Officially? No. Though Braga (who wrote it) has said he pretends it never existed.Meanwhile, I'm not aware of "Threshold" ever being decanonized.
Officially? No. Though Braga (who wrote it) has said he pretends it never existed.Meanwhile, I'm not aware of "Threshold" ever being decanonized.
I'd heard that with Pertwee (which Barry Letts disputed ever happened) but not with Tom Baker. I got the sense that Tom Baker's departure was a combination of him being tired of doing it and the new production team getting tired of dealing with him.
Terence Dicks said it best himself. "Continuity is only whatever I can remember." Even RTD said he would gladly ignore any and all of his own previous episodes, if he felt it served the script he was currently working on. Continuity, canon, consistency, they're nice treats, but they shouldn't be requirements, and Doctor Who is not a show which should be constrained by anything limiting, not even a consistent universe for the show to be set within.Regarding canon, that's rather up in the air.
The problem is that with the classic series very few people (including and especially the writers) knew what happened in previous stories. They just weren't easily available for viewing for a long time. So you got a whole load of handwaving fanon trying to make sense of the inconsistencies and big cheesy mistakes.
You know, like how TOS kept on visiting parallel Earths, just more widespread.
With the new series some of the writers (like Moffat) used that handwaving as a crutch. Who cares if there's huge potholes and inconsistencies, the fans will just handwave it and the general view won't care. Problem is the general viewers do care and the fans themselves get tired of going 'oh, a wizard did it'.
It's 21st century TV, you expect a bit more consistency. There are cartoon shows that have more of a consistent universe than Doctor Who.
Time Wimey isn't a valid excuse.
Rather shameless promotion, really. And a rather obvious indication by the BBC about Capaldi's popularity. Just... ugh.Saw this "goodbye 12th doctor" video
Rather shameless promotion, really. And a rather obvious indication by the BBC about Capaldi's popularity. Just... ugh.
I mean, he's not even going to regenerate until frickin' Christmas. Like 10 months away. Please!
Besides, wasn't Ben Daniels considered a "safe bet" for the Doctor as recently as a month prior to Capaldi's announcement?
At least in Daniels case, there was some truth behind that "safe bet" -- he was the runner up for the role, and he's said in interviews that the production team stayed in touch with him throughout the process, right up until the reveal show, on the chance that Capaldi had a change of heart.
I was genuinely excited about the possibility of Daniels as the Doctor. If Chibnall cast him, I'd have no major problem with that. Yes, I'd like to see a woman in the role, but Daniels would be a good choice.
Any casting right now, though, is nothing more than a Wild Ass Guess with no basis in reality whatsoever.
If, somehow, Garbage Colin somehow were cast as the next Doctor, I think I'm out. ("Garbage Colin" is how Pajiba referred to the actor from Love Actually... in a series of articles at Christmas who's currently being "rumored," with no basis in fact, for the role.)
Regarding canon, that's rather up in the air.
The problem is that with the classic series very few people (including and especially the writers) knew what happened in previous stories. They just weren't easily available for viewing for a long time. So you got a whole load of handwaving fanon trying to make sense of the inconsistencies and big cheesy mistakes.
You know, like how TOS kept on visiting parallel Earths, just more widespread.
I wouldn't be out. I learned my lesson by being dismissive of Daniel Craig when he was cast so even if they cast Danny Dyer I'd give him a chance (not a very long chance, but a chance) so if they did go down the Kris Marshall route I'd have to watch it, but as I said I think it would be a very VERY safe choice, but then my fear is that Chibnall Who is supposed to be safe. I hesitate to say I fear it'll be bland, but I do think the BBC might want a more generic kind of show than the ones RTD and Moffat gave us. Whatever your view of either man I do think each had a vision, and I fear Chibnall might be a more pragmatic show runner--which isn't necessarily a bad thing I realise.
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