Funhouse
is written by Alan McKenzie with art by John Ridgway and lettering by Annie
Halfacree. It was released in Doctor Who Magazine issues 102-103 (June – July 1985) and
is reprinted in its original form in Doctor
Who: Voyager by Panini Books.
This is an odd one. The second Doctor Who Magazine strip
from editor Alan McKenzie and it kind of reveals McKenzie’s philosophy in
writing stories. The strip is
essentially back to doing self-contained yarns with perhaps little character
development between them which isn’t necessarily a bad thing. After Steve Parkhouse and his sprawling
epics, going small-scale works really well, especially as at this point the television
show was on hiatus and had a year before it would be coming back with The
Trial of a Time Lord. Funhouse
is also one that has a trippy idea for a plot and is smart enough to not make
the two issues overstay their welcome.
It’s essentially a two hander with the villain being this unexplained
being taking the form of a house. The
image of a house on a desolate planet is a creepy one and John Ridgway’s art is
stylized here in a way that brings up ideas of cosmic horror for the story.
The second issue also is
another example of the Doctor going back through his regenerations before defeating
the house by flipping a switch on the TARDIS console and throwing it into the
Time Vortex, once again allowing a beautiful panel of Ridgway’s rendition of said
vortex. There’s also an interesting
implication with a hallucination of Peri being used by the house as a piece of
temptation to get the Doctor and Frobisher to stay. Again following the idea of cosmic horror
there are shadows and unearthly things in this house that makes this feel
almost a tribute to horror movies of the early 1980s mixed with gothic horror
from Hammer Studios.
This is overall a comic
that actually doesn’t do much of interest.
The art is good and the plot works really well for softening the Sixth
Doctor, and of course Frobisher’s sarcasm is great, there just isn’t a whole
lot going on in terms of plot or character work that had been done so well in previous
strips. It almost feels like the strip
is devolving slightly to the late Tom Baker era with its single and double
issues not really allowing the comic to have enough space to tell stories. Luckily, this is something that is almost
immediately rectified with the Voyager collection ending with four
connected single issues, and only one more single issue story for the rest of
the Sixth Doctor’s strip run. 7/10.
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