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Dvd Review – Doctor Who: Nightmare Of Eden

30 Mar

Release Date: 2 April 2012
1979 | PG | 96 minutes | £19.99
Distributor: 2entertain
Director: Alan Bromly
Cast: Tom Baker, Lalla Ward, David Brierley, Lewis Fiander, Jennifer Lonsdale, Geoffrey Bateman, David Daker

Fourth Doctor tale “Nightmare Of Eden” deserves a better rep than the one it has. It hails from the show’s 17th season, an era rife with budgetary problems and BBC industrial disputes, which had an all-too-obvious effect on what ended up on-screen.

One version of Who history has it that the show had, by this point, become badly made and (thanks to an out-of-control star) overly silly, and that incoming producer John Nathan-Turner rescued the series in the nick of the time when he swept in as a new broom the following year. Sorry, but we take a dissident viewpoint: in 1979, Who was clever, witty, and massively popular; the ratings slumped when it started taking itself more seriously.

The story of “Nightmare Of Eden” is a strange one for Who in some ways, revolving as it does around what’s essentially an intergalactic traffic accident. When space liner the Hecate accidentally materialises around a small trade ship, the Doctor gets tangled up in the ensuing dispute. The secondary plot strand is even more startling: someone on the Hecate is smuggling Vraxoin, a deadly drug. It’s jarring (but fascinating) to see a child-friendly show like Who tackle this topic without reaching for a more palatable metaphor; Vraxoin is basically heroin by another name. Admittedly, the treatment is pretty simplistic (“DRUGS IS BAD”), but the fact that they have a crack at it all is laudable.

And that’s not all! There’s a third element: the CET machine, a sort of hi-tech zoo which can store alien habitats on a crystal, while the presence of a shadowy figure and the mystery of a missing crewman add a whodunnit factor.

With all these elements combined, there’s never a shortage of intrigue. Tom Baker and Lalla Ward are on top form as the Doctor and his unflappable Time Lady companion Romana, tossing off playful dialogue with immense charm. And you’d have to have undergone a complete humour bypass not to be tickled by Lewis Fiander’s Professor Tryst (inventor of the CET), a zoologist with an utterly outrageous Germanic accent.

There are some questionable plot points: for one thing, how can the CET capture the sun in the sky of an alien planet? And once the source of the vraxoin is revealed (in a neat twist), the fact that there was previously another source on another planet fails to make any sense.

But these are minor quibbles. The only thing that’s really wrong with “Nightmare Of Eden” is the design, and much of the paucity of that can be put down to BBC penny-pinching. The monsters of the piece – lumbering, flared-trousered bear-things called Mandrels – look faintly pathetic as they lumber about with their arms spread, looking like they’re desperate for a cuddle; the sets are bland or shabby (even the Police Box prop looks monumentally knackered); and the costume designer is clearly working under the illusion that everyone in the future, from co-pilots to customs officers, will be decked out in sparkly fabrics. But in every other respect this is a strong example of a season that deserves re-evaluation.

Extras:

Human-IMDb Toby Hadoke chairs the commentary, marshalling a rotating cast of participants which includes Lalla Ward, writer Bob Baker, visual effects designer Colin Mapson, make-up designer Joan Stribling and actor Peter Craze. Ward is particularly good value, despairing of her “maternity dress” costume and revealing that script-editor Douglas Adams was “good at slapping down Tom”.

Making Of “The Nightmare Of TV Centre” has an interesting story to tell, since the whole production was a behind-the-scenes disaster. Mapson, video effects guy AJ Mitchell and Assistant Floor Manager Val McCrimmon all chip in, with a picture soon building of an old-fashioned ogre of a director who infuriated absolutely everyone – and was eventually sacked – and a badly behaving Baker. The coup de grace comes when McCrimmon unfurls one of the celebratory t-shirts they had run off on the last day of shooting, which bears the legend, “I’m relieved the nightmare is over”!

The bafflingly-titled “The Doctor’s Strange Love” (16 minutes) turns out to be a discussion of the story featuring Torchwood/SJA writer Joseph Lidster and comedian Josie Long, much of it composed of affectionate mickey-taking. “Going Solo” is a short, unremarkable interview with writer Bob Baker (eight minutes). Michael Aspel quizzes Lalla Ward in a vintage clip from Ask Aspel, in which The Honourable Sarah Ward (daughter of the seventh Viscount Bangor) lives up to her lineage – barely a sentence goes by without her declaiming the words “ghastly” or “frightful” in those cut-glass tones. Both stories come with the usual informative text commentary, gallery and Radio Times PDFs.

Rating : 8/10
extras : 8/10

source:sfx.co.uk
by:Ian Berriman

Doctor Who Series 7 Trailer

26 Mar

Jenna-Louise Coleman replaces Karen Gillan as new companion on ‘Doctor Who’ season 7

21 Mar

Jenna-Louise Coleman has been announced as the new Doctor Who companion.

The Titanic actress is confirmed to be replacing Karen Gillan (Amy Pond) as the assistant to Matt Smith’s Time Lord in the BBC sci-fi show’s seventh series. Coleman’s debut episode will air at Christmas.

Speaking at BBC’s Broadcasting house this morning, she said that she was a “huge fan of the show”, commenting: “I’m beyond excited, I can’t wait to get cracking; working alongside Matt I know is going to be enormous fun and a huge adventure.

“Matt Smith did my audition with me. It was fun and I felt like we were in it together.”

Coleman also revealed that her personal favourite companions were Billie Piper and Karen Gillan.

Showrunner Steven Moffat said: “It always seems impossible when you start casting these parts, but when we saw Matt and Jenna together, we knew we had our girl. She’s funny and clever and exactly mad enough to step on board the TARDIS.

“It’s not often the Doctor meets someone who can talk even faster than he does, but it’s about to happen. Jenna is going to lead him his merriest dance yet. And that’s all you’re getting for now. Who she’s playing, how the Doctor meets her, and even where he finds her, are all part of one of the biggest mysteries for the Time Lord ever.”

Moffat confirmed that Doctor Who will air six episodes in 2012 and a further eight in 2013 for the show’s 50th anniversary. In total, series seven comprises of 14 big, blockbuster-movie episodes.

The writer also dropped hints about Gillan and Arthur Darvill’s departures, claiming that it would involve a final encounter with the Weeping Angels and that not everybody would make it out alive. “And I mean it this time,” added Moffat.

Rumours that Coleman, who has also appeared in Emmerdale and Waterloo Road, had been cast in the show first emerged this morning,

Gillan was confirmed to be departing Doctor Who along with co-star and on-screen husband Arthur Darvill (Rory Williams) back in December.

It is known that they will leave part way through series seven in a “heartbreaking end”, and Gillan has teased that her exit will have a “strong impact”.

She also described her final Doctor Who storyline as a “damn good” one that will see Amy go out “on a high”.

DVD REVIEW – Doctor Who: The Daemons

18 Mar

Release Date: 19 March 2012
1971 | PG | 122 minutes | £19.99
Distributor: 2entertain
Director: Christopher Barry
Cast: Jon Pertwee, Katy Manning, Nicholas Courtney, Roger Delgado, Richard Franklin, John Levene

Third Doctor five-parter “The Daemons” is widely-regarded as an all-time classic, but truth be told, it ain’t all that. Its glowing reputation seems to be largely down to the cast and crew, all of whom praise it to the skies at every opportunity, in part because (thanks to extensive location filming in the idyllic English village of Aldbourne) they had such a jolly old time making it. The fact that the script (by then-producer Barry Letts) is scrupulously even-handed, carefully giving every single one of the regular “UNIT family” something heroic interesting to do, is also a factor.

Essentially a tale of black magic given a thin coat of science gloss, it’s as close as Doctor Who ever got to tackling the occult head on. When an ancient barrow near the village of Devil’s End is opened, it unleashes horned alien Azal, whose race have influenced mankind for centuries and who is now ready to stand in judgement upon them. Hoping to gain from this is the local vicar, Reverend Magister, a bearded fella who looks an awful lot like The Master…

Sadly, “The Daemons” is, for the most part, an awful mess. The plot doesn’t make a shred of sense. Characters are continually acting in a completely absurd way – The Master’s attempts to press a pub full of bewildered villagers into his service with promises of world domination are particularly asinine. The exposition is shamelessly crude – at one point, the Doctor sits everyone down and treats them to a slide show. And the less said about the ending (a risible twist on the old “Kirk talks a computer to death” gambit), the better. In short, if the Mystery Science Theater 3000 gang ever decided to start adding mocking commentaries to Who, this story would be a very good place to start.

In its defence, “The Daemons” has three magnificent characters: lisping white witch Miss Hawthorne (a wonderfully dotty performance by Damaris Hayman), bluff Yorkshireman archaeologist Professor Horner, and Alistair Fergus, a presenter on an alternate-universe BBC Three which broadcasts material even more horrifying than a double-bill of Snog, Marry Avoid. It’s such a shame, then, that Miss Hawthorne is soon sidelined, and that the other two don’t outlive episode one.

That opener, which employs a device Russell T Davies would turn to again and again decades later, establishing the scenario via a TV broadcast, is pretty much perfection. And dotted throughout are spots of pure, white-hot brilliance, which have burned onto fandom’s collective memory: the Brigadier, faced by a living gargoyle, calmly declaring “Chap with the wings there, five rounds rapid”; the Doctor captured by a crowd of menacing Morris Men; a fantastic model of an exploding church. Those scattered moments explain why, when viewed through the forgiving haze of nostalgia, “The Daemons” is considered a classic. But sit down and watch it end to end with an unforgiving eye and its many shortcomings sadly become all too obvious.

Extras:

Director Christopher Barry and actors Katy Manning, Damaris Hayman and Richard Franklin contribute to a very warm, friendly (if rather shapeless) commentary, full of laughter and banter.

Pretty much every facet of “The Daemons” has been discussed in detail over the years, but Making Of “The Devil Rides Out” (29 minutes) does a good job of covering all the bases, via interviews with seven cast and crew. There are some great stories, particularly one about Jon Pertwee roaring off on a motorbike in a hissyfit; the star is Damaris Hayman, who, it turns out, was the production’s on-set expert on all things occult (and appears to be every bit as winningly eccentric in real life).

The highlight is “Remembering Barry Letts” (34 minutes), which provides an overview of the producer and writer’s life and career (of which Who was just a small part). Including contributions from both his sons and many family photos, it’s a very touching tribute which leaves you without any doubt that he was a thoroughly lovely man.

You also get seven minutes of (silent) super 8 footage on location shot by a local (featuring both The Brig and The Master hanging out in-between takes wearing shades!), and a clip from Tomorrow’s World (five minutes) discussing how the story’s colour was restored (be warned, younglings: the quality of the picture varies considerably from episode to episode). The usual informative text commentary, gallery and Radio Times PDFs complete the package.

Rating : 7/10
Extras : 8/10

source:sfx.co.uk
by:Ian Berriman

Farscape’s Ben Browder to be in Doctor Who season 7

7 Mar

According to this month’s Doctor Who Magazine, Browder—who played lost astronaut John Crichton on four seasons of Farscape and Lt. Colonel Cameron Mitchell on two seasons of Stargate SG-1—has apparently been tapped to appear in the third episode of Doctor Who’s seventh season.

The episode, written by Being Human creator and frequent Who contributor Toby Whithouse (“School Reunion,” “The Vampires of Venice,” “The God Complex”), will be set in the Wild Wild West, with filming to actually take place in Madrid, Spain.

According to Doctor Who TV, all three of the main cast—Matt Smith, Karen Gillan and Arthur Darvill—have just been spotted arriving there yesterday.

DVD Review : Doctor Who – The Face Of Evil

2 Mar

Release date: 5 March 2012
1977 | PG | 98 minutes | £19.99
Distributor: 2Entertain
Director: Pennant Roberts
Cast: Tom Baker, Louise Jameson, David Garfield

Star Wars was released four months after this story originally aired, and the gulf between the two franchises has never been wider. Not so much in terms of production values, but in approach.

Rarely has Doctor Who been so adult. We’re not just referring to the fact that this story introduced scantily-clad savage Leela and her liberally-employed knife. “The Face Of Evil” is pretty hardcore SF.

Based on the clever idea of the Doctor returning to a jungle planet he only half-recalls visiting to discover he’s now worshipped as an evil God this is strong, compelling stuff. Okay, there are some dodgy costumes and hammy acting, but you can plainly see why this era of Doctor Who was the most-watched in the classic show’s history. Shame Star Wars came along and changed everybody’s expectations of screen sci-fi.

Extras:

Who DVD extras ain’t what they used to be – there’s a kind of listless efficiency to them now, especially when it comes to the formulaic documentaries. But while this may not be the most exciting bunch, at least you get value for money in terms of sheer volume. Aside from the usual culprits (commentary, text commentary, PDF material, gallery, , etc) there’s a 25-minute Making Of; nine minutes of film trims; an 18-minute documentary on Leela; a “Tomorrow’s Times” (14 minutes) covering the media’s reaction to the Fourth Doctor‘s era; a clip from Swap Shop and an advert for the Denys Fisher dolls.

Rating :8/10
extras :7/10

source:sfx.co.uk
by:Dave Golder

The entire history of Doctor Who in 10 minute video

29 Feb

‘Doctor Who’ series 7 to film in Spain?

18 Feb


© BBC Pictures

The new series of Doctor Who will film in Spain, according to an acting agency’s website.

Shepperd-Fox claims that their client Rob Cavazos “shortly flies to Spain to play Walter in the new series of Doctor Who”.

Cavazos has chiefly worked in the theatre, but was previously involved with Channel 4′s 2006 documentary Munich: Mossad’s Revenge.

Filming on Doctor Who’s seventh series will begin on Monday (February 20), with Scottish director Saul Metzstein at the helm.

Series stars Karen Gillan (Amy Pond) and Arthur Darvill (Rory Williams) will exit the show midway through the new run.

Gillan recently claimed that her character has a “damn good” exit, adding that she wanted to leave the sci-fi drama “on a high”.

Doctor Who will return to BBC One in the autumn.

‘Doctor Who’, ‘Star Trek’ crossover comic ‘Assimilation2′ to debut in May

15 Feb

Star Trek: The Next Generation and Doctor Who’s comic series will crossover this May for Assimilation2.

IDW Publishing has joined forces with CBS and the BBC to bring The Doctor and his companions together with the crew of the U.S.S. Enterprise.

“By joining these two sci-fi powerhouses, fans will be taken on the ultimate adventure through time and space,” said Liz Kalodner, executive vice president and general manager of CBS Consumer Products.

Star Trek: The Next Generation/Doctor Who: Assimilation2, which will run for eight issues, is written by Scott and David Tipton with some input from Tony Lee. Fallen Angel illustrator J.K. Woodward will shoulder art duties.

The story sees The Doctor, Rory and Amy join forces with Captain Jean-Luc Picard and his crew to take on the joint threat of the Cybermen and the Borg.

“We are excited about this new adventure for The Doctor and the fact that he will be travelling with Captain Jean-Luc Picard and his iconic crew. This is a perfect partnership for not only Doctor Who’s incredible fans, but also for the brand,” said BBC executive Soumya Sriraman.

“We have just celebrated our most successful year yet. Doctor Who’s latest season delivered record ratings for BBC America and it was most downloaded full TV season of 2011 in the US on the iTunes Store.”

Star Trek: The Next Generation/Doctor Who: Assimilation2 will feature a variant cover design by Joe Corroney. A limited edition version with a rare wraparound photo cover will be available in selected retailers.

Two writers confirmed for Doctor Who series 7

10 Feb

Production is weeks away from starting on series seven of Doctor Who. But aside from the fact that Steven Moffat is writing episodes, that Mark Gatiss is penning one, and that there are well-reported changes that are set to happen in front of the camera, we still don’t know much about who’s writing what.

At least until now. Today, it’s been revealed that both Toby Whithouse and Chris Chibnall are penning episodes for the new series of Doctor Who.

Being Human supremo Whithouse, who some suggest is the heir apparent when Steven Moffat gives back the keys to the TARDIS, is set to write the episode currently third in line in the new series. His The God Complex was one of the highlights of the last run for us.

Returning after a long gap is Chris Chibnall, who last penned The Hungry Earth and Cold Blood for Doctor Who, before going off to be head writer on the now-cancelled Camelot show for Starz.

With filming starting, expect the drip feed of guest star announcements to begun in due course, too…

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