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MMMman

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I locked my girlfriend in the cellar until she watched Doctor Who. She’s out now & I think we’ll live happily ever after

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I don’t know about the rest of the world but I really, really like the resurrected Doctor Who. I find its mischievous, upbeat and sometimes irreverent tone utterly infectious. It is episodic entertainment working perfectly within the constraints of its format. Each episode is a fantastical adventure fraught with danger and intrigue that almost always stands up to scrutiny on its own merits. Yet, throughout these isolated tales small, tantalising clues as to the larger, currently incomprehensible overarching story are sown. I know this is basic television writing and am not suggesting that Doctor Who has revolutionised the structure of plotting over many hours. What I am saying, though, is that these clues and symbols, whether they be recurring phrases or momentary glimpses into the unknown, always, without fail, coalesce into the most satisfying season finales I’ve ever witnessed.

Gushing over, let us get to the problem with Doctor Who. In my professional life working in post production I find myself invariably surrounded by the good Doctor. From his earliest adventures outsmarting men wearing bed sheets and tinfoil, through his days as a private military contractor in Wales, the shitty Eighties where even he wasn’t very entertaining, right up to today where we see him fighting men wearing CG bed sheets and CG tinfoil. All this exposure has led to unhealthy episodes of mania where I am unable to control my consumption, often staying late into the night in the office to re-watch serials whilst simultaneously creating collages of Jon Pertwee’s utterly beautiful hair.

I do this not for selfish reasons, quite the opposite, I do it for my girlfriend. I know, simply know, that old, or classic as it is professionally known, Doctor Who will be of no interest to her, my lovely, wonderful, beautiful partner. Christ, some of them are a stretch even for me and I genuinely like the stuff. The pacing can be terribly ponderous, especially in the Sixties, and a decent level of suspension of disbelief is necessary to enjoy a lot of the lower-budget aspects of the show. I’m big enough to not try and force this onto her, however much I’d to curl up with her under Tom Baker’s scarf and live happily ever after. I’m not big enough, though, to never watch the new stuff with her, even if she thinks she doesn’t like it.

My friend recently bought a flat and last weekend invited us around to test out her newly purchased garden furniture. Everything was going swimmingly until the recently broadcast Broadchurch was mentioned. “I really don’t like David Tennant” said my friend, scrunching her face up so completely until it resembled a potato after being thrown at a wall. “His ratty little face upsets me” she continued, oblivious to her current lack of facial beauty. “I fully agree with you, his little body is silly; his torso is so slight, he just can’t be very manly” piped up my girlfriend helpfully. Well, with that I embarked upon a courageous defence of Mr. Tennant, hitting all the bases I could in the fifteen seconds I had before gang-obliteration. Shakespearean acting chops, perfect Doctor balancing levity and dark brooding like no other, beardy narcissism in the aforementioned Broadchurch, cheeky hijinks in Casanova. I felt as though I’d defended his honour admirably, though it was all for nought. They simply didn’t see the merit in the great man’s talents; I had been bested by x chromosomes and sheer ignorance.

Undeterred, I sat my girlfriend down, partly as punishment for disagreeing with me, partly as a life lesson, and forced her to watch ‘Rose’, the first episode of the new run of Doctor Who. There I was, bouncing on the sofa in time to the running music which makes up about eighty-five percent of the episode, while my lovely partner was sitting stony-faced beside me, clearly having the time of her life. She persevered though, and slowly opened herself up to Doctor Who’s brand of rather particular, cheesy levity. First it was the wordplay and terrible Dad-jokes, then came the slapstick, and finally, last night, she was taken by the drama. In a harrowing episode which sees a previously deceased father saved from his fate only to create the most horrible of paradoxes, which kills the Doctor might I add, and then re-kill himself to set things straight, the tension in my living room was palpable. She smiled, she laughed, she gasped, and I’d go as far as saying she loved Doctor Who for the first time.

Such is the power of perfectly-written-Saturday-night-light-sci-fi. All I need do now is keep bombarding her with episodes until anything that remained of her own personality is gone and she is merely a female version of myself. For that is the real joy of a relationship, no?

62 Comments

62 Comments

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Shaunage

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Edited By Shaunage

I find doctor who annoying. Its too goofy to be taken seriously, and its too self-serious to be a goofy fun ride. Also doctor who fans are some of the most insufferable pricks, if you say you don't like it, even for valid reasons they act like i killed their dog or something and make it their mission to "prove" my opinion is wrong.

Fuck doctor who. And more importantly, fuck doctor who fans.

This man knows some things.

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zeforgotten

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Edited By zeforgotten

I find doctor who annoying. Its too goofy to be taken seriously, and its too self-serious to be a goofy fun ride. Also doctor who fans are some of the most insufferable pricks, if you say you don't like it, even for valid reasons they act like i killed their dog or something and make it their mission to "prove" my opinion is wrong.

Fuck doctor who. And more importantly, fuck doctor who fans.

As a Doctor Who fan who never insulted you for disliking it yet still I get insulted I would just like to flip you this bird and kindly ask you to sit on in and spin.
Who knows, you might even enjoy the spinning :P

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Clonedzero

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@clonedzero said:

I find doctor who annoying. Its too goofy to be taken seriously, and its too self-serious to be a goofy fun ride. Also doctor who fans are some of the most insufferable pricks, if you say you don't like it, even for valid reasons they act like i killed their dog or something and make it their mission to "prove" my opinion is wrong.

Fuck doctor who. And more importantly, fuck doctor who fans.

As a Doctor Who fan who never insulted you for disliking it yet still I get insulted I would just like to flip you this bird and kindly ask you to sit on in and spin.

Who knows, you might even enjoy the spinning :P

Do you clip your fingernails?

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TheManiacsGnome

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Edited By TheManiacsGnome

I watched the Christopher Eccleston stuff, I lost interest though and didn't continue.

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joshthebear

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Doctor Who cares is more like it.

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MMMman

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Edited By MMMman

@omdata:

I work for a company called Deluxe; they did film processing in the early days of Hollywood and have since branched out into all aspects of modern post production/distribution. We've been handling the Doctor Who releases on DVD from the beginning and I get a real kick out of seeing all the extra footage the BBC put together for the releases. Back in the Sixties they were wiping tapes as if the serials weren't important and now they are slowly piecing together the lost episodes like the actually matter. Obviously the damage can't be reversed, some will be lost forever, but the time and money they appear to be investing is mighty reassuring.

It might be hokey and dated but it ran for far longer than Star Trek, in any guise, and still isn't fully appreciated on a similar level. I just hope the BBC will one day make everything in their archive available, even for a subscription, and let the world enjoy all of the original run. The masters are there, it's really just whether the executives see it as a worthy cause. I, of course, think is is. One-hundred-percent.

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MMMman

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zeforgotten

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@zeforgotten said:
@clonedzero said:

I find doctor who annoying. Its too goofy to be taken seriously, and its too self-serious to be a goofy fun ride. Also doctor who fans are some of the most insufferable pricks, if you say you don't like it, even for valid reasons they act like i killed their dog or something and make it their mission to "prove" my opinion is wrong.

Fuck doctor who. And more importantly, fuck doctor who fans.

As a Doctor Who fan who never insulted you for disliking it yet still I get insulted I would just like to flip you this bird and kindly ask you to sit on in and spin.

Who knows, you might even enjoy the spinning :P

Do you clip your fingernails?

Not for you, no

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TruthTellah

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Your title made me think of that recent story of the man who locked three young women in his cellar and kept them there for over a decade until someone finally freed them a few weeks ago.

Though, despite the chilling title, I would agree that Doctor Who is good fun.

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zoozilla

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I'm nearing the end of David Tennant's first season now, and I guess I'm digging it.

Have to admit, I really liked Christopher Eccleston, and still find Tennant a little too manic. The stories also seem to be even more loosey-goosey than the first season of the "new Who." Apparently there's really good stuff later on?

It's weird - even though the series is incredibly inconsistent, and their approach to the fiction ranges from "well, whatever" to "this makes absolutely no sense, but go with it," it's still a pretty entertaining show.

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omdata

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@mmmman: Wow! So there's hope for all those lost Hartnell and Troughton ep's? Hartnell's great, but I've always thought it was absolutely criminal how much of Troughton's work was lost. I was watching the commentary of Davison and Dicks for the 5 Doctors last night, and I have to agree with Dicks' assertion that Troughton originated the role in many ways. I'd kill to be able to see the Yeti storyline (that's one of the "lost" series, right?). And of course, more Wendy Padbury couldn't hurt....

Also, I'm glad to see someone near the source is at least putting into the ether the idea of a sub-based model for Doctor Who content. Half a century's worth of tv episodes - not to mention the radio plays that could also be made available - behind a subscription model? Sign me up day 1.

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omdata

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@zoozilla: I understand how you feel. Tennant just keeps getting better in the role, I'd say, though from that point on various other parts of the show begin to waver in quality. Without giving too much away, his next assistant's character is shamefully wasted by the writers but there are some real winners in her season. I found that his next assistant after that started out grating, and ended up a fantastic character.

You might just want to apply a 5 - 15 minute rule with some of the episodes if the "Oh, COME ON" factor gets too high, just zip to the next one as there is some really great television throughout Tennant's run.