The Zombies (comic story): Difference between revisions

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Tag: 2017 source edit
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Tag: 2017 source edit
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{{real world}}
{{real world}}
{{ImageLinkComics}}
{{ImageLinkComics}}
{{Infobox Story
{{Infobox Story SMW
|image= The_Zombies_Hynotised_Slaves.jpg
|image= The Zombies Hynotised Slaves.jpg
|series=[[TV Comic|''TVC'' comic stories]]
|series=[[TV Comic|''TVC'' comic stories]]
|number=
|number=
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|enemy      = [[Zagbor]]s
|enemy      = [[Zagbor]]s
|setting= [[London]], [[1969]]
|setting= [[London]], [[1969]]
|writer= [[Roger Noel Cook]]
|writer= Roger Noel Cook
|artist= [[John Canning]]
|artist= [[John Canning]]
|editor=
|editor=
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|letterer=
|letterer=
|publication= ''[[TV Comic]]'' 796-798
|publication= ''[[TV Comic]]'' 796-798
|release date= [[18 March (releases)|18 March]] - [[1 April (releases)|1 April]] [[1967 (releases)|1967]]
|release date= 18 March - 1 April 1967
|publisher=  
|publisher=  
|reprint = DWCC 17
|reprint = DWCC 17

Revision as of 22:27, 28 January 2024

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The Zombies was a TV Comic story featuring the Second Doctor, John and Gillian.

Summary

The Doctor's TARDIS malfunctions and only partly materialises so that the Doctor has to affect emergency repairs to complete the landing. Outside, he realises he has arrived in 1969 London where the people have been hypnotised and become human robots. The villains are Zagbors, a humanoid alien race.

Zagbors chase the Doctor back to the TARDIS. They take the TARDIS to their spacecraft and try to cut it open with ray cutters. When the Doctor tries to dematerialise again it malfunctions once more so that he, along with John and Gillian, have to surrender. The Doctor asks to be hypnotised first, before his grandchildren and overcomes the hypnotising beam, thus making the Zagbors his slaves. He reverses the hypnosis on the humans, and repairs the TARDIS.

Plot

to be added

Characters

Worldbuilding

Notes

  • Predating the introduction of the Time Lords in TV: The War Games, the Doctor implies himself to be human, as he refers to those enslaved by the Zagbors as "our people."

Original print details

(Publication with page count and closing captions)

  • TVC 796 (3 pages) [No closing caption]
  • TVC 797 (3 pages) [No closing caption]
  • TVC 798 (3 pages) THE END!

Continuity