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Last Classic Who Story you watched

Basically what Jaime said. There are whole record companies dedicated to reissuing a lot of Radiophonic and related music, or new music heavily influenced by early 1970s UK TV music, like the the Focus Group, Belbury Poly, and the Advisory Circle on their Ghost Box label, and artists like Pye Corner Audio, Warrington-Runcorn New Town Development Plan, and many others. There's the Delaware Road project, with a graphic novel, albums, and live events about an alternate world equivalent of the Radiophonic Workshop.

And to keep this relevant to Doctor Who for more than just the Radiophonic connection, this whole scene has considerable overlap with a retro UK folk scene inspired by folk horror like The Wicker Man, so there are some projects that have electronic and folk elements, like A Year in the Country (blog, albums, books, etc) and the Black Meadow (albums, books). "The Daemons" is often mentioned among the key influences in this whole set of subgenres, which is sometimes called hauntology, though that includes other things as well.
If you get the Paul Temple collection (only episodes in colour, there is a another bos set of the episodes that only exist in BW, though it seems that there colour versions in Germany so using the English soundtrack with the German visuals might be doable). Anyway, late on there is a very Daemons episode, and a superb cost-cutting episode set entirely in a Tv studio where a vengeful main (Joseph Futst) insists thet the panel solve the murder of his wife.
 
^^this

The story ideas (Hayles's vs script editor Tosh's prevailing) are often really neat, but the presentation was... I can't even use the word "bland". Possibly due to the budget having been used in 'The Ark' and "Daleks Masterplan', of course.

The animation is simply wonderful, with your saying "matches the story's intentions" being an understatement. The facial features were definitely unexpected, but they grew on me.
Episode 3 is simply great.
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Didn't realize that the one Donald Tosh photo makes him look a little like Philip Madoc's stunt double!
Superb documentary there, thanks for sharing!
 
Cure of Fendahl.

Have to wonder if this was yet another case of a Doctor Who appearance leading to a B7 with Scott Fredericks.
 
Doctor Who and the Silurians.

I like that the Third Doctor is more of a roll up your sleeves and get dirty type. Popping the hood and mucking about with machinery. Sciencing shit. And on occasion a bit of fisticuffs!
 
Pertwee was great. When I get annoyed by Doctors like 10 or 13 being too passive, I think of 3/Pertwee and how he was always going out and getting things done. He's also who I thought of when 10 whined about being "the man who never would" (to be clear I like the 10th Doctor, but he could be a doofus at times).
 
I watched The Curse of Peladon a little while ago, and I liked it. It wasn't quite as good as the last couple story arcs, but getting off Earth was a nice change of pace.
 
I watched the first 5 episodes of The Sea Devils yesterday, and it was good. The Sea Devils are pretty cool aliens, and of course you can't go wrong with The Master as the bad guy.
 
Strictly speaking the Sea Devils are not aliens, just non-human Earthlings.

If we're speaking strictly, "alien" literally means "foreigner" or "outsider;" it's historically been used to refer to people from other countries (as in "illegal alien"), so it could certainly apply to Earth denizens of another species. The usage of "alien" to mean "extraterrestrial" didn't catch on outside of prose science fiction until around the 1960s; before then, they were generally referred to as something like "spacemen" or "creatures from outer space," or with specific demonyms like "Martian" or "Venusian." Even as late as the '80s or '90s, supermarket tabloids tended to use "space alien" to make it clear they weren't talking about immigrants.
 
"State of Decay" -- lovely little Halloweeny story, this one is. Part 2 really ramps up and with a great cliffhanger. The stitching of the Great Vampire to Time Lord lore (and the E-Space tie-in as well) is deftly handled by story author Terrance Dicks, who also created the Time Lords in 1969.
 
The thing about Sate of Decay was that Terrance originally wrote it to open season 15. A major producation of Dracula (starring Louis Jordain) meant it was vetoed, with Fang Rock replacing it. So the script sat on the shelf for years, and Bidmead revised it (adding the name shift)
 
The thing about Sate of Decay was that Terrance originally wrote it to open season 15. A major producation of Dracula (starring Louis Jordain) meant it was vetoed, with Fang Rock replacing it. So the script sat on the shelf for years, and Bidmead revised it (adding the name shift)

Yup. The BBC didn't want confusion between shows, which made sense at the time. And, decades later, it's sad that only one of the two vampire-themed stories remains talked about on any semi-regular basis. Or both if you consider how one sometimes brings up the other. :devil: Which is sad, Louis was perfect for the titular role! Wasn't Louis also in the James Bond film "Octopussy"?

I also liked Bidmead's revisions. :angel:
 
Silver Nemesis (blu-ray extended special edition, probably the definitive and readily watchable version of this story.)

Quite a lot of nice edits of deleted footage and tightening up, as well as new CGI.

The line from Peintforte needing human blood was removed and it's barely noticeable.

The technical trickery used to show Peintforte and Richard arriving in the empty cafe is a great fix as, along with nobody noticing the unusual-for-1988 warm November weather, nobody noticed the duo in the cafe. One small thing - when the TARDIS arrives at the castle, that big long line of tourists didn't notice the ship arriving there either! Nicholas Courtney is also in that list, but he's on screen for 1/2 second... But I do wonder if it was a running gag to have had all those scenes of people appearing out of nowhere and nobody thinks it unusual. Could be a tie-in with "Remembrance of the Daleks" as the Doctor berates humanity in front of Ace over how it can't remember all the invasions threatening it (Daleks, Yeti, Cybermen, etc.) Or I'm thinking into this too much, and the making-of documentary (1988) does remind the hectic nature of the production so some oversights or unwanted bits were inevitable...
 
Just started The Ark in space, and before anyone askes, Yes, it is bubble wrap, but back in 1975 i had no idea what bubble wrap was, and when he pulls his hand out of his pocket it looked like the most amazing horrible thing i had ever seen on the show, wel that and the maggots from the Green death.......and now when i think of it, maybe the colour on that rental 20in crt tv from DER might have been too saturated with green, hence why it seems to have been burned into my brain how vivid the colours were on the show back in the 70s. lol
 
I'm about 2/3 of the way through The Mutants, and so far it's been pretty good.
You can tell at this point the writers are really starting to have trouble with The Doctor's banishment to Earth, they keep finding more and more ways and reasons to get him off '70s Earth.
 
I'm about 2/3 of the way through The Mutants, and so far it's been pretty good.
You can tell at this point the writers are really starting to have trouble with The Doctor's banishment to Earth, they keep finding more and more ways and reasons to get him off '70s Earth.
I love this one even though it's not a fan favorite. (What do they know?!) This one has big ideas, a sense of history, and trying to incorporate some science into it via the interaction between planetary science and evolution.
 
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