Slashdot Mirror


Online Doctor Who Documentary

mikey writes "There's an online documentary called Planet of the Doctor about the influence of Doctor Who. It's put out by the CBC and it's got some decent interviews with original producers, writers, and cast as well as fans and others. So far, it's been very entertaining and informative. They've got four episodes out with another couple to come. If you're a Doctor Who fan (or even a generic Sci-Fi fan) it's worth checking out."

4 of 154 comments (clear)

  1. Another Doctor Who documentary to check out by Black+Art · · Score: 5, Informative

    Another documentary to check out is Doctor Who Confidential broadcast by BBC 3. It is a 13 part half-hour documentary series on the Doctor, past and present. It can be viewed on the BBC web site in Real Movie format or can be found on various file sharing networks in a larger and more viewable format.

    So far I have seen nothing from the BBC on releasing the series on DVD. I hope they will. It has been quite good so far. (At this date, 11 of the 13 episodes have aired.)

    --
    "Trademarks are the heraldry of the new feudalism."
  2. I've never seen Dr. Who by kingofalaska · · Score: 5, Interesting
    I thought it might be something else, but when I got to the site all I got were Volkswagon ads.

    Am I alone in being turned off by excessive commercialism? For example, the latest Star Wars offering may be entertaining, but with all the tie-ins, from Pepsi to fast foods to Saturday morning cereal advertisements aimed at children, to my formerly-favorite candy M&M's (for which I almost went to jail over once-don't ask), coupled with all the astroturfing...well the stench of desperation is turning my appetite off. And that's just one example.

    I'm ready for a revolution. Tear it all down and start fresh, or at least, let the writing and acting stand on its own.

    KOA

    1. Re:I've never seen Dr. Who by zakezuke · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Am I alone in being turned off by excessive commercialism?

      Part of the reason I enjoyed Doctor Who in the first place was it was produced by the BBC, non-commercial television, and shown in America on PBS, non-commercial television. To answer your question you are not the only one turned off by seeing VW every time you see a CBC Who reference.

      If you are trully interested in the subject see http://www.bbc.co.uk/doctorwho/
      No commercials, no Volkswagons.

      --
      There is no sanctuary. There is no sanctuary. SHUT UP! There is no shut up. There is no shut up.
  3. Re:BBC Dr Who by jd · · Score: 5, Informative
    A very rough guide to the different generations of Doctor Who, and the sorts of people who might find them appealing:
    • William Hartnell - The "Original" Doctor!
      • His era was primarily intended to be educational. Someone else on Slashdot noted the lack of humor - well, this is humorless and intended to be that way. It'd deadly serious stuff, and usually on deadly serious subjects. Stories include:
      • Massacres in Revolutionary France
      • Stone-age tribes on the edge of starvation
      • An Aztec coup
      • The destruction of Rome at the hands of Nero
      • Dalek attempt to nuke the Thaals
      • Dalek attempt to hollow out Earth as a spaceship
      • Dalek attempt to use time disruptor to conquer galaxy
      • Dalek attempt to conquer time as well as space
      • Cybermen attempt to conquer Earth
      • Human colonists nearly get wiped out by disease they'd lost immunity to
      • Murderer wipes out alien civilization to cover tracks
      • Major civil war on planet controlled by insects
      • The destruction of Troy and the massacre of nearly everyone inside
    • In general, this is great for fans who like "historical fantasy" (what would have happened, if...) and was actually used to teach history and scientific methods to younger students.

    Patrick Troughton - the First Regeneration

    • After William Hartnell became too ill to continue, they needed to either replace him or scrap the series. It was too popular to scrap, but he was too dominant and too unique to simply replace. So began the most creative plot device of all history... He injected humor into the series, was generally much lighter than Hartnell, and that had an appeal that made a big difference. It still had a lot of history and science, but was much more edutainment than either education OR entertainment, in the classic sense.
      • The Highlanders - Classic historical story, sadly lost (apart from the script and the soundtrack) but included gems such as Troughton pretending to be a medical doctor, bashing one guy's head on a table repeatedly and "diagnosing" the headache as a serious illness, the cure to which was to be locked in a closet.
      • Evil of The Daleks (at least one episode still exists, along with the soundtrack) - almost half was set in Victorian England and was extremely well-done period drama. With the addition of psychotic pepperpots. Mostly a story of greed, on the part of a Victorian alchemist who wanted the secret of transmutation, and on the part of the Daleks, who wanted the secret of how to eliminate fallibility. Ends up with a civil war on Skaro, between super-evil Daleks and "humanized" Daleks.
      • A race of super-pacifists is enslaved by mass-murdering Dominators...
      • Krutons - oops, Krotons - subjugate another planet by means of Weapons of Mass Destruction, periodic butchering of the more intelligent residents, and the prohibition of science. Now we know what President Bush has been watching...
      • One group decides to create a super-army, by creating a gigantic battlefield of easily brainwashed primitives from Earth...
      • The Mind Robber - Probably the very best of the lighter stories. A superb blend of folk stories, psychology and futuristic virtual reality, long before Star Trek's "Holodeck"...
      • The Invasion - Brilliant, but only partially complete and some of the recordings are in poor shape. A tale of high treason, an International spy ring, Cybermen and a female mathematician faster than Britain's (real-life) Carol Vordeman.
      • The Ice Warrior stories are darkly political, but have their light moments and plenty of unexpected twists.
      • Dystopia meets humor can also be found in The Macra Terror (only audio and a little video exists, sadly)
    • Great for those who like humor, but also want some fairly meaty
    --
    It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)