Friday, May 31, 2013

90 MInute 50th?

Steven Moffat has been talking more about the length of the 50th anniversary special in the latest issue of Doctor Who Magazine. Fans have been speculating on the length, saying anywhere from 90 minutes to the 60 minutes hinted at in a BBC Worldwide poster.
People keep asking how long the Anniversary special is, and it’s a fair question. I don’t actually know, because the answer is, it’s as long as it needs to be. The script is quite long though. I’m looking at it now. Ooh, that’s quite long.

In theory a 45-minute episode of Doctor Who ought to be about 55 pages. But it’s a fast-paced show, you need something to cut, so let’s say 60 pages. And that, let me tell you, is wrong. The script for The Time of Angels was 70 pages long, and it came in short at 40 minutes, even with added material. The script for The Snowmen has almost the same page count as A Scandal in Belgravia (sorry to mention The Other One) but one is an hour and the other is 90 minutes. Thank God, the BBC is kind to us. Our notion of 45 minutes has veered between 39 minutes and 57 (I think, roughly this is from memory).
Basically, the 50th anniversary could be anywhere from 45 to 90 minutes. It all just depends on editing. I'm hoping for as long as possible, and I think most of the other fans are too, but we'll just have to wait and see.

Thursday, May 30, 2013

Brian Minchin on Series 8 and Christmas

New executive producer Brian Minchin has spoken briefly about Series 8 and this year's Christmas Special in the latest issue of Doctor Who Magazine.
My main job now is staring in awe at the 50th Anniversary Special and wondering ‘How the hell do we follow on from that?! Then, when I stop gawping and wondering, ‘How did they do that bit, and that one, and that bit!’ I will start work on the Christmas episode, written by Steven Moffat himself.
When asked what we can look forward to, he responded
A whole new series! But we certainly won’t be releasing the details of that series right now in May 2013. Oh dear, that sounds mean! Well, I can tell you that I have just spent a very happy few days meeting some scarily clever writers, and we have an incredible set of stories to work on. More adventures ahead!

Monday, May 27, 2013

Is the Series 5-7 Story Arc Actually Explained?

Short answer: Series 6 & 7 are explained, Series 5 isn't. We finally got an explanation of what's so important about the Doctor's name and how Clara could be in all those places, but no explanation of why the TARDIS exploded.

Since the Doctor's name apparently unlocks his tomb, it appears the Silence didn't want anyone to have access to his timestream. They didn't want anyone to have the ability to go in and alter his life. This would almost make it appear that they are the good guys and didn't want anyone to unsave everyone he'd saved. Another possibility, however, is that the didn't want anyone to know about the Doctor's other regeneration. I don't get the problem with knowing, so there's the possibility he's trapped there and is somehow going to escape. He was the only regeneration who actually interacted with Clara and the Doctor. The others all just ran about completely oblivious to them, he was somehow different.

Clara's mystery did turn out to be precisely what some people predicted. There were a number of theories going about how she was splintered in time (similar to Scaroth in City of Death), however, no one seems to have gotten how she was splintered. She shattered herself across the Doctor's life in order to save him at certain key points. It's interesting how we didn't see her saving the ninth or tenth Doctors at all, I think they're saving footage of them because they're going to be appearing in the 50th anniversary.

Two seasons & three years later, we still haven't received an explanation of how the TARDIS exploded. I think we're being led to believe that the Silence did it, but it's not entirely clear. We've received no motive on their part. If they're trying to kill the Doctor, then they're smart enough to realize the effects of blowing up a TARDIS and should really have been able to realize that he wasn't even onboard. I'm still holding onto the theory that the Time Lords did it to execute the Ultimate Sanction since I haven't seen any evidence to the contrary.

I guess Moffat must be saving his explanation of the TARDIS exploding for the 50th anniversary or Series 8. That may actually be separate story arc that has nothing to do with the Silence or the Question. He may simply have planted it so long ago in an effort to keep us watching so we would sit through Series 6 and 7 before finally finding out what happened. He must surely know from the internet that we don't have the foggiest idea, so he's got to explain it at some point or another.

Sunday, May 26, 2013

Destiny of the Doctor: Smoke and Mirrors Review

I'm doing a series of reviews on the Destiny of the Doctor 50th anniversary audio range. The month's adventure, Smoke and Mirrors, is written by Steve Lyons and read by Janet Fielding & Tim Beckmann. It stars the fifth Doctor, Adric, Tegan, Nyssa, & Harry Houdini.

I'm glad they finally took the opportunity to bring back a recurring villain for this adventure. Having monsters of the month is fun, but it's not really Doctor Who unless you bring back a villain like the Master. His presence makes possible storylines that don't really work with other villains. It's also refreshing having another adventure with him, since I've watched almost all of Anthony Ainley's episodes.

This is also the first Destiny of the Doctor story that's a proper historical. One of the things that makes Doctor Who Doctor Who is the ability to have episodes set in the far future, but also venture back in time and meet historical figures, in this case Harry Houdini. I think any set of Doctor Who stories needs to have a historical, and this certainly fulfills that purpose.

The thing happens again. The spoilery thing. It's happened in every adventure so far. I have no idea what it's building towards. Obviously, someone's in trouble, but I can't figure out the relevance of the various items in each of the stories.

If you haven't already purchased these stories, I would definitely recommend them. It's always nice to see old Doctors in new stories, and it will help bide the time until the 50th anniversary.

Doctors Revisited Specials Not on iTunes

Apple and BBC America have failed to make the Doctors Revisited specials available to be purchased. The Doctors Revisited specials are a series of eleven episodes airing throughout this year on BBC America in celebration of each of the Doctors. The first episode aired four months ago and the show has still not been made available anywhere, which is an outrage.

I'm requesting that all of my readers use the following link to request the show be made available on the iTunes store. Just click on the link and fill out the form. If you don't know which version of iTunes you have or which operating system, just pick a random one towards the top.

http://www.apple.com/feedback/itunes.html

Thank you

Prequel: Clarence and the Whispermen

There was an additional prequel to The Name of the Doctor released on the Series 7 Part 2 DVD set. You can watch it below courtesy of Doctor Who TV.

Friday, May 24, 2013

Thursday, May 23, 2013

Tip of the Tongue Available

The fifth Doctor eShort, Tip of the Tongue is now available for purchase online. The story is written by Patrick Ness, starring the fifth Doctor and Nyssa, and is the fifth in a series of eleven short stories.

Synopsis
In 1945, a strange new craze for Truth Tellers is sweeping the kids of small-town America. The Fifth Doctor and Nyssa soon arrive to investigate the phenomenom, only to discover that the actual truth behind the Truth Tellers is far more sinister than anyone could have imagined...

http://www.amazon.com/Doctor-Who-Anniversary-Digital-ebook/dp/B00B54TZBA/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1369337514&sr=1-1

Wednesday, May 22, 2013

Matt, Jenna, and Arthur at Once

Matt and Jenna met up with Arthur Darvill on Monday in New York. Arthur was performing in the Broadway musical Once. Earlier in the evening, they attended the Peabody Awards where Steven Moffat won an Institutional Peabody.


Tuesday, May 21, 2013

The Name of the Doctor Review

Honestly, I was hoping for something a bit longer. I like season finales the way Davies did them: big, long epic adventures. Moffat's last two finales haven't quite been up to snuff. He could have at least made it a bit longer, but with this plot line, I'm not sure how much more he could have added. I really hope next season we have more two-parters (perhaps have a season of all two-parters plus a three-part finale?).

I was never actually expecting the conference call promised in the synopsis to be over the telephone line. I knew it was going to be some sort of telepathic thing, though I was expecting some sort of weird virtual space with faces floating all around. Either that, or the subwave network (though that was destroyed in Children of Earth). I wasn't expecting a dreamspace with people sitting at a table, that's more of a conference than a conference call.

It's rather weird that the Silence didn't try to intervene in Trenzalore. I was always expecting them to try to take out whoever asked the Question. There are a number of possible reasons why we didn't see this happen. Perhaps the Silence viewed the Doctor as more of a threat than the Great Intelligence. Or maybe they found it too difficult to kill a disembodied mind. Either that, or killing the Great Intelligence was always a back-up plan and they thought they killed the Doctor, and therefore saw no reason to go after the GI.

Apparently when Moffat said that nobody figured out Clara's mystery, he was lying. Several people had theorized that she was somehow splintered in time, which turned out to be the correct explanation. I think either they failed to figure out how, or Rule 1: Moffat lies. I figured it out as soon as I heard the radio trailer last Friday and realized from the trailer the Saturday before that she was going to step into the lighty thingy. I had no idea that was the Doctor's timestream, I thought the console had just been removed and that was what's left. Moffat had been dropping hints since March that companion Clara was a perfectly ordinary girl. I think we were supposed to take from that that she was the original and something was going to happen to her. Moffat probably lied when he said nobody had figured it out, because if he did admit someone was right, the fans would stop speculating and turn inward on each other and start fighting over who was right. I think he wanted a happy discussion and speculation and knew some fans would argue about whose theory was best. That, and he would be constantly hounded to give up whose theory was right and the fans would never leave him alone.

I honestly did not see the bit with John Hurt coming. I thought we wouldn't see him until November. Well actually, to be honest I did give up and start reading spoilers the night before the episode and I did read about this. I thought it was a fake spoiler, but the screenshot should have been a dead giveaway. But if it hadn't been for that, I never would have guessed that John Hurt was in the finale, so good job to Moffat for keeping that secret. You can read my speculation about him here.

The only thing I'm left wondering is how the Doctor and Clara are going to get out of there. The timestream appears to have closed behind the Doctor and it looks suspiciously like he's trapped there. On the other hand, the area they're trapped in looks suspiciously like the graveyard, so they might just be right outside. Oh, and how did the catacombs they were in lead into the TARDIS? How do underground passages lead into another dimension?

Sunday, May 19, 2013

Who John Hurt Really Plays

I posted in this article about John Hurt possibly playing the Valeyard, but we now know that not to be true. The Valeyard was artificially created as an amalgamation of the Doctor's dark side. John Hurt's character isn't an artificial creation, he's just another regeneration of the character we all know and love. Also, the Valeyard was created between the Doctor's twelfth and final regenerations, meaning the Doctor hasn't properly met him yet. But the current Doctor seems to already be familiar with everything the John Hurt character did, suggesting he's already lived through that regeneration.

The current Doctor stated that taking the name "Doctor" is like a promise, and that the John Hurt character somehow broke that promise. The only question is, what did he do to break that promise? It was more than likely something involving the Time War (seeing as the only place we could have an extra Doctor is between McGann & Eccleston, during the war), but it could be anything really. If this were Davies, everything would relate back to the Time War, and this would probably be true, but this is Moffat. Moffat is likely to throw us a curveball, he could have done anything, really.

I'm really thinking that this promise is some sort of promise that all Time Lords and Ladies have to take, probably the promise not to interfere. We've already seen the Doctor interfere many times, and even get put on trial for it. He always managed to justify his interference by claiming to be saving innocent lives. Well, perhaps this regeneration killed innocents. He claimed to be doing it "in the name of peace and sanity," but the Matt Smith Doctor seems to think that it was a despicable act. He agrees with the motives, but claims it is something the Doctor would never do.

The Ending of The Name of the Doctor

The last 4 minutes of the season finale.

***WARNING: EXTREME SPOILERS***

Inside Look: The Name of the Doctor

BBC America has posted an Inside Look at the season finale

Saturday, May 18, 2013

Returning Baddie for 50th Anniversary

According to one reliable source, Omega is returning for the 50th Anniversary. No actor has been confirmed to play the role of him yet. They could just be keeping it a secret (they managed to keep Jenna-Louise Coleman's appearance in Asylum secret) or it could be someone we already know about.

The classic series actors have all denied involvement in the 50th anniversary. I frankly think Moffat isn't stupid enough to not include them in the episode. I think either Davison, Baker, McCoy, or McGann (or some combination thereof) is going to play him. How? In the 1983 episode The Arc of Infinity, Omega stole the Doctor's biodata and duplicated him in order to create himself a body. He may still have that biodata and may be using it for another body (his original one was destroyed in The Three Doctors).

If it is a new actor, it's not going to be anyone we saw in location shooting. The BBC is going to want to keep it a secret, so all of his (or her) scenes would be filmed in Roath Lock studios. They're keeping everything very hush-hush, so we'll likely not get any new casting details for months. The only cast the BBC's announced has been those who were location shooting, and only then right before the actual filming. They're revealing as little as possible, but keeping all the glory of the announcements to themselves.


Matt and David on the 50th Anniversary

As promised, the BBC has released a video with Matt Smith and David Tennant for the 50th Anniversary.

Behind the Scenes of The Name of the Doctor

Behind-the-scenes video for the season finale

A Glorious Day

Another one of Strax's field reports has been released as a video by the BBC

Friday, May 17, 2013

The Name of the Doctor Spoiler Summary

Here's my final spoiler summary for the next six months.

Videos

Teasers

Synopsis
Clara is summoned to an impossible conference call, alerting her that the deadly Whisper Men are closing in on Vastra, Jenny and Strax. Someone is kidnapping the Doctor’s friends, leading him toward the one place in all of time and space that he should never go. It’s a deadly trap that threatens to unravel his past, present and future...
Clara, Madame Vastra, Jenny, Strax, and River Song are summoned to a mysterious conference where something about the Doctor is said. Trenzalore appears to be a planet. Also, something happened on Gallifrey a long time ago.

Nightmare in Silver Review

This is probably my favorite Cyberman story. I generally don't like the Cybermen, I don't like anything where humans or human society becomes "more perfect," but this episode was good.

It appears that the Cybermen have never actually fully upgraded their software. They've never done a full rewrite of their operating system, they've just stuck on a series of patches. The fact that the Cyberplanner fixed the gold bug probably means that we're never going to see that trick used again. That's too bad, because I wanted to see someone use a makeshift glitter gun like what was mentioned in Revenge of the Cybermen.

I want to know what the 0.238% of the Doctor's brain that neither of them could control was. The Doctor initiated a complete mental block against the Cyberplanner, but was unable to block that tiny portion of the brain. It was probably either some low-level processing section, like the brain stem, or some special Time Lord thing with some unique purpose.

The Cyberplanner's comment that "he's had some cowboys in here" in reference to the Doctor makes it seem like the Doctor has undergone some sort of brain scan. Now, seeing as this was followed by a bit about "ten complete rejects", that could be referencing all the previous regenerations that have inhabited his mind, or it could be ten different mind probes that he's forced out. If it was the mind probes, I just want to know what happened to the 11th (was it successful?). This may be connected to the 0.238%, they could have stuck something into him that he couldn't control.

I really don't like just pointlessly reinventing the Doctor's enemies. I feel like the only reason the writers upgraded the Daleks and Cybermen was so that Matt Smith could have a new version. I suppose there is a point in that they don't want the bad guys to get too predictable, because that's when the ratings plummet. The problem with doing it with the Cybermen, is that they don't have time travel technology, but the writers are probably going to ignore that and put the Cybermen in the 21st century in the next episode. Without time travel, it's going to take some sort of extraordinary plot device to get the Cybermen back in time. Either that, or they're just going to put the Cybermen back in time with no explanation. Either of those is going to subtract from the story because the viewer is going to be distracted by these elements. The only other solutions are either limit all the stories to the distant future (after Nightmare) or give the Cybermen time travel capability.

Clara Meets River

I'm not sure what the source of this is, but there's a third clip out from The Name of the Doctor.

Radio Trailer for The Name of the Doctor

BBC radio has new trailer for The Name of the Doctor. It's rather spoilery.

The Name of the Doctor Second Clip

Digital Spy have another clip from the finale featuring the Doctor and Clara

Matt Smith Confirmed for Series 8

In a recent interview for The Sun's TV Magazine, Matt Smith has confirmed he will be staying on until at least Series 8.
I’m on a break for a couple of months while I’m in Detroit making How To Catch A Monster. We come back and shoot the Christmas special over the summer, then we go on to the next series, which will either start filming at the end of this year or at the start of 2014.
Assuming a December filming schedule for Series 8, it looks like the show won't resume until June. Last year, filming began in February and the series aired in August. A November or December filming schedule would push it earlier in the summer. January would make almost no difference and we would get a wait similar to Series 6-7.

So it looks like we get the finale tomorrow, the 50th Anniversary in November, then a Christmas Special, then at least six months until Series 8, all with Matt Smith.


A Message for Clara

The first clip from this week's episode, The Name of the Doctor