Hey, maybe they can do a story without making jokes. You know, like just a regular story.
And then Philip Madoc finally shows up as the War Lord and totally steals the show from the broadly acted, melodrama-villain Chiefs by giving an understated, calm, and therefore far more menacing performance.
Oh, I don't know, I think they're right up Chibnall's street. Perhaps though, he'll bring over his own Victorian lesbian alien-fighters from Torchwood.
Philip Madoc is one of the all-time great Doctor Who guest actors. He could do quiet menace like in "The War Games" or he could be a raving lunatic like Solon in "The Brain of Morbius."
A lovely man, btw: he came along to the pub screening of Eleventh Hour, and then led the pub crawl up the road when the place closed early. So that ended up as a very pleasant drunken night.I'm amazed those are the same actor. I can't even recognize him as Solon, with such different hair -- but then, I initially didn't recognize him as the War Lord (after seeing him as Eelek in "The Krotons") with the beard and glasses. It's only by the voice that he's recognizable, really. I'm not sure when I'll get around to "Morbius" -- I may have to put my rewatch on hold, since I may have to cancel my Netflix DVD service if my finances don't improve soon. But when I eventually do, I'll be curious to see it now that I know the actor's other roles.
(By the way, does the "Morbius" DVD fix the audio on episode 1? The version I always saw in the past was somehow missing the music and sound effects tracks on episode 1, which was very off-putting.)
By the way, does the "Morbius" DVD fix the audio on episode 1? The version I always saw in the past was somehow missing the music and sound effects tracks on episode 1, which was very off-putting.
I always thought it was cool how Doctor Who can show so many different sides to actors that they could use an actor multiple times in the same season in different roles. During Patrick Troughton's final season, they not only used Philip Madoc twice ("The Krotons" & "The War Games"), they also used Bernard Horsfall twice as both Gulliver in "The Mind Robber" & one of the Time Lords at the end of "The War Games."
I believe that's a problem limited to specific videotapes circulated in North America.(By the way, does the "Morbius" DVD fix the audio on episode 1? The version I always saw in the past was somehow missing the music and sound effects tracks on episode 1, which was very off-putting.)
I believe that's a problem limited to specific videotapes circulated in North America.
The original UK broadcast also had a problem at the same point, though a different one: the sound FX for the Trooper and station guns suddenly swap.I don't know what caused it exactly (someone grabbed the wrong tape when sending it downstairs for duplication?) but it also affected Part Two of the four-part version of Resurrection of the Daleks in North America.
I'd like to see more of the Silurians other than Vastra. And a more serious take on the Sontarans again.
And I wish someone would bring back the Draconians from "Frontier in Space." They were intriguing, an alien race who weren't monsters-of-the-week but simply another civilization, competing with humans but not beyond reason or reconciliation. Cool design, too. And yet they haven't been seen since their one and only appearance in the '70s. If the new series can bring back the bloomin' Macra, why can't we see the Draconians again? (An updated creature design for Alpha Centauri from the Peladon stories would be cool too.)
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