The Ninth Doctor: Sin Eaters
by Cavan Scott, Cris Bolson (Illustrator), Adriana Melo (Illustrator)
Doctor Who: The Ninth Doctor (4), Doctor Who {non-TV} (Graphic Novels — Graphic Novel)
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All-new adventures with the Ninth Doctor! Two staggering adventures see the Doctor and his companions facing psyche-shattering conspiracies and ancient secrets! First, the Doctor goes undercover at a prisoner rehabilitation facility held within a collapsing singularity… Meanwhile, Captain Jack has left the TARDIS and when the object of an assassination he was supposedly responsible for turns up alive and well, Jack must delve deep into a past he would rather leave behind! Writer Cavan show more Scott (Who-Ology, Doctor Who Event 2016) and artists Adriana Melo (Star Wars: Empire, Birds of Prey) and Cris Bolson (The Shadow) explore the hidden depths of The Ninth Doctor and crew's ongoing adventures!. show lessTags
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This is the last volume of The Ninth Doctor, making it the first of Titan's Doctor Who ongoings to draw to an end. As a result, it has to tie up all the various threads Cavan Scott has introduced since the series began. It consists of two stories. The first, "Sin Eaters," is about the Doctor, Rose, and Tara investigating a space prison that extracts people's bad thoughts and injects them into separate bodies; the Doctor goes undercover as a criminal, and Rose as an inspector. I thought the central premise of this one was pretty silly, and Doctor Who stories about evil Doctors rarely convince me, because evil Doctors don't act very Doctor-ish, and just act like the kind of stupid bad guy the Doctor stops all the time. The last chapter of show more "Sin Eaters" switches perspective to Jack, and shows us some flashbacks of his time as a Time Agent, with a small appearance by the Doctor. It was fine, and mostly serves to set up the next story.
"The Bidding War" is about a con being played on the TARDIS crew, to capture and auction off the Doctor's memories. Again, it was fine. It feels rushed, like the series was cancelled earlier than expected... but it had fifteen issues, so surely Scott should have known "Year One" was up even if he had expected to get a Year Two, and Titan Who comics usually reset at the end of each year. Some of the explanations for what we saw at the year's beginning don't entirely convince, and I think the incessant continuity references interfere with this comic's attempt to recapture the tone of the 2005 series.
Having read the whole series now, I'm not really sure what the point of Tara, the new companion (a 1970s UNIT nurse) was. She never really seemed to do much (these stories already have three leads), and I never got a real sense of her personality. Her writing-out here is pretty perfunctory. And again, having a companion who is friends with Harry Sullivan really cuts against the 2005 vibe. This was probably the weakest of Titan's ongoings; at least The Tenth Doctor has had the occasional enjoyable story for all its flaws.
Also, what's up with the right side and bottom of the cover of my comiXology edition? Why is there that weird mirroring?
Titan Doctor Who: « Previous in sequence | Next in sequence » show less
"The Bidding War" is about a con being played on the TARDIS crew, to capture and auction off the Doctor's memories. Again, it was fine. It feels rushed, like the series was cancelled earlier than expected... but it had fifteen issues, so surely Scott should have known "Year One" was up even if he had expected to get a Year Two, and Titan Who comics usually reset at the end of each year. Some of the explanations for what we saw at the year's beginning don't entirely convince, and I think the incessant continuity references interfere with this comic's attempt to recapture the tone of the 2005 series.
Having read the whole series now, I'm not really sure what the point of Tara, the new companion (a 1970s UNIT nurse) was. She never really seemed to do much (these stories already have three leads), and I never got a real sense of her personality. Her writing-out here is pretty perfunctory. And again, having a companion who is friends with Harry Sullivan really cuts against the 2005 vibe. This was probably the weakest of Titan's ongoings; at least The Tenth Doctor has had the occasional enjoyable story for all its flaws.
Also, what's up with the right side and bottom of the cover of my comiXology edition? Why is there that weird mirroring?
Titan Doctor Who: « Previous in sequence | Next in sequence » show less
With Jack having left the team, the story begins with the Doctor incarcerated in a high-security prison on a space station for the murder of Tara. It is, of course, a fakeout to give the Doctor a chance to investigate the prison's suspicious rehabilitation methods. Things go wrong when Rose arrives in disguise and is unable to prevent the Doctor having his anger and darkest thoughts removed into a doppelganger called a sin eater. The sin eaters would be absolutely ridiculous in televised Doctor Who, but some how they work as in pen and ink, where the body horror is quite so bad. The whole story is built on well-worn science fiction tropes, but still somewhat entertaining.
The remainder of the volume pays off the plot of Jack Harkness show more losing his memories and the Doctor offering up the Mind of Time Lord plot is also paid off. Once again the Doctor is held in captivity for much of the story as four alien agents attempt to bid on his brain. The Doctor is able to defeat his enemies with his grief (not unlike a plot twist in an episode of Class). Tara ends up staying behind to help a devastated planet, freeing up the Doctor, Rose, and Jack to return to Cardiff to meet up with Mickey and Margaret. show less
The remainder of the volume pays off the plot of Jack Harkness show more losing his memories and the Doctor offering up the Mind of Time Lord plot is also paid off. Once again the Doctor is held in captivity for much of the story as four alien agents attempt to bid on his brain. The Doctor is able to defeat his enemies with his grief (not unlike a plot twist in an episode of Class). Tara ends up staying behind to help a devastated planet, freeing up the Doctor, Rose, and Jack to return to Cardiff to meet up with Mickey and Margaret. show less
This is the fourth, and hopefully not final, installment in the Ninth Doctor's adventures with Jack and Rose. Of the four so far, this was definitely my favorite. It's a bit more gruesome in parts than you'd expect from Doctor Who, but it's terrific fun.
The Doctor is imprisoned in an institute and Rose goes undercover to free him while Jack goes on the hunt for his missing two years worth of memories. Another great installment with a great team. Ninth Doctor was so great and it's fun to at least get to see him in the comicbook version.
https://fromtheheartofeurope.eu/sin-eaters-by-cavan-scott-adriana-melo-cris-bols...
Last in the series of Ninth Doctor comics from Titan, this has the Doctor dealing with a creature constructed from his id, a bit of Jack’s back story, Rose called on to save the day and only a small role for the promising UNIT companion Tara. There’s also a bit of commentary on social media. I thought the first story would have made a great TV episode if there had been a second Ninth Doctor series, and enjoyed the rest though it was a bit uneven in places.
Last in the series of Ninth Doctor comics from Titan, this has the Doctor dealing with a creature constructed from his id, a bit of Jack’s back story, Rose called on to save the day and only a small role for the promising UNIT companion Tara. There’s also a bit of commentary on social media. I thought the first story would have made a great TV episode if there had been a second Ninth Doctor series, and enjoyed the rest though it was a bit uneven in places.
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Common Knowledge
- Canonical title
- The Ninth Doctor: Sin Eaters
- People/Characters
- The Doctor (9th, War); Rose Tyler; Jack Harkness; Tara Mishra
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- Reviews
- 5
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- English
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