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Steven Moffat

Author of Sherlock: Season 1

86+ Works 3,760 Members 63 Reviews 2 Favorited

About the Author

Image credit: Steven Moffat taken by Ewen Roberts at Comic Con 2008.

Series

Works by Steven Moffat

Sherlock: Season 1 (2010) — creator — 381 copies, 4 reviews
Sherlock: Season 2 (2012) — creator — 320 copies, 3 reviews
The Adventures of Tintin: The Secret of the Unicorn [2011 film] (2011) — Screenwriter — 285 copies, 7 reviews
Sherlock: Season 3 (2014) — Creator — 268 copies, 3 reviews
Sherlock Vol. 1: A Study in Pink (2013) — Author — 201 copies, 10 reviews
Sherlock: Season 4 (2017) — Creator — 169 copies
Sherlock: The Abominable Bride (2016) — Screenwriter — 153 copies, 2 reviews
Doctor Who: The Day of the Doctor (2018) 135 copies, 9 reviews
Doctor Who: The Complete Eighth Series (2014) 121 copies, 1 review
Doctor Who: The Complete Ninth Series (2016) 86 copies, 1 review
Coupling: The Complete First Season (2000) — Author — 75 copies, 1 review
Doctor Who: The Time of the Doctor [DVD] (2014) 74 copies, 1 review
Coupling: The Complete Second Season (2001) — Author; Writer, some editions — 57 copies, 1 review
Doctor Who: Series Seven, Part One (2012) 54 copies, 2 reviews
Doctor Who Special: Twice Upon A Time (2018) — writer/executive producer — 52 copies, 1 review
Doctor Who: A Christmas Carol (2011) 51 copies, 1 review
Coupling: The Complete Third Season (2002) — Author — 48 copies, 1 review
Sherlock: The Complete Series (2014) — Creator — 42 copies, 1 review
Doctor Who: Series Seven, Part Two (2012) 42 copies, 1 review
Coupling: The Complete Fourth Season (2004) — Author — 39 copies, 1 review
Doctor Who: Series Six, Part One (2011) 36 copies, 1 review
Dr. Who: Last Christmas (2015) 34 copies
Sherlock: A Scandal in Belgravia Part 1 (2019) — Author — 32 copies, 2 reviews
Coupling - The Complete Seasons 1-4 (2000) — Creator — 31 copies
Doctor Who: Series Six, Part Two (2011) 28 copies, 1 review
The Cruel Sea (2014) 27 copies, 1 review
Doctor Who: The Snowmen (2013) 26 copies, 1 review
Doctor Who: The Husbands of River Song (2016) — writer/executive producer — 24 copies
Jekyll [2007 TV mini-series] (2007) — Creator — 23 copies
Sherlock Series 1 Boxed Set (2018) 21 copies
Doctor Who: Series 10, Part 2 (2017) — Writer — 19 copies, 1 review
Ein Skandal in Belgravia (2021) 16 copies
Doctor Who: Series 10, Part 1 — Writer — 14 copies, 1 review
Doctor Who: The Doctors Revisited: 9-11 (2013) — Writer (Impossible Astronaut & Day of the Moon) — 12 copies
Dracula [2020 mini-series] — Creator/Writer/Executive Producer — 9 copies, 1 review
Doctor Who: The Curse of Fatal Death [videorecording] (2000) — Screenwriter — 5 copies
The Unfriend (2023) 3 copies
Murder Most Horrid: Volume One — Screenwriter — 1 copy
Sherlock 1 copy
Press Gang 1 copy

Associated Works

A Study in Scarlet (1887) — Introduction, some editions — 8,066 copies, 320 reviews
Doctor Who: The Complete First Series (2005) — Author — 256 copies, 6 reviews
Doctor Who: The Complete Third Series (2007) — Author — 208 copies, 3 reviews
Doctor Who: The Complete Second Series (2007) — Author — 201 copies, 3 reviews
Doctor Who: The Complete Fourth Series (2008) — Author — 179 copies, 1 review
Doctor Who: The Shooting Scripts (2005) — Contributor — 170 copies, 2 reviews
Doctor Who: The Complete Specials (2010) — Author — 136 copies, 1 review
Decalog 3: Consequences: Ten Stories, Seven Doctors, One Chain of Events (1996) — Contributor — 131 copies, 1 review
Doctor Who: The Brilliant Book 2011 (2010) — Contributor — 124 copies, 4 reviews
Sherlock Vol. 2: The Blind Banker (2014) — Author — 106 copies, 2 reviews
Aliens and Enemies (2006) — Script extracts — 106 copies, 1 review
Doctor Who: The Brilliant Book 2012 (2011) — Contributor — 95 copies, 3 reviews
Doctor Who Annual 2006 (2005) — Contributor — 84 copies, 2 reviews
Sherlock Vol. 3: The Great Game (2016) — Author — 81 copies, 1 review
Doctor Who: The Complete Tenth Series [2005 TV Series] (2005) — Producer — 71 copies, 1 review
The Doctor Who Storybook 2007 (2006) — Contributor — 69 copies, 2 reviews
Adventures in Lockdown (2020) — Contributor — 58 copies, 4 reviews
Professor Bernice Summerfield and the Dead Men Diaries (2000) — Contributor — 56 copies, 2 reviews
The Doctor Who Storybook 2009 (2008) — Introduction — 48 copies, 1 review
Script Doctor: The Inside Story of Doctor Who 1986-89 (2005) — Introduction, some editions — 46 copies, 2 reviews
Collision: Stories From the Science of CERN (2023) — Contributor — 13 copies
Sherlock: A Study in Pink (2012) — Author — 7 copies
Bernice Summerfield: Treasury (2015) — Contributor — 4 copies
In●Vision: Season 19 Overview (1996) — Contributor "The One (out of Seven)" — 2 copies
Doctor Who Magazine, Issue 388 (2007) — Interview — 2 copies
Doctor Who Magazine 383 (2007) — Interview — 1 copy

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Common Knowledge

Members

Reviews

It just the first episode of BBC Sherlock but drawn/reformatted frame by frame. Which when I don't think about that fact, makes it enjoyable. But when I do think about it, it makes the volume annoying. Like yea, go and get your very obvious cash grab BBC. Granted, it does make me a wee bit of a hypocrite as there are manga produced after the anime. There's even been manga made after video games. Guess I'm conflicted about it all.
 
Flagged
Wybie | 9 other reviews | May 14, 2024 |
The final episode is a let down after two very solid first thirds, but even so, this is an enjoyable reimagining of the classic tale. As a result of the somewhat lacklustre third part, it doesn't in my opinion quite live up to Moffat's two excellent previous Victorian classic remakes ("Jekyll" and "Sherlock"), but it's well worth the watch. Dolly Wells is particularly memorable as Sister Agatha Van Helsing.
 
Flagged
Lucky-Loki | Jan 8, 2024 |
Access a version of the below that includes illustrations on my blog.

I've always been a bit salty that this book exists. Well, it would be more accurate to say that I am salty that the DWM Special Edition The Ninth Doctor Collected Comics exists. I dutifully bought that, expecting that no such graphic novel would ever come out—there just weren't enough strip adventures to justify such a collection! Eight years later, and the size of these collections had been halved, and so I bought those stories all over again, with just one addition—a prose story that I already had! Well, that and the as usual excellent extras.

So this was a reread again for me, but the added context of the extras was new. I appreciated in particular that were get to hear a lot from Mike Collins, who illustrated every DWM strip of the ninth Doctor; this is one of those eras where we have a consistent artist but not a consistent writer. I've opined before that you need one of those two, otherwise the strip doesn't feel cohesive because you don't have an actor's performance to unify the various voices as the tv programme does. And Mike Collins does good work; he's been with DWM since 1987 as a writer, and since 1991 as an artist, but I knew him first from his work on Star Trek comics for Marvel and Wildstorm and Babylon 5 comics for DC. He's good at likenesses, great at storytelling—exactly the artist you want, I reckon, when you're suddenly producing a tv tie-in strip to an actual tv programme for the first time in over fifteen years!

It's funny, in the extras to both this and the next volume, The Betrothal of Sontar, editor Clay Hickman talks about how they felt they had to a go a bit more kid-friendly now that the tv show was back... but I would hesitate to call any of the DWM strips here notably kid friendly, especially Rob Shearman's! But overall, I remembered this era as a bit of a shambles, and rereading it I didn't find that true at all. It's not perfect, but this is a solid slice of Doctor Who comics. Certainly it's much better than what DWM was putting out last time the tv programme was still on!

The Love Invasion
The ninth Doctor and Rose debut with a very solid piece of Russell T Davies pastiche. There's a lot of running back and forth in 1960s London as the Doctor and Rose must piece together what links some overly helpful young women, the death of several prominent scientists, and a woman who keeps killing aliens. There's solid humor, a decent alien motivation, and a strong sense of the voices of both Eccleston and Piper. The main thing I didn't like was that there's sort of a fake-out double ending, which felt tacked on.

Art Attack
This is a decent story with a good ending, about the Doctor and Rose coming to a futuristic art gallery, and getting caught up in an evil piece of performance art. That said, I felt like there's a better version of this story somewhere in the multiverse: a comics story about art written by an artist seems like it could have done more fun stuff than the story does, and there's surprisingly little made of the fact that both the Doctor and the alien are the last of their kinds—that would have been the emotional center of the story on tv, I think.

The Cruel Sea
I was pretty surprised when Mike Collins noted this as one of the best comic strips he's ever illustrated—because to me it was the weakest story in this volume. It has striking visuals—a cruise ship on the red oceans of Mars, Billie Piper in a skintight spacesuit, a woman whose face looks like a fractured mirror—and some neat uses of the medium—the conversation between the two Doctors—but even though I'm a big fan of Robert Shearman's audio work for Big Finish and his original prose fiction, I found something deeply unpleasant about reading this story. Some of the visuals struck me as inappropriate for the Doctor Who of 2005, and some I just didn't like. Well rendered, but genuinely unpleasant to think about. It's the kind of thing Shearman makes work in prose or audio, I guess (there's some gross stuff in Scherzo), but when you have to actually see it, it's very different. The characters generally are unpleasant, too—this story is very much the epitome of something that's well-crafted but just did not work for me.

When I posted the above on GallifreyBase, Rob himself popped up to opine, "I absolutely agree with you! I'm so grateful to Mike Collins for his amazing art and lovely support, but I don't think I got this story right at all. I've never been a big comics fan, and so misunderstood the particular demands of the medium - and yeah, I think I got the tone wrong completely." Phew!

Mr Nobody / What I Did on My Christmas Holidays by Sally Sparrow
These two stories, one comics, one prose, are both from Panini's only Doctor Who Annual, and are both more child-focused than the average DWM strip. But they're still both solid. You can of course count on Scott Gray for a well put-together done-in-one, and Steven Moffat's story is a fun time travel loop. We should meet this Sally Sparrow again!

A Groatsworth of Wit
The ninth Doctor's DWM tenure comes to a quick end with this, a decently fun story with some good jokes and a nice last scene. Obviously this ended up a dry run for a David Tennant episode, like some many stories in this volume, but it's different enough to be worthwhile.

Other Notes:
  • The Love Invasion, despite being three issues long, spans the entirety of Christopher Eccleston's on-screen tenure.
  • The behind-the-scenes stuff about Mike Collins trying to get Christopher Eccleston and Billie Piper's likenesses down was great. On the one hand, Eccleston kept shooting down images that were too heroic and good-looking and muscular, too American comics! On the other hand, Piper just said, "Ooh, he's given me hips and tits, I like it!"
  • After all the talk of likenesses, it thus becomes very noticeable when Rose has a dream in The Cruel Sea about marrying Mickey, but we never actually see his face, presumably so the story could avoid an extra set of approvals just for a one-page sequence.
  • Elements of The Love Invasion, The Cruel Sea, What I Did on My Christmas Holidays, and A Groatsworth of Wit arguably all ended up on screen. The latter two are obvious, but Clay Hickman makes the case that The Cruel Sea influenced "The Waters of Mars." Is this an offshoot of the Flood? A GallifreyBase commenter pointed out to me that the scene in Love Invasion where the Doctor counteracts being poisoned by eating random foods was lifted for "The Unicorn and the Wasp."
  • Rose is the first companion to spontaneously appear in the strip since Benny, and only the second to ever do so. Every other previous companion was introduced, even if (as in Peri and Ace) it was a reintroduction. Between this and the Doctor's regeneration, the illusion of the DWM strip as a standalone continuous narrative is shattered. We're in for a lot of that over the next couple years...
  • Rob Shearman is, I think, the first tv writer to work on the strip since Marc Platt. (Though one other strip writer here would go on to be a tv writer, as is the case with a couple past writers.)
  • It's pretty mind-boggling to learn about the ninth Doctor strips we didn't get from the extras: Russell T Davies and Bryan Hitch writing the ninth Doctor's debut! Russell T Davies and Dave Gibbons writing his final episode!! It's a shame we've still never gotten an RTD Doctor Who comic. I don't know if comics would play to his strength like tv, but I'd certainly be interested to see it.
Doctor Who Magazine and Marvel UK: « Previous in sequence | Next in sequence »
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Flagged
Stevil2001 | Dec 22, 2022 |
As far as I'm concerned this is exactly what a Christmas special should be like. There's a Christmas surprise, some amazing visual effects, and a large nod to CS Lewis and Narnia (not just a snow-covered planet but a line quoted from the book). There's some humour, there are some unusual aliens, and, best of all there's a wonderful climax and a great ending.

it's not standard Doctor Who, and probably won't appeal to hard-line fans. It's rated PG, and there's only mild suspense; there's a lot that's silly and the whole is somewhat twee. Credulity is always suspended in this series, but perhaps even more so in this.

And I loved it.
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Flagged
SueinCyprus | 1 other review | Dec 22, 2022 |

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Awards

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Associated Authors

Mark Gatiss creator, Author, Actor, writer, Screenwriter, Editor, Creator, Creator/Writer/Executive Producer/Actor
Russell T Davies writer/executive producer, Writer (Bad Wolf, Parting of the Ways, Stolen Earth & Journey's End)
Paul McGuigan Director, Director
Steve Thompson Screenwriter, Writer
Nick Hurran Director
Euros Lyn Director
Edgar Wright Screenwriter
Joe Cornish Screenwriter
Colm McCarthy Director
Neil Gaiman Contributor, writer
Toby Haynes Director, Director (Impossible Astronaut & Day of the Moon)
Faith Penhale Producer
Phil Ford writer
Coky Giedroyc Director
Jay Illustrator
Ed Bazalgette Director
Daniel O'Hara Director
Sue Vertue Producer
Joe Ahearne Director (Bad Wolf & Parting of the Ways)
Graeme Harper Director (Stolen Earth & Journey's End)
Damon Thomas Director
Matt Smith Actor, Actor (Impossible Astronaut & Day of the Moon)
Clayton Hickman Contributor
Rupert Graves Actor, Actor.
Una Stubbs Actor, Actress
Alex Kingston Actor, Actor (Impossible Astronaut & Day of the Moon)
David Tennant Actor, Actor (Parting of the Ways, Stolen Earth, Journey's End)
Billie Piper Actor, Actor (Bad Wolf, Parting of the Ways, Stolen Earth & Journey's End)
John Hurt Actor
Fabian Wagner Cinematographer
Michael Price Composer
John Williams Composer
Hergé Original story
Peter Jackson Producer
Murray Gold Composer
Tom Baker Actor
John Barrowman Actor, Actor (Bad Wolf, Parting of the Ways, Stolen Earth & Journey's End)
Arthur Conan Doyle Author, Bibliographic Antecedent
Catherine Tate Actor (Stolen Earth & Journey's End)
Freema Agyeman Actor (Stolen Earth & Journey's End)
Elisabeth Sladen Actor (Stolen Earth & Journey's End)
Kris Justice Illustrator
Martin Geraghty Illustrator
David A. Roach Illustrator
Scott Gray Contributor
John Ross Illustrator
Peter Greenhalgh Cinematographer
Christopher Eccleston Actor (Bad Wolf & Parting of the Ways)
Ben Miles Actor
Lou Gish Actor

Statistics

Works
86
Also by
27
Members
3,760
Popularity
#6,738
Rating
3.9
Reviews
63
ISBNs
103
Languages
7
Favorited
2

Charts & Graphs