Thank goodness we no longer need to hear a Scottish accent anymore in Who, really got sick of it, good riddence i say, if i hear it wan mer time i will los the heid.

McGann was 36, just 4 years younger than Tom and Colin were. Eccleston was 41...
Okay, maybe "introduced" was the wrong word there. But every classic Doctor except Davison was older than McGann, while 60% of modern Doctors (counting Whittaker) have been younger. The average starting age of classic-series Doctors was 43, while the average age of modern-series Doctors is 38, even with Capaldi skewing the curve (it'd be 34 without him). McGann was 36 in the movie. So I stand by my point that the '96 movie set a precedent that the 2005 series seemed to follow. I'm looking at the overall picture, not any isolated detail.
But the 2005 series didn't follow that precedent initially.
I actually really liked the Fox movie and wish I could buy it digitally on Google Play, Vudu or Amazon.Again: I'm looking at the big picture, not one single detail. It's not any one thing, it's the fact that so many simultaneous things are shared by the movie and the revival series. Haters of the movie can try all they like to deny it, but it set a precedent for modern Who in a number of ways.
I actually really liked the Fox movie
I kept wishing the BBC would do a "flashback" season of McGann adventures, like when Tennant was taking a year off for Hamlet, but all we got was "The Night of the Doctor" (though that was a delightful surprise). I wonder if Chibnall would be willing to do a "two Doctors" story with Whittaker and McGann.
I actually really liked the Fox movie and wish I could buy it digitally on Google Play, Vudu or Amazon.
Other way around. Doctor Who was taking a year off, Tennant went and did Hamlet because of it. Says so in The Writer's Tale.when Tennant was taking a year off for Hamlet,
Eh, I can overlook shoddy rubber masks, dodgy CGI and monsters dressed in bubble wrap, I can overlook Eric Roberts.Yeah, but...ERIC ROBERTS as the Master? Seriously?![]()
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And McGann was a good Doctor, one I wish had gotten a longer turn in the role onscreen.
It's not everyone's cup of tea, but the Big Finish audio dramas with McGann as the Doctor really go a long way to scratching this itch- good stories, well told with wonderful humour and intelligence. Although, come to think of it, that just makes me want a McGann season all the more.
I've heard the first several, and I'd like to hear more, but it would still be good to get more onscreen Eighth Doctor.
Any chance she can do a American accent so we can get that American Doctor we have all been wanting?
Who the hell is this "we" you speak of?
How hard is it to make out the words "Oh, brilliant?" Could it be that many Americans aren't accustomed to hearing that word used to mean "great" or "wonderful," so they don't recognize it when they hear it?
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