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Russel T. Davies' new show.

Interesting premise. I'll certain take a look at it when it arrives.

Intriguing that BBC has already commissioned a second series.
 
Heh! Well it had to happen. Didn't Ron more try something like this with a pilot about Cops with magic powers? Also isn't the Doctor kind of a wizard replace tardis with Broomstick and sonice screwdriver with wand. Wasn't he also Merlin once?
 
Excellent news on several fronts. First and foremost it's keeping at least some of the SJA team together (it's probably a guarantee there'll be some familiar names in the cast as well). Second, if RTD is working on this, after having earlier announced a suspension of his activities due to the illness of his partner, hopefully that's a good sign on that front. I guess this means "Cucumber" isn't going anywhere soon, though.

Third, if RTD is reestablishing his base in the UK that increases the likelihood of Torchwood season 5 being based more in the UK, if it's made.

The Bleeding Cool article mentions that RTD is also working on a project for BBC Worldwide called "Star Lost". Nah, it couldn't be ... could it? (If anyone could bring that show back and make it work, it would be RTD.)

Alex
 
I for one surely hope his partner is doing better, hopefully this new project news means things are looking up. Also, I hope we have not seen the last of Captain Jack!
 
As long as Tommy and Daniel are in it, playing boyfriends again, I'll be tuning in. ;)
 
As long as Tommy and Daniel are in it, playing boyfriends again, I'll be tuning in. ;)

Well, Tommy as I understand it had stepped away from SJA anyway except for guest appearances (maybe for school? Someone jump in on that if I'm wrong) so whether he'd be available for a new series is a question. But Daniel and Anjli had great chemistry and their story arc was just developing, so unless they're involved with other shows I'd love to see them come back. The girl who was signed to play Sky and replace Tommy in the series got shortchanged; I wouldn't be surprised if we saw her come back too.

In any respect, although the premise sounds a bit odd, I think AvW will be worth watching if it uses the same writers and production crew. SJA still gets knocked, mostly by folks who have never bothered to watch it, but it turned out to be a much better show than I expected, which more than a few episodes equalling and even surpassing Doctor Who, so my hopes are high for AvW.

Though I had to admit to being curious - and a little nervous - about what an RTD-created series called "Cucumber" might have been..

Alex
 
Yea, Sarah Jane Adventures S1 was skewed pretty young, but, from S2 onward, most adults who like Doctor Who could get into it easily enough
 
Bleeding Cool seem to have mistaken industry insiders for Gareth Roberts and Joseph Lidster's CV's. :rolleyes:

Thus far the BBC have released no information about it so the description as "Doctor Who meets Harry Potter" is nothing more than guesswork based on the title. Though I have been told that production commences in the next couple of months, which again might be guesswork by that person based on the assumption that it will be taking the slot on CBBC vacated by SJA.

Though it's good to know that Rich Johnston reads my posts on GB. :rofl:
 
Heh! Well it had to happen. Didn't Ron more try something like this with a pilot about Cops with magic powers? Also isn't the Doctor kind of a wizard replace tardis with Broomstick and sonice screwdriver with wand. Wasn't he also Merlin once?
Apparently that was an Alternate Universe or future Doctor - and possibly ginger; although River does mention in one episode that whenever she investigates a supposed magician or wizard, it usually turns out to be him. :)
 
The series is now casting. I don't have any details of the roles, except that the protagonists are a modern day family of wizards.
 
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I'll just leave this here, for no apparent reason.

timelord.png
 
The BBC have posted a press release about the series:

Tom Clarke lives a seemingly ordinary life with his dad and grandmother. However he hides a deep secret - Tom’s family are wizards and when the Nekross arrive, hungry for magic, they find themselves on the menu.

The Nekross may be equipped with ray guns, teleports and high-tech robots but they haven’t reckoned on Tom and his friend, science super-brain Benny. They form an extraordinary duo, using Tom’s magic and Benny’s science to battle the Nekross and save the Earth.
 
In an interview RTD has had his say on the state of Children's TV and there's some info on the show in there.

From the Guardian

They decided to focus the new drama on two 16-year-olds, Tom and Benny, one secretly in possession of magical powers, the other a super-bright scientific brain, who does not believe in magic. They combine their skills to battle a tribe of aliens, called the Nekross, to save the world.
From the dark side of the moon, the Nekross set up a base to scan the earth, looking for magical skills to buttress their power and, naturally, destroying anything that stands in their way.The idea was quickly turned into a first script, then an order for 26 episodes.
Davies said: "Magic and science fiction are never combined. For example, the only thing that could make Harry Potter better, in my view, would be if a big spaceship arrives at the door of Hogwarts, but it never does. It does in ours, in episode one."
At the core is an ideological clash as the two boys argue over the separate worlds of magic and science, such as the existence of spells versus, say, laser technology.
Davies added that the trick was to create a drama based on ordinary life, as in The Sarah Jane Adventures, set in Ealing, west London, into which fantasy intrudes. "Remember, I spent my whole childhood waiting for the Daleks to arrive in my school playground," said Davies. The wizard teenager is descended from a family of wizards, but he keeps this a secret and attends a comprehensive school. Aliens Vs Wizards will also feature lots of prosthetic monsters, as in Doctor Who, and not just computer generated imagery.
The lavish multimillion-pound series, which starts filming in the Cardiff drama studios of BBC Wales in March, is being financially backed by FremantleMedia Enterprises (FME), to supplement CBBC budgets. In return for the investment, Fremantle, not the BBC, has global sales rights, as well as rights to DVDs, merchandising and book publishing.
 
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