I watched the first episode of City of Death yesterday, and its the most padded episode of Classic who I've seen since I finished Jon Pertwee's last seven parter. I swear, of the first episode of City of death, there is 5 minutes of story and 20 minutes of wandering around Paris. Since I'm not watching Doctor Who to watch Tom Baker get paid to be a tourist in Paris, this was pretty boring. I've heard a lot of good things about this serial, but it had better ramp up the story and cut out the wandering around Paris stuff next episode. As it is, so far its barely keeping me awake.
This is one of my favorites, precisely because of the location. It's a welcome change from the same gravel pit story after story.
Didn't you feel the tiniest emotion (humor, exasperation, bemusement) at Romana's first impression of the Mona Lisa: [Romana II voice]"Why hasn't she got any eyebrows?"[/Romana II voice]?
That's the sort of question a child might ask, but it's also the sort of question an alien might ask, or at least someone who is totally unfamiliar with such a famous work of art.
The "wandering around Paris" serves two purposes: Doctor Who is on location, and that's no cheap thing - why not show as much as possible? And the second is that the Doctor is showing Romana around a part of his favorite planet. He's been to Paris before, after all, in at least one of his previous regenerations.
How do folks feel about Turlough's revelation in Frontios about the Tractatots destroying his home planet, and then having a Trion Civilization in Planet of Fire? I didn't ntice anything necessarily directly contradictory, but, it would've been nice had they made some mention of Trion being a new home Planet.
I never thought there was much about Frontios that made sense, and have to wonder if they'd even thought about any consistency to Turlough's story beyond the Black Guardian arc.
Bluffing by making the enemy think that the hat stand was some sort of exotic weapon was good, though.
I wish they hadn't made Liz such a pushover. She's a real, actual Doctor, for goodness sake--the best UNIT could get on earth. Then this...alien comes in and steals her job. And he doesn't even have the decency to call her "Doctor."
I understand that it could have been problematic to have 2 "doctors," but I think they could have made it work. The first time he calls her "Liz" and sends her off to answer phones or make coffee, she should have corrected him and pointed out it is "Dr. Shaw."
I assume the producers/writers felt it would be too confusing to have both the leads with the title of "Doctor."
Harry Sullivan pointed out that he's a doctor, but it didn't do much good as the Doctor only acknowledged it maybe once, and in a rather offhand way.
Something they sort of did with the McCoy stories is that the novelizations (Done for most Doctor Who stories back then) were actually far more detailed than the actual TV stories, and in some cases could get away with elements that couldn't be used on TV. Rememberance of the Daleks is a good example of this.
I have most of the novelizations, and the ones by Ian Marter are especially good for adding in extra stuff here and there.