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Mariano Laclaustra

Author of The Twelfth Doctor: Fractures

9+ Works 329 Members 21 Reviews

Series

Works by Mariano Laclaustra

The Twelfth Doctor: Fractures (2015) — Illustrator — 58 copies, 2 reviews
The Twelfth Doctor: Hyperion (2016) — Illustrator — 56 copies, 3 reviews
The Lost Dimension, Book One (2018) — Illustrator — 47 copies, 3 reviews
The Lost Dimension, Book Two (2018) — Illustrator — 39 copies, 2 reviews
The Twelfth Doctor: Year Two: The Twist (2017) — Illustrator — 34 copies, 4 reviews
Doctor Who Free Comic Book Day 2017 (2017) — Illustrator — 33 copies, 3 reviews
The Twelfth Doctor: Time Trials: The Terror Beneath (2017) — Illustrator — 31 copies, 1 review
The Twelfth Doctor: Year Two: Sonic Boom (2017) — Illustrator — 30 copies, 3 reviews

Associated Works

The Twelfth Doctor: Terrorformer (2015) — Illustrator — 95 copies, 5 reviews
Doctor Who: Free Comic Book Day 2015 (2015) — Illustrator — 63 copies, 2 reviews
The Thirteenth Doctor: The Many Lives of Doctor Who (2018) — Illustrator — 61 copies, 4 reviews
The Ninth Doctor: Doctormania (2016) — Illustrator — 54 copies, 5 reviews
Doctor Who: Free Comic Book Day 2018 (2018) — Illustrator — 34 copies, 3 reviews
Doctor Who: Free Comic Book Day 2016 (2016) — Illustrator — 32 copies, 1 review
The Rise of Itza (2023) — Artist — 2 copies

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Reviews

This is one big story, and I don't have meaningfully distinct comments about each volume, so this review takes in both.

Titan's Doctor Who crossovers got bigger every year. This one is eight issues and two collected editions, and crossed through its ongoings (instead of just featuring characters from them), taking in issues of The Tenth Doctor: Year Three, The Eleventh Doctor: Year Three, and The Twelfth Doctor: Year Three. It also features the ninth Doctor, Rose, Jack, Tara, Madame Vastra, and Jenny; Jenny, the Doctor's daughter; the fourth Doctor and second Romana; and River Song in a set of specials. Plus every other incarnation of the Doctor puts in at least a one-scene cameo. Is that enough already?

It is, in fact, too much. It follows the Big Finish model: the characters are mostly separate for most of it, which means they undertake pretty generic adventures, and then the characters come together at the end, which means the narrative doesn't have room for anything other than simple solutions and generic Doctor sniping... something we've seen twice in the past two years! I have posited in the past that Big Finish's nostalgic crossovers are pointless because they bring together characters we see in ongoing adventures all the time already, and the same is true here. There is no novelty to bringing "back" the tenth Doctor, Gabby, and Cindy when I read their adventures already. The only characters we don't already see all the time in Titan adventures are Jenny, the fourth Doctor and Romana, and River, but the first of those I had no desire to see come back, and the others I listen to the adventures of already via Big Finish. (Plus, I didn't find the stories or dialogue very good; the River story in particular was confusingly written and poorly illustrated.)

If we aren't getting nostalgia, then we're not getting anything, because this story isn't really about anything. A dimension turns people into mindless zombies... as Doctor Who threats go, it's definitively bottom tier and generic. Does this story have any interesting themes or clever characterization? Basically, no. The one exception is the Eleventh Doctor issue, which isn't by any of the regular Eleventh Doctor writers but is at least by regular Eleventh Doctor artists Leandro Casco and I. N. J. Culbard. It's a decent tale of the eleventh Doctor and Alice being trapped on ancient Gallifrey and becoming inadvertently involved with the Time Lord's early TARDIS experiments. The rest of it all is sound and fury, signifying nothing. I'm glad that after three goes, Titan finally abandoned these annual events; I had mixed thoughts about Four Doctors, but it was overall pretty interesting. The latter two have been exercises in tedium.

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Stevil2001 | 1 other review | Feb 11, 2022 |
This is one big story, and I don't have meaningfully distinct comments about each volume, so this review takes in both.

Titan's Doctor Who crossovers got bigger every year. This one is eight issues and two collected editions, and crossed through its ongoings (instead of just featuring characters from them), taking in issues of The Tenth Doctor: Year Three, The Eleventh Doctor: Year Three, and The Twelfth Doctor: Year Three. It also features the ninth Doctor, Rose, Jack, Tara, Madame Vastra, and Jenny; Jenny, the Doctor's daughter; the fourth Doctor and second Romana; and River Song in a set of specials. Plus every other incarnation of the Doctor puts in at least a one-scene cameo. Is that enough already?

It is, in fact, too much. It follows the Big Finish model: the characters are mostly separate for most of it, which means they undertake pretty generic adventures, and then the characters come together at the end, which means the narrative doesn't have room for anything other than simple solutions and generic Doctor sniping... something we've seen twice in the past two years! I have posited in the past that Big Finish's nostalgic crossovers are pointless because they bring together characters we see in ongoing adventures all the time already, and the same is true here. There is no novelty to bringing "back" the tenth Doctor, Gabby, and Cindy when I read their adventures already. The only characters we don't already see all the time in Titan adventures are Jenny, the fourth Doctor and Romana, and River, but the first of those I had no desire to see come back, and the others I listen to the adventures of already via Big Finish. (Plus, I didn't find the stories or dialogue very good; the River story in particular was confusingly written and poorly illustrated.)

If we aren't getting nostalgia, then we're not getting anything, because this story isn't really about anything. A dimension turns people into mindless zombies... as Doctor Who threats go, it's definitively bottom tier and generic. Does this story have any interesting themes or clever characterization? Basically, no. The one exception is the Eleventh Doctor issue, which isn't by any of the regular Eleventh Doctor writers but is at least by regular Eleventh Doctor artists Leandro Casco and I. N. J. Culbard. It's a decent tale of the eleventh Doctor and Alice being trapped on ancient Gallifrey and becoming inadvertently involved with the Time Lord's early TARDIS experiments. The rest of it all is sound and fury, signifying nothing. I'm glad that after three goes, Titan finally abandoned these annual events; I had mixed thoughts about Four Doctors, but it was overall pretty interesting. The latter two have been exercises in tedium.

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Stevil2001 | 2 other reviews | Feb 11, 2022 |
The stories from Titan's first two Doctor Who Free Comic Book Day specials were included in their regular collections, but as far as I can tell, this one and the next were not, so I added them to my marathon of Titan collections This is a twelfth Doctor story—the first to include tv companion Bill Potts—that includes flashbacks to the ninth, tenth, and eleventh Doctors (i.e., everyone who starred in an ongoing, though the ninth's had been cancelled by this point). It's fine; I am not sure I entirely bought all the Doctor's actions, but whatever, it's sixteen pages and I didn't pay any money for it! My biggest complain is that when the Doctor tells Bill something happened to the ninth Doctor "before Tara," that is clearly a comment aimed at the continuity-obsessed audience, and not anything he would ever actually say to Bill!

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Stevil2001 | 2 other reviews | Jan 14, 2022 |
"Year Three" of Titan's Twelfth Doctor ongoing has the umbrella title "Time Trials," but no kind of ongoing storyline is introduced in its first volume. Indeed, my guess is that the umbrella title is so vague because there won't be one, that kind of thing being much harder to weave into an ongoing that's beholden to what's happening on screen. (The twelfth Doctor was still on screen when these comics came out; "Year One" did have a minor ongoing plot, but "Year Two" didn't.) Like the last couple volumes of Year Two, the Doctor is still companionless here, but he does pick up one-off companion Hattie from The Twist for a perfectly okay outing about spooky underwater things in a seaside village. Mann has settled in as a serviceable writer of twelfth Doctor comics: rarely wretched, but in no way does the twelfth Doctor looking at the "camera" and saying, "I always thought the Jon Pertwee era was the best one" capture what the twelfth Doctor era was like on screen, which often pushed at the boundaries of screen Doctor Who to such an extent as to irritate me. Just try to be interesting, Mann! I do think Mariano Laclaustra is good at atmosphere, and he's probably this comic's best artist who wasn't Rachael Stott.

There's also a one-issue story by James Peaty where the Doctor lands in a town terrified by a floating smile. Warren Pleece turns in some excellent, disconcerting art, but the story itself is entirely predictable and obvious.

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Stevil2001 | Jan 14, 2022 |

Lists

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Daniel Indro Illustrator
Adriana Melo Illustrator
Cris Bolson Illustrator
Emma Beeby Author
Ivan Rodriguez Illustrator
Wellington Diaz Illustrator
Warren Pleece Illustrator
Fer Centurion Illustrator
Agus Calcagno Illustrator
Klebs Junior Illustrator
Mony Castillo Contributor
JB Bastos Illustrator
Leandro Casco Illustrator
Pasquale Qualano Illustrator
I.N.J. Culbard Illustrator
Marcelo Salaza Illustrator
Anderson Cabral Illustrator
Nico Selma Illustrator
Pier Brito Illustrator

Statistics

Works
9
Also by
7
Members
329
Popularity
#72,116
Rating
½ 3.6
Reviews
21
ISBNs
27
Languages
2

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