This article needs additional citations for verification. (January 2013) |
Countdown | |
---|---|
Publication information | |
Publisher | Polystyle Publications |
Schedule | Weekly |
Format | Ongoing series |
Genre | Action, Adventure, Science fiction, Spy-fi, Techno-thriller |
Publication date | 20 February 1971 – 25 August 1973 |
No. of issues | 132 |
Creative team | |
Artist(s) | Gerry Haylock, John M. Burns, Brian Lewis, Reprints: Mike Noble, Don Harley |
Letterer(s) | Matt Anderson (1970–73) Danny Fox (1973) |
Editor(s) | Dennis Hooper Robin Hilborn (assistant editor, 1970–71) Peter Levy (assistant editor, 1971–73) Roger Perry (art editor) Bill Kidd (assistant art editor) |
Countdown was a British comic published weekly by Polystyle Publications – ultimately, under several different titles – from early 1971 to late summer 1973. The pages in each issue were numbered in reverse order, with page 1 at the end – a gimmick which was derived from the comic's title in order to create a countdown to the number one every week.
Countdown initially featured many comic strips based on Gerry Anderson's Supermarionation TV shows which had been popular throughout the 1960s. (Much of this material was reprinted from an earlier publication called TV Century 21.) The principle exceptions to this were the strips based on Doctor Who, which had previously been published in Polystyle's long-established title TV Comic, the Anderson's new live-action series UFO, and (from issue 35) the Roger Moore/Tony Curtis vehicle The Persuaders!.
It was a high-quality (but expensive) publication, featuring full-colour art on the cover and on many of the inside pages, and was printed on coated paper. After 58 weeks, the publisher cut costs by relaunching the comic under the title TV Action, in a much cheaper format. The relaunch saw a gradual shift in emphasis away from Gerry Anderson content, with an increased focuson comic strip stories based on popular crime and adventure TV series of the era such as Hawaii Five-O, The Protectors and Alias Smith and Jones.
A notable feature of Countdown was the inclusion of nonfiction articles about current space exploration which often included a level of technical detail more typical of technical trade journals aimed at adult professionals.