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Last Classic Who Story you watched

I've been jumping around the the selection available on Tubi. In the last couple days I've watched State of Decay with Tom Baker, Planet of the Giants with William Hartnell, I'm currently watching Doctor Who and the Silurians with Jon Pertwee.
 
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Can we count pre-Ncuti as classic now?

Does classic Who become vintage Who?

Anyway, I have been re-watching a lot of the 11th and the Ponds recently and had forgotten how much I liked them. I really liked the his steam punk TARDIS too.

I had forgotten how ridiculous Matt Smiths wig was in Pandorica Opens.
 
I watched the colour animated version of The Underwater Menace. Much easier to sit through than the old DVD with the two surviving episodes and telesnap recons of the missing episodes.
 
I received season seventeen for Valentine’s Day, but have only found time to watch a few minutes of Tom and Lalla bopping around Paris. Anyone know if any of the extras are particularly worth a watch?
 
10th anni with Pertwee, Troughton and Hartnell.

I still get a chuckle from the fact Benson causes it all to kick off when he flicks a used wrapper at the creature for no reason. Lol
 
City of Death.

In February I went to see a Q&A with Dan Starkey, Bonnie Langford, Catrin Stewart and Nicol Bryant which was great fun.

Before they came on there was people who worked on the Classic era from William Hartnell onwards and they were fasacinating to listen too. Listenening to them made me want to re-wath City of Death to look out for the badges Tom and Lalla were weqaring. I have seen it loads of times and somehow never spotted the huge badges they had on their coats.

Doreen James: Costume Designer
(Episodes including The City of Death' and 'The Androids of Tara')
Dee Robson:
Costume Designer
(Episodes including 'The Invasion of Time', 'Arc of Infinity' and 'Terminus')
Jeremy Bear:
Set Designer
(Episodes including Jon Petwee's story 'The Mutants' and Tom Baker's 'The Seeds of Doom')
Mike Tucker: Visual Effects Designer.
(The first person to work on both the classic and rebooted series)
 
Didn't want to start a new thread for this, but Big Finish gave Colin a little party/cake to celebrate 40 years of the 6th Doctor

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My favorite Doctor, celebrating his 40th anniversary. The most underrated Doctor, and (in my opinion) the one that got screwed the most by the people in charge and the general situation. I've heard him say that he wanted a Tom Baker length run, and he deserved it (although obviously with Grade in charge of the BBC the show was going to get cancelled long before then, even if Grade didn't personally hate Colin). I may not be a huge Big Finish fan, but I am legitimately happy that they've given him so much and helped really raise the reputation of the 6th Doctor, at least with big Doctor Who fans.
 
I might need to check out more 6th Doctor serials, I watched one ages ago, but I don't remember anything about it or him.
 
I might need to check out more 6th Doctor serials, I watched one ages ago, but I don't remember anything about it or him.

A lot of people only got into the 6th Doctor because his later Big Finish work helped flesh out the character (and probably had more consistently good writing, objectively speaking) but I loved the 6th Doctor just from his TV episodes. Personally I find most of Season 22 to be solid (with Attack of the Cybermen being my favorite story, and Timelash my least favorite) and season 23/Trial of a Timelord was an interesting experiment in having multiple stories take place inside a framed narrative, and its overall a decent season.

I'd personally recommend Attack of the Cybermen or Vengeance on Varos from season 22 to people unfamiliar with the 6th Doctor, while warning everyone away from his first story, The Twin Dilemma, which was badly written and does the 6th Doctor no favors.
 
I think Vengeance on Varois is the one I watched, I just watched a trailer I found for it on Youtube, and some of it looked familiar. I'm wondering if I wasn't able to finish it for some reason, because some of it looked familiar and some of it didn't. I'm pretty sure I liked it, so I'm thinking I rented it as a disc from Netflix and was not been able to finish it for some reason.
 
A lot of people only got into the 6th Doctor because his later Big Finish work helped flesh out the character (and probably had more consistently good writing, objectively speaking) but I loved the 6th Doctor just from his TV episodes. Personally I find most of Season 22 to be solid (with Attack of the Cybermen being my favorite story, and Timelash my least favorite) and season 23/Trial of a Timelord was an interesting experiment in having multiple stories take place inside a framed narrative, and its overall a decent season.

I'd personally recommend Attack of the Cybermen or Vengeance on Varos from season 22 to people unfamiliar with the 6th Doctor, while warning everyone away from his first story, The Twin Dilemma, which was badly written and does the 6th Doctor no favors.

I liked Twin Dilemma at the time, only because the new Doctor was animated and lively, compared to the comatose 5th Doctor. But I won't disagree, Twin Dilemma is the worst.

Thanks to advances in technology, I must say that the new effects for "Timelash" do much in its favor, oddly. But I've rewatched that one the least as well. Attack, Varos, Rani, Two Doctors, Revelation all offer more for stories and ideas, and even tone.
 
Just watched Galaxy 4 (the animated color version). It was ok, I liked the reversal of making the spooky aliens the good guys and the "normal" looking people the evil ones. But not a lot actually happens in the story, it feels like it has two episodes worth of story stretched to four. The animation was fine, the fact that not much happens mean that they didn't have to try to animate much action, although I liked seeing the planet disintegrating at the end. The 1st Doctor was lively and got to do stuff, Vicki was fine but Steven was a bit annoying, I'm not a huge fan of the character although I haven't seen much of him so maybe he's better in other stories.

Overall this is an ok story, I'd like to see the Rills or Drahvin show back up in Doctor Who because they both felt like more could be done with them (especially the Drahvin).
 
I've recently watched The Armageddon Factor and Destiny of the Daleks. The Armageddon Factor is easily two episodes too long and is overall a lackluster end to the Key to Time "saga". Outside of an entertainingly over the top side villain in the Marshal, a clever time loop trick by the Doctor and a weird timelord named Drax there isn't much to this serial, a mediocre end to a mostly mediocre set of stories.

Destiny of the Daleks feels like someone was hired to write the most generic Classic Who Dalek story possible. The Daleks are in a war they can't win, so they dig up (literally) Davros to help them. The Doctor and newly regenerated (for no actual reason) Romana II randomly show up on Skarro and interfere with these events. Its not a bad story by any means, but outside of introducing Romana II it is a completely by the numbers story. Nothing particularly new is done with The Daleks and Davros, it just feels like a generic Classic who Dalek story. Davros also looks bad, the mask has not held up to time, and the replacement actor isn't very good at the role. Overall this is an ok story, better then the last one but almost impressive in how standard it is.

With these two stories done I only need to watch two more 4th Doctor stories to be finished with his era, The Creature from the Pit and Nightmare of Eden. I'll probably get to them before too long.
 
I've recently watched The Armageddon Factor and Destiny of the Daleks. The Armageddon Factor is easily two episodes too long and is overall a lackluster end to the Key to Time "saga". Outside of an entertainingly over the top side villain in the Marshal, a clever time loop trick by the Doctor and a weird timelord named Drax there isn't much to this serial, a mediocre end to a mostly mediocre set of stories.

It definitely feels like an artificial extension once Drax appears. If not when the Doctor, acting as if he figured Astra out as being the 6th piece, later acts as if he's genuinely clueless again. The time loop and first part prevailing, the story does go downhill - complete with ending that renders the point of the season pointless. Never mind the logistics of a segment being limited to one point in space and time (not solved until the 2005 revival introduced "fixed point in time" as an umbrella catch-all.)

The two Guardians were introduced well and come across like the ultimate chess players, using the universe's creatures as pawns.

Destiny of the Daleks feels like someone was hired to write the most generic Classic Who Dalek story possible.

Which is doubly sad as the writer of "Destiny" created them in 1963!

The Daleks are in a war they can't win,

On the surface, it's a cool idea. The problem is, the Daleks now have to be devolved into robot creatures to make it work - and is even told outright in the script - as opposed to finding a way of having a species being beaten by a computer be smarter in other ways. Or Nation was more interested in continuing "Survivors", "Blake's 7", and other shows he created or was involved in...

so they dig up (literally) Davros to help them.

Which retroactively ruins the strong ending of "Genesis", but somehow feels germane and relevant - this is a positive in a story that's a huge mixed bag.

The Doctor and newly regenerated (for no actual reason) Romana II

An event offscreen, but is handled as if the makers detested the show they were working on and turned into a lampoon. Later stories took this scene's concept of casual change and gave it new depth since, once lampooned, how does the show make itself credible again so that the audience will take it seriously too? The Rani gloats to the Doctor how she can change her appearance whenever she likes (being a biochemist) whereas he's stuck (inability to control, for whatever reasons).

Why otherwise say the show was lampooning itself? The dumb joke about their not climbing inclines or stairs, which was also used in "The Chase", and even Pertwee-era stories had antigravity discs (used in limited and budget-friendly conditions.) By "Revelation of the Daleks", they could finally hover of their own accord and "Remembrance" took an idea handled plainly and made it one of the best-ever cliffhangers. The novelization does the scene wonders as well.

randomly show up on Skarro and interfere with these events.

Especially as the Randomizer was only recently installed and for the reason of keeping the Black Guardian guessing! It goes back to the show lampooning itself. Spoiler alert, the next story takes place on modern day Earth. Even nonfiction making-of books made snide jokes about why the Black Guardian didn't just hang around near either planet instead? (He sorta does, look up Turlough's introductory story. :D )

Its not a bad story by any means, but outside of introducing Romana II it is a completely by the numbers story. Nothing particularly new is done with The Daleks and Davros, it just feels like a generic Classic who Dalek story. Davros also looks bad, the mask has not held up to time, and the replacement actor isn't very good at the role. Overall this is an ok story, better then the last one but almost impressive in how standard it is.

The mask is "good enough" and was probably made out of thin material to allow facial expressions and wasn't stored in ideal conditions.

The fact that a lot of "Destiny" is redone as a part of "Resurrection" (which takes similar ideas, repackages the Movellan was in past-tense, and then does what "Destiny" could have spent more time on instead - but with a more appropriate tone) only shows how flimsy "Destiny" is.

With these two stories done I only need to watch two more 4th Doctor stories to be finished with his era, The Creature from the Pit and Nightmare of Eden. I'll probably get to them before too long.

Cool! Looking forward to your takes on them!
 
Just finished The Creature from the Pit. It wasn't very good. It had a few good moments, I like how the "creature" wasn't actually some mindless monster and K9 got opportunities to be useful, but overall the story wasn't great and the supporting characters were generally just annoying. The story feels like its just The Doctor and Romana walking around captured by various people with uninteresting motivations. the main villain, the rich woman, was boring and pretty standard and the group of metal hunting crooks were just annoying. The alien blob creature was kind of interesting but outside of it being revealed as sentient and not a monster its not that interesting either.

I didn't dislike this episode, but it really feels like one that I'll barely remember in a week. Next up will be the last 4th Doctor serial that I need to watch, Nightmare of Eden. Hopefully its at least a more memorable story.
 
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