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It was the 80's. Six was just keeping right up with the times.
Yeah, I think there is something to be said for the 1980s point and his attitude was probably reflective of the times too.
Well I think that the most brilliant adventure besides the obvious ones was definitely the two doctors..there was something decidedly different about Colin's acting there, which had a more modern feel to his attitude. Tho killing an enemy did shock me..what I find interesting is the clues spread throughout the series beginning with the three doctors, then the five doctors and on to the two doctors, as to how Patrick troughtons doctor could keep showing up, and usually out of time at the behest of the time lords..
I was intrigued to see him with the sixth, which confirmed my suspicions that the second doctor was secretly being used by the cia for a time..remember him saying to the brigadier in the five doctors, that he wasn't exactly breaking the laws of time but bending them, and then in the two doctors he's on a secret mission with Jaime to halt the time travel experiments on that space station.. that two doctors story is very significant in my view, and also we get to see Colin without that jacket.
Thanks to that episode, it really puts Patrick troughton's doctor as the one who has had the most interactions with his later selves then any of the others..
The first Doctor had interactions with the
2nd Doctor in The Three Doctors and The Five Doctors
3rd Doctor in The Three Doctors and The Five Doctors
5th Doctor in The Five Doctors
Total = 5
2nd Doctor had interactions with
3rd Doctor in The Three Doctors and The Five Doctors
5th Doctor in The Five Doctors
6th Doctor in The Two Doctors
Total = 4
Unless I've missed a multi-Doctor episode where they had direct interaction. Of course in terms of actor playing the role then Troughton would have interacted the most.
Yeah, I think there is something to be said for the 1980s point and his attitude was probably reflective of the times too.
wasn't the charm of the Doctor was he was supposed to dress outside the times, as a sort of clue to his being outside the normal time stream as a time traveler?? I mean from the 1920s style, the vagabond, to the dandy, the space numb, to the cricket player, they seemed to be on track, but high mainstream fashion at the height of the 80s?? ..
I agree.The sixth Doctor is brilliant on audio. Better written, and allowing Colin Baker to play the part how he would have really wanted. And you don't have to look at the costume. The absolutely greatest triumph of Big Finish is the rehabilitation of the sixth Doctor.
Bring back Frobisher!The sixth Doctor comic strips were great too. He may be the only Doctor where the spin-off material is consistently better than the tv version.
Yeah, I think there is something to be said for the 1980s point and his attitude was probably reflective of the times too.
wasn't the charm of the Doctor was he was supposed to dress outside the times, as a sort of clue to his being outside the normal time stream as a time traveler?? I mean from the 1920s style, the vagabond, to the dandy, the space numb, to the cricket player, they seemed to be on track, but high mainstream fashion at the height of the 80s?? ..
In-universe, sure. But writers, directors, show-runners etc are influenced by what's going on around them. Patrick Troughton has a Beatle haircut. Jon Pertwee's take had aspects of Danger man and other TV secret agents. And compare Peter Davison's outfit with those worn by the main characters in the then-hugely popular Brideshead Revisited. They've all been influenced by things which were popular at the time.
Besides, I don't think that Six's outfit would've constituted high mainstream fashion, even in that decade that taste forgot. But like the 80s, he and his costume were bold, bright, brash and in your face. I don't think that was coincidental.
FWIW, I think the killer blow was introducing the new Doctor at the season end. It let the writers see it, not realizing he was supposed to be post-regen crazy, so he ended up odd and nasty far longer than planned.
Real Time, with Evelyn Smythe is Flash Animated and he is wearing the solid blue coat, so, that's kinda Canonical Onscreen Evidence (BBC was involved in making it, correct?)I thought Big Finish had it as he swapped to blue in their later stories, and canon says he switches back after picking Mel up again. Though I guess technically we don't 'see' it there.
Yeah, but the thing with that is, Real Time is sorta non-canon - and by sorta, I mean by the mouth of its writer.Real Time, with Evelyn Smythe is Flash Animated and he is wearing the solid blue coat, so, that's kinda Canonical Onscreen Evidence (BBC was involved in making it, correct?)I thought Big Finish had it as he swapped to blue in their later stories, and canon says he switches back after picking Mel up again. Though I guess technically we don't 'see' it there.
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