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The BBC have revealed that Michelle Gomez will be reprising her role as Missy in the two-part premiere of the next series of Doctor Who, entitled The Magician's Apprentice, and The Witch's Familiar.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/mediacentre/latestnews/2015/michelle-gomez

The premiere will also see the return of [URL='http://guide.doctorwhonews.net/person.php?name=JemmaRedgrave']Jemma Redgrave as Kate Lethbridge-Stewart, who appears alongside UNIT in the current block directed by Hettie MacDonald. The episodes will also feature Kelly Hunter (who previously played the Shadow Architect in The Stolen Earth), Clare Higgins (Ohila in The Night of the Doctor) and Jaye Griffiths.[/URL]

 
WE HAVE IT! WE HAVE A RESPONSE.... It's not very good but at least they responded.

The message is as follows:
Dear <Insert my name here>

Thank you for your email in regards to Doctor Who.

I'm afraid that it is too soon to confirm scheduling for Peter Capaldi's second series as The Doctor. The series is still in production and rights agreements with the BBC have yet to be confirmed.

However, please be assured that your interest in a simulcast broadcast has been noted, and thank you for your support of the ABC.

Kind regards,

<Insert ABC Employee Here>
ABC Audience and Consumer Affairs






Great.... Thanks ABC
 
WE HAVE IT! WE HAVE A RESPONSE.... It's not very good but at least they responded.

The message is as follows:
Dear <Insert my name here>

Thank you for your email in regards to Doctor Who.

I'm afraid that it is too soon to confirm scheduling for Peter Capaldi's second series as The Doctor. The series is still in production and rights agreements with the BBC have yet to be confirmed.

However, please be assured that your interest in a simulcast broadcast has been noted, and thank you for your support of the ABC.

Kind regards,

<Insert ABC Employee Here>
ABC Audience and Consumer Affairs

Great.... Thanks ABC

...oh wow ... that is incredible to see that BigBrotherCritic!... colour me impressed my friend... at least it has been noted by them... that is a great victory!... if thousands of others like you are doing the same then it is sure to return... (that would be happening for sure methinks)... well done my friend... cheers.
 
The BBC have revealed that Michelle Gomez will be reprising her role as Missy in the two-part premiere of the next series of Doctor Who, entitled The Magician's Apprentice, and The Witch's Familiar.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/mediacentre/latestnews/2015/michelle-gomez

The premiere will also see the return of Jemma Redgrave as Kate Lethbridge-Stewart, who appears alongside UNIT in the current block directed by Hettie MacDonald. The episodes will also feature Kelly Hunter (who previously played the Shadow Architect in The Stolen Earth), Clare Higgins (Ohila in The Night of the Doctor) and Jaye Griffiths.


...terrific post tickytoc... that really is good news my friend... thanks for posting it... cheers.
 
CLASSIC WHO MARATHON

Finally, I'm posting my DALEK INVASION OF EARTH review and I would like to thank Meglos for his patience and good grace in waiting, and his terrific review (again).

No time like the present...

THE DALEK INVASION OF EARTH is a landmark story for two main reasons. The most obvious selling point was the first return of the Daleks following an unexpected bout of Dalekmania.
The other milestone is the first departure of one of the regular cast.
Terry Nation weaves together a fairly loose story to connect the two, involving a version of Earth's future history in the wake of a Dalek invasion.
The Daleks themselves are more mobile than before, coming equipped with handy satellite dishes so they can move (somewhat) freely without the aid of metal floors or static electricity. They are in their element here, with images provided by their jaunts over several major London landmarks being justifiably iconic.
Dalek.jpg

We also discover the existence of a black Dalek Supreme, who seems to oversee the concentration camp and the upkeep of the Slyther, some kind of mutant guard dog hybrid of Marty The Monster and a mushroom.

We are shown a grim, dystopian world under Dalek control, with most humans relegated to an existance as Robomen, slaves, starving outcasts or splintered rebel groups. The first real foray into a recognisable human future is a grim experience, not least for Ian and Barbara, who are separated early and given their own companions in their attempts to fight back against oppression.
Barbara tems up with Jenny (played with a nice sideline of cynicism by Ann Davies, the wife of the late Richard Briers) and Dortman, until the demise of the latter provides the impetus for the women to carry on the fight. The episode where Barbara and Jenny push Dortman's wheelchair across London is a visual tour-de-force, showcasing beautifully the series first real location shooting.
Susan, meanwhile, is teamed up with David Campbell, a young resistance fighter who might as well have LOVE INTEREST stuck to him in neon lights. Susan is given a rare chance to develop as a character, and is no longer the naive schoolchild or helpless grandaughter.

The Doctor is also in his element here, easily taking control and confronting the Daleks no matter what odds are stacked against him. When he finally suceeds and gives a nod to the strength of the human spirit, we recognise a theme that will continue in the series to the present day.
The finest moment in the story comes when the Doctor, realising that nothing lasts forever, is able to relinquish his control over his grandaughter's life, making the decision for her that she was unable to, to go forward in her beliefs and prove to him that he is not mistaken in his. It's a truly touching scene, and was deemed important enough to revisit in the anniversary special 20 years later.
William Hartnell injured himself in an accident on the ramp to the Dalek ship, and was out of action for more than one episode. They covered it seamlessly, and Hartnell is superb both before and after the incident.

Other things to look out for include : Mr Rumbold from Are You Being Served playing it straight as resistance fighter Wells, a couple of homeless Shakespearean hags chewing the scenery (the old one is great but the younger one seems unsure of whether to act), and a powerful scene where Ian's friend Larry is reunited with his robotised brother, only for them to die together.
As I said, it's grim, but audiences in 1964 would have been thrilled, and it's hard not to feel the same way watching it now. It's an epic that, for the most part, captivates, and any shortcomings are reasonably minor (shout out to the Slyther and the paper plate flying saucers).
It feels like the end of an era, but I'm as excited as ever to see what comes next.

So Susan’s gone. I never completely warmed to her because of the wimpy way she was written, which Carole Ann Ford obviously thought as well as she left due to Susan's lack of character development. Susan just didn’t have the boldness that one would expect from a time travelling teenager … she was no Ace. But she made up for it in these last episodes. Considering she is supposed to be only 15 (did she have any birthdays since the series started?), it is slightly creepy her being courted by a bearded young man, but as Susan looks older than 15, maybe her beau was younger than he looked as well. And what custodian abandons their loved one with what would appear to be her first boyfriend?!? I guess Susan isn’t your average teenager. But still …

Susan and the Doctor’s final scenes were so sweet and sad: first the painfully awkward conversation where they avoided the elephant in the room (that Susan had fallen in love); then Susan’s anguished conversation with her beau where she shows her complete loyalty to the Doctor, over and above her own wants; then the Doctor locking her out of the TARDIS before releasing her from any obligation she felt to look after him rather than to live her own life. And then he was gone. And I cried. It was a great goodbye speech, delivered with all the gravitas it deserved. You could argue there was a tinge of sexism involved, but I choose not to see it that way:

[By the riverside] I want you to belong somewhere, to have roots of your own. With David, you’ll be able to find those roots and live normally like any woman should do.

[From the TARDIS] Believe me, my dear, your future lies with David, and not with a silly old buffer like me. One day, I shall come back. Yes, I shall come back. Until then, there must be no regrets, no tears, no anxieties. Just go forward in all your beliefs, and prove to me that I am not mistaken in mine. Goodbye, Susan, goodbye, my dear.​

The adventure as a whole was terrific, though obviously more or less the same plot as the movie that based itself on this serial, Daleks - Invasion Earth: 2150 A.D. with Peter Cushing as the (human) Doctor, and Bernard Cribbins who played Donna’s grandfather Wilfred as an Ian-like character. I watched the movie recently so there was a little déjà vu, even though the TV version came first.

The feel was marvellously industrial with its empty factory settings, desolate scenes under bridges and so on. The depiction of a harsh and defeated London was perfect, from the opening scenes with the sign – IT IS FORBIDDEN TO DUMP BODIES INTO THE RIVER – to Barbara running the roadblock in a truck. It also ran one of my favourite themes … I think DW is at its best when there is an organised rebel group battling to free the planet from oppressors. It's a theme for the ages and, considering Britain was in the throes of granting independence to its numerous colonies, very poignant.

My favourite scenes, however, involved the wheelchair-bound Dortmun who built a bomb to destroy the Daleks. His face-off against them was really moving, a disabled man with limited means of escape trying to blow up the seemingly invincible enemy. Quite the suicide mission. So sad, so brave, and so self-sacrificing. I’m not supporting suicide missions here, just the tenacity to do whatever you can when things are completely bleak.

Of course, there were the usual funny bits, like the speed the Daleks initially flew down the helipad ramp, although they seemed to fix that as the episodes went on.
And the Dalek-controlled humans sounded like dreary lobotomy patients. But to be fair, who’s to say that if a mind was controlled by Daleks the voice wouldn’t sound like that of a lobotomy patient.
Then there was the scene where Susan accidentally pulls down a crumbling bridge onto the TARDIS, the Doctor tells her:

‘What you need is a jolly good smacked bottom.’​

Ah, the good ol’ days of child abuse ... although that line was probably added to highlight the shifting relationship between the Doctor and Susan ... as by the end he finally realises she's no longer a little girl.
AND one of the Daleks says 'RESISTANCE IS USELESS' … a kick for Hitchhikers fans like me.

All in all, an EPIC adventure. A story like this is what we all watch DW for.
 
CLASSIC WHO MARATHON

Finally, I'm posting my DALEK INVASION OF EARTH review and I would like to thank Meglos for his patience and good grace in waiting, and his terrific review (again).



So Susan’s gone. I never completely warmed to her because of the wimpy way she was written, which Carole Ann Ford obviously thought as well as she left due to Susan's lack of character development. Susan just didn’t have the boldness that one would expect from a time travelling teenager … she was no Ace. But she made up for it in these last episodes. Considering she is supposed to be only 15 (did she have any birthdays since the series started?), it is slightly creepy her being courted by a bearded young man, but as Susan looks older than 15, maybe her beau was younger than he looked as well. And what custodian abandons their loved one with what would appear to be her first boyfriend?!? I guess Susan isn’t your average teenager. But still …

Susan and the Doctor’s final scenes were so sweet and sad: first the painfully awkward conversation where they avoided the elephant in the room (that Susan had fallen in love); then Susan’s anguished conversation with her beau where she shows her complete loyalty to the Doctor, over and above her own wants; then the Doctor locking her out of the TARDIS before releasing her from any obligation she felt to look after him rather than to live her own life. And then he was gone. And I cried. It was a great goodbye speech, delivered with all the gravitas it deserved. You could argue there was a tinge of sexism involved, but I choose not to see it that way:

[By the riverside] I want you to belong somewhere, to have roots of your own. With David, you’ll be able to find those roots and live normally like any woman should do.

[From the TARDIS] Believe me, my dear, your future lies with David, and not with a silly old buffer like me. One day, I shall come back. Yes, I shall come back. Until then, there must be no regrets, no tears, no anxieties. Just go forward in all your beliefs, and prove to me that I am not mistaken in mine. Goodbye, Susan, goodbye, my dear.​

The adventure as a whole was terrific, though obviously more or less the same plot as the movie that based itself on this serial, Daleks - Invasion Earth: 2150 A.D. with Peter Cushing as the (human) Doctor, and Bernard Cribbins who played Donna’s grandfather Wilfred as an Ian-like character. I watched the movie recently so there was a little déjà vu, even though the TV version came first.

The feel was marvellously industrial with its empty factory settings, desolate scenes under bridges and so on. The depiction of a harsh and defeated London was perfect, from the opening scenes with the sign – IT IS FORBIDDEN TO DUMP BODIES INTO THE RIVER – to Barbara running the roadblock in a truck. It also ran one of my favourite themes … I think DW is at its best when there is an organised rebel group battling to free the planet from oppressors. It's a theme for the ages and, considering Britain was in the throes of granting independence to its numerous colonies, very poignant.

My favourite scenes, however, involved the wheelchair-bound Dortmun who built a bomb to destroy the Daleks. His face-off against them was really moving, a disabled man with limited means of escape trying to blow up the seemingly invincible enemy. Quite the suicide mission. So sad, so brave, and so self-sacrificing. I’m not supporting suicide missions here, just the tenacity to do whatever you can when things are completely bleak.

Of course, there were the usual funny bits, like the speed the Daleks initially flew down the helipad ramp, although they seemed to fix that as the episodes went on.
And the Dalek-controlled humans sounded like dreary lobotomy patients. But to be fair, who’s to say that if a mind was controlled by Daleks the voice wouldn’t sound like that of a lobotomy patient.
Then there was the scene where Susan accidentally pulls down a crumbling bridge onto the TARDIS, the Doctor tells her:

‘What you need is a jolly good smacked bottom.’​

Ah, the good ol’ days of child abuse ... although that line was probably added to highlight the shifting relationship between the Doctor and Susan ... as by the end he finally realises she's no longer a little girl.
AND one of the Daleks says 'RESISTANCE IS USELESS' … a kick for Hitchhikers fans like me.

All in all, an EPIC adventure. A story like this is what we all watch DW for.


...oh my God nutmeg that review was awesome!... as Meglos said... I love on how you touch so well on the human aspects of things... it shines through on just how compassionate and caring a person that you are on the inside... it really does... an excellent review and such a pleasure for me to read... thankyou so much... it made my day!... I feel that I'm slowly getting back to my cosey little Dr Who Universe within this thread again... I love it!... it's great to see you back again nutmeg... cheers.
 
@nutmeg !
So pleased to see you back in this thread.
Terrific review as usuak, I like the way you touch on the human motivations and relationships, which were especially prominent in this story, amongst the spectacular Dalek action.
Hitch-Hikers Guide to the Galaxy fan here too.

Oh wow! Me too!! :D, oh and I must say! FANTASTIC review @nutmeg
You really are brilliant at doing these!

...amen to that... Hitch-Hikers Guide to the Galaxy was so cleverly done... as was Red Dwarf another favourite of mine... lol!... cheers.
 
Things I love about Dr Who-

The TARDIS.

The introduction of the daleks.

The first doctor's childish arrogance.

The second doctor's scatterbrained nature.

The third pompous rebellion streak.

The fourth doctor's bohemian and alien ways.

The fifth doctor's gentle nature.

The sixth docto's bombastic nature.

The seventh doctors air of quaint mystery.

UNIT.

Lethbridge-Stewart. He always had the doctor's back, even though he may not have understood what he was up against.

The master v the doctor rivalry in the Pertwee era.

The stories that would sometimes go up to three months.

The cliffhangers.

The shoddy BBC production values.

The dvd's of the classic series. I'm not sure if it has been mentioned before, but the classic dr who dvd's are amazing with all the extras and the commentries, even for stories that people people don't look back fondly on.

Images of the British countryside.

The death of Adric.

The fourth doctor debating whether to commit genocide of the dalek race.

The third doctor's face after lethbridge-stewart has all the silurian bases blown up.
 
Things I love about Dr Who-

The TARDIS.

The introduction of the daleks.

The first doctor's childish arrogance.

The second doctor's scatterbrained nature.

The third pompous rebellion streak.

The fourth doctor's bohemian and alien ways.

The fifth doctor's gentle nature.

The sixth docto's bombastic nature.

The seventh doctors air of quaint mystery.

UNIT.

Lethbridge-Stewart. He always had the doctor's back, even though he may not have understood what he was up against.

The master v the doctor rivalry in the Pertwee era.

The stories that would sometimes go up to three months.

The cliffhangers.

The shoddy BBC production values.

The dvd's of the classic series. I'm not sure if it has been mentioned before, but the classic dr who dvd's are amazing with all the extras and the commentries, even for stories that people people don't look back fondly on.

Images of the British countryside.

The death of Adric.

The fourth doctor debating whether to commit genocide of the dalek race.

The third doctor's face after lethbridge-stewart has all the silurian bases blown up.


...oh wow reepbot that is a broad range of reasons for liking Doctor Who!... you sent me on a quick trip down memory lane with all of that... I must say... I have to agree with them all!... and yes I did love the shoddy BBC production values... they were always working on such cheap shoe-string money budgets to keep it on the air at the time... to think that they managed to keep it on air so long under those circumstances was an incredible feat in itself... cheers.
 
Thanks for liking my review, it was easy to write because the story was amazingly amazing (couldn't resist another Hitch-Hikers reference, seeing as we are all fans here. And don't get me started on Red Dwarf, how creative were those writers?!?!).
Things I love about Dr Who-

The TARDIS.

The introduction of the daleks.

The first doctor's childish arrogance.

The second doctor's scatterbrained nature.

The third pompous rebellion streak.

The fourth doctor's bohemian and alien ways.

The fifth doctor's gentle nature.

The sixth docto's bombastic nature.

The seventh doctors air of quaint mystery.

UNIT.

Lethbridge-Stewart. He always had the doctor's back, even though he may not have understood what he was up against.

The master v the doctor rivalry in the Pertwee era.

The stories that would sometimes go up to three months.

The cliffhangers.

The shoddy BBC production values.

The dvd's of the classic series. I'm not sure if it has been mentioned before, but the classic dr who dvd's are amazing with all the extras and the commentries, even for stories that people people don't look back fondly on.

Images of the British countryside.

The death of Adric.

The fourth doctor debating whether to commit genocide of the dalek race.

The third doctor's face after lethbridge-stewart has all the silurian bases blown up.
Great list.

I loved UNIT and the Brigadier (and Benton and Yates), particularly when the Doctor was stranded on Earth. I read an old interview with Nicholas Courtney and he is so un-Brigadier-like in real life. He sounded like a hoot.

And the old Doctor/Master storylines were gripping. New Who does many things better than Classic Who, but I think the relationship between those two foes was better in the old days, probably because Roger Delgado and Anthony Ainley were both perfect for the role. Plus they stuck around for a few years each, rather than nowadays where it feels like a ' casting event'. John Simm and Michelle Gomez are both incredible in the role, but their presence feels short term, like they are hired just for a season. Hopefully Missy proves me wrong.
th
th


And Adric, I'm still not over that. Stuff the laws of time, the Doctor should have gone back and saved him.
 
Thanks for liking my review, it was easy to write because the story was amazingly amazing (couldn't resist another Hitch-Hikers reference, seeing as we are all fans here. And don't get me started on Red Dwarf, how creative were those writers?!?!).

Great list.

I loved UNIT and the Brigadier (and Benton and Yates), particularly when the Doctor was stranded on Earth. I read an old interview with Nicholas Courtney and he is so un-Brigadier-like in real life. He sounded like a hoot.

And the old Doctor/Master storylines were gripping. New Who does many things better than Classic Who, but I think the relationship between those two foes was better in the old days, probably because Roger Delgado and Anthony Ainley were both perfect for the role. Plus they stuck around for a few years each, rather than nowadays where it feels like a ' casting event'. John Simm and Michelle Gomez are both incredible in the role, but their presence feels short term, like they are hired just for a season. Hopefully Missy proves me wrong.
th
th


And Adric, I'm still not over that. Stuff the laws of time, the Doctor should have gone back and saved him.

Apparently Roger Delgado's premature death was one of the reasons why Jon Pertwee left his role as the third doctor.

I personally think that Delgado, unlike Simms and Gomez, never acted like 'I'm insanely evil!! Mohhahahaha! Look how evil I am! Look at me over-act!' he was cruelly cool yet strangely vunerable.
 
Attention all Douglas Adams and Dr Who Fans (cause why wouldn't you be)
The Douglas Adams script "City of Death" is going to be turned into a novel
http://www.theguardian.com/books/20...tor-who-script-city-of-death-novel-james-goss

“It’s a book [URL='http://www.theguardian.com/books/douglasadams']Douglas Adams was supposed to write,” he said. “In the 80s, they wrote to him, and asked if he would like to write [his scripts] as novels - they even said they’d pay double. But he thanked them politely, and declined, and used his ideas in other books.”[/URL]
 
Apparently Roger Delgado's premature death was one of the reasons why Jon Pertwee left his role as the third doctor.

I personally think that Delgado, unlike Simms and Gomez, never acted like 'I'm insanely evil!! Mohhahahaha! Look how evil I am! Look at me over-act!' he was cruelly cool yet strangely vunerable.
I have to agree with you there, He was mad but at the same time, not mad. He only wanted domination, not the need to make everybody know he was crazy
 
Another anniversary coming up this week - 10 years of New Who - March 26.

Top 10 Doctor Who Reboot episodes (2005-2015) as voted by readers of Radio Times.com
  1. BLINK (2007)
    DOCTOR: David Tennant / WRITER: Steven Moffat
  2. VINCENT & THE DOCTOR (2010)
    DOCTOR: Matt Smith / WRITER: Richard Curtis
  3. THE STOLEN EARTH / JOURNEY’S END (2008)
    DOCTOR: David Tennant / WRITER: Russell T Davies
  4. THE DAY OF THE DOCTOR (2013)
    DOCTORS: Matt Smith, David Tennant, John Hurt / WRITER: Steven Moffat
  5. THE EMPTY CHILD / THE DOCTOR DANCES (2005)
    DOCTOR: Christopher Eccleston / WRITER: Steven Moffat
  6. ARMY OF GHOSTS / DOOMSDAY (2006)
    DOCTOR: David Tennant / WRITER: Russell T Davies
  7. THE GIRL IN THE FIREPLACE (2006)
    DOCTOR: David Tennant / WRITER: Steven Moffat
  8. BAD WOLF / THE PARTING OF THE WAYS (2005)
    DOCTOR: Christopher Eccleston / WRITER: Russell T Davies
  9. SILENCE IN THE LIBRARY / FOREST OF THE DEAD (2008)
    DOCTOR: David Tennant / WRITER: Steven Moffat
  10. THE END OF TIME (2009/10)
    DOCTOR: David Tennant WRITER: Russell T Davies
Maybe we could make our own top 10
 
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