Profits of Doom! is written by Mike
Collins with pencils by John Ridgway, inks by Tim Perkins, and lettering by
Annie Halfacree. It was released in Doctor Who Magazine issues 120-122 (December 1986-February 1987)
and is reprinted in its original form in Doctor Who: The World Shapers by Panini Books.
The last Doctor Who
Magazine review I wrote, eightish months ago, introduced legendary comic writer
Grant Morrison to the strip for the first of their three stories. Profits of Doom! is the first
contribution of Mike Collins to the strip, this time in capacity of writer. Collins has most recently contributed to the
strip as artist in 2019 and has several runs as primary artist. Profits of Doom! feels like an
important milestone for the strip, mainly because after this point there are
only two more Sixth Doctor stories which would take the strip through the
autumn of 1987 when Sylvester McCoy would premiere in the role of the Doctor
and become the primary Doctor of the strip well into the 1990s. Profits of Doom! feels far more in
line with where Andrew Cartmel would begin taking the show and the Virgin New
Adventures line of novels would continue, setting three issues of the strip in
the cold, harsh, emptiness of space in a society where capitalism has run rampant. Now it is especially weird seeing the Sixth
Doctor, Peri, and Frobisher really interacting with this particular setting
since the televised show has just gone through an era far less concerned with
this overt type of storytelling.
Profits of Doom! is a story where the villains are capitalist slugs
who prioritize profits over all else, invading a spaceship where a woman is awoken
from suspended animation only for maintenance.
Collins keeps the number of characters down, Kara being our primary
guest character for the story and a single woman being sent to Arcadia for
unknown purposes. Collins directly links
the capitalism of the Profiteers of Ephete (the slugs are from a planet that’s
a tax haven) equally with colonialism of expansion. Kara’s ship is the Mayflower which is
a clear symbol of colonialism, the big twist being that there is an immortal
villain who wishes to convert the planet Arcadia into a capitalist hellscape
complete with slaves. That immortal
villain is called Seth and is sadly where the story drops the ball, he’s an uninteresting
immortal and built up as if this is a foe the Doctor has faced before under
many aliases. The problem comes in the
fact that he’s essentially just a man on a screen who really only serves to be
a big bad because the comic strip kind of needed some central villain to
defeat. It’s a shame because the
interactions between the Doctor, Peri, and Frobisher, especially in the first
part of the story are excellent, perhaps the best the characters have been
characterized and John Ridgway’s pencils work really well with Tim Perkins on
inks.
Overall, Profits of
Doom! was honestly a big surprise since many of the issues with the Doctor
Who Magazine strip are overcome here as the characters are well
characterized and the plot is simple enough to fill the short page count while
providing some fairly biting commentary on the state of the world in late
1986. It’s just a shame about that weak villain. 8/10.
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