Leaked episode one promotional image
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Looks like 13 is channeling her in 3rd with that costume.
Leaked episode one promotional image
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The Thirteeth Doctor shows up at the SDCC fashion show
On the contrary, considering fashion shows are so extravagant and unworn by common folk (or often times, not at all), I think the pairing is rather apropos.The Doctor and fashion show - two terms you'd never expect to have in the same sentence![]()
Eleven’s first console room was the best one. It was vast and mad and colourful. The subsequent rooms were dank, dull and not all befitting a mad (wo)man with a box. Here’s hoping the rest of the new console room is a little more colourful than the brown all we’ve seen so far.It's like Capaldi's opening montage threw up in there. Sill might be better looking than Matt's first console room.
It looks like the police box acts as a kind of foyer in the second image.
That picture will hopefully silence all those pink Tardis jokers for good.Eleven’s first console room was the best one. It was vast and mad and colourful. The subsequent rooms were dank, dull and not all befitting a mad (wo)man with a box. Here’s hoping the rest of the new console room is a little more colourful than the brown all we’ve seen so far.
The TARDIS she’ll poking into the inside is pretty neat. If nothing else, it explains why you see the inside of a wooden box whenever you see the door open from the outside, at least from certain angles. The last prop exterior tried to put the ribbed (sic) interior on the inside of the opposite wall, but it never really matched the actual console room set. This works really well from a production standpoint and allows the director of photography much more freedom in setting up camera angles, among things.
As for the rest of the peek, the hexagonal shapes (next gen round things?) in the walls and floor, raised platform, and Gallifreyan script are all good cues of some of the best in console room design. The Smith/Capaldi set was IMO the best, being the first truly 360-set in ALL of Doctor Who, and allowing for a lot of spectacular long tracking shots. I loved it even more when Twelve finally gave it a properly lived-in look, which I hope will carry over here.
Mark
Eleven’s first console room was the best one. It was vast and mad and colourful. The subsequent rooms were dank, dull and not all befitting a mad (wo)man with a box. Here’s hoping the rest of the new console room is a little more colourful than the brown all we’ve seen so far.
The TARDIS she’ll poking into the inside is pretty neat. If nothing else, it explains why you see the inside of a wooden box whenever you see the door open from the outside, at least from certain angles. The last prop exterior tried to put the ribbed (sic) interior on the inside of the opposite wall, but it never really matched the actual console room set. This works really well from a production standpoint and allows the director of photography much more freedom in setting up camera angles, among things.
As for the rest of the peek, the hexagonal shapes (next gen round things?) in the walls and floor, raised platform, and Gallifreyan script are all good cues of some of the best in console room design. The Smith/Capaldi set was IMO the best, being the first truly 360-set in ALL of Doctor Who, and allowing for a lot of spectacular long tracking shots. I loved it even more when Twelve finally gave it a properly lived-in look, which I hope will carry over here.
Mark
Looks like 13 is channeling her in 3rd with that costume.
The Doctor and fashion show - two terms you'd never expect to have in the same sentence![]()
Apparently the biggest reason they got rid of Matt Smith's first TARDIS set was that it was physically bolted to the framework of the physical building, and as such when they changed studios bringing it along with them would have been cost-prohibitive. There were other reasons the production people didn't like it, from the fact that it wasn't a full 360-degree set (only partially fixed for the first half of S6), to the reflective glass flooring that also limited camera angles (which they made sideways fun of in some webisodes).
I actually liked it a fair bit, compared to its direct predecessor. While it was all Willy Wonka (on purpose, supposedly to go along with the Fairy Tale groove Moffatt was looking for), all the stairways and doorways were really neat, as were the multiple levels and cubbies that allowed for separate conversations to take place in the same room (where most others are effectively one medium-sized space). I think the implication that this set is what happens when you let the TARDIS do its own interior, versus most other iterations which generally state that the Doctor was in charge of the drapes.
I've always compared the TARDIS to a giant box of Lego - it comes with a "Default Setting" per the instruction manual, but otherwise the operator is allowed to configure it as they see fit, and let the thing take them where they want to go looking like they want it to look. Thing is, I'm thinking that the TARDIS will be regenerating sans-Doctor this time, so when Thirteen pops in (as the pictures suggest), she'll be in awe of what happens someone shakes up the box of Lego without thinking of where the pieces will fall.
Mark
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