Just spotted these http://instagram.com/p/V6bLMqzVap http://instagram.com/p/V9RTgGTVU3 http://instagram.com/p/VtbvUbTVS- http://instagram.com/p/V6VGbzTVW_ Looks good!
Green Console - Thumbs Up! No "Big Thing" Hanging Over The Console - Thumbs Down! No Photo Wall - Thumbs Down! (Though that does make it easier to use in another production...)
Screw series 8! Let's just redo the 1st and 2nd doctor stories. It shouldn't take more than 6 to 7 years if they copy the production to a "T"
That's a fantastic recreation. Oh man. Maybe they could use this in a certain other production? Maybe?
Well, that would be one way to deal with the missing-episode problem... Oh, and the name of the film is actually An Adventure in Space and Time, which I believe was the Radio Times's tagline for the series in its descriptions.
Am I missing something inaccurate other than the lack of photowall? If it's not accurate, perhaps I should say "fantastic interpretation" instead.
Oh, that's an interesting point, Christopher: An Adventure in Time and Space was I think the wording used in Radio Times, whereas An Adventure in Space and Time was the title of the story-by-story fanzine about the early days in the series which later became IN-Vision. Irritatingly, I can't remember which way round is which, and my old Space and Time issues are stuck on a shelf I can't get at easily...
The non-photographic roundels are wrong too. (And while they've got the Doctor, Ian & Barbara in the right clothes, Susan's are completely different.)
Carole Ann Ford's costume is accurate to the original pilot recording, which would seem to be what is being represented here.
I didn't get to see those but I am guessing these are the same pics here. http://blogtorwho.blogspot.co.uk/2013/02/an-adventure-in-space-time-pics.html
Nice! Who knew 50 years ago that someday the BBC would make a telemovie about what they were doing back then? I love it.
I doubt that. Presumably these are sets designed to look like low-budget sets constructed in the 1960s, and wouldn't have the level of detail necessary to be convincing as "real" TARDIS interiors or locations in a modern Doctor Who production.
Pity that none of those pics gives us a view of the time rotor: from talking to fan replica builders, that's the really tricky bit of the original console to get right!