Kopic's Doctor Who & Torchwood News |
| Posted: 10 May 2009 10:51 AM PDT American Magazine Wizard has voted Doctor Who as the greatest Sci-Fi show ever. The magazine placed the series top of the list ahead of series such as Star Trek and Buffy, describing it as the most durable, most charming, most altogether fun excursion into the unknown on the dial to date. Thanks to Graham Tatt. | |
| Posted: 10 May 2009 08:36 AM PDT Captain Jack says that "everything changes" - nothing more so than fashion! As you're no doubt aware TORCHWOOD.tv has dabbled in fashion before - who doesn't want a TW.tv T-shirt?! - but now at last Woodies across the land can rejoice as Forbidden Planet International have on sale an official licensed Torchwood T-shirt (that puts our's to shame, and then some!) that you can get your hands on right now!* ![]() *I admit that's there's been some recent scandal about online buying from FP International, but I'm assured that this has all been corrected now. * *** * In other news, it looks like BBC America won't be airing Children of Earth the same week as BBC One here in the UK. Instead promotional material indicates that it'll go out some time in July - a full month after its mid-June UK debut. | |
| Posted: 10 May 2009 06:10 AM PDT Bristol Comics Expo turned out to be really enjoyable. I think, for me, that was mostly because I made the decision not to be 'on duty', except when signing at the Panini table (they provided some very nice tea, and impressed me with their desire to collect all of Captain Britain in handy volumes, and the way they organise Marvel's output for British readers). So I didn't feel an obligation to | |
| Loyalty points - guardian.co.uk Posted: 10 May 2009 04:18 AM PDT
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| Posted: 10 May 2009 02:51 AM PDT Finally ... getting some time on a Sunday afternoon to sit down and pen some thoughts about recent Who and other things ...Thanks to those of you who nudged me to see if I was still alive after all this time. I am ... and I'm OK, though there have been some quite dramatic changes in my life since last I blogged. Anyway, onwards and upwards and first on my list of things to catch up with are the two latest Doctor Who specials. We had The Next Doctor at Christmas, and at Easter there was Planet of the Dead. Heading back to Christmas first, and at the time I wasn't sure how to take The Next Doctor. It seemed to be quite a fun romp at times, but scattered through with disjointed elements which didn't seem right. Overall I felt it was certainly one of the weaker Cybermen adventures, with only the very cool black and silver with brain showing variant to elicit much interest - though quite why this CyberLeader was like that is anyone's guess. I liked the setting and the idea of David Morrissy being the Doctor was a nice conceit which unfortunately fell into the Doctor's Daughter school of not being that at all, and all being something else entirely ... a shame really as again, the 'gosh wow' idea of it was better than the actuality. As usual for BBC Drama, the setting was well realised, but I'm not sure that the number of black gentlemen who were seen around could have been correct - at this time in England's history, weren't black men and women menials rather than toffs? Which brings us to Rosita and her perfect Cockney accent, let alone that she's treated as an equal ... hmmm. The Cybershades were frankly rubbish. Eliciting no form of excitement at all and looking like something which had been constructed from the pages of Doctor Who Adventures Magazine (but then perhaps that was the intention, to feature a monster which every child could effectively pretend to be with a sheepskin rug and a cardboard mask ... And why would the Cybermen convert cats and dogs anyway? There are enough people around after all. Then it all goes Oliver with Miss Hartigan's Fagin capturing the kids to work in a factory ... again, not much explanation as to why the kids were used ... why not controlled humans? Why were they needed at all? And of course finally it turns into Transformers and a giant Cyberking rises from the Thames to stomp all over London ... I have no idea what the point was, but it all looked nice if you disengaged your brain. Yes ... different from the other Christmas specials, perhaps not as good as Voyage of the Damned, but better than The Runaway Bride ... But then we get Planet of the Dead. Oh dear. I had high hopes for this, but it turned out that everything we had heard about it was exactly what it was. Recorded in a Dubai which looked like sand dunes in Cornwall, and featuring some woman off EastEnders and The Bionic Woman who acted well but had no clue really, and a race of giant flies who eat excrement, and you start to think that it's all going to hell in a handcart.What niggled me most about this was the lack of plot. The Doctor is on a London bus acting like the loony you try to avoid and wittering on about easter eggs and fiddling with something electronic when the bus is sucked through a space time portal and dumped in the desert. As happens you know ... We then have most of the running time taken up with Doctor on said bus trying to figure out how to get back while another loony on the bus goes on and on about death coming (no love, it's just a swarm of alien stingray things), while on Earth, UNIT has it's hands full as they've inexplicably put Lee Evans in charge of the tech ... Lucky that on board the bus is the Bionic Woman who can't do anything useful really, but who has a gold chalice she just nicked and which is exactly what the Doctor needs to turn the bus into something out of Harry Potter and fly back home again. And that's about it. Obviously co-writer Gareth Roberts has a thing about flying beasties as he's used them in The Shakespeare Code and The Unicorn and the Wasp as well as Planet of the Dead. Maybe we should call it Lara Croft on the Planet of the Flies and be done with it as that was really what it seemed to be about.Of course we had to end with the loopy woman going on about something returning and knocking four times ... but then her predictions of death were so way off kilter that if the Doctor has any sense then he'll ignore her. But then again, he's so used to everyone he's ever met suddenly turning up again on a giant Dalek saucer, or at the end of the world, or in a submarine or somewhere equally unlikely, that if I were him, I'd just assume that Rose was coming back for him having worn out her clone Doctor, or that Donna had remembered her past and rather than Wilf have to put up with her whining about that, decides to find the Doctor himself and give him a piece of his mind. I've been hearing the rumours about Tennant's swan song and thinking ... oh no, not again. It's interesting to look back just a couple of years ... I watched a repeat of Army of Ghosts and Doomsday again last week, and I was again reduced to crying my eyes out over the ending. They should have left it there, they really should. The production team seem to have stopped trying in many respects. Now that Doctor Who is rightfully back on top of the schedules, and that it's pulling in more money than ever before in its history through merchandise and overseas sales, it seems like the golden goose cannot be harmed. So the scripts get a little rushed and shoddy, less care is taken over the finer details than in which celebrity casting we can use this time around ... it's all worryingly like the slow decline of the show under John Nathan-Turner, when scripts came second to crowd-pleasing reunions and a wacky opportunity to record in Spain gave us The Two Doctors rather than spending the money on a decent set of scripts and some great ideas. I worry because I care ... I love that Doctor Who is top of the telly pops again, and that my interest in it is seen as being cool and interesting rather than geeky and sad ... but if the scripts aren't cutting the mustard, then the public will turn away quickly and find something else to watch. Primeval perhaps, which has really given Who a run for it's money with this new season. The episode shown along with Planet of the Dead apparently killed off one of the lead characters in a way that was dramatic and effective. Not just for show, or to try and grab viewers (as no-one knew it was going to happen), but in a script that was tense and well thought through. The Who production office has many, many very talented people working in it, and I know they do care ... but complacency has a way of creeping in. I'm glad that Russell T Davies has stood down and that Steven Moffat now needs to prove himself against the mirror of Davies' television juggernaught. This should provide the necessary boost and up the ante for everyone to create not just Doctor Who, but a bigger, bolder, better Doctor Who. Something that amazes and terrifies in the same breath, something which is thought provoking, touches on the human condition, and which works on a number of levels. No pressure then ... | |
| British film featuring Doctor Who star competes for Cannes prize - Telegraph.co.uk Posted: 10 May 2009 01:31 AM PDT
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| News: New Doctor Who Animation? Posted: 10 May 2009 01:30 AM PDT According to Twitter user Adrian Hon (@adrianhon), there is a new Doctor Who animation in development. How does he know? Hon is currently the co-founder and Chief Creative Officer at Six to Start, a cross-media entertainment company that already has active links with both the BBC and Penguin books (current owners of BBC Children's Books). The news was revealed on Adrian Hon's Twitter feed on April 30th - although little has been heard on the subject since. New #doctorwho animated series,... | |
| Posted: 10 May 2009 12:26 AM PDT John Barrowman's UK tour of 17 dates this summer, among them Liverpool's Philarmonic Hall which recently hosted the Lis Sladen-presented Music From Outer Space live orchestral event. Barrowman chatted recently with the Liverpool Daily Post on the subject of being ubiqitous/versatile and whether or not we can expect to see him in Doctor Who again... “I’m different things to different people and that’s a nice thing for me,” he says. “I can be Mr Saturday... | |
| News: Is Neil Gaiman on Board? Posted: 09 May 2009 11:59 PM PDT Den of Geek have restoked the "Neil Gaiman Scripting Doctor Who in 2010" fire with a report following the writer's appearance on BBC Radio Two's Jonathan Ross show on Saturday morning (May 9th, available on BBC iPlayer). Neil Gaiman is of course the writer behind some of the most popular fiction of the last 30 years; the novel and TV series Neverwhere for instance, as well as the comic books Sandman and Stardust (the latter of which was adapted into a 2007 blockbuster movie). With... | |
| Big match verdict: Hull City shot down by well-drilled regiment of ... - Mirror.co.uk Posted: 09 May 2009 08:04 PM PDT
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| Royal Scottish Academy of Music and Drama - guardian.co.uk Posted: 09 May 2009 06:38 PM PDT
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| Doctor Who: Podshock - Episode 148 Posted: 09 May 2009 06:03 PM PDT ![]() Episode 148 of Doctor Who: Podshock is now available. "Is it usual for a host to kill a guest?" Outpost Gallifrey Presents: Doctor Who: Podshock - Episode 148 Review of the Four to Doomsday DVD, news, feedback from Jim E. Oconner, Don, James, Lel ... | |
| A Wales of a time in Britain - Daytona Beach News-Journal Posted: 09 May 2009 11:09 AM PDT
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| Brown's men shot down by well-drilled regiment of rejects and ... - Mirror.co.uk Posted: 09 May 2009 10:40 AM PDT
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