purplecat: The Sixth Doctor (Who:Six)
Or possibly it should be "random visit to my brief fanzine making days". Reviews of Attack of the Cybermen by myself and my sister from The Web Planet.


Typewriter written page from a fanzine, complete with ASCII art style heading and manual crossing out achieved by typing over typos.  Transcript below.


I think we liked the episode more then than I do now and I'm mildly bemused by my categorisation of a typically violent and nihilistic Saward story as a "jolly little romp" - maybe I was fooled by all the bright colours?

Transcript (typos eliminated at random):

ATTACK OF THE CYBERMEN

This story has suffered greatly from a poor plot written by Paula Moore. There is little in the way of a story and what bought it to life was wonderful acting an an excellent script. If you cut the story into different scenes like a play, you would no doubt find it perfect, but rolled into one to form a continuous story all glamour is lost in the pathetic "Plot".

The acting by Maurice Colbourne (Lytton) was magic as was that of the rest of the cast but I felt that his stands out as the best.

The idea of winding the meagre plot around an old story was attractive but also baffling to those who were not acquainted with "The Tenth Planet."

The acting was superb and it is a great pity the story was unable to do it justice.

By Sophie Dennis

Well I must admit that I agree the lot was very poor not to say confusing. If the Cybermen can't travel in time how come they know that Mondas will be destroyed.

Continuity aside though ATTACK OF THE CYBERMEN is a jolly little romp if nothing else. My favourite bit must be when the TARDIS changed shape for the first time. Peri's remark "I love it Doctor, I mean there's nothing incongruous about that!"

By far the cleverest twist of the (what there was of a) plot was making Lytton a good guy that was one thing no one expected.

Did anyone notice how easily these supposedly invincible Cybermen are destroyed? One even with a normal bullet!

Oh well! complaints aside loved the Cyrons, loved the TARDIS, though the Doctor was great (full marks to Colin Baker) and am prepared to enjoy it as a jolly little romp.

By Louise Dennis
purplecat: The Tardis against a sunset (or possibly sunrise) (Doctor Who)
The Web Planet (as well as being a first Doctor story) was my first venture into the world of fanzines. I was thirteen. I had a typewriter, I think inherited from my grandfather in some way, and I used that, a liberal application of tracing paper and a certain amount of recycling of other Doctor who material via a version of cut-n-paste that involved actual scissors and actual glue, to create a master copy which my mother would then photocopy at work for me and I distributed at school.



This is the cover of the first issue. You can tell by the 1 in the top corner which is doing its best to be sparkly despite the limitations of pen, ink and photocopiers.


The first issue contains an editorial, a word search, a shamelessly copied and unattributed Tim Quinn and Dicky Howett comic (bad baby purplecat!), short articles on Monsters (Daleks, Cybermen, Sontarans and the Master) and UNIT and a Quiz, plus a bonus pullout leaflet listing all the Doctors and companions.

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