Immagine dell'autore.

Alan Barnes (1) (1970–)

Autore di The Hammer Story

Per altri autori con il nome Alan Barnes, vedi la pagina di disambiguazione.

53+ opere 1,133 membri 52 recensioni

Sull'Autore

Alan Barnes has co-authored acclaimed books on Quentin Tarantino, the James Bond films and Hammer Horror. His fiction writings include comic strips, audio dramas and the animated Doctor Who adventure, The Infinite Quest.
Fonte dell'immagine: Jeff Hardcastle, 2008.

Serie

Opere di Alan Barnes

The Hammer Story (1997) — Autore — 85 copie
Storm Warning (2001) — Autore — 72 copie
Zagreus (2003) — Autore — 61 copie
Neverland (2002) — Autore — 57 copie
End Game (2005) 55 copie
The Girl Who Never Was (2007) — Autore — 46 copie
The Next Life (2004) — Autore — 41 copie
Weapon of Choice (2004) 37 copie
Panacea (2006) 35 copie
Brotherhood of the Daleks (2008) — Autore — 33 copie
A Blind Eye (2004) 33 copie
Castle of Fear (2009) — Autore — 30 copie
Orbis (2009) 29 copie
Enemy Aliens (2013) 28 copie
Death in Blackpool (2009) 26 copie
Nevermore (2010) 26 copie
Heroes of Sontar (2011) — Autore — 24 copie
Trail of the White Worm (2012) 21 copie
Gods and Monsters (2012) — Autore — 21 copie
The Oseidon Adventure (2012) 21 copie
Daleks Among Us (2013) — Autore — 17 copie
The Clockwise War (2019) — Autore — 17 copie
Trial of the Valeyard (2013) — Autore — 16 copie
Last of the Cybermen (2015) — Autore — 16 copie
White Ghosts (2014) 15 copie
And You Will Obey Me (2016) — Autore — 13 copie
Suburban Hell (2015) — Autore — 12 copie
Ground Zero (2019) — Autore — 11 copie
Gallery of Ghouls (2016) 11 copie
Time War: Susan's War (2020) — Autore — 9 copie
An Alien Werewolf in London (2019) — Autore — 9 copie
Liberation of the Daleks (2023) 9 copie
The Eighth Doctor: The Further Adventures of Lucie Miller, Volume One (2019) — Script Editor; Collaboratore — 7 copie
The War Master: Anti-Genesis (2020) — Autore — 5 copie
Charlotte Pollard: The Further Adventuress (2022) — Autore — 3 copie

Opere correlate

The Glorious Dead (2006) — Collaboratore — 55 copie
The Company of Friends (2009) — Collaboratore — 44 copie
The Betrothal of Sontar (2008) — Collaboratore — 34 copie
The Blue Tooth (2007) — Script Editor — 33 copie
Doctor Who: Dark Eyes 2 (2014) — Collaboratore — 22 copie
The Sixth Doctor: The Last Adventure (2015) — Collaboratore — 21 copie
Doctor Who: The Audio Scripts, Volume One (2003) — Collaboratore — 19 copie
Jago & Litefoot: Series One (2010) — Collaboratore — 18 copie
Doctor Who: The Audio Scripts, Volume Four (2005) — Collaboratore — 14 copie
Doctor Who: The Churchill Years, Volume One (2016) — Autore — 12 copie
Doctor Who: The Churchill Years, Volume Two (2018) — Autore — 9 copie
Cybermen: The Ultimate Comic Strip Collection (2023) — Autore — 6 copie
Destiny of the Doctor: The Complete Series (2013) — Collaboratore — 5 copie
The Eighth Doctor Authors (2002) — Collaboratore — 2 copie
Doctor Who Magazine 581 — Collaboratore — 2 copie
Doctor Who Magazine 572 — Collaboratore — 1 copia
Doctor Who Magazine 535 — Collaboratore — 1 copia
Doctor Who Magazine 594 — Collaboratore — 1 copia

Etichette

Informazioni generali

Nome legale
Barnes, Alan R.
Data di nascita
1970-03-17
Sesso
male
Nazionalità
UK
Attività lavorative
scriptwriter
journalist

Utenti

Recensioni

A cautious four stars, but it will depend on how this series unfolds as to whether it warrants it.
 
Segnalato
therebelprince | 3 altre recensioni | Apr 21, 2024 |
Access a version of the below that includes illustrations on my blog.

It's DWM's longest story! By issue count, at least; I think The Glorious Dead still has it beat out by approximately ten pages. Picking up from the end of The Power of the Doctor, this leads right into Destination: Skaro... though I am unconvinced that its events really could squeeze into the sixty minutes the Doctor states have passed between the two stories in Destination: Skaro. I am pretty sure it took me longer than sixty minutes to read it!

It's a bit bonkers, and it's not very deep, but it is fun. One of Alan Barnes's strengths as a writer has always been rearranging pop culture iconography in interesting ways: here the Daleks attack the World Cup Final in 1966, only it turns out that it's all a simulation from the future, an amusement park where people go to experience Dalek wars... and the park enslaves real Daleks to make it all work. When the Doctor escapes from the simulation, he brings real Daleks with him.

It's not very deep, but it is deep enough; the story does some fun stuff with the disjunction between how we perceive Daleks as viewers (fun, goofy) and how they function in the narrative of Doctor Who (purveyors of genocide); probably the best of the many strong cliffhangers is the one where a bunch of tourists began chanting "EXTERMINATE," hoping to be exterminated! As you would, of course. It casts a lens on Doctor Who's own story, but also reflects the way that, say, Nazis come across in real pop culture. Alan Barnes amps it up as the story proceeds by even bringing in the TV Century 21 Daleks, contrasting their even more goofy iconography with the brutality of the "actual" Daleks.

It does give a feeling of being made up as it went along. Mostly I don't mind this (so does, say, the original Star Beast) but it does seem like the whole story could have ended with part eight but keeps going with a whole new subplot.

Lee Sullivan does a great job with Daleks of course, but all throughout; he captures new series Daleks, classic series Daleks, TV21 Daleks, all of them. James Offredi matches him on coloring with some good work, especially on the TV21 stuff.

If you thought this would be a deep plunge into the mysteries of the fourteenth Doctor (and I can see why you might have, though the story itself discards this pretty quickly), this isn't it. But it is a solid piece of DWM fun.

Other Notes:
  • For those of us who keep track of such things, these fourteen strips tie Alan Barnes for the twelfth-longest run as writer of the DWM strip with Steve Parkhouse (#86-99), and tie Lee Sullivan for seventh as artist with David A Roach (#451-64). For total written, it moves Barnes from fifth to third (at 41 strips, a bit below Steve Parkhouse's total of 46), and Lee Sullivan from eighth to seventh (at 44 strips). But I believe there's more to come after this for both, so their numbers will move even further up.
  • This is Barnes's first contribution to the main strip since #380, a gap of 204 strips! This would place him in second for largest gap (if we discount the returns for issue #500), behind John Tomlinson's record of 210... except that Lee Sullivan makes his first contribution since #317, setting a new record of 267!
  • I'm given to understand that the conceit of TV Century 21 was that it was a news magazine from one century after its time of publication. Because of that, the humorless pedants of the Tardis wiki have counted all sorts of weird stuff as "valid" because it was printed in TV21 alongside the Dalek strips. Like, they'll count Thunderbirds... but (up until recently) not Scream of the Shalka or Death Comes to Time!? Anyway, if they are paying attention to Liberation, they need to take all that stuff back out, because Barnes establishes the TV21 comic strips are an in-universe 21st-century children's fiction.
Doctor Who Magazine and Marvel UK: « Previous in sequence | Next in sequence »
… (altro)
 
Segnalato
Stevil2001 | Apr 15, 2024 |
2.5-2.75 stars. I was really looking forward to hearing this, and as usual The 5th Doctor and Nyssa gave great performances. However the story itself, or perhaps the way it was followed left me nonplussed. I thought the castle owner sounded more like an extremely daft "lad about town" from the 20 or 30's than someone of that era. I think between Wendy and
rel="nofollow" target="_top">Aidan's reviews my opinion is well represented.… (altro)
 
Segnalato
Kiri | 2 altre recensioni | Dec 24, 2023 |
Access a version of the below that includes illustrations on my blog.

The twelfth Doctor's run comes to an end with this somewhat odd collection, which includes just one twelfth Doctor story as well as a number of outstanding uncollected color stories from various sources, basically everything color that was left except for a few strips that made their way into The Age of Chaos.

The Clockwise War
This story caps off the twelfth Doctor era with a story that pits the Doctor and Bill against erstwhile companion Fey, who's out for revenge against the Time Lords after suffering through the horrors of the Time War. I think there's a lot to like about this story but it didn't totally work for me. I like the return of Fey, I like the installment told from the perspective of the War Doctor, I like the reveal about Shayde, I like the return of Jodafra and the use of his death to prove the situation is serious, I like the stuff with Wonderland and especially Annabel Lake. John Ross probably turns in his best-ever DWM work here, it's propulsive and beautiful to look at. On the other hand, the black-and-white monsters are too similar to what we just saw in The Phantom Piper, and while it's nice to see some of the supporting characters from The Parliament of Fear return... I'm not actually sure why they're there! Ultimately I think it's at least partially a victim of the sudden page cut: there's little room to breathe, and just like in the last story, Bill feels a bit forgotten in the middle of it all. This is her last story, but she doesn't get the kind of moments or send-off that Rose, Donna, Amy, and Clara got in theirs. Lots of moments to love but I didn't love it altogether.

A Religious Experience
In this first Doctor story from 1994, he and Ian watch a religious ritual on an alien planet. I didn't care for this at all: overly talky and nihilistic, I felt. Plus, John Ridgway's art usually doesn't benefit from being colored, especially coloring this crude.

Rest & Re-Creation / The Naked Flame
These are both fourth Doctor stories from the 1990s where he re-meets old monsters: the Zygons in the first and the Menoptera. They're by a young pre-"Scott" Scott Gray, and I found both kind of boring and confusing.

Blood Invocation
The fifth Doctor, Tegan, and Nyssa take on Time Lord vampires in this story that's almost but not quite a prequel to the Missing Adventure Goth Opera; in the extras, Paul Cornell explains that he doesn't know why they aren't consistent. I didn't find much to enjoy here; again, I think I'd be more into John Ridgway drawing vampires if it was all in black and white.

The Cybermen
This was a series of one-page strips published in the magazine across about two years; even before reading the commentary it was obvious to me that it was based on the old Daleks strips: it focuses on the Cybermen on Mondas in the old days, encountering weird threats, where we're usually meant to identify with the monsters, not the people trying to stop them. Like those old strips, they're kinetic and weird and fascinating, and I kind of felt like reading them all in a row wasn't doing them justice. They're very visual stories, and I often didn't know what exactly had happened, and felt I ought to have spent the time working through the art of the (as always) brilliant Adrian Salmon, but instead I went on to the next. But still: where else can you get Cybermen battling dinosaurs, Cybermen with blimps, Cybermen battling Cthuluoid menaces. The use of stuff like the Silurians could be overly fannish, but Barnes and Salmon make it work; I don't know how this actually fits with previous Cybermen stories, not even The Tenth Planet, but I don't really care.

Star Beast II / Junk-Yard Demon II
It would be easy to attack to self-consuming nature of DWM pre-TVM: the best it could come up was two sequels to Steve Parkhouse strips? But actually these were my favorites of the various yearbook stories collected here. Fun, straightforward stories with good artwork. Beep the Meep is always good fun, of course, and it's nice to see Fudge again. I don't know that Junk-Yard Demon demanded a sequel, but if it had to get one, this one is suitably grotesque.

Stray Observations:
  • Branding this collection "Collected Multi-Doctor Comic Strips – Volume 2" is one of those things that's technically correct but seems a bit confusing. Far better to brand it as the fifth and final of the "Collected Twelfth Doctor Comic Strips," since that's the series it actually ties into.
  • I liked the return of Jodafra, but on the other hand I didn't remember who Gol Clutha was at all even though she appeared much more recently, in Hunters of the Burning Stone and The Stockbridge Showdown!
  • I know the name came from Moffat (it debuted in this comic, but Scott Gray e-mailed Moffat to find out if the character had a name), but I find "Kenossium" as a name for Ken Bones/T'Nia Miller's General character really really stupid.
  • In the extras, Tim Quinn complains that editor John Freeman added a reference to the planet Quinnis from Inside the Spaceship to A Religious Experience. He seems to think the name "Quinnis" is intrinsically dumb-sounding but I'm not sure why.
  • These are Charlie Adlard's only Doctor Who contributions, and he seems faintly bemused by the whole things in the notes. He also did a lot of Vertigo work in the 1990s, but most notably went on to be the penciller on 187 issues of The Walking Dead, making him the person in this volume with the biggest non–Doctor Who comics career.
  • Star Beast II picks up from the end of The Star Beast; when Big Finish eventually did its own Beep the Meep story (2002's The Ratings War), it would actually pick up right from the end of Star Beast II, with Beep escaping Lassie.
Doctor Who Magazine and Marvel UK: « Previous in sequence | Next in sequence »
… (altro)
 
Segnalato
Stevil2001 | 2 altre recensioni | May 10, 2023 |

Liste

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Statistiche

Opere
53
Opere correlate
18
Utenti
1,133
Popolarità
#22,652
Voto
½ 3.7
Recensioni
52
ISBN
95

Grafici & Tabelle