
In the programme’s mythology, the Daleks were so feared that even the Time Lords tried to avert their creation, using the Doctor as their agent, so as not to get their own hands dirty. It was to spark a Time War which was to threaten all of creation, as the two races vied for supremacy. Even though the Doctor fought with the Time Lords against the Daleks, it did not necessarily mean that they saw eye-to-eye, as there was a long and chequered history.
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In Doctor Who: Origins, writer Jody Houser shows us that even way back in the Doctor’s history, the Time Lords were guilty of some heinous acts, while always maintaining the veneer of superiority and enlightened detachment which belied the true nature of some of their number. Here, we find that although the Time Lords and Daleks were aeons away from encountering each other, the two races were perhaps more alike than the natives of Gallifrey would maybe care to admit.
Given a mission by the shadowy Division to take out a threat to the future of their home, the Doctor and new companion Taslo visited a colony world and found the residents to be a benign presence. What was even more surprising was then discovering that those people were Time Lords who had all acclimated to their new environment, and in regenerating had begun to look less humanoid, setting them apart from the Time Lords who still dwell on Gallifrey.
With such a broad, scarcely marked canvas to be able to paint on, the opportunity which is presented here has certainly not been squandered by Houser, leading to some fresh, dynamic storytelling. Doctor Who: Origins lets us view an unfamiliar version of the character, laying all of the groundwork for the established Doctor we know and love.
Doctor Who: Origins is out now from Titan Comics.

