Pity that none of those pics gives us a view of the time rotor: from talking to fan replica builders, that's the really tricky bit of the original console to get right!
Does the original console set still exist?
Pity that none of those pics gives us a view of the time rotor: from talking to fan replica builders, that's the really tricky bit of the original console to get right!
Great that they can re use the sets for the anniversary episodes of the actual series![]()
I doubt that. Presumably these are sets designed to look like low-budget sets constructed in the 1960s, and wouldn't have the level of detail necessary to be convincing as "real" TARDIS interiors or locations in a modern Doctor Who production.
^I didn't say they were made to be exact replicas. I said that, given the purpose they were built for, they would presumably have been made to look like low-budget '60s TV sets -- i.e. to give that impression to the audience watching An Adventure in Space and Time, regardless of their fidelity to the actual items.
Thus, I don't find it credible that they would use the same sets for two such incompatible purposes.
And, there's one particular episode in Series 7b that could be a perfect opportunity to use it inThus, I don't find it credible that they would use the same sets for two such incompatible purposes.
I find it completely credible that they could use the same set for that purpose. The new set is designed to look very similar to the original set. It should look similar in either production, which serves the purpose of both productions.
If they are to show the original console room in Doctor Who proper, it'll look lower tech and less glitzy than what we've got now because that's how it actually looked onscreen in early Doctor Who.
The two goals are entirely compatible because they both require sets that look like the original console room.
Mr Awe
I find it completely credible that they could use the same set for that purpose. The new set is designed to look very similar to the original set. It should look similar in either production, which serves the purpose of both productions.
Lots of obvious things are untrue. "Obvious" just means "reinforcing one's preconceptions." It doesn't bring one any closer to the objective truth, and can often lead one farther astray. So one should always distrust the obvious.
If so, they would have to do pick-up filming next month, probably between Adventures wrapping and during the first days of the anniversary special filming, for the episode.And, there's one particular episode in Series 7b that could be a perfect opportunity to use it inJourney to The Center of the TARDIS
Lots of obvious things are untrue. "Obvious" just means "reinforcing one's preconceptions." It doesn't bring one any closer to the objective truth, and can often lead one farther astray. So one should always distrust the obvious.
And it's called Golden Nemesis.
Great that they can re use the sets for the anniversary episodes of the actual series![]()
I doubt that. Presumably these are sets designed to look like low-budget sets constructed in the 1960s, and wouldn't have the level of detail necessary to be convincing as "real" TARDIS interiors or locations in a modern Doctor Who production.
And it's called Golden Nemesis.
Really? God...who came up with that title? It sounds like a title for cheap porn flick. I will not elaborate further to keep this PG...but everyone with his mind in the gutter will know what I´m thinking off...
Great that they can re use the sets for the anniversary episodes of the actual series![]()
I doubt that. Presumably these are sets designed to look like low-budget sets constructed in the 1960s, and wouldn't have the level of detail necessary to be convincing as "real" TARDIS interiors or locations in a modern Doctor Who production.
Well..in that case...they could always use that set as a base and and the nessecary detail and stuff to make it convincing, right?
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