Monday 26 December 2016

The Return of Doctor Mysterio

26 December 2016

Well that's another one over (Christmas specials, that is.)  I'm not sure yet what I think of The Return of Doctor Mysterio, having only seen it once so far.

On the plus side, it has returned to the Russell T Davies approach of a pastiche of a popular holiday blockbuster film (see The Christmas Invasion and Voyage of the Damned) rather than visiting yet another alien planet of the Dickensian Christmas people (see A Christmas Carol, Time of the Doctor and The Husbands of River Song.)  On the negative side, I'm not a great fan of superhero movies.

Another good point is that Matt Lucas' Nardole was considerably less annoying than I had anticipated.  In fact, I found myself looking forward to his appearances. I was less pleased to see the reappearance of the aliens with the zip-up heads and gloopy brains.  I think that they are uncalled-for when the nation is digesting its Christmas dinner.

I'll need to see it again a few times to come to a final conclusion, but I watched The Christmas Invasion again afterwards, and I can exclusively reveal that it is still number one.




Sunday 18 December 2016

My All New Top 10 (and a bit) Christmas Specials

Sunday 18 December 2016

Two years ago I did a series of posts on my top ten Doctor Who Christmas specials.  There have been two more since then, so an update is in order.  I am still finding it weird that Doctor Who now occupies the Morecambe and Wise spot as the traditional Christmas Day entertainment for all the family (and the Prime Minister.) However, it's been 11 years now, so here is my revised ranking, with 2014's Last Christmas and 2015's The Husbands of River Song slotted in.

1
The Christmas Invasion
2005
2
The Unquiet Dead*
2005
3
A Christmas Carol
2010
4
The Doctor the Widow and the Wardrobe**
2011
5
The Runaway Bride
2006
6
Voyage of the Damned
2007
7
Last Christmas***
2014
8
The Next Doctor
2008
9
The Husbands of River Song****
2015
10
The End of Time
2009
11
The Snowmen
2012
12
The Time of the Doctor
2013












* Yes, I know that this was technically not a Christmas Special, but it should have been.
**My new team member thinks this one is terrible, but at least it's properly Christmassy. We do agree about Nardole, though, so I'll let him off.
***Marked up for the Rudolph's nose car alarm gag
****Marked down for excessive continuity references and Matt Lucas.

There is still no change at number one.  How can you beat David Tennant, revived by a cup of tea, saving the world with a satsuma whilst still in his pyjamas, then having time to bring down the (female) Prime Minister before tucking in to turkey and all the trimmings?

I wonder which one is Theresa May's favourite?

PS Has anyone ever managed to solve the Watcher's Christmas Quiz in Doctor Who Magazine?  This year I don't even understand the questions.

PPS Have had a breakthrough with the Quiz.  Once we worked out the key, it isn't actually as hard as usual.  Woo hoo!

Sunday 11 December 2016

More Power of the Daleks

Sunday 11 December 2016

I am most encouraged to learn that I am not the only lady of a certain age who watches Doctor Who of her own volition. None other than Theresa May, Prime Minister (yes, we know who she is) enjoys watching the Doctor Who Christmas Special after she has cooked her goose. I just wish I could get away with wearing leather trousers...

Anyway, we have finished watching Power of the Daleks. There are definitely parallels with Victory of the Daleks - yes, we have Daleks in a servile role, bringing drinks. Why doesn't an enterprising Cardiff restaurant try that?

There are a lot of other familiar elements: lots of running up and down corridors; the Doctor being mistaken for someone in authority (psychic paper would have saved a lot of time; the Doctor being locked up; his companions being kidnapped; a misguided scientist; a rebel force and a scheming security chief. As this is the 1960s, the female companion has little to do apart from be kidnapped, although Polly seems to know quite lot about Daleks considering she hasn't actually met any before. Ben and Polly's initial suspicions of the new incarnation of the Doctor are soon forgotten.

The animation is strange in that the human characters are not particularly well realised, but the Daleks look almost photo-realistic.

Overall I enjoyed it.  Now we are on to the end of the Troughton era with The War Games.


Sunday 27 November 2016

Power of the Daleks - the beginning

Sunday 27 November 2016

On Friday my other half decided that a burgundy coloured Fourth Doctor cosplay coat was the ideal garment to wear:

a) to work (where the Finance Director correctly identified it); and
b) to the AGM and Presidential Lecture of the Royal Historical Society.

After the lecture, I tried to make a swift exit and he asked me if I didn't want to go the reception for a canapĂ©.  "Not in that coat," I replied, "it looks a lot better in the dark." [This was a reference to our first date. We were at the theatre and as the house lights he turned to me and told me that I looked better in the dark. Reader....I married him anyway.]

The upside of this was that we got home in good time to watch The Grand Tour, leaving Saturday night free to make a start on the DVD of Power of the Daleks.

It's rather a strange story.  I'm not sure whether the animation follows the original script exactly, but it seems to be a little disjointed, as if linking action or scenes are missing.  The animation is quite basic, and doesn't seem to have captured the Doctor,  Ben and Polly particularly well.  That said, I am enjoying it, and found episode two creepy enough to be watched from a vantage point to the rear of our soft seating area.  The end of this episode is rather similar to Victory of the Daleks, which I wasn't really expecting.

I'm off now to watch the next thrilling installment.

Sunday 13 November 2016

A Helmet for a Space Cow?

Sunday 11 November 2016

Our meander through classic black and white stories reached The Time Meddler last night. We saw the first two episodes, which were incredibly slow by modern standards.  The initial scene in the TARDIS and the scene-setting in 11th century Northumbria would have been over  in about 2 minutes these days.

There were some good lines, nevertheless.  I think  that Steven's introduction to the TARDIS remains one of the best ever: "that's the horizontal hold...and that's a panda on a chair."  I suspect that the original script didn't say "horizontal hold." (For younger readers, horizontal hold was something you occasionally had to adjust on an old-fashioned TV, possibly while dancing around holding a set-top aerial to see where the best position was.) 

I will let them off having a Viking helmet with horns on it, purely because it allowed them to have the line "what do you think it is, a helmet for a Space Cow?"

It is very difficult though to watch episodes with Steven in without thinking it's Peter Purves from Blue Peter and wondering what he has done with Valerie Singleton and John Noakes. Peter Purves is also incidentally one of the few famous people I have seen and recognised in real life - he was on the platform at Euston Square Station. I'm the person who had to travel in the same train to Marylebone Station with Geoffrey Palmer, who lives in my hometown before being sure it was him! Luckily no one collapsed from plague on arrival.

This evening we will find out what the mysterious Monk is up to.

Sunday 30 October 2016

End of an era...

30 October 2016

We were going to take a trip to the tip this morning with the old Doctor Who VHS tapes we moved out of the TARDIS yesterday.

As an afterthought, I posted on our local Facebook group asking if anyone was interested in them (free).  Within a couple of hours they had been collected. The power of the internet in action!





Saturday 29 October 2016

My TARDIS has a screw loose...

Saturday 29 October 2016

We have a storage problem: not enough room for our DVDs.   Husband has a brilliant idea: if he throws out all his remaining old Doctor Who VHS tapes we can no longer watch (he has slowly been replacing them with DVDs), then the Doctor Who DVDs can go in the TARDIS video cabinet, making space in our other storage units.

Problem 1: Find the autograph.  I distinctly remember Colin Baker signing a VHS cassette at the Who shop that briefly appeared in Little Chalfont, whilst avoiding falling Silurian masks.  Obviously we don't want to throw that one out. But none of the VHS tapes in the TARDIS are of Sixth Doctor stories. The later VHS tapes are downstairs, but the only Sixth Doctor story we have left is Trial of a Time Lord, and that hasn't been signed.  Have we already ditched the autograph by mistake? 

Problem solved: Husband finds the autographed cassette.  It turns out to be the 1994 Bill Baggs Video The Zero Imperative, starring Colin Baker, Sylvester McCoy, John Pertwee, Caroline John, Louise Jameson, Sophie Aldred and Linda Lusardi. (Spot the odd one out...) There is also an appearance by the writer, a young man called Mark Gatiss.  I wonder what happened to him?

Problem 2: DVDs are slightly deeper than VHS tapes.  The doors of the TARDIS no longer close properly, and one of them comes off completely.  Husband has another (not so) brilliant idea: we take the other door off to match.

I have a better idea: we put the Virgin New Adventures and Missing Adventures in the TARDIS, and the DVDs on the bookshelf.

The books fit, and I wield my (totally un-sonic) screwdriver to fix the doors.

Just one problem left.  Where shall we keep The Zero Imperative?

Sunday 23 October 2016

Revisiting the Classics

Sunday 23 October

My other half has celebrated earning a bonus at work by investing in a lot of DVDs of old Troughton stories.

As a result we have been enjoying The Invasion, The Moonbase and The Ice Warriors, all with animation filling in for missing episodes.

The last two are definitely of their time. Poor Polly spent most of The Moonbase making coffee.  Whilst I didn't like Clara that much, she wouldn't have stood for that - the Doctor had to fetch his own coffee!  The Ice Warriors was a  reminder that not so long ago we were more worried about a returning ice age than global warming.



Monday 30 May 2016

The Doctor Who Experience...


Our tickets for the Doctor Who Experience were for entry between 10.00 a.m and 10.30 a.m.  So we arrived in Cardiff Bay at 9.20 a.m. with plenty of time to enjoy the late May Bank Holiday weekend sunshine. We spent some time hanging around outside trying to find a good angle for photographing the precariously positioned TARDIS, whilst listening to some passers-by:

“It’s a television programme, about a time-traveller.  People come here from all over the world to see this.  Look, that’s a Dalek, that thing there.”

After while, I located a cafe that was actually open that early on a Sunday (we had walked right past it whilst looking at the TARDIS). It also sold pies, so as we sat outside I wondered whether the Experience would last long enough to justify our having lunch there. 
Eventually 10.00 a.m arrived and the doors opened. We let someone else go in first.  It doesn’t do to look too eager. The first ‘experience’ started at 10.15. Until then we had the choice of sampling the delights of their cafĂ© (which apparently opened at 9.30, but had no signage outside to let anyone know this fact) or admiring a new paradigm Dalek built out of Lego (why on earth? They look as if they have already been built from Lego) and some other replica monsters.

At 10.10 a.m. we joined the small queue to enter the ‘Gallifrey Museum.’ I noticed that whilst there were some small children in the group, they were easily outnumbered by adults.  No need to be embarrassed about being a pair of mature (in appearance, anyway) adults. We were finally admitted to the Museum, where our Museum host handed out chunky and rather heavy museum passes, which had to be worn around our necks at all times.  The introductory film, narrated by the Lady Romanadvoratrelundar, was about to begin. Quite why Lalla Ward had been booked to provide this was not entirely clear. I realise that she is a well-known Gallifreyan who is not the Doctor, but her voice may not be that familiar to younger fans.  I suppose they couldn’t afford Timothy Dalton, who has experience in Gallifreyan voiceovers.

Needless to say, the next half an hour or so was not a typical museum visit.  I won’t give away the plot, (scripted by Joe Lidster) but at the end of the film presentation things started to go wrong, and a certain Time Lord needed our help to put things right. With his help we travelled to several different locations, in search of some things that were needed to fix another thing, avoiding some of the Doctor’s old enemies on the way.  The museum passes helpfully lit up to function as torches in the dark parts. 

Whilst our host chivvied us along, we were fully involved in the adventure. Everyone helped to hunt for the thingies, and a few volunteers even had the opportunity to retrieve them from their hiding places. Some of us even got an opportunity to fly the TARDIS.  I moved the lever left instead of right, so am probably responsible for the bumpy landing we experienced.

After the ‘experience’ part of the visit we emerged into the exhibition area. The ground floor area had a number of TARDIS sets, starting with the one from An Adventure in Space and Time and a re-creation of the Radiophonic Workshop – something that probably seems just as alien to today’s digital-native children as Davros’s chamber on the planet Skaro.

 On an upper level was a more familiar prop and costume exhibition, but brought right up to date with items from the latest series, including the Clara Oswald memorial TARDIS and even Pearl Mackie’s costume from the introductory scene that aired during the FA cup final.

We then faced our toughest challenge of the day – escaping through the gift shop with our bank balance intact.








Saturday 28 May 2016

A culturally eclectic weekend...

28 May 2016

We are off to Cardiff today.  The carefully planned idea is to see the RSC production of A Midsummer Night's Dream, which is on a national tour working with various local amateur groups, there tonight, and to visit the Doctor Who Experience tomorrow. 

This seemed like a brilliant plan - until I discovered that the BBC version of A Midsummer Night's Dream, directed by Russell T Davies (and with consultancy on jokes from David Tennant) is being broadcast on Monday.

Oh well, I like visiting Cardiff anyway, and the long drive down the M4 is an excuse to listen to the Big Finish Tenth Doctor and Donna audios.

Update: it turned out that there was major congestion on the M4 so we turned off, and went to Bowood House to see the rhododendrons, which are looking a picture at this time of year.  (I don't suppose many Doctor Who blogs bring you information like this.) 

Doctor Who is getting a bit like Casualty,  Doctors,  Holby City  and The Bill - one of those ubiquitous series you can play actor bingo with whilst waiting for the play to start.  Titania in A Midsummer Night's Dream was played by Ayesha Dharker (Solana Mercurio from Planet of the Ood). Sadly, Chu Omambala (Major Blake from The Christmas Invasion), who was due to play Oberon, was indisposed, so his part was played (very well) by his understudy. Other Doctor Who connections among the cast were Peter Hamilton Dyer (Embery from Remembrance of the Daleks) playing Egeus and Laura Harding, playing Hippolyta, who has been in several Big Finish audios.

Tomorrow: The Doctor Who Experience.

Sunday 24 April 2016

St George's Day

23 April 2016

It is St George's Day, and the 400th anniversary of Shakespeare's death (or at least the 400th anniversary is being celebrated today.)

To honour the occasion, the BBC have decided to announce the new Doctor Who companion at half time of a football match.  Do Doctor Who fans watch football?  The new companion turns out not to be David Tennant as Doctor 10.2 (my ideal choice), or Frank Skinner (my second choice, after his performance in Mummy on the Orient Express), but then Peter Capaldi is on record as saying that he didn't want a male companion, in case he got to do all the action stuff. It is actually a girl named Bill, played by Pearl Mackie.

This will naturally led itself to some great puns and headlines in Doctor Who Magazine. How long before they run with 'Kill Bill!'

Meanwhile in Stratford-upon-Avon, the DoctorDonna (i.e. David Tennant and Catherine Tate) are hosting the Shakespeare Live! gala at the RSC. The start was a bit shaky, and there was rather too much music and not enough Shakespeare but it cheered up no end after the Nine Hamlets sketch with David Tennant, Tim Minchin, Paapa Essiedu, Harriet Walter, Ian McKellen, Rory Kinnear, Benedict Cumberbatch, Judi Dench and, er... Prince Charles.

I was left a little disappointed though that it didn't start with Dean Lennox Kelly coming on and saying 'Shut your mouths'

Saturday 30 January 2016

A girl can dream...

30 January 2016

So Steven Moffat is leaving Doctor Who. He must really need a holiday by now.  Interestingly, when I just went to google this story, Google suggested 'Steven Moffat has ruined Doctor Who' as a search term.  Everyone's a critic! 

Seriously, I cannot agree with that sentiment, though I do think that Moffat produced better Doctor Who episodes as a writer than as a showrunner.  The Empty Child/The Doctor Dances, The Girl in the Fireplace and Blink are among my all-time favourites. I'm less keen on the convoluted story arcs that take a couple of years to pay off ('silence will fall') or personal relationships that 'need a flowchart', as I think they tend to alienate the casual viewer.  I had the same problem with The X-Files.

It will be interesting to see the direction that Chris Chibnall will go in when he finally takes over.  Until then, I'm secretly hoping for a 'Tenth Doctor wakes up in the shower/TARDIS and it was all a dream' plot. After all, Chibnall is working with David Tennant on Broadchurch and there does seem to be a tendency for producers to work with the same people over and again. 

A girl can dream, can't she?


Saturday 9 January 2016

It's totally sonic

Saturday 9 January 2016

Last night we watched a repeat of City of Death on the Horror Channel. It's an episode that still stands up well as one of the all time greats, in my opinion.

But observing the sonic knife in the rehearsal of the Mona Lisa heist got me thinking about all the different sonic devices that have appeared in the series:

  • Sonic screwdriver
  • Sonic shades
  • Sonic cane
  • Sonic lipstick (in the Sarah Jane Adventures)
  • Sonic pen (Miss Foster in Partners in Crime)
  • Sonic trowel (River, in The Husbands of River Song)
What next, I wonder?  A sonic toothbrush?  Come to think of it, they have sonic showers in Star Trek.

Wednesday 6 January 2016

It was a funny old Christmas...

Wednesday 6 January 2016

Owing to a lack of forethought on my part, we spent Christmas abroad in a place with no Doctor Who, but fortunately no internet access either, so at least we avoided spoilers.

As a result, we didn't see The Husbands of River Song until a couple of days ago.  I need to watch it again, but on first viewing, it seemed rather a strange choice for an episode that is likely to be watched by a family audience including people who are not regular viewers.  There were a lot of continuity references, some of which go back to River's first appearance in Silence in the Library/Forest of the Dead back in 2008*.

And there were some bits that were rather revolting for a post-Christmas lunch viewing.

Still, I might pinch the idea of a 'Carol Singers will be Criticised' notice.

*Update: I have just read the review in the excellent Doctor Who Magazine. If their reviewer missed the significant of the visit to the Singing Towers, what hope is there for the casual viewer?


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