The Deal
is written by Steve Parkhouse with art by Dave Gibbons. It was released in Doctor Who Monthly issue 53
(June 1981) and is reprinted in its original form in Doctor Who: Dragon’s Claw by Panini
Books.
Steve
Moore only stayed on Doctor Who Monthly for a single year before moving
onto other things in the comics world moving onto Star Wars before
starting work on Warrior, a series of British anthology comics while
artist Dave Gibbons stayed on until October 1982, another full year. Moore was replaced by another Steve in the
seat of writer, Steve Parkhouse, who would begin Doctor Who Monthly’s
longest run so far of comic writers, from June 1981 to March 1985, a run of
nearly four years. Parkhouse’s initial
strip, The Deal, continues the style of the Moore strips, telling single
stories over 8-10 pages in only one, maybe two, issues. This would be the style until the end of the Fourth
Doctor’s comic run, however, with Parkhouse comes a very different tone for the
comics. While Moore’s stories were generally
campy fun with the Doctor taking companion Sharon and K9 through wacky space
adventures, The Deal sets out to be story with a bitter ending and overall
a darker tone.
The
Doctor crashes onto a planet during a series of intergalactic wars, a mercenary’s
spaceship causing the TARDIS to have interference. In the eight pages that comprise this comic the
reader gets a real sense of just who this mercenary is and while it is slightly
one note, that one dimension is enough to imply the horrors of war turning
people who once may have been good to evil.
The Doctor only acts under duress in this story, with our mercenary
threatening his life in exchange for passage off the planet. The Doctor is only willing to advises, leading
into a short sequence of dealing with the war, but the real kicker is the
ending. The mercenary is left on this
planet to die exclaiming that this was not part of the deal, the deal being a through
line the comic has about war and what the Doctor is tasked to do. This ending is genuinely bleak: while the
mercenary is not by any means a good person, he is still a human being and the
Doctor’s actions come across as quite inhuman.
The Doctor here is a pacifist with the zany edge of Tom Baker’s characterization
of Season 17, while wearing the Season 18 outfit. This is all aided by Dave Gibbons’ art which
as always is wonderful, though this time the setting of a barren planet doesn’t
give him a lot to work with when it comes to artistic expression.
Overall,
The Deal is a rousing success for Steve Parkhouse, showing that Parkhouse
isn’t afraid to return to telling stories with weight. While his comparison to Mills and Wagner’s
sweeping eight part epics is yet to be seen, this one is a great start, though still
shallow as a single issue comic of eight pages kind of has to be. 8/10.
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