Well to date the doctor has broken the 4th wall quite a few times over the shows history, Hartnell, Baker, McCoy, and Capaldi had a entire scene talking to us directly in the episode, wait for it...........before the Flood().............so breaking the forth wall is almost a Who tradition now, but if you want to strech that theory to breaking point, you could say only timelords have broken the forth wall over the course of the show, so what does that make Mrs Flood? (Dun dun daaaa). Lol
I am sure McCoy broke the forth wall in episod, i am going to say Remembrance of the daleks....i just can't pin it down, but i am sure it was a cliff hanger ending where he did it.
Which doesn't mean too much as changes are made before, during, and even after filming. Case in point, new footage was added at the beginning of "Church of Ruby Road" at the request of Disney after they screened the episode.
McCoy looks down the camera for cliffhangers a *lot* (Dragonfire, Greatest Show, Remembrance…) but that’s just a shot choice. I think he only speaks whilst doing it once, ‘I think I may have miscalculated’ , but I don’t remember him ever addressing the audience directly, or even seemingly. Admittedly, I have still managed to avoid watching any of the middle stories of season 24.
Davison does I think, at the end of Five Doctors.
The point is, though, that creative changes, including last-minute ones, are made all the time. Initial ideas can change at any point in production or new ones can pop up that can change an entire narrative of the original story (I present Exhibit A, one George Lucas). What might have been initially conceived as something minor can become more relevant if inspiration hits or that particular something becomes suddenly popular with audiences.There's a difference between small scene like the one between the Doctor and the Police Officer which has no impact on the story versus a character that carries on through out a season unless you want to take it on as a coda at the end of each episode which would be pretty crap.
I thought Davison was looking side-angle and not quite at it? It might be "close enough", though it's still cringey. Not as direct as Colin's introduction.
"Paradise Towers" is rather good, all things considered. I'd check it out one day...
On the other hand, if you've managed to avoid "Delta and the Bannermen" so far, try to keep doing so. The story has a good core plot, but the presentation quickly devolves into trash and it never gets better. Which hurts to say because it's clear how Don Henderson and Sylvester McCoy are working overtime to save the story from being a total shambles. I'd otherwise recommend watching for them alone, and maybe for one other character (won't say who or why they're in it), but everyone else... it's truly horrendous. And yet, despite inevitability, some people to this day grate on Don's performance for playing it too straight! (What, enough of the other cast not giving a toss wasn't bad enough already?! Ugh...)
I read the novels in 89 or so. Tried episode one of both, and kind of… gave up. Better they exist as the books.
Seconded. I remember buying the novels at the time, reading them, and they felt so much stronger - for one example, the scene where Ace snaps at Mike's mum over the sign is so much more effective in the novelization. The reader gets to have their own interpretation of style (reading into it as seriously or as hypercampy or anything in between as one wants), and can imagine how great it looks compared to what could be done on screen, and the show did much with what little was given.
When he puts his finger to his lips at the end of Silver Nemesis, when Ace asks 'Professor? Doctor? Who are you?' and winks?I am sure McCoy broke the forth wall in episod, i am going to say Remembrance of the daleks....i just can't pin it down, but i am sure it was a cliff hanger ending where he did it.
When he puts his finger to his lips at the end of Silver Nemesis, when Ace asks 'Professor? Doctor? Who are you?' and winks?
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