This will be the first appearance of the Daleks in a Titan comic? All the different series they've done and they've never done a single Dalek story?
Nope. The Daleks are separate rights. Even Eleventh Doctor Year Two, which co-starred Absolom Daak, Dalek Killer and took place partly during the Time War, was very careful to not have the Daleks on panel.
I didn't know that. I know rights worked differently in England and the creators of that kind of stuff get more rights than in the US, but I had assumed everything related to DW would still be included in the DW rights. So does that mean they have to get separate rights for every single character, alien, and concept that they take from the show?Nope. The Daleks are separate rights. Even Eleventh Doctor Year Two, which co-starred Absolom Daak, Dalek Killer and took place partly during the Time War, was very careful to not have the Daleks on panel.
I didn't know that. I know rights worked differently in England and the creators of that kind of stuff get more rights than in the US, but I had assumed everything related to DW would still be included in the DW rights. So does that mean they have to get separate rights for every single character, alien, and concept that they take from the show?
Hell, back when the show first came back, there was a very real possibility the show itself wouldn't be allowed to use the Daleks. The rights to the Daleks were finally granted at the eleventh hour, at a point where RTD had already created a new race which was in concept designs to be the enemy the Time Lords fought against in the Time War. That race ended up being used in season 3, the Toclafane.but I had assumed everything related to DW would still be included in the DW rights.
Depends. I know one reason why Daleks were rarely used in the Doctor Who novels is because Terry Nation actually insisted that half of what the author was paid for writing the book be turned over to him. Understandably, not a lot went for that arrangement, though there were a few who did.
And if you don't have the resources of the BBC you're pretty much screwed?
What were his objections, if I may so boldly ask?The BBC had more difficulty in 2004, as The Wormhole says above. They were pissed about two things. Terry Nation hadn't been happy with "Remembrance of the Daleks" in 1988, and I've heard the he issued his estate a directive to not work with the BBC on Dalek appearances in the future.
LOL.(Big Finish was fine; they weren't the Beeb.)
That was hilarious! DW stories I never knew that I needed to know.One of my favorite stories of Terry Nation and the Dalek rights involves Doctor Who Magazine, though I think it was Doctor Who Weekly at the time. Steve Moore and Steve Dillon introduced a new character to the Doctor Who universe, Abslom Daak, Dalek Killer. (If you're unfamiliar with the character, he's basically Snake Pliksson from Escape from New York with a chainsaw that can cut through Dalekanium.) In one story, the magazine's rights to use the Daleks lapsed, so Ablsom Daak fought Kill-Mechs, who were exactly like the Daleks but looked and talked nothing like them. And in the next issue, Daak was back fighting the Daleks. Years later when it was reprinted in a Marvel graphic novel, the Kill-Mechs were replaced with Daleks.
One issue he had that I remember hearing about, Terry Nation completely lost it over the existence of a Special Weapons Dalek, feeling it to be redundant given Daleks are already armed with the most powerful weapons imaginable.What were his objections, if I may so boldly ask?
That would have been a hell of a pairing. Or even better, they could have had the Daleks on Star Trek.In the early 2000s, Big Finish were able to negotiate a license for the Daleks with the Terry Nation estate that was affordable for them. One of the reasons for that is they (read: Nick Briggs) wanted to do Dalek stories unconnected from Doctor Who, and the Nation estate was amenable to that. Terry Nation had tried to sell NBC a Dalek series in the late 1960s; I sometimes think of an alternate history were Daleks and Star Trek are shown back-to-back.![]()
Yeah, as popular as the Daleks are in Dr. Who, I can't really see them doing quite as well by themselves.he BBC had more difficulty in 2004, as The Wormhole says above. They were pissed about two things. Terry Nation hadn't been happy with "Remembrance of the Daleks" in 1988, and I've heard the he issued his estate a directive to not work with the BBC on Dalek appearances in the future. (Big Finish was fine; they weren't the Beeb.) And, the Dalek cameo in Looney Tunes Back in Action wasn't authorized by them. It's long been my opinion that the reason they relented in their stance in 2004 was that they realized that the Daleks weren't exploitable outside of Doctor Who and if the RTD series were a success without the Daleks their property would be devalued.
That's funny.One of my favorite stories of Terry Nation and the Dalek rights involves Doctor Who Magazine, though I think it was Doctor Who Weekly at the time. Steve Moore and Steve Dillon introduced a new character to the Doctor Who universe, Abslom Daak, Dalek Killer. (If you're unfamiliar with the character, he's basically Snake Pliksson from Escape from New York with a chainsaw that can cut through Dalekanium.) In one story, the magazine's rights to use the Daleks lapsed, so Ablsom Daak fought Kill-Mechs, who were exactly like the Daleks but looked and talked nothing like them. And in the next issue, Daak was back fighting the Daleks. Years later when it was reprinted in a Marvel graphic novel, the Kill-Mechs were replaced with Daleks.
One issue he had that I remember hearing about, Terry Nation completely lost it over the existence of a Special Weapons Dalek, feeling it to be redundant given Daleks are already armed with the most powerful weapons imaginable.
To be fair, I always thought the way the Special Weapons Dalek was presented was rather silly. Two opposing Dalek forces are fighting each other, shooting back and forth but never hitting each other. Then one side tosses in the towel and declares it's time to call in the "Special Weapons Dalek." We get a two minute sequence of a fancy Dalek with a huge cannon rolling along as very distinctly sounding 1980s background music plays. This Dalek then fires its huge cannon, instantly obliterating the opposing side. Still, if that's all the issue Nation had, it's a bit of an overreaction.
This one I'm not 100% sure of its accuracy, though another story I've heard is that Nation was supposed to have veto authority over the script, which he tried to exercise to remove the scene with the Dalek hovering up the stairs, but the scene stayed in over his objections.
Quite the contrary, that was his problem, Dalek's aren't supposed to be able to climb stairs, according to Nation, and they should only have limited, assisted flight abilities, like those discs we saw them using in Planet of the Daleks.Guess he missed the bit in the earlier story when the Doctor mocked the daleks for not being able to climb stairs.
It beggars belief.So he objected to the Special Weapons Dalek because he thought your common-or-garden Dalek was already the ultimate killing machine... yet at the same time, he objected to the levitating Dalek because he thought Daleks should be too limited to handle anything but a flat surface. O-kayyyy...
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