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The Next Doctor Who Crossover?
Callum_Preciou2
Posts: 144
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My idea is that the next crossover will be: The Avengers. They are the comic book superhero team created by Stan Lee, but now. The Doctor teams up with the Earth's Mightest Heroes from Christmas 2015 on your TV screen.
Since the 'Doctor Who/Sherlock' was rejected by Steven Moffat earlier this autumn. We can have a 'Doctor Who/The Avengers' crossover instead for the first time ever since the crossover with EastEnders back in 1993.
Post your reactions of my idea about the new DW crossover for next Christmas.
Since the 'Doctor Who/Sherlock' was rejected by Steven Moffat earlier this autumn. We can have a 'Doctor Who/The Avengers' crossover instead for the first time ever since the crossover with EastEnders back in 1993.
Post your reactions of my idea about the new DW crossover for next Christmas.
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I am sure they can find actors who loos like Steed and Emma Peel did back in the sxities.
You might want to do some research on that. Start by Googling 'Stan Lee vs Jack Kirby' and 'Stan Lee vs Steve Ditko', the real creators of most of the classic Marvel heroes.
The crossover idea is, of course, inane.
How about Ralph Fiennes and Uma Thurman?
i.e. it's exactly the level of stuff that goes into superhero movies?
All equally responsible for the iconography of the original Marvel Universe.
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/6/6a/Planet_X_Star_Trek.jpg/200px-Planet_X_Star_Trek.jpg
And this
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/7/77/Star_Trek_The_Next_Generation_Doctor_Who_Assimilation2.jpg/250px-Star_Trek_The_Next_Generation_Doctor_Who_Assimilation2.jpg
So it could be possible for The Doctor to cross into the Marvel Universe
How about her or her.
Nah ... I wasn't keen on that movie.
There was a scene where Steed's bowler hat was crushed, and he said in a surly peevish voice 'You'll pay for that.'
Sorry, i can never imagine MacNee's John Steed saying that - he would be a lot more witty.
https://image-cdn.zap2it.com/images/tumblr_m48nwh1LV51rw6hzpo1_1280.jpg
Well it is to do with the Doctor but why does it look so Strange
I don't know love.
What a ghastly idea. Crossovers are rarely any good, and Doctor Who should never mix with comic book superhero teams...
How about The Doctor Who comic which has already had crossovers.
I have The Doctor Who-Star Trek crossover and it's very good IMO
That's kind of different - a comic strip version of Doctor Who isn't the same as the TV version. And the OP was talking about on screen, on TV.
Marvel uk started with reprints of us material, before it started pushing it's own character. Inbetween it handled a lot of marvels cartoon and tv licences. Like the transformers.
One of marvel uk's early characters was death's head (an excellent character.) he started of in the transformers universe before switching to the marvel u. Inbetween he meet the doctor, who shank him down from giant robot size with the masters Ray.
Now that what I call a cross-over.....
In fact, Kirby and Ditko (and the other Marvel artists of the period) were more than the artists. By most accounts all Stan Lee tended to add was the dialogue and captions and maybe a suggestion along the lines of 'let's have a superhero with spider powers'. The actual stories were plotted by the artists, drawn by them, and then Stan Lee would just add his trademark 'thees' and 'thous' at the end. All of the characters were created by the artists. In most cases you'd be hard pressed to even call Lee co-creator, beyond thinking up a name.
In some cases, Lee didn't even work for Marvel at the time the character was created. Captain America for instance was created by Jack Kirby and Joe Simon in the 1940s.
Stan Lee was the nephew of the then publisher of Marvel comics and that's how he got his position. Pure nepotism.
He is an entertaining writer and DID bring a lot of the charm to the stories but his role in the creation of it all was / is extremely exagerrated. At the worst interpretation, Stan Lee was a nepotistically placed stooge to rob the other creators of their credit and stories.
The comics history has an absolutely appalling history in regards to creator rights and Stan Lee is one of the worst offenders. Stan Lee is the only guy who made a good living from those classic Marvel characters and for years attempted to take sole credit. Even now he won't fully admit the contributions of the others. Steve Ditko never made a penny from Spider-man, Doctor Strange or any of the other characters he almost entirely created (Stan Lee's ONLY contribution to the first Spider-man story was the name Spider-man and the dialogue. Jack Kirby created the costume. Everything else was Steve Ditko), beyond the pittance 'work for hire' wage he got at the time.
This is widely known now in comic fandom but it's a shame Stan Lee's mythological version of events is still in the more general public consciousness.
Well, it shouldn't crossover with Doctor Who but I fondly recall deaths Head.
One of the most significant things published in the old Marvel UK Doctor Who comic was some of Alan Moore's earliest published work, doing back-up strips (anyone familiar with comics should know who Alan Moore is), his first featuring the Cybermen.
A few years later, once Moore had written watchmen, V for Vendetta, Miracle man, Swamp Thing and so on, establishing a huge reputation, he was actually approached to write for the Doctor Who TV series in the McCoy era (presumably by Andrew Cartmel, who actively looked for new talent to bring onto the show) but rejected the offer through a disinterest in writing for television in general and Doctor Who in particular. His rather amusing comment on Doctor Who is that all of the Doctors post Hartnell struck him as having the characteristics of 'particularly flamboyant child molesters'). Not a fan of the show. The Doctor's speech about time to the departing Mel in Dragonfire was pretty obviously written by a guy who had just read Watchmen, published around that time.
I always assumed that the creation of the early 60s Marvel characters was a collaboration between Stan Lee and others, but I didn't realise that the generally accepted history had become so skewed in Lee's favour!
He sounds like a latter day Thomas Edison, taking sole credit for many things that were actually at very least team efforts, and in some cases other people's work entirely!