So, Sarah Jane left the Fourth Doctor before K9 was introduced and K9 left the Doctor light-years away from Earth, and yet, in The Five Doctors (and apparently from that point on) K9 is with Sarah Jane. How/When/Why/Where?
Despite the name of the show, it was obviously meant to be Sarah Jane-centric.
As it was meant to be, its quite a bad pilot for a new show set in the Who-niverse. You really don't get a lot of background for Sarah or what this K9 dog is or who this Doctor person is.
As it was meant to be, its quite a bad pilot for a new show set in the Who-niverse. You really don't get a lot of background for Sarah or what this K9 dog is or who this Doctor person is.
I figure just about everyone in England, certainly in the show's target audience, already knew those things.
And that's part of its failing. It was only marketed at fans of the parent show, with no attempt to make it accessible to the casual viewer, which as a pilot for a new series it should have been, and as a Christmas special it should have been.
As it was meant to be, its quite a bad pilot for a new show set in the Who-niverse. You really don't get a lot of background for Sarah or what this K9 dog is or who this Doctor person is.
I figure just about everyone in England, certainly in the show's target audience, already knew those things.
And that's part of its failing. It was only marketed at fans of the parent show, with no attempt to make it accessible to the casual viewer, which as a pilot for a new series it should have been, and as a Christmas special it should have been.
Christopher said:But that's my point. In England at the time, everyone knew about Doctor Who. It was a British institution. Saying they should've marketed it to BBC viewers who weren't familiar with the Doctor is like saying that a Christmas special should be marketed to people who aren't familiar with Santa Claus. A show isn't doing anything wrong by failing to target a demographic that essentially does not exist.I figure just about everyone in England, certainly in the show's target audience, already knew those things.
And that's part of its failing. It was only marketed at fans of the parent show, with no attempt to make it accessible to the casual viewer, which as a pilot for a new series it should have been, and as a Christmas special it should have been. Re: Sarah Jane and K9?
Just a word of warning. Given the chance, Chris would argue that the sky is red and not blue if given the chance.
There's also a K9 TV series in Australia but it's not really part of the "Whoniverse" (Who/SJA/Torchwood) but I think was developed independently by K9's creators. I'm not even sure what K9 mark (There are four) it's supposed to be, or even if it's any of them. Generally it's considered pretty bad.
K9 receives a redesign for it too.
It's not unreasonable at all for them to have "assumed" everybody knew Doctor Who and its characters already.
Actually, when you consider it, it was unreasonable. Not that people wouldn't know what Doctor Who was, but rather that people would remember Sarah, who hasn't been on Doctor Who for a good five or so years at that point. Which is a massive amount of time in the age of no DVDs or videos, and only occasional repeats. Some kind of context beyond 'oh Doctor you did remember' should have been given.
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