Jan 072009
 

d11-002Well the BBC certainly knows how to gin up interest in the program don't they? It has to be said that the interim period between learning of the impending announcement of Friday to the unveiling Saturday was one of delicious anticipation for the THT Brain Trust. This was truly the first 'Next Doctor' announcement for the internet age. Tennant was named just after the 2005 started rolling and we learned Eccleston was leaving. Eccleston's surprise casting was made without terrific fanfare, and McGann was cast in the formative days of the net. So now Mr .Smith goes to Gallifrey, He brings the relative anonymity of Tom Baker and the exaggerated youth of Davison. It has to be said, at least for this fan–who started watching Doctor Who in 1981–that Matt Smith hadn't even been born! I suspect that says more about me than him. In Moffat We Trust. Matt Smith also poses a bit of a challenge for internet scavengers, at least initially. Not much of a web presence. Still we've begun that process of building out the Matt Smith portion of the Tour

 Posted by at 1:36 am
Jan 032009
 

Well the BBC have certainly trumped anything I was going to say today. We can promise that, as we did both in 2004 and 2005 when the previous Doctors were cast, we'll throw a quick "Who Not Who!" gallery together for the new Doctor no later than the end of the weekend. On a separate matter, as we do every year, as the twelve days of Christmas come to a close, so must The Feast of Steven. Catch it before it hibernates for another year.

 Posted by at 12:58 am
Dec 282008
 

d10-10f-004The Season of Specials kicks off in fine style with The Next Doctor, a story which deliberately went more for period style than spectacle, and featured an outstanding performance from David Morrissey as the broken Jackson Lake. While the promised "big twist" never happened and some of the plot turns were well telegraphed, the first new Who in almost six months was very welcome indeed here at THT Worldwide.

Caps and images for The Next Doctor are now online. BTW we've never had a story come out of the gate sporting almost 300 images! We've also pushed through a modest site update, mostly Tennant-focused, which pushes the overall image count to 64600.

 Posted by at 8:39 pm
Dec 272008
 

Now that we have a few of these Christmas Specials under out belt, it seems like a good time to rank the X-mas stories in our eyes…

  1. The Christmas Invasion
  2. The Next Doctor
  3. The Runaway Bride
  4. Voyage of the Damned

The Christmas Invasion scores with us because it has the most heart of the four, a sense of scale to it all and the tease about when the Doctor would finally emerge works.

The Next Doctor also scores well, The Runaway Bride is like Christmas in July. Oh wait… it was. And Voyage of the Damned went the other way from The Next Doctor, going for spectacle over style. Never the best strategy.

 Posted by at 6:23 pm
Dec 192008
 

steven11The TARDIS whirled on it's way again. The Doctor listened to Sara and Steven as they recovered from their recent exertions. Sara asked, "Whatever was that place?"

"I've no idea," Steven replied, "Let's hope we never land there again." He heard a tinkling sound and looked up to see the Doctor carrying a silver tray with three crystal wine glasses, brimful. "we so rarely get a chance to celebrate," remarked the Doctor at their unspoken questions.

"Celebrate?" the mystified Steven asked.

"Don't you remember? In the Police Station – it was Christmas."

 steven12"So it was," smiled Steven, taking the proffered glass.

"Here's a toast. A Happy Christmas to all of us," said the Doctor, bending a benign smile on his young companions. Then he raised his glass high, saluting a host of Absent Friends and turned away.

"And incidentally – a happy Christmas, to all of you at home."    

 Posted by at 3:00 am
Dec 062008
 

steven11It's a Tragical History Tour tradition (and the Matrix Mutterings before that) that stretches all the way back to 1995. Our annual holiday bit of Christmas merriment heralds Doctor Who's most prominent (at least until 2005) and obvious holiday crossover. And therein lies a tale (some of it possibly apocryphal!) Christmas Day in 1965 fell on a Saturday. DOCTOR WHO was well into a successful third season in its by-now-traditional Saturday tea-time slot on the BBC schedules with William Hartnell in the lead and was going all out to appease the rampant Dalekmania that had taken England and the series by storm by unleashing the massive 12-part story The Dalek Master Plan over a three month period. Rather than take a break for more traditional holiday-fare the powers that were in the BBC decided not to break up the Dalek epic halfway through (at episode 7) and continue to run the series. The Producer at the time John Wiles felt the unusual slotting on Christmas day provided an ideal chance to break from the larger story temporarily and try something totally different.

In England the theater tradition of Christmas pantomimes was a well understood and accepted form of entertainment. Thus virtually all links to the story up to that point were forgotten for a week to indulge in the 'Christmas spirit' as it were. In other words nothing less than a full-blown pantomime and send-up as the Doctor and his companions–Steven and Sara–ricocheted from one ridiculous situation to another. steven12IAs it was viewers at the time didn't mind the diversion–although the episode was never sold into syndication overseas. Even so the most infamous feature in this episode was William Hartnell's closing speech–directly to the audience! Although this closing exists in the scripts that exist today, both script editor Donald Tosh and director Douglas Camfield insisted it was not in the shooting script! Camfield was reportedly so incensed that, according to Heather Hartnell, he gave Hartnell the original print shortly after it was broadcast and in subsequent years the Hartnell family would then gather together after Christmas dinner to watch The Feast of Steven all over again. The following is a photonovelization taken from the Zerinza (the Australian Doctor Who Club) adaptation of the story by Rosemary Howe back in 1987. Ho! Ho! WHO!

 Posted by at 11:17 pm