Two of Steve Moore’s finest creations in the back-up strip
were Abslom Daak: Dalek Killer and Kroton the Cyberman. Abslom Daak was an
unrepentant psychopath, sent in lieu of execution to a Dalek-occupied world to
cause as much mayhem with his chain-sword as possible. It’s hard to think a
more exciting premise. Kroton, meanwhile, was a Cyberman who developed a ‘soul’
and emotions; he came into his own as a protagonist of his own adventure Ship of Fools, a haunting re-working of
the Flying Dutchman legend. It’s a testament to the strength of these two
creations that they had a life beyond these brief appearances in the Doctor Who Weekly comic strip, Abslom
Daak returning in a number of adventures in the main strip, and Kroton
eventually becoming a companion.
The great thing about both the first Abslom Daak story and Ship of Fools is that they both have gut-churning
twists on the final page. And that’s one of the two things I learned from Steve
Moore; that comic strips can pack an emotional punch, and can move you to laughter,
nightmares or even tears. In the latest Doctor
Who Magazine I counted the shock ending of Abslom Daak: Dalek Killer as one of the best ‘Dalek moments’ of all
time.
The other thing I learned comes from (in my humble opinion) his
best work on the magazine, the lead comic strip Spider-God. It’s an extraordinary demonstration of economic
storytelling, and storytelling not through dialogue, but through a succession
of shocking, enchanting, terrifying images that still stick with me thirty
years later; the eerie silent village with its blank-eyed occupants; the night
sky full of stars and strange moons; the emergence of the spider; the cocoons dangling
from its web; the hatching egg; the final stunning metamorphosis. You could remove
all the dialogue and still follow the story. And it packs one hell of a punch,
ending with the Doctor plaintively remarking ‘Now do you see what you’ve done?’
followed by a single panel of Commander Frederic dropping his laser gun. One of
the finest moments in the strip ever.
(I always wondered whether the planet was intended to be
Vortis. And whether the story’s conclusion meant that the butterfly-people
would become extinct. But unanswered questions are good.)
But Spider-God was
just one story amongst many; Dragon’s
Claw with its wonderful character of the ancient hermit; Time Witch, the definitive fantasy-universe
story; The Collector, with it’s
mind-boggling time paradox; the virtual-reality nightmare of Dreamers of Death. All gloriously
rendered by Dave Gibbons but the product of the vivid, mind-expanding, inspiring
imagination of Steve Moore.
His Doctor Who lead
strips can be found in the Dragon’s Claw
collection, which I strongly recommend tracking down.