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The Guardians of Terror (comic story)

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Revision as of 22:00, 1 June 2013 by CzechBot (talk | contribs) (INFOBOX CLEANUP: Moving all pipes to beginning of line)
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|{{Infobox Story name=The Guardians of Terror | |image= Tgotr.jpg |series=DWBIT comic stories |doctor= Tenth Doctor |companions= |enemy= year= Corah| |writer= Jason Loborik artist= Lee Sullivan | |colourist= Alan Craddock |letterer= unstated |editor= Claire Lister |publication= Doctor Who: Battles in Time (magazine) |release date= 1 April 2009 |publisher= GE Fabbri Ltd |format= Comic - Part 1 of 2 (4 pages) |prev= The King of Earth (comic story) |next= The Rebirth of Corah (comic story) }}

Opening narration box

Travelling alone, the Doctor decides to check out a strange planet ...

Summary

On the purple planet of Corah the Doctor is captured by a military research team led by Professor Slade. By a nearby lake are crude, human-shaped statues which give off a faint electrical signal.

The research team believe the Doctor has killed a fellow crew member, but when the Doctor asks them to count the statues, there is an extra one. The Doctor believes something in the pool is transforming people. A tentacle attached to a very large green creature emerges and rapidly drains all the moisture from Grent and another crew member leaving behind a husky shell.

The Doctor offers an endless supply of water in his ship, but the creature pursues them across the rocky terrain.

Characters

References

  • The Battles in Time comic strip sought to reinforce the association of its Doctor with the one seen on screen with ‘props’ from the TV series: his blue/brown suit, sonic screwdriver, psychic paper and his intelligent glasses.

Notes

  • Supporting the series of collectable Doctor Who trading cards, the magazine carried a regular four-page comic strip of the Tenth Doctor’s adventures.
  • The limitation of only four pages meant that stories often lacked depth compared to other regular comic strips running at the same time.
  • The artwork and colours were bold and bright, reflecting the tone of the magazine and, as did Doctor Who Adventures, reflected the appeal to readers younger than those catered to by Doctor Who Magazine.

Original print details

  • 1/2 DWBIT 67 (4 pages) TO BE CONTINUED!
  • No reprints to date.

References

to be added

Continuity

to be added

External links

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