Sunday, March 23, 2008

Kopic's Doctor Who & Torchwood News

Kopic's Doctor Who & Torchwood News

Amusing Doctor Who is everywhere...

Posted: 23 Mar 2008 06:06 PM CDT

This might not be meaningful for everyone, but I'm terribly amused that Neil Gaiman can make jokes about the depths of Steve Manfred's Doctor Who knowledge.

...Of Death

Posted: 23 Mar 2008 08:20 AM CDT

As I write this, Film4 is showing Doctor in Clover. This is a '60s medical comedy starring Leslie Phillips, and not - as modern fandom might like to imagine - a movie about David Tennant being rolled in low-fat butter.

However, I don't want to talk about David Tennant being rolled in low-fat butter. I want to talk about something which isn't much more insightful, but which is morbidly obsessive in a very different sort of way. I want to talk about famous people dying.

Traditionally, there's always been a skulking, unspoken connection between Doctor Who and Celebrity Death. The reason for this is simple and obvious: one of the most important Big Facts we were told about the series, when we were learning its ancient history from the fanzines and guidebooks, was that the first episode was broadcast while the world was still recovering from the hangover of the Kennedy assassination. For those of us who started reading Doctor Who Monthly before we started thinking about girls, it may even have been the first time we heard of the Kennedy assassination. At first sight, it's hard to see any direct correlation between the "Camelot" Presidency (motorcades, mafia connections, power and glamour, Jackie Kennedy's early-'60s ultra-chic) and Hartnell-era Doctor Who (junkyards, police boxes, very small sets, Barbara Wright's cardigans), however desperately "Silver Nemesis" might try to link the two. More importantly, though, the hype and pizzazz of Lee Harvey Oswald's Grand Day Out has overwhelmed all the other legends and oddities surrounding Doctor Who's arrival in the world. Which is unfortunate, when you consider that the very same day - 22nd of November, 1963 - also saw the deaths of both Aldous Huxley and C. S. Lewis.

Even on its own, the death of Lewis is striking, far more so than what was going on in Dallas. Not that I want to heap any praise on the pompous, reactionary old bore (obviously I'm bound to be on Philip Pullman's side in this argument, although the Narnia books are actually far less offensive that Lewis' Perelandra trilogy, which is the SF equivalent of being shouted at by the angry man who stands outside the supermarket and tries to give you pamphlets about the Love of Jesus), but it is true to say that The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe gave us the most important single prototype of the TARDIS. Yes, even more important than the H. G. Wells model, since the Ship's "magic wardrobe" qualities have always been closer to the heart of the programme than its "time-travel" ability: q.v. the final scene of "Rose". We can go further, and suggest that Doctor Who was the post-War descendant of the same children-find-a-secret-world-down-the-back-of-a-sofa tradition, even if "An Unearthly Child" presents us with a version in which the grown-ups are the ones who discover Fairyland. Had Lewis lived just another twenty-four hours, then he would have been able to watch the first episode and say to himself: 'Haaaaang on a minute…'

But when you consider the three fatalities in combination, a more interesting picture emerges. (We're not the first ones to try this, incidentally. Peter Kreeft wrote a novel entitled Between Heaven and Hell, in which Kennedy, Huxley and Lewis meet each other in limbo on their way to the afterlife, and drone on about the nature of Christ for 120 pages. The justification for this is that all three men were Christians of varying philosophical breeds, but if it's acceptable for an author to use their deaths as an exercise in Catholic propaganda, then I'm fairly sure it's all right to use them to talk about Daleks.) Consider the following…

Early Doctor Who was never explicitly conceived as "sci-fi", and the parts that seem most "spacey" came from experiments in TV production rather than the Arthur C. Clarke school of rocket-ship fiction. But the '60s version of the programme did exploit all sorts of popular anxieties and aspirations about the future, specifically those parts of the future that most concerned the British, at a time when the country was still in the process of rebuilding itself after the Austerity years. The fact is that the people of 1963 considered Thinking About the Future to be an important pastime. Our twenty-first-century society, being wholly consumer-driven and largely run by Rupert Murdoch, fetishises the idea of having things now and discourages us from thinking about what-happens-next. To the '60s mind-set, what-happens-next was at the root of all modern culture. For the British, anything American was considered futuristic, and the Yanks seemed determined to build fully-functional space-colonies by the 1980s. Across the western world, questions of social order and population control were making us wonder whether the White Heat of Technology really could save humankind. And amidst all of this, the BBC was attempting to make reasonably cosy, reasonably highbrow family entertainment with its roots in popular literature rather than Hollywood razzle-dazzle.

This is the crucible in which Doctor Who was given shape, and in that light, can you think of any better combination of blood-sacrifices than the space-happy President of the US, the man who wrote Brave New World, and the country's best-known children's fantasist? The only name which might perhaps be better-suited to the list of casualties is John Wyndham, given that Susan Foreman can safely be considered a "nice" version of one of the Midwich Cuckoos (and certainly a product of the same post-War generation-gap angst), but Wyndham didn't pop his clogs until 1969. He may even have seen Doctor Who, although God knows what he thought of it if he did. Maybe he watched "An Unearthly Child", and found himself thinking 'oh good, it's not just me'; maybe he watched "The Dalek Invasion of Earth", and wondered if he was in some way responsible for either the vision of a post-apocalyptic Britain or the giant shambling plant-creature; maybe he watched "The Dominators" in his final months, and just thought it was a load of cobblers.

This raises another point about death and Doctor Who: a lot of people we now think of as "historical", or at least "recent-historical", lived long enough to watch it. The 1980s taught us that if a series about time-travel goes on for long enough, then it'll eventually overlap with its own predictions about the future ("Attack of the Cybermen" might be seen as a symptom of this problem more than an actual story, or at least, it's half-tolerable if you think of it that way). Now the 2000s are teaching us that if a series about time-travel goes on for long enough, then it'll start treating the early years of its run as if they were an era of antiquity, fit for the Doctor to revisit. "Remembrance of the Daleks" was the first sign of this, but it's a lot more noticeable if you live in an age which is so obsessed with the present that it even considers time-travel to the 1980s to be in some way exotic (Ashes to Ashes, for Christ's sake…). Kennedy, Huxley and Lewis all missed the Doctor Who epoch by twenty-four hours, and Wyndham could theoretically have watched Quarks at play, but they all died in the monochrome 1960s. To someone of my age, the difference between the black-and-white era and the colour era is like a geological boundary layer, separating the Ancient TV Past from the Recent TV Past. What about casualties of the 1970s, then?

When BBC7 interviewed Agatha Christie's biographer in 2007, they remembered that geeks might be listening - because BBC7 always remembers that geeks might be listening - and asked her what Dame Agatha would make of the fact that she's going to be the subject of a Doctor Who story this year. The biographer fielded the question politely enough, but interestingly, both interviewer and interviewee spoke as if Christie would be vaguely puzzled by the existence of this strange, futuristic programme about a man in a time-travelling police box. Except, of course, that… she died in 1976. Specifically, she died between episodes two and three of "The Brain of Morbius". Whereas it used to be taken for granted that the Doctor only ever met historical figures of the Marco Polo oeuvre, it's now perfectly reasonable for him to bump into people who might actually have seen Philip Madoc trying to cut Tom Baker's head off.

This raises odd questions about the future, assuming our civilisation has one. Modern-day Doctor Who is, as we've already established, so addicted to celeb culture and showbiz parties that the monsters in "Voyage of the Damned" even look like walking BAFTA awards. Many of the celebrities who come into contact with the series in our own decade will be historical figures, of a kind, thirty or forty or fifty years from now. A producer of Sky-TV-owned Doctor Who in 2050 may well decide that it'd be "cute" for the Doctor to go back in time and meet legendary late-twentieth-century starlet Kylie Minogue, oblivious the fact that she was actually in the programme. Or how about soon-to-be-mythical Lord Mayor of London Boris Johnson, who's surely guaranteed a cameo appearance in the show at some point in the next few years?

I mentioned a blood-sacrifice, and… I may not have been entirely serious. But human beings can still instinctively feel, even after centuries of evidence to the contrary, that no great work can succeed unless somebody's buried in the foundations for good luck (hence the creepy later verses of "London Bridge is Falling Down", and the more modern architectural tradition that a new bridge hasn't been "christened" until at least one suicide has jumped off it). It obviously worked for Doctor Who in 1963, given that the bridge is still standing, even if it was closed for repairs between 1989 and 2005. It's not always so successful, though. Jon Pertwee snuffed it just before the supposed "return" of the programme in 1996, which might have been interpreted as a symbolic laying-to-rest of the old before the ushering-in of the new, but all it seemed to get us was a "Planet of the Spiders"-style motorbike chase in the middle of the TV Movie. And the only notable person who died in the twenty-four hours before "Rose" was Jim Callaghan, which might be considered a bit of a damp squib on the Kennedy scale. Although it may be apt that Callaghan was Prime Minister during the late 1970s, the last time the series was a ratings-winning national institution.

Now Doctor in Clover has come to an end, and the TV ads are telling me that you can get free Doctor Who DVDs in this week's Sun. That settles it: the world is officially broken. Balance can clearly only be restored to the universe if, in the spirit of '63, Rupert Murdoch gets shot in the head twenty-four hours before the broadcast of "Partners in Crime". That might make even Catherine Tate seem bearable.

A Postscript. While we're feasting on the dead… these days, a lot of critics (rather unfairly) attack the film 2010 for being "dated", on the grounds that it depicts a world just two years in our future where the Cold War is still in progress. However, I'd point out that the movie also features a cameo by Arthur C. Clarke, who's seen reading a newspaper on a bench outside the White House. I'd tentatively suggest that Arthur C. Clarke reading a newspaper on a bench outside the White House is a lot less likely to happen in 2010 than a face-off between America and Russia, at least unless someone does something really weird with preserving fluid and animatronics.

Torchwood Episode 209 Recap: "Something Borrowed" - AfterElton.com

Posted: 23 Mar 2008 07:52 AM CDT


Torchwood Episode 209 Recap: "Something Borrowed"
AfterElton.com - 13 minutes ago
We open with a scene we've already seen, the one from this season's first episode when Gwen breaks the news to Jack about her engagement and he actually ...

S4: Trailer Screencaps

Posted: 23 Mar 2008 05:38 AM CDT

S4: Trailer Screencaps
News Dated: 23/3/2008

DWO have put together some screencaps from the Series Four cinematic Trailer:

[To view images - check out the DWO News page]

In addition to the cinematic trailer, a series of teaser trailers featuing Daleks, Sontarans and The Ood, have aired on the BBC Channels. DWO have some screencaps from the Dalek teaser with more to follow.

In the meantime, all the trailers can be viewed on the BBC's YouTube page:
http://www.youtube.com/BBC

[Source: Steve Freestone]

From Royston Vasey to Benidorm - Times Online

Posted: 23 Mar 2008 04:33 AM CDT


From Royston Vasey to Benidorm
Times Online, UK - 15 minutes ago
I'm like a doctor who can't take on another patient. I've already got Lost, Damages, Mad Men and re-runs of The Prisoner to catch up on. ...

News: Tom Baker: Ask Me Nicely

Posted: 23 Mar 2008 03:47 AM CDT

At the opening of the Earl's Court hosting of the Doctor Who Exhibition last week, Fourth Doctor Tom Baker revealed that he would consider a return to Doctor Who! In typical Tom fashion, after years of denying all interest, he's decided he might be up for it... although he might get a shock: "I don't actually watch [Dr Who]," he said. "I didn't even watch it when I was in it - for all sorts of reasons. "But I do get messages from David Tennant and I have seen him in other things of...

News: Partners in Crime Preview

Posted: 23 Mar 2008 02:13 AM CDT

Let's get our Series 4 Episode 1 preview out of the way! Following information is via the BBC Press Office... (Also note that the time is still To Be Confirmed): Doctor Who – Partners In Crime Ep 1/13 Donna Noble is determined to find the Doctor again – even if it means braving the villainous Miss Foster and her hordes of sinister Adipose, as Russell T Davies's Bafta Award-winning time-travelling drama returns for a fourth series. But when the alien threat escalates out of control,...

News: Series 4 Trailers

Posted: 23 Mar 2008 02:06 AM CDT

Aha! Yes you read that right - trailers! Not only was the Series 4 trailer aired on Saturday evening (just prior to the John Barrowman featuring talent search I'd Do Anything) but three other mini teasers appeared throughout the evening... Now available on the BBC's Official Doctor Who page (nice to see it active again in the last week, incidentally) these three mini trailers feature: The Ood! The Sontarans! The Daleks! The build up has well and truly begun, and with a fortnight to...

Spinoffs: Torchwood: Fragments

Posted: 22 Mar 2008 11:40 PM CDT

Series 2 of Torchwood is about to enter the final stage (or already has for those of you watching on BBC Three), and Fragments tells the 5 stories of how each member of Torchwood joined the organisation. If you haven't caught it yet then below are some spoilers (from Digital Spy) which you can choose to view, or not view. Simply right click your mouse, and drag... There's an alien in a brain... a live human brain. Toshiko's mother makes an appearance. Captain Jack is subjected...

Triple teaser trailers!

Posted: 22 Mar 2008 10:33 PM CDT

Watch the Ood, Sontaran and Dalek clips.

Earnings highlights: Goldman Sachs, Lehman Bros., Morgan Stanley ... - BloggingStocks

Posted: 22 Mar 2008 10:26 PM CDT


Earnings highlights: Goldman Sachs, Lehman Bros., Morgan Stanley ...
BloggingStocks - 5 hours ago
Please keep your comments relevant to this blog entry. Email addresses are never displayed, but they are required to confirm your comments. ...

I’d Do Anything, week 2: Nancy School - Stage

Posted: 22 Mar 2008 09:29 PM CDT


I'd Do Anything, week 2: Nancy School
Stage, UK - 4 minutes ago
The final judging place is taken up at last by Barry Humphries, a former Sowerberry and Fagin, while John has been delayed while shooting Torchwood in ...

Phobia Corner: Inflatable Snakes ('Dr Who')

Posted: 22 Mar 2008 08:00 PM CDT

The dreaded Mara made a lasting impression in the 1982 Doctor Who story &os;Kinda&os;.

Telly treasures - Arkansas Democrat Gazette

Posted: 22 Mar 2008 06:50 PM CDT


Telly treasures
Arkansas Democrat Gazette, AR - 2 hours ago
THE CATHERINE TATE SHOW SERIES TWO Release date: Out Tuesday on Kultur White Star. Price: $ 29. 99. The story: Tate sprints through short comic sketches in ...

BIRMINGHAM'S SUPERSONIC FESTIVAL ANNOUNCES MORE NAMES - Imperiumi.net

Posted: 22 Mar 2008 04:25 PM CDT


BIRMINGHAM'S SUPERSONIC FESTIVAL ANNOUNCES MORE NAMES
Imperiumi.net, Finland - 53 minutes ago
They join: BATTLES, HARVEY MILK, EFTERKLANG, HARMONIA, NOXAGT, EARTH, WOODEN SHJIPS, THRONES, OXBOW, JUSTICE YELDMAN, DALEK, ORTHODOX, BLACK SUN, ...

Baker: I'd do Dr Who cameo 'if they ask me nicely' - Kent News

Posted: 22 Mar 2008 04:10 PM CDT


Baker: I'd do Dr Who cameo 'if they ask me nicely'
Kent News, United Kingdom - 3 minutes ago
In 1986, Baker married Sue Jerrard, who had been an assistant editor on Doctor Who. They moved to an old property in Boughton Malherbe near Maidstone, ...

John Barrowman Says Scots Girl Can Win TV Talent Show - Glasgow Sunday Mail

Posted: 22 Mar 2008 04:02 PM CDT


John Barrowman Says Scots Girl Can Win TV Talent Show
Glasgow Sunday Mail, UK - 10 minutes ago
TORCHWOOD star John Barrowman has tipped fellow Scot Ashley Russell to win BBC reality show I'd Do Anything. Ashley last night battled with 11 other girls ...

Series Four Trailer

Posted: 22 Mar 2008 12:33 PM CDT

Following its BBC One broadcast, the Season Four Cinema trailer is now available on the official BBC Website as well as in high quality on the BBC YouTube channel. Due to licence restrictions the trailer may not be available outside the United Kingdom. In addition to the Cinema trailer, a short tease was shown on BBC One just before the late News, featuring upcoming monsters from the new series. Different versions were shown in England, Wales, Scotland...

Torchwood John Tips Scot For Oliver Glory - Glasgow Sunday Mail

Posted: 22 Mar 2008 12:26 PM CDT


Torchwood John Tips Scot For Oliver Glory
Glasgow Sunday Mail, UK - 1 hour ago
TORCHWOOD star John Barrowman has tipped fellow Scot Ashley Russell to win BBC reality show I'd Do Anything. Ashley last night battled with 11 other girls ...

When Thom met Ken - Guardian

Posted: 22 Mar 2008 07:08 AM CDT


When Thom met Ken
Guardian, UK - 48 minutes ago
'A mega bin is OK in the tropics, but here you need three big dalek bins. One's ready to go; another is comfortably digesting. Third one: pile all the crap ...

An Easter Without Doctor Who

Posted: 22 Mar 2008 04:14 AM CDT

It&os;s a strange thing... since 2005, the Easter Weekend has gone together with Doctor Who like death and taxes, burgers and fries, Beethoven and symphonies. Even when it didn&os;t debut that weekend (which it didn&os;t last year) it was still...

What's On Tonight: Cops, Zoey 101, Torchwood - TV Squad

Posted: 22 Mar 2008 03:17 AM CDT


What's On Tonight: Cops, Zoey 101, Torchwood
TV Squad, CA - 7 hours ago
Please keep your comments relevant to this blog entry. Email addresses are never displayed, but they are required to confirm your comments. ...

Torchwood 2.11 Overnight Ratings

Posted: 22 Mar 2008 02:01 AM CDT

Unofficial figures show that the BBC2 showing of Torchwood Episode 11, Adrift was watched by 2.1 million viewers, a 8.9% share of the total TV audience. The programme was the 3rd most watched of the day on BBC2, with slightly fewer viewers than Gardeners World and Eggheads. It was the 29th most watched on British television for the day. The timeslot was won by BBC1's The Passion which got 3.7 million viewers. Torchwood outrated the second half...

This Week In Doctor Who - March 22, 2008

Posted: 22 Mar 2008 01:29 AM CDT

THIS WEEK IN DOCTOR WHO March 22, 2008 - Vol 11, No 11 The weekly guide to Doctor Who and Sarah Jane broadcasts worldwide. by Benjamin F. Elliott http://groups.yahoo.com/group/thisweekindoctorwho http://groups.yahoo.com/group/torchwood Section A - Everything But The PBS Stations Upcoming premiere broadcasts: Saturday 22 March: SABC2 South Africa 3:28PM CAT - Sarah Jane Adventures - Whatever Happened To Sarah Jane, pt 1 BBC Prime Europe/Middle East...

Torchwood This Week - March 22, 2008

Posted: 22 Mar 2008 01:16 AM CDT

TORCHWOOD THIS WEEK March 22, 2008 - Vol 2, No 11 The weekly guide to Torchwood transmissions. by Benjamin F. Elliott http://groups.yahoo.com/group/torchwood

This Week In Doctor Who B - March 22, 2008

Posted: 22 Mar 2008 01:13 AM CDT

THIS WEEK IN DOCTOR WHO March 22, 2008 - Vol 11, No 11 The weekly guide to Doctor Who boadcasts worldwide. by Benjamin F. Elliott

This Week In Doctor Who A - March 22, 2008

Posted: 22 Mar 2008 01:10 AM CDT

THIS WEEK IN DOCTOR WHO March 22, 2008 - Vol 11, No 11 The weekly guide to Doctor Who and Sarah Jane broadcasts worldwide. by Benjamin F. Elliott

The Tellybox: What’s Hot, Hot, Hot in the UK: Torchwood’s Second ... - Eclipse Magazine

Posted: 22 Mar 2008 12:44 AM CDT


The Tellybox: What's Hot, Hot, Hot in the UK: Torchwood's Second ...
Eclipse Magazine, CA - 4 hours ago
Episodes 10, 11 and 12 of Torchwood's second series have all aired in the past three days on BBC2 and BBC3, leaving me with the feeling that, ...

Christopher Eccleston to star in GI JOE film

Posted: 21 Mar 2008 10:45 PM CDT

Former Doctor Who Christopher Eccleston is set to star in the up and coming Stephen Sommers-directed film G.I. Joe, based on the Hasbro toy line and Devil's Due comic. He will play Destro, COBRA's arms dealer and love interest of the Baroness. The film also stars Ray Park (Darth Maul) as Snake Eyes. The film is an origin story and Sommers says he plans to explain various strange aspects - from Destro's metal mask to Snake Eyes' lack of speech. The...

Loser legends return - Daily Telegraph

Posted: 21 Mar 2008 09:10 PM CDT


Loser legends return
Daily Telegraph, Australia - 36 minutes ago
The Coup and Ten HD's Torchwood. It makes US actor Eddie Cibrian from Third Watch seem positively lazy with his guest appearances in Seven's Samantha Who ...

PRIX HUGO 2008 - SFU

Posted: 21 Mar 2008 08:38 PM CDT


PRIX HUGO 2008
SFU, France - 6 minutes ago
Cawley Entertainment Co. and The Magic Time Co.) Torchwood: "Captain Jack Harkness" (Written by Catherine Tregenna. Directed by Ashley Way. BBC Wales)

Sci Fi’s ‘Rock Monster’ movie doesn’t take itself too seriously - TheNewsTribune.com

Posted: 21 Mar 2008 08:37 PM CDT


Sci Fi's 'Rock Monster' movie doesn't take itself too seriously
TheNewsTribune.com, WA - 8 minutes ago
An alien leaves Gwen with the wedding gift that keeps on giving on "Torchwood" (9 pm, BBC America). • Thora Birch and Kelly Lynch star in the superior 2003 ...

Sci-fi fans gather to remember the man who saw the future - Belfast Telegraph

Posted: 21 Mar 2008 06:31 PM CDT


Sci-fi fans gather to remember the man who saw the future
Belfast Telegraph, United Kingdom - 4 minutes ago
Proceedings kicked-off with a discussion over whether its creator, Russell T Davies, was the saviour of British sci-fi, or "just a mad fan with a God ...

Sci Fi builds a 'Rock Monster' - Allentown Morning Call

Posted: 21 Mar 2008 05:25 PM CDT


Sci Fi builds a 'Rock Monster'
Allentown Morning Call, PA - 5 minutes ago
An alien leaves Gwen with the wedding gift that keeps on giving on ''Torchwood'' (BBC America at 9). Thora Birch and Kelly Lynch star in the superior 2003 ...

'Torchwood,' hoops are a slam dunk - Fort Worth Star Telegram

Posted: 21 Mar 2008 03:03 PM CDT


'Torchwood,' hoops are a slam dunk
Fort Worth Star Telegram, TX - 1 hour ago
7 pm, WFAA/Channel 8 Torchwood: Having regained its groove in the past three episodes, all of which had something to do with Owen (Burn Gorman) being killed ...

Sci Fi presents a 'rocky' horror picture show - SouthCoastToday.com

Posted: 21 Mar 2008 12:08 PM CDT


Sci Fi presents a 'rocky' horror picture show
SouthCoastToday.com, MA - 27 minutes ago
An alien leaves Gwen with the wedding gift that keeps on giving on "Torchwood" (9 pm, BBC America). Thora Birch and Kelly Lynch star in the superior 2003 ...

S02E11: 'Adrift'

Posted: 21 Mar 2008 10:50 AM CDT

Gwen investigates the disappearance of a young boy and fears that Captain Jack is involved.

S02E11: 'Adrift'

Posted: 21 Mar 2008 10:50 AM CDT

Moving performances and a poignant script boost this impressive episode.

Happy families - Telegraph.co.uk

Posted: 21 Mar 2008 07:21 AM CDT


Happy families
Telegraph.co.uk, United Kingdom - 21 Mar 2008
Anything practical involving chemicals is normally undertaken by her father, who goes at it with David Tennant-style optimism and zeal. ...

Photo of the Day 03-21-08 - AOL News Newsbloggers

Posted: 21 Mar 2008 06:07 AM CDT


Photo of the Day 03-21-08
AOL News Newsbloggers, VA - 22 hours ago
Penitents of the "Los Dolores" brotherhood take part in a Holy Week procession in Cordoba, southern Spain, Friday March 21, 2008. ...

Doctor Who back at start of April - CBBC Newsround

Posted: 19 Mar 2008 07:42 PM CDT


Doctor Who back at start of April
CBBC Newsround, UK - 20 Mar 2008
CBBC Series Totally Dr Who won't be back this year, but there willl be some old friends returning to The Tardis. Martha, (Freema Agyeman) who left The ...

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