At the places I've worked? Yes.So? When you get promoted, do you continue to do the same job you did before the promotion?Sure, but that would mean bringing in someone else to take over your old job. You can't be in two places at once. So, with this analogy, if Moffat went off to do the movie, he'd have to quit the show.
But we're assuming that Moffat would want to leave the show in order to do the movie. Maybe he's happy where he is.
For those who didn't actually click the link...
Yates made clear that his movie adaptation would not follow on from the current TV series, but would take a completely fresh approach to the material.
"Russell T. Davies and then Steven Moffat have done their own transformations, which were fantastic, but we have to put that aside and start from scratch," he said.
Sounds like a recipe for success! /sarcasm
... make a movie that has to appeal to the casual viewer?
Don't you wish that instead of always trying to make movies of Star Trek or Doctor Who or whatever for the casual viewer, they made those movies to appeal to the Star Trek or Doctor Who viewers?
We keep making these films to appeal to everyone, and they end up appealing to no one. What's the first thing they are saying about this film? "Let's take what's happening in the show and throw it out the window. Start from scratch." Great. Why bother calling it Doctor Who then?
If that happened, I bet they would end up putting more effort into a movie franchsie rather than try to incorporate it into the show. Hell, they might even cancel the show in order to draw more attention to the movies.My only worry would be if Yates came along and made a blockbuster with a completely different take on the character and format I didn't like, and BBC Wales decided to drop their current production to make something based on the movie.
So? When you get promoted, do you continue to do the same job you did before the promotion?Sure, but that would mean bringing in someone else to take over your old job. You can't be in two places at once. So, with this analogy, if Moffat went off to do the movie, he'd have to quit the show.Wellll ... if it were a better territory with better pay and more opportunities for success, I'd at least like to have a shot at it.
Saying a movie is years off, or "someday but not today" isn't a denial of the original story, which refers to just beginning a development process, which (as I said earlier in the thread) means it'll spend years in development hell, and I'll believe it'll happen when I see it.
But the Variety report can be (and almost certainly is) true, without a movie actually coming of it!
So? When you get promoted, do you continue to do the same job you did before the promotion?Sure, but that would mean bringing in someone else to take over your old job. You can't be in two places at once. So, with this analogy, if Moffat went off to do the movie, he'd have to quit the show.
Writing and directing are very different jobs
And, of course, if you take a chance on quitting your post to try a completely different one, and fuck it up, or for whatever reason the new one doesn't get the success, you're out of both of them!
Very true. But Stephen Moffat's a bit more than just a writer these days, isn't he?
For those who didn't actually click the link...
Yates made clear that his movie adaptation would not follow on from the current TV series, but would take a completely fresh approach to the material.
"Russell T. Davies and then Steven Moffat have done their own transformations, which were fantastic, but we have to put that aside and start from scratch," he said.
Sounds like a recipe for success! /sarcasm
... make a movie that has to appeal to the casual viewer?
Don't you wish that instead of always trying to make movies of Star Trek or Doctor Who or whatever for the casual viewer, they made those movies to appeal to the Star Trek or Doctor Who viewers?
We keep making these films to appeal to everyone, and they end up appealing to no one. What's the first thing they are saying about this film? "Let's take what's happening in the show and throw it out the window. Start from scratch." Great. Why bother calling it Doctor Who then?
Exactly. Moffat is the creative producer, not the nuts-and-bolts money producer. That's what Beth Willis and Piers Wenger were for Moffat, what Julie Gardner and Phil Collinson were for RTD -- they took care of the money and the locations and what-not, letting the "showrunner" (Moffat now, RTD before) focus on the storytelling. Moffat is like the reverse of Rick Berman on the Star Trek series -- he was the producer, but he wasn't the story guy; that was left to Michael Piller (on TNG and early DS9), Ira Steven Behr (DS9), Jeri Taylor (Voyager), Brannon Braga (Voyager and Enterprise), Ken Biller (Voyager), and Manny Coto (Enterprise). Moffat's role in Doctor Who is like that gang of names.Very true. But Stephen Moffat's a bit more than just a writer these days, isn't he?
Producing and directing are also different jobs...
But this looks like a big project if it actually (ever) materializes, and snubbing your nose at the series and crew that have made the franchise a phenomenon seems a bit ... thoughtless.
Variety said Yates was aiming to keep the "British Flavor", the only Americanism he pointed out, was that he would consider someone like Steve Cloves who proved he could keep the British Flavor in Harry Potter. He said he wouldn't eliminate all American writers straight off. No indication of any other part of this being Americanized as of yet.Wonder who they get to play the doctor,be a amercian playin hin with a fake english accent i reckon.
Series 7 is being broadcast in late 2012 (first half) and early 2013 (second half). The reason they're doing it is (presumably) so they can concentrate an entire series' budget into the Super Special Awesome 50th Anniversary Event, due to be broadcast in late 2013.Um. Question: did I read somewhere we're getting less episodes next year? And this movie's going to be made?
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