Meta-Crisis Doctor, and refers to himself as the [[Valeyard]], has added credence to the rumour that the Meta-Crisis Tenth Doctor could be destined to become the Valeyard. The Doctor himself however laughs at this idea in the story. Until such a time as a connection is actually made, the fact the villain chooses "The Valeyard" as his alias means that's the villain being impersonated here, no matter what he actually looks like.
*The plot of this story is very similar to the novel [[The Eight Doctors]] because:
*This story contains several plot points reminiscent of the novel [[The Eight Doctors]].
**The Tenth Doctor loses his memory. like The Eight Doctor
**The Tenth Doctor loses his memory. like the Eighth Doctor
**There are multiple references to his old adventures.
**The Doctor revisits, after a fashion, the events of his past adventures.
**The Doctor has an encounter with his previous incarnations.
**The Doctor has an encounter with his previous incarnations, though in this case it is mental projections of them rather than the genuine articles.


==Cover gallery==
==Cover gallery==

Revision as of 02:58, 11 October 2011

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For the graphic novel, see The Forgotten (graphic novel)

The Forgotten (comic story) was a Tenth Doctor comic published by IDW from 2008 to 2009. It is notable for its inclusion of many historical Doctor Who elements.

Summary

The Tenth Doctor discovers a museum dedicated to his lives and has to remember events from his previous incarnations in order to restore his fading memories.

Plot

Issue 1: Amputation

The Doctor wakes up in a strange room without the TARDIS or the sonic screwdriver. He finds Martha Jones and together they explore the building. They soon learn that it is a museum dedicated to the Doctor.

The different displays consist of things such as a Dalek gun, the Seal of Rassilon, and a Voord helmet. They then enter a large room where the Doctor's clothes from his previous nine incarnations are found, along with some thing he used during that incarnation (jelly babies, a staff, a recorder, psychic paper, etc.). The Doctor mentions how he'd be lost without his previous incarnations.

A strange man in a darkly lit room decides to test that theory. The Doctor suddenly becomes very weak and realizes that he can't remember anything from before his encounter with the Sycorax on Christmas Day a couple of years ago.

Martha brings him his staff from his first incarnation and he tells her a story of (when Susan, Barbara, and Ian were travelling with him) how he saved a pharaoh's life with that staff. He then tells how and when he dropped Ian, Barbara, and Susan off. Martha asks if he thinks that Susan is dead and he replies in the affirmative, and mentions that, as far as he know, he is the last, although the Doctor mentions he left Susan on a future earth with a freedom fighter she fell in love with. The strange man chuckles and says, "If only that were true". He then reveals (whilst talking to himself) how he will force the Doctor to regenerate so that he can steal the Doctor's remaining incarnations. The Doctor collapses and tells Martha that one of his hearts has stopped; he collapses into unconsciousness.

Issue 2: Renewal

The Doctor has fallen into a coma. Martha performs CPR on him, making him wake up. The Doctor and Martha explore more of the museum and find his recorder, the one he played in his second incarnation. He tells Martha about his second incarnation. The Second Doctor is on a space ship with Jamie and Zoe, they find it has been attacked by snake-like creatures. They help the crew of the spaceship defeat them by playing on the recorder. Back in the museum the man watching the Doctor and Martha releases an Auton, ready to kill the Doctor and Martha.

The Doctor remembers his third incarnation as Martha hands him the keys to Bessie, the old car he used to drive while he worked for UNIT. He, the Brigadier and Jo Grant are in a car being chased, by giant, spider-like robots, with humanoid dogs as drivers. Jo uses her make-up mirror to aim the laser beams at the ships, and the doctor uses his sonic screwdriver to destroy the dog-like aliens, with the help of Captain Yates.

Back at the Museum the Auton approaches the Doctor and Martha, the Doctor fires a can of Nitro 9 at the Auton, killing it. The Doctor then checks the readings of the TARDIS' key, and horrified by the absolute lack of response, tells Martha that it means the TARDIS has been destroyed.

Issue 3: Misdirection

Martha asks whether the TARDIS is actually gone. She and the Doctor go back to the costume room and find a bag of Jelly Babies. This reminds him of his fourth incarnation.

He remembers the time he took Romana to Paris the second time in the year 2000. Romana notices a mime posing. She thinks he is trapped in time, but as a time hole appears near him, the mime, the Doctor and Romana fall through the hole and land in a late 17th century sewer. They are soon questioned by guards; the Doctor makes up an alias so he can have an excuse to boss them around. Following the trail, they manage to reach the exit door, which is guarded by Taureau the Minotaur, who agrees to let them pass if they answer his riddle. When Romana fails miserably to answer correctly, the Doctor opens a wall, causing an explosion killing Taureau and the mime. The Doctor and Romana escape through it.

Back at the museum, the Doctor says to himself that Romana did pretty well for herself - until the Time War. He notices Martha has gone. He finds a cricket ball in his pocket. He then thinks about the his fifth incarnation.

The Fifth Doctor is playing cricket near Allen Road. Tegan Jovanka and Vislor Turlough are watching. All of a sudden a Judoon ship flies over. the doctor asks Turlough to fetch his 500 year old diary, while he and Tegan go and meet the Judoon. It turns out the Judoon have landed on Earth in search of the Eye of Akasha. Turlough returns and the Doctor fetches the Eye from the TARDIS before doing a switch with his cricket ball, giving the Judoon the ball.

In the museum the Doctor finds Martha. She is holding Ace's baseball bat ready to defend herself. The strange onlooker releases a swarm of giant spiders from Metebelis 3, surrounding Martha...

Issue 4: Survival

The Doctor arrives and manages to distract the Metebelis 3 spiders with the crystal from his sonic screwdriver, which is similar to the type they search for. He and Martha escape and the Doctor vaguely recalls the phrase "There's something on your back." He collapses and begins to fade again. Martha hands him his sixth incarnation's cat brooch and goes off to hunt for the "Time Bracelet thing" and another screwdriver in the Fourth Doctor's costume, while the Doctor recalls a memory from his sixth life involving the brooch.

He remembers the time when he and Peri Brown were in the court of a group of animal people, with Peri accused of the first-degree murder of Professor Mis'kin Karac. On the first day of the trial, Peri tells the court of how while in the market, a boy pushed a gun into her hands, which fired, killing the professor as he left the building. Peri says she never meant to kill anyone, and the Doctor calls off questioning.

As the second day comes around, Professor Karac's assistant offers evidence against Peri, and the judge calls a recess until the next day. The Doctor gets the assistant's permission to check out the lab, where he and the professor had been working on quantum flux technology. The Doctor finds the murder weapon in the lab and comes up with a plan.

The next day in court, the Doctor pulls out the gun and aims at Peri, explaining that it is tagged with a genetic signature which the bullet uses to find the target when fired. He also explains that this was why the professor's assistant was behind Peri: so that he could fire through her at the professor and make it look like she, being the one with the gun, had done it. He then tells the assistant how he is currently wearing a cat brooch doused in chronal energy and with a drop of his blood on it, meaning that if he fires, the bullet will kill him, not Peri. Under huge pressure, the assistant confesses and is taken away. As Peri and the Doctor leave, the Doctor explains that the gun wouldn't have work, and that he was bluffing, a bluff which the assistant fell for.

Back in the museum, the Doctor speaks through a camera to the mysterious onlooker, who says he and the Doctor have much in common, except for the obvious, and that he should have left him in the Crucible. The Doctor challenges him to come out, holding up an umbrella and remembering his seventh incarnation.

He recalls the time he and Ace ended up in the war of Angrivan Seven, which was declared a non-intervention site by the Time Lords. Someone had given the Strykes a Gallifreyan virus to use over the Marats, and the Doctor had to stop it. They were captured by the Strykes, but managed to escape due to an air strike. They met a Marat, who took them to the Marats infected by the Strykes' new bioweapon. The Doctor met with Doctor Treykan, and gave her the antidote to the plague, hidden in his umbrella. Then he seemed to talk to the current Doctor, telling him to fight to survive.

Back in the museum, the Doctor finds the same restorative inside the umbrella, and begins to hear the Cloister Bell. He states the impossibility of this, as it can only be heard in the TARDIS, the Time Lord Matrix, or on Gallifrey, none of which they are at--or are they?

Martha demonstrates knowledge of the Cloister Bell she shouldn't yet have and the Doctor remembers her saying he isn't the only doctor in the TARDIS, though she's only a medical student. The Doctor wonders again what's really going on, while the mystery onlooker says they can't have the Doctor remembering his future just yet, and sends out a Clockwork Droid and a Voc Robot. The section ends in the TARDIS with the Cloister Bell tolling, the inside red, and an alien life form attaching itself to the unconscious Doctor...

Issue 5: Revelation

After the Cloister Bell rings the Doctor begins the question who or what Martha really is. They are attacked by a Clockwork Droid and a Voc Robot. The Doctor and Martha manage to escape. Martha hands the Doctor a cravat belonging to the his eighth incarnation, and the Doctor then begins to tell Martha about that specific life.

The Doctor was alone in a prison cell on an unnamed planet, wondering whether the Last Great Time War was still being waged, when the cell door opened and the guards threw a new prisoner into the cell. Sixteen days later the Doctor and his new cellmate Chantir saw a spaceship land through the cell window and the Doctor said it was time to escape. The Doctor slowed his heartbeats to almost nothing and Chantir called in the guards, allowing the Doctor and Chantir to overpower them and steal their laser weapons when leaving the cell. The Doctor opened all the other cells to allow the other prisoners to escape. They traveled to the end of the hall and blasted open the door. Inside the Great Key stood on a pillar in the centre of the room and the Doctor picked it up, telling Chantir that he planned to use it to recreate the De-Mat Gun, and possibly even modify the original to increase its lethality to remove millions from time and space at once. The Doctor and Chantir escaped from the prison by sliding down a power cable on the outside wall of the prison, Chantir left the Doctor to find his crewmates and the Doctor walked a few miles to recover his TARDIS.

The Doctor explains to Martha how he ended the Last Great Time War using the Great Key and that his eighth incarnation died alone. Martha gives him the psychic paper and he remembers his Ninth Incarnation.

The Doctor and Rose arrived in a World War I trench on Christmas Day and the Doctor showed the British occupants of the trench documents identifying him as Brigadier Bambera using the psychic paper. A football landed in the trench and the Germans asked the British to hand them back their football. The Doctor challenged the Germans to a football match for their ball. As the British played football with them, the Doctor refereed. After the match ended the Doctor and Rose left in the TARDIS.

Martha hands the Doctor the chameleon arch and the Doctor regains the last of his memories, that very moment, the Meta-Crisis Tenth Doctor arrives with the Clockwork Droid and the Voc Robot and threatens to steal the Doctor's regenerations so that he can regenerate himself.

Issue 6: Reunion

Just as the Meta-Crisis Tenth Doctor finished his threat, the real Doctor laughed it away, as he knew it was a poor fabrication of the creature who was truly responsible for the entire mess, using bits and pieces of the Master, the Valeyard and the Meta-Crisis Doctor to fabricate a poor amalgam with which he expected to bedevil the Doctor.

Infuriated at his plans being so easily exposed, the being identifies itself as Es'Cartrss of the Tactire, a parasitic race known as the Cranial Parasites. It tells of how his planet was one of the many the Daleks had sequestered to power up the Reality Bomb, and he managed to infiltrate the Crucible until its destruction, when Es'Cartrss entered the Doctor's TARDIS and attached itself to him in the effort that began the story.

The Doctor uses the distraction to flee, and "Martha" gives him the last clues to realize what it truly was - the TARDIS' own mind, desperately trying to help its pilot shake off the parasite. The entire place was actually the TARDIS matrix. Once the Doctor realizes this, he begins to realize other things-namely, the TARDIS could assume the form of anyone who had ever traveled with him.

Prompted by the Doctor, the TARDIS assumes a variety of disguises from many past companions geared for combat, such as Steven Taylor, Leela, and Harry Sullivan, while the Doctor examines the baseball bat, realizing it was, in fact, a chameleon circuit covering the Great Key of Rassilon, the final key designed to open the last door of the Matrix, the one the robots had been so desperate to keep them away from.

The TARDIS beins assuming other shapes, better suited to specific tasks, like Kamelion, who shrugged off attacks by the Voc Robot and the Clockwork Droid to open the door with the Great Key, Sarah Jane Smith, and Adric, whose intellect allowed him to design a way to break the parasite's hold on the Matrix by blowing himself, the infected Matrix components, and the droids, with one of Ace's old Nitro 9 cans.

Confronted by the Last of the Tactire, the Doctor implements his plan-reminding the Matrix there was only one Time Lord in existence-himself. As he speaks, the power of the items he has gathered coalesced, and summons all of his other forms at once-ten Doctors against a Tactire. He offers his enemy a final chance, and Escart'rss rejected it. Sighing, the Doctor asked the Matrix to eliminate all non-Time Lords from itself, purging the system of Escartr'ss.

The Doctors briefly converse, with the Tenth a bit surprised, as he didn't know it could be done, and some squabbling and annoying on each side. Leaving his memories, the Doctor and "Martha" walk through the museum to the exit, modelled after the TARDIS. Having lost his key, the Doctor wonders how to open the doors, until Martha reminds him River Song already taught him how. Smiling, the Doctor thanks her and snaps his fingers, opening the doors and flooding the museum with light. Before leaving, he asks the TARDIS to assume a final form, and she acquiesces.

Susan Foreman appears before her grandfather, who begs for her forgiveness and asks if she's had a good life. She hugs him back, and soothes him, saying she understood his thoughts and that she always knew he was doing the right thing. She then beckons him to walk into the light, and the dream ends.

The Doctor awakens inside the real TARDIS, and kicks the now-mindless Tactire out of the way. Reflecting on how he's never truly alone with his oldest companion, he thanks her and decides to go on a little adventure - to Barcelona.

Characters

Doctors

References

Last Great Time War

Races and species

The Doctor

  • During the Eighth Doctor flashback, the Doctor claims he created the fiction of being half-human using a chameleon arch in order to deceive an enemy.
  • The Doctor indicates that "no one alive" knows about all nine of his past incarnations. The implication in this statement is that Martha Jones is either the first companion to become aware of the first 10 incarnations (if one takes into account Amy Pond, Rory Williams and Jackson Lake viewing the Doctor's past incarnations through holograms in DW: The Eleventh Hour and DW: The Next Doctor), or that the Doctor believes that anyone else (companion or Time Lord) who is aware of it is now dead. The Brigadier is the closest to knowing all of them, having met the 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th, 6th, 7th, 8th, and 10th incarnations.
  • The Second Doctor says he "always hated" the song Jamie started to sing in order to distract the snake aliens, the song being "I am the Doctor" by Jon Pertwee.

The Doctor's items

  • Among the artefacts of the Doctor's past visible: the Seal of Rassilon; a Voord helmet; and items association with each incarnation: a walking stick (First); recorder (Second); Bessie's car keys (Third); a bag of jelly babies (Fourth); a cricket ball (Fifth); a cat brooch (Sixth); an umbrella (Seventh); a cravat (Eighth); and the psychic paper (Ninth).
  • The First Doctor was given his walking stick by Kublai Khan. However the Tenth Doctor at first claims he obtained it in an unchronicled adventure involving Oscar Wilde and "midget assassins," though he later admits it was a ruse to trick "Martha."

Story notes

  • The Forgotten was a comic book mini-series produced by the American company IDW Publishing in the fall of 2008, following on from its initial Doctor Who title (Agent Provocateur).
  • This was the first officially sanctioned spin-off to feature all ten (at the time) of the Doctor's incarnations.
  • Collected and reprinted as the graphic novel The Forgotten in April 2009.
  • Due to an unknown error, the dialogue on Page 1 of Issue 6 didn't print. The absence of the dialogue has caused confusion over whether the villain was meant to be the Meta-Crisis Tenth Doctor or The Valeyard, since most references to it were on this page (although the Doctor refers to the villain as the Valeyard on a later page). The dialogue was later fixed in the trade paperback release. [1]
  • The fact the villain takes the form of the Meta-Crisis Doctor, and refers to himself as the Valeyard, has added credence to the rumour that the Meta-Crisis Tenth Doctor could be destined to become the Valeyard. The Doctor himself however laughs at this idea in the story. Until such a time as a connection is actually made, the fact the villain chooses "The Valeyard" as his alias means that's the villain being impersonated here, no matter what he actually looks like.
  • This story contains several plot points reminiscent of the novel The Eight Doctors.
    • The Tenth Doctor loses his memory. like the Eighth Doctor
    • The Doctor revisits, after a fashion, the events of his past adventures.
    • The Doctor has an encounter with his previous incarnations, though in this case it is mental projections of them rather than the genuine articles.

Cover gallery

Continuity

Timeline

For the First Doctor:

For the Second Doctor:

For the Third Doctor:

For the Fourth Doctor:

For the Fifth Doctor:

For the Sixth Doctor:

For the Seventh Doctor:

For the Eighth Doctor:

  • This story occurs after: ST: Osskah
  • This story occurs before: DW: Rose

For the Ninth Doctor:

For the Tenth Doctor: