#4861
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Favourite Hartnells: Time Meddler The Daleks The Crusade The Chase Favourite companions: Ian, Barbara and Vicki. Ian is a total badass, Babs is cool and Vicki is just plain adorable. |
#4862
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Carol Ann Ford would be great to see again as Susan. But I doubt either showrunner's will even consider such a move. Doctor seeing Susan again would be one of the most emotional moments in Doctor Who. And a great story is needed to deliver the emotional impact. Whatever Happened to Susan Foreman? |
#4863
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Seems like Steven Moffat is trying to leave his final mark on Doctor Who. This last series under his leadership will probably have many big revelations to come. Some probably bigger than others. Will Peter Capaldi stay on into the beginnings of the Chibnall era? Christ only knows. I'm keeping my fingers crossed he will.
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#4864
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My fave Hartnell stories are, in transmission order Marco Polo - A story i've only listened to on cd as none of it's episodes exist anymore or so we are led to believe. It's a fantastic purely historical story which pits the Doctor, Ian, Barbara and Susan against the mighty Mongolian emperor Kublai Khan in a battle to get the TARDIS back from him after it was given to him as a gift by Marco Polo as a way to win favour in the emperor's court. The story gallops along as the time travelers meet up with Polo in the Himalayas and journey with him to Peking as they come up against terrifying perils on the way. If i could wish for any story to be returned to the archives it would be this, although it undoubtedly plays out far more spectacularly in my imagination than it would do on screen. The Aztecs - Following the epic Marco Polo, writer John Lucarotti returned with this morality tale which puts the travelers in the middle of the Aztec empire. Beautifully acted and realized it's a fascinating look at the way the ritual of sacrifice is seen as the entire reasoning for the Aztec life and a great conundrum when Barbara, mistaken for an Aztec high priestess, attempts to put an end to it all. The Dalek Invasion of Earth - A fantastic fast paced six part story that sees the return of the Daleks. This time on earth. As the stories at the time didn't have wrap around titles the first episode with the moniker Worlds End gave no clue as to what had happened to the earth and in this case London. The shock viewers at the time would have had as a Dalek rises out of the Thames must have been awesome as would seeing the Daleks in and around London's famous landmarks in later episodes. It also marked the end for Susan, the Doctors grand daughter as a TARDIS traveler culminating in a tearful farewell from the Doctor which is as emotional as anything we've seen in the show since. The Massacre of St Bartholomew's Eve. - Another historical story from the pen of Lucarotti and another missing completely from the archives. Again thanks to the audio cd and my imagination this is another gripping historical story which pits the Doctor and Stephen in the middle of Paris in a dangerous situation with tensions between toe Catholics and Protestants at fever pitch. This is a tour-de-force for Hartnell who plays not only the Doctor but the sadistic Abbot of Amboise as well. With Hartnell as the Abbot, Peter Purves as Stephen takes centre stage and is terrific and it all ends in a rather disturbing fashion as the Catholics or Huguenots as they are known as are slaughtered in the streets of Paris by the Protestants. The War Machines - As Hartnell's time as the Doctor was coming to a close, The War Machines is seemingly a trial run for what the series was to become in the future. Set in present day London under the threat of invasion in the form of mighty robotic war machines under the control of super computer WOTAN. Pitting the destructive machines against soldiers and having them run riot in the streets. This was the first time the TARDIS visited contemporary earth since the very first episode with the hedonistic swinging 60's at the forefront of the story with the introduction of new companions Ben and Polly. Had it not been for the brilliance of William Hartnell in the role and some ingenious scripts, ideas and of course Daleks, Doctor Who wouldn't be...well, it just wouldn't be! To me William Hartnell isn't the first Doctor. He is the Doctor. |
#4865
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Pic of the Day # 5 Frontier in Space (1973) |
#4866
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'Class' isn't performing well on BBC1! "Episode Four, Co-Owner Of A Lonely Heart, had an audience of 0.28 million, a share of 5.1%. This episode was beaten by Tattoo Fixers on Channel 4 with 0.45 million and by Celebrity Big Brother on Five, with 0.42 million" Doctor Who News: Class Episode 3/4 Ratings
__________________ People try to put us down Just because we get around Golly, Gee! it's wrong to be so guilty |
#4867
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#4868
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It all depends on how it does on BBC America. It's been a complete muck up from the start. Only showing it online, releasing the discs before it had been on tv, showing it last thing on a Monday night. I hope BBC America don't ask for another series. They'd be better off doing some more Torchwood. |
#4869
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Best placed to languish in Tv Hell....FOREVER! BURN BABY BURN... |
#4870
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For every good episode ('Countrycide') there was a poor one (the God-awful 'Cyberwoman', which was the worst episode ever) When it got to the series' that were full arc stories ('Children Of Earth' and 'Miracle Day') I found it unwatchable The best spin-off series was 'The Sarah-Jane Adventures', which (in my opinion) often eclipsed the parent show
__________________ People try to put us down Just because we get around Golly, Gee! it's wrong to be so guilty |
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