^ Farting aliens and Weakest Big Brother Links aside, I always thought his Doctor was given reasonably straight material to work with.
I think the relaunch would have died a death if they'd overdone the seriousness and miserable "Last of My Kind" stuff straight out of the trap, certainly Tennant got a bit too weepy at times.
Anyway, back to my latest purchase - the "Vintage Beeb" rerelease of the Genesis of the Daleks soundtrack, which has been out for ages.
Must have played the original vinyl LP issue of this to death so much as a child that I'm surprised the stylus didn't wear right through it.
Long since lost/discarded, along with any equipment to be able play vinyl on !
"No Tea Harry".
"Djchoo are insane Davros!"
Zips along, you don't really miss any of the stuff cut out from the TV version, although it ends quite abruptly almost mid-Dalek rant.
Comedian Lee Mack will have a small cameo in series 11: http://www.radiotimes.com/news/tv/2018-0...-who-role/
The recurring Sharon D. Clarke mentioned on the same show that she's playing Mary, the wife of Bradley Walsh's character Graham.
^ "You don't start with a marketing idea and move backwards."
Had to put this here. Watch Peter Capaldi's answer to the question (from 5'35") about his costume at this year's ReGeneration Who convention in Baltimore. It speaks volumes about the abomination that is Whittaker's outfit.
(17-03-2018 10:26 )M-L-L Wrote: [ -> ] For anyone willing to contribute to their coffers by buying something again....... I see there's a new "Special Edition" of the Patrick Troughton "Enemy Of The World" story being released soon.....
^ Yes. Extras laden now because they knew they could sell it to us more than once. It's such an old trick but it does work unfortunately.
Caved in.
The Deborah Watling tribute is quite touching.
The Toby Hadoke "Treasure Hunt" vehicle in search of something new to find about Enemy of the World is just a bit bonkers but has a surprisingly emotional ending.
Philip Morris affirms his belief that the missing Web of Fear episode is on the verge of being re-found, but offers no real evidence.(Presumably it just slipped down the back of some airport carousel (should have invested in a stronger backpack?) and wasn't sold off to some private collector.)
^ Morris eventually did that public appearance for Fantom. Gave his usual vague positivity without absolutely anything solid. Apparently he reckons it's in private hands in Australia. That documentary's "lost on its way back to the UK" is a broad stroke to say the least. So we're still waiting. And maybe the special edition of Web is too.
But enough if this tittle tattle. Here's another easy round up of season 11 info culled from the web:
The season will see the return of classic monsters according to the BBC Sales Director: http://www.digitalspy.com/tv/doctor-who/...-monsters/ Bold and radical is all very well but there must also be recongnisable areas of saleabilty it seems.
And don't worry I don't intended to be listing all the older Who news all the time... but I did think the following recent examples were worth putting here in case anyone had any thoughts on them.
Season 10 had a deleted cameo scene shot featuring two characters from Casualty: http://www.digitalspy.com/tv/doctor-who/...a-mealing/
Sounds a bit nauseating - for reasons I can't quite put my finger on. Glad they binned it.
And finally, the usual Who storm in a teacup... https://www.mirror.co.uk/tv/doctor-who-f...l-12496989
I must say though there is something of a whiff of revisionism about this. You put together a panel to review old episodes but you skew it so the top age is 26?! Now I understand the need to tailor a magazine's contents to the average age of the readership but to then include a NuWho Sales Director too does begin to look like you're stacking the deck for a certain kind of response.
It's like one of those 'everything was crap in the 70s' type shows they have on TV. These seem to exist purely for young nobody 'celebrities' to take cheap pot shots at old programmes with the implication being 'isn't everything so much better now just because we're more enlightened'. Well the truth is that sometimes it is, and sometimes it isn't...
But in any case, Gary Russell happens to be plain wrong here: The new DWM panel represents an exclusion of a certain fan type perspective and therefore is against everything that Who should stand for.
(09-05-2018 20:45 )ShandyHand Wrote: [ -> ]Season 10 had a deleted cameo scene shot featuring two characters from Casualty: http://www.digitalspy.com/tv/doctor-who/...a-mealing/
Sounds a bit nauseating - for reasons I can't quite put my finger on. Glad they binned it.
How silly
Quote:And finally, the usual Who storm in a teacup... https://www.mirror.co.uk/tv/doctor-who-f...l-12496989
I must say though there is something of a whiff of revisionism about this. You put together a panel to review old episodes but you skew it so the top age is 26?! Now I understand the need to tailor a magazine's contents to the average age of the readership but to then include a NuWho Sales Director too does begin to look like you're stacking the deck for a certain kind of response.
It's a feeble complaint when the original Time Team feature saw 4 super-fans pulling the Old Series to bits with gay abandon. Props to the Mirror for singling out a fan called David Steel, though
Little point wasting this in the Music section. 30 summers ago, this was about as exciting as life possibly got (at least until Sabrina appeared not long after, mind):