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Last Classic Who Story you watched

I know I posted this morning. Well, here I am posting again. I just finished watching The Time Warrior, the Jon Pertwee Doctor episode where the Doctor and Sarah Jane Smith first meet.

P.S. HAPPY BIRTHDAY TO ME!
 
I'm working from home tonight (due to the weather) and Xmas Eve (due to the holiday): forced to sit at the computer for an extended period, but with access to my nice unblocked personal laptop. I should get some more Who in (especially Friday: super slow holiday shift).
 
Saw episodes 2 and 3 of Robot. Man that robot is...a lot like a kids home made Halloween costume.

What, as opposed to big-budget creature effects like the Zarbi or the Macra? They never had a lot of money to spend on effects. It's still a cool story, though.
 
If a US based production, they probably would have just rented Robby the Robot costume from MGM, at most making a few minor cosmetic changes. The only "flaw" with K-1 (in my biased opinion) were the loose fittings resulting in wobbly knees and flopping feet, not the design itself.
 
I had a bigger problem with the wonky CSO mattes making parts of the Robot disappear in the final episode.
Oof! That is a valid concern.

Things like that could have potentially "turned me off" when I first saw the series in August 1982, but thankfully the inherent charisma of Tom Baker held my fascination and I stuck with the show. It may have also helped that I saw scattered episodes of "Dark Shadows" during its original run in my "formative" years, so I was already accustomed to the "video" look.
 
Things like that could have potentially "turned me off" when I first saw the series in August 1982, but thankfully the inherent charisma of Tom Baker held my fascination and I stuck with the show. It may have also helped that I saw scattered episodes of "Dark Shadows" during its original run in my "formative" years, so I was already accustomed to the "video" look.

"Robot" was my first Who, but I'd grown up seeing plenty of other things with cheesy effects. Bluescreen/CSO was always prone to problems, whether it was dropouts or visible matte lines or whatever. In this case, I always figured that the problem was that the robot's shiny surface was reflecting the bluescreen and vanishing along with it, a common problem with anything reflective. Although I later learned that it wasn't quite because of that; rather, they'd recently switched from using blue to yellow as the CSO color, and the reflection of the stage lights off the robot's body registered as yellow to the cameras.
 
I'll watch at least one episode of Doctor Who tonight (Robot part 4), but mostly I'll be listening to my NSFW/don't let kids listen Xmas Youtube playlist.
 
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A newly found Dr Who The Three Doctors from 1959....so would this be classed as a classic Who? :p
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...and before you ask the 3rd Doctor is waiting at the hospital. lol
 
I got the animated reconstruction of The Evil of the Daleks from the library. I got all three discs (which I had to request separately) before finding out that each one was a different version -- B&W 4x3 animation on disc 1, color widescreen on disc 2, telesnap reconstruction on disc 3. I decided that an animated recon couldn't be visually faithful anyway, so I might as well just go all-out and watch the color version. And all the features on disc 1 are also on 2 or 3, aside from a PDF file, so I just skipped disc 1 altogether. Good thing I just borrowed them.

Anyway, I think the story is somewhat overrated. It's got some good things going for it, especially once they get to Skaro, but it's way too padded, a couple of episodes longer than it needed to be. Every time Ruth Maxtible or Arthur Terrall showed up, I found myself thinking, "Why are they even in this story?" Then there's the total gibberish of Theodore Maxtible's all-done-with-mirrors time travel theory, but I guess maybe we can assume that it was the Daleks' technology that latched onto his experiment and made it work.

The continuity is weird too. The Daleks want Waterfield to capture Jamie with the Doctor, but this is the only serial in which Jamie and the Daleks ever interact, since he wasn't introduced until after "The Power of the Daleks," and "Evil" is the last Dalek story until the Pertwee era. So how did the Daleks even know Jamie existed? And why did Jamie act as though he was familiar with them? Well, it was implied that the Doctor talked about them a lot, but it was still weird.

Did they use the Loose Cannon reconstruction for the third disc? I remember that one having CGI sequences in the same places this one does. It looks like they also shot some live footage of Daleks and a Victoria double at the original location.
 
It's a bit of a pea-souper out here tonight, and has been foggy all day- sounds like an excuse for a Saturday night Dr Who in the form of Horror Of Fang Rock...
 
I just finished the 5th Doctor's era. I didn't like Peter Davison the first time I saw him,. I think it's because he had to follow my all time favorite Tom Baker. But this time i really enjoyed his portrayal of the Doctor. He was actually funny in a very subtle way, and maybe the most compassionate doctor I've seen. On another note I found Turlough to be the worst companion in the entire Dr. Who run. It would be nice to see some of these villains again like the Mara, the Urbankans, the Kinda, the Terlreptils, the Mawdryn, the Malus and the Androzanians.
 
I first watched Trial of a Time Lord in 2001 on VHS and bought it again on DVD when it came out, but didn't get around to the DVD version. Until now. The Mysterious Planet was somewhat better than I remembered, Mindwarp wasn't. I'll get around to Terror of the Vervoids at some point in the next few days. I remember finding it a light change of pace after the misery of Mindwarp. We'll see how that stands up.
 
I just finished Tom Baker's second season (Season 13), and wasn't as impressed with it on the whole as most of the wider fandom seems to be.

It started out good with Terror of the Zygons and Planet of Evil, took a dip with Pyramids of Mars and The Android Invasion, and rebounded to finish strong with The Brain of Morbius (the best of Tom's era so far) and The Seeds of Doom, but isn't IMO, the overwhelming classic that people have hyped it up as being.
 
I just finished the 5th Doctor's era. I didn't like Peter Davison the first time I saw him,. I think it's because he had to follow my all time favorite Tom Baker. But this time i really enjoyed his portrayal of the Doctor. He was actually funny in a very subtle way, and maybe the most compassionate doctor I've seen. On another note I found Turlough to be the worst companion in the entire Dr. Who run. It would be nice to see some of these villains again like the Mara, the Urbankans, the Kinda, the Terlreptils, the Mawdryn, the Malus and the Androzanians.
Turlough doesn't become tolerable until the story in which he leaves (it helps immensely that his Black Guardian story arc is finally finished). When I think of seeing the Doctor and Turlough, relaxing on the beach (Mark Strickson was definitely eye candy in this one - shirt, shorts, bathing suit...), I wished Turlough would have stayed on. Without Nyssa and Tegan screeching and whining all the time, the Doctor and Turlough could have developed a respect and friendship like the 2nd Doctor and Jamie did.

But nooOOOooo, Turlough had to go and the Doctor acquired yet another screechy, brainless companion...

I just finished Tom Baker's second season (Season 13), and wasn't as impressed with it on the whole as most of the wider fandom seems to be.

It started out good with Terror of the Zygons and Planet of Evil, took a dip with Pyramids of Mars and The Android Invasion, and rebounded to finish strong with The Brain of Morbius (the best of Tom's era so far) and The Seeds of Doom, but isn't IMO, the overwhelming classic that people have hyped it up as being.
Seeds of Doom gave me the shivers every time I looked at green plants.

If you want to develop a permanent phobia against having house plants, watch that story, then read Alan Dean Foster's novels about Mid-World (a world covered in a planet-wide jungle, and nearly every kind of plant and flower wants to kill and digest you in some way).
 
Just watched the Colony in Space. I was a bit perturbed that the Doctor just flipped a switch on a doomsday device, destroying all the innocent inhabitants in the city, and assuming that its destruction would remove the planet-wide radiation leakage rather than just irradiating everything for decades.
 
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