During this week at Comic-Con, I had the opportunity to talk to Arvind Ethan David, executive producer on BBC’s Dirk Gently’s Holistic Detective Agency. We touch on points such as the show’s growing popularity, just what the show means to him, and more! Give it a listen!

If you’re interested in watching it, you can catch the first season of Dirk Getly on Hulu right now! Season 2 will premiere later this year. Check out a preview of Season 2 below!

Clara Oswald’s time with the Doctor has come and gone. Now that Jenna Coleman has departed her role in Doctor Who, the long-running sci-fi series on BBC, the search for a new companion to travel alongside Peter Capaldi’s Twelfth Doctor across the cosmos commenced behind closed doors. And the search has ended. Meet Billy, portrayed by Pearl Mackie. A lengthy preview was uploaded by surprise on the show’s official social media channels. (Note: For some reason the perfectly normal YouTube link isn’t embedding, so you’ll have to click here to check it out.)

Who’s Pearl Mackie? That’s a good question! She’s a relatively new actress with very few notable roles prior to Doctor Who. If you happen to be a British soap fan (aren’t we all?), she played Anne-Marie Frasier in the BBC One series Doctors — what a coincidence! — in 2014. A year later she performed in a stage adaptation of the 2003 novel The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time for the National Theatre’s West End. And now, she’s on Doctor Who!

So far, so great. Capaldi and Mackie have some great chemistry that I’m excited to see play out, especially with how totally worn out Coleman seemed to be. I don’t know how much longer Capaldi has in his contract, but I’m glad Doctor Who — a behemoth of a sci-fi franchise — is willing to cast people of color if they stubbornly insist on keeping their Doctor an old white guy (although Capaldi has been the best old white guy, for what it’s worth). Doctor Who will be a star-maker for Mackie, and I can’t wait to see what’s in store for Billy.

Doctor Who returns to air for its tenth season in 2017. The show is expected to continue until 2020.

BBC Three has just announced a new Doctor Who spin off entitled Class. In writing this initial 8 episode run centered on students in modern-day London, they may be shooting for a middle road between previous spin offs. Torchwood featured some darker stories of a special ops. team aimed more at older audiences, while The Sarah Jane Adventures was a decidedly kid friendly installment in the Whoverse. Class sounds like a unique creation of Who-ology, geared more toward the young adult crowd.

Class is a YA series set in contemporary London. Incredible dangers are breaking through the walls of time and space, and with darkness coming, London is unprotected.

—BBC Three

Executive producer Steven Moffat (Doctor Who, Sherlock) has teamed with award winning author Patrick Ness (the Chaos Walking trilogy and A Monster Calls) to create the series. Ness, born in the States—and having lived in Virginia, Washington state, Hawaii and southern California (where he attended USC)—before becoming a naturalized British citizen in 2005, seems an excellent choice to be writing about other worlds and dimensions. Moffat sound very excited about Ness, saying, “No one has documented the dark and exhilarating world of the teenager like Patrick Ness, and now we’re bringing his brilliant storytelling into Doctor Who. This is growing up in modern Britain—but with monsters!” I’m guessing something along the lines of the setting being a British school sitting on the Doctor Who universe equivalent of the Hellmouth from Buffy the Vampire Slayer. The Whosphere got a taste of Ness’ skills with his 2013 short story for the 50th anniversary, Doctor Who: Tip of the Tongue, which is available as a bite-size ebook featuring Peter Davison’s fifth Doctor.

Ness has nine other full novels under his belt—his latest The Rest of Us Just Live Here (read the back cover below) hits US store shelves on October 6th. He appears to have a strong storytelling resume outside of his novels as well, having written and reviewed for The Daily Telegraph, The Times Literary Supplement, The Sunday Telegraph and The Guardian. He has even taught creative writing at Oxford University! None of it, however, makes him too hoity-toity to play in The Doctor’s sandbox. To hear him tell it, “I’m astounded and thrilled to be entering the Doctor Who universe, which is as vast as time and space itself. There’s so much room there for all kinds of amazing stories, and to work with Steven Moffat and Brian Minchin to find a place to tell one of my own has been an absolute joy. I can’t wait for people to meet the heroes of Class, to meet the all-new villains and aliens, to remember that the horrors of the darkest corners of existence are just about on par with having to pass your A-Levels.”

Whew! If he’s that into it, sign me up! The show will air on Britain’s BBC Three later next year—no word yet on when it might hit American shores but BBC America is probably the logical venue. Can’t wait for more details!

The Rest of Us Just Live Here Back Cover:

What if you aren’t the Chosen One?
The one who’s supposed to fight the zombies, or the soul-eating ghosts, or whatever the heck this new thing is, with the blue lights and the death?
What if you’re like Mikey? Who just wants to graduate and go to prom and maybe finally work up the courage to ask Henna out before someone goes and blows up the high school. Again.
Because sometimes there are problems bigger than this week’s end of the world, and sometimes you just have to find the extraordinary in your ordinary life.
Even if your best friend is worshiped by mountain lions.
Award-winning writer Patrick Ness’s bold and irreverent novel powerfully reminds us that there are many different types of remarkable.

It’s that time again!  Every once in a while an outlet or website will release a top, or best of, list of films that the internet will argue over.  BBC Culture is the culprit this time and has complied a list containing the 100 Greatest American Films as voted on by film critics from across the globe.  Each critic was asked to submit a top 10 and each slot was weighed.  The usual suspects (not THAT Usual Suspects, sorry Bryan) are of course on the list- Star Wars, Jaws, Back to the Future, The Godfather, Citizen Kane (number one on the list), etc.

BBC Cultures Top 100 American Films:

100. Ace in the Hole (Billy Wilder, 1951)
99. 12 Years a Slave (Steve McQueen, 2013)
98. Heaven’s Gate (Michael Cimino, 1980)
97. Gone With the Wind (Victor Fleming, 1939)
96. The Dark Knight (Christopher Nolan, 2008)
95. Duck Soup (Leo McCarey, 1933)
94. 25th Hour (Spike Lee, 2002)
93. Mean Streets (Martin Scorsese, 1973)
92. The Night of the Hunter (Charles Laughton, 1955)
91. ET: The Extra-Terrestrial (Steven Spielberg, 1982)
90. Apocalypse Now (Francis Ford Coppola, 1979)
89. In a Lonely Place (Nicholas Ray, 1950)
88. West Side Story (Robert Wise and Jerome Robbins, 1961)
87. Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind (Michel Gondry, 2004)
86. The Lion King (Roger Allers and Rob Minkoff, 1994)
85. Night of the Living Dead (George A Romero, 1968)
84. Deliverance (John Boorman, 1972)
83. Bringing Up Baby (Howard Hawks, 1938)
82. Raiders of the Lost Ark (Steven Spielberg, 1981)
81. Thelma & Louise (Ridley Scott, 1991)
80. Meet Me in St Louis (Vincente Minnelli, 1944)
79. The Tree of Life (Terrence Malick, 2011)
78. Schindler’s List (Steven Spielberg, 1993)
77. Stagecoach (John Ford, 1939)
76. The Empire Strikes Back (Irvin Kershner, 1980)
75. Close Encounters of the Third Kind (Steven Spielberg, 1977)
74. Forrest Gump (Robert Zemeckis, 1994)
73. Network (Sidney Lumet, 1976)
72. The Shanghai Gesture (Josef von Sternberg, 1941)
71. Groundhog Day (Harold Ramis, 1993)
70. The Band Wagon (Vincente Minnelli, 1953)
69. Koyaanisqatsi (Godfrey Reggio, 1982)
68. Notorious (Alfred Hitchcock, 1946)
67. Modern Times (Charlie Chaplin, 1936)
66. Red River (Howard Hawks, 1948)
65. The Right Stuff (Philip Kaufman, 1965)
64. Johnny Guitar (Nicholas Ray, 1954)
63. Love Streams (John Cassavetes, 1984)
62. The Shining (Stanley Kubrick, 1980)
61. Eyes Wide Shut (Stanley Kubrick, 1999)
60. Blue Velvet (David Lynch, 1986)
59. One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest (Miloš Forman, 1975)
58. The Shop Around the Corner (Ernst Lubitsch, 1940)
57. Crimes and Misdemeanors (Woody Allen, 1989)
56. Back to the Future (Robert Zemeckis, 1985)
55. The Graduate (Mike Nichols, 1967)
54. Sunset Boulevard (Billy Wilder, 1950)
53. Grey Gardens (Albert and David Maysles, Ellen Hovde and Muffie Meyer, 1975)
52. The Wild Bunch (Sam Peckinpah, 1969)
51. Touch of Evil (Orson Welles, 1958)
50. His Girl Friday (Howard Hawks, 1940)
49. Days of Heaven (Terrence Malick, 1978)
48. A Place in the Sun (George Stevens, 1951)
47. Marnie (Alfred Hitchcock, 1964)
46. It’s a Wonderful Life (Frank Capra, 1946)
45. The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance (John Ford, 1962)
44. Sherlock Jr (Buster Keaton, 1924)
43. Letter from an Unknown Woman (Max Ophüls, 1948)
42. Dr Strangelove (Stanley Kubrick, 1964)
41. Rio Bravo (Howard Hawks, 1959)
40. Meshes of the Afternoon (Maya Deren and Alexander Hammid, 1943)
39. The Birth of a Nation (DW Griffith, 1915)
38. Jaws (Steven Spielberg, 1975)
37. Imitation of Life (Douglas Sirk, 1959)
36. Star Wars (George Lucas, 1977)
35. Double Indemnity (Billy Wilder, 1944)
34. The Wizard of Oz (Victor Fleming, 1939)
33. The Conversation (Francis Ford Coppola, 1974)
32. The Lady Eve (Preston Sturges, 1941)
31. A Woman Under the Influence (John Cassavetes, 1974)
30. Some Like It Hot (Billy Wilder, 1959)
29. Raging Bull (Martin Scorsese, 1980)
28. Pulp Fiction (Quentin Tarantino, 1994)
27. Barry Lyndon (Stanley Kubrick, 1975)
26. Killer of Sheep (Charles Burnett, 1978)
25. Do the Right Thing (Spike Lee, 1989)
24. The Apartment (Billy Wilder, 1960)
23. Annie Hall (Woody Allen, 1977)
22. Greed (Erich von Stroheim, 1924)
21. Mulholland Drive (David Lynch, 2001)
20. Goodfellas (Martin Scorsese, 1990)
19. Taxi Driver (Martin Scorsese, 1976)
18. City Lights (Charlie Chaplin, 1931)
17. The Gold Rush (Charlie Chaplin, 1925)
16. McCabe & Mrs Miller (Robert Altman, 1971)
15. The Best Years of Our Lives (William Wyler, 1946)
14. Nashville (Robert Altman, 1975)
13. North by Northwest (Alfred Hitchcock, 1959)
12. Chinatown (Roman Polanski, 1974)
11. The Magnificent Ambersons (Orson Welles, 1942)
10. The Godfather Part II (Francis Ford Coppola, 1974)
9. Casablanca (Michael Curtiz, 1942)
8. Psycho (Alfred Hitchcock, 1960)
7. Singin’ in the Rain (Stanley Donen and Gene Kelly, 1952)
6. Sunrise (FW Murnau, 1927)
5. The Searchers (John Ford, 1956)
4. 2001: A Space Odyssey (Stanley Kubrick, 1968)
3. Vertigo (Alfred Hitchcock, 1958)
2. The Godfather (Francis Ford Coppola, 1972)
1. Citizen Kane (Orson Welles, 1941)

With these lists, it’s always interesting to me how many modern films are able to claw their way on.  On this particular list, only six films made the list from the past 15 years- Dark Knight, 25th Hour (GREAT damn movie if you haven’t seen it), Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, Muholland Drive, Tree of Life (eat that haters!), and 12 Years a Slave.  I don’t disagree with any of these choices but there are several films from the 2000’s that I find worthy of a list like this such as The Diving Bell and the Butterfly, No Country for Old Men, and so on.  For some reason, critics see it as a stigma if modern movies pop up on lists like these and I never understood it.

Heath Ledger

Speaking of No Country for Old Men, where are the Coen brothers on this list?  Ace in the Hole, 12 Years a Slave?  These are great films but there are several Coen brothers movies I would slot above those (Millers Crossing, No Country, Blood Simple).  Also, no love for Paul Thomas Anderson?  Perhaps the best filmmaker working today?  I love Eyes Wide Shut, thought I was one of the few but guess not- see you guys in therapy, but I would much rather see Magnolia or There Will be Blood on this list.

Besides those caveats, and that fact that animated films were shafted other than Lion King, there really isn’t too much complain about with the list.  Is there any film you were disappointed to see didn’t make the list?

“About bloody well time!” were the words on the lips of many BBC America viewers and fans of Orphan Black when the announcement came that, after long last, Tatiana Maslany was finally being nominated as Lead Actress in a Drama Series for the 67th Emmy Awards.

We wish you could hear the screaming in BBC America’s office just after 11:30 a.m. as Tatiana’s name was read… because we could hear you — loud, proud, and online.

I mean, Canada has already given her her own street, for crying out loud!

Her snubs for the nomination the last couple years have come as quite a shock to most anyone who’s seen the show. It’s not that she’s turning in a great performance each episode; it’s that she’s nailing like 10 different characters and counting—in one show! Geeking out actor-wise, it’s amazing to watch her change vocal intonation, accent, countenance, total physicality and on and on. It took me several episodes before it hit me that these different clones I was following were all the same actress—I mean, I knew it going in but completely forgot about it as I was pulled into the various storylines; each character felt so vastly different. That’s acting at it’s finest.

Maslany will now face Claire Danes (Homeland), Viola Davis (How to Get Away With Murder), Taraji P. Henson (Empire), Elisabeth Moss (Mad Men) and Robin Wright (House of Cards) in the Lead Actress category this year. Amazing performances from all of them but—and let me be clear—just one each.

I bet Gareth Edwards and the crew working on the Star Wars spin-off under development are kicking themselves if rumors are true that they really have passed over Maslany for the lead. (Here’s hoping, for all our sakes, that it’s not too late to still make it happen.)

BBC America were quick to congratulate their star:

You can check out our full list of 67th Emmy Awards nominees here. And if for some reason you’re one of the sorry few still not acquainted with Tatiana please allow me to let Seth Meyers introduce you (and then go watch Orphan Black):

Go #CloneClub!

As let down as I was by the Tranzalore episode last December, I was still in a stew of anticipation for the new Doctor and the new series. As the premiere date got closer, I’ll even admit that the anticipation wound up to a fevered pitch. I was very, very, very excited!

So, I wanted to wait a day before I wrote up my thoughts about the premiere episode of Doctor Who‘s eighth season, “Deep Breath,” in order to separate coherent opinion from a sort of post-Christmas morning let down. So, a day (and one more viewing) later, and I’ve found (disappointingly) that the issues remain.

Not to say there weren’t flashes of pure, Doctor-y brilliance in the episode. And if Peter Capaldi, our new Doctor, can be that good amidst that much rubbish, imagine how good he’ll be when he actually gets a better story!

Needless to say, if you haven’t seen the newest episode, and don’t like spoilers, don’t read any further!

Peter Capaldi as Doctor Who and Jenna Coleman as Clara. Courtesy of the BBC
Peter Capaldi as Doctor Who and Jenna Coleman as Clara.
Courtesy of the BBC

So, first, what worked:

1. Peter Capaldi: From ‘furious eyebrows’ to dinosaur-translating to that delightful Scottish brogue, Capaldi’s Doctor is angry, wry, sad, puzzled, conceited, arrogant, lost, humble and very, very lonely (as all of Moffat’s Doctors are). From the ungainly fingers sticking out in all directions to the sauve pose and reveal of the red silk lining of his new suit; from the desperate wretchedness of “Who frowned this face for me?” to the rapier-wit comedy of “You said that all by yourself”; from the frantic flirting with a larger-than-it-should-be dinosaur to the calm humor when he tells Clara (Jenna Coleman) that he is not her boyfriend, Capaldi reveled in his Doctor, and invited us along for (what I hope will be an amazing) ride.

2. Vastra and Jenny Flint (mostly): Vastra (Neve McIntosh) has always been one of my favorite reoccurring characters, and her and Jenny Flint’s (Catrin Stewart) relationship is given more time in this episode than any other; Jenny almost becomes a fully fleshed character. The quick allusions to Vastra’s other cases make me want a spin-off (though the Sherlock Homes references got to be a little much) and their lizard-lady kiss was certainly the first of its kind on television. Vastra provided such much needed snark and sarcasm (until she also become a monologue mouthpiece bent on lecturing fan-girls, but more on that later).

3. The Alley Scene: Capaldi and a homeless man in an alley, where Capaldi ruminates on ‘why this face.’ Moffat writing at its best: evocative, funny, illuminating without feeling like an info-dump, and creating a connection with the audience. By the end of that scene, I was sold on Capaldi’s Doctor.

4. Jenna/Doctor in the Restaurant Scene: It was funny. Both Coleman and Capaldi were obviously enjoying themselves, and the banter fairly sparkled. For that brief scene, I could see Clara and the Doctor as a team (versus other scenes, where I keep being told they were but didn’t actually see it).

5. Heaven/The Last Scene: Did I miss something? Do we know that woman named Missy (Michelle Gomez)?? Who was she? Where was she? How does she know the Doctor? What is she on about? In 30-seconds I went from ‘meh’ to ‘oh, ok, well I guess I have to watch this season.’ She’s clearly going to be a presence over the next few months. If anyone knows who she is, please say in the comments! Or even if all you have is a vague idea or an loud opinion. It is the Internet, after all. Don’t be shy!

Doctor Who
Michelle Gomez as Missy the Mystery Woman in Doctor Who: Season Eight.
Courtesy of the BBC

Alright, now on to what didn’t work.

And so much didn’t, right? Huge plot holes; convenient, highly-coincidental happenings; every single character getting a two minute monologue about how the new Doctor is the Doctor and how we should all just get over it and move on; a bad-guy that was oh-so-not-subtly a mirror to our own Doctor’s emotional state–the list, quite literally, goes on.

1. The Dinosaur: I have nothing against the odd dinosaur (I went through the dinosaurs are awesome phase just like everyone else) but why? And how? The TARDIS has been stuck inside any number of things (organic and inorganic) and time-traveled out of them, and none of those things got pulled along for the ride (and this dino is HUGE. Sorry, Vastra, you’re ‘I was there.’ didn’t explain away that one). And aside from the ‘huh…how?’ issue, there’s the fact that now we have an episode about a dinosaur, an ancient being, lost out of its time, alone and stranded, worlds away from its family and home (gee, are you getting some subtext here? You should be, because, like a lot of this episode, it’s not so much sub- as just right out there, completely textual). And if for some reason we didn’t grasp the allegory, Moffat made sure we did by having the finally-asleep-Doctor translate the lost, lonely and cold dinosaur’s thoughts for us.

2. The Attempts at Humor: This is mostly about Strax. I usually really like Strax and his obtuse, violence-first approach is good for a gallows humor. This episode, his humor is too broad, too easy. And the bit where he hits Clara in the head with the newspaper? What was that? It wasn’t funny, and it cuts from Clara flying backward, directly to Clara coming into the kitchen with neither a bruise, nor any discussion about the concussion-causing projectile. And the medical examination that follows (though explained by Strax) seems gratuitous (oh, hey, your subconscious shows men playing sport and sex! You naughty girl! How dare you have a perfectly healthy libido!). Other ‘funny’ moments that weren’t: the Doctor falling through the trees; the Doctor flipping onto the horse (only because it looked so odd); Vastra having Jenny strike a pose but not really painting her, and then asking Clara to take her clothes off when she comes into the room; Clara kicking the sonic screwdriver into (we’re led to believe) the Doctor’s crotch (hey, dick humor! Everyone likes that, right?)

The jokes feel forced and fall flat–while individually funny, perhaps, they don’t feel coherent with the whole. It’s like halfway through someone said, ‘oh, this Doctor is too dark. Too edgy. Let’s force in some humor–hey, those Three Stooges were funny, right? Why not try some stuff like that?’

Vastra and Strax in Season Eight, Episode One "Deep Breath.: Courtesy of the BBC
Vastra and Strax in Season Eight, Episode One “Deep Breath.:
Courtesy of the BBC

 3. The Lectures: By my count, we were told on four separate occasions that the Doctor was still the Doctor, he just looked different. Older, grayer, but still the Doctor, and we just needed to get over it and accept it. And if we couldn’t, well, then, we weren’t worthy to be in his presence (or hang out with Vastra’s unveiled self, either). Much like the end of the Christmas Special, the characters take time out from the episode to essentially to give the audience (really, the super-fans) a little scolding. Now, I was sad to see Matt Smith’s Doctor go, but was looking forward to a new Doctor (that is, after all, part of the charm of the show). Being constantly reprimanded about how missing the old Doctor was somehow selfish, childish and judgmental soured a great deal of the episode for me. Which leads me to…

4. Clara: Jenna Coleman seems like a perfectly nice, gracious and talented young woman. But to be honest, I have never been a huge fan of the Clara companion. And in this episode she surpassed her worst moments from all of last season combined–through no fault of her own, or even her character’s. Rather, it felt like Moffat had decided to use her as a stand-in for every Super Fan who went into hysterics when Matt Smith left, and then twisted and forced the episode to show how shallow, unsubstantial, egomaniacal and self-centered those Super Fans are–and, as mentioned in point #3, every character there, up to and including Matt Smith’s Doctor, decided to give her a lecture.

On top of that, she was singularly useless. Why was she even there? We kept getting told how important she was to the Doctor, but other than vacillating between dull disdain of his new form (how many gray hair insults can you cram into an hour-and–half show?), near-hysteria over the new Doctor’s behavior, and perky-wide-eyed naivete, she didn’t seem important. Yes, she told us a number of times (as did Vastra, and Strax and even the Matt Smith Doctor himself) how important she was to him, but why?

And how many times was she going to have to get saved by the Doctor? I counted three times in one episode. When the Doctor leaves her behind in the Larder, there’s a GIANT LEVER right next to the door, and instead of pulling it and, I don’t know, escaping, she decides to hold her breath and cry. Why? Supposedly Jenna Coleman is leaving after the Christmas Special, and if this episode is any indication of what they are doing with her character, I can’t blame her.

Peter Calpaldi as the 12th Doctor. Courtesy of the BBC
Peter Calpaldi as the 12th Doctor.
Courtesy of the BBC

5. Gaping Plot Holes. Gaping Plot Holes Every Where: The aforementioned dinosaur. The killing of said dinosaur for its optic nerve (what?? really??). The clockwork re-building robots (yet another metaphor of regeneration and renewal, in case we weren’t getting the inner turmoil) living under Victorian London.

Note: For those of you wondering, the clockwork fix-it robots first showed up during David Tennant’s Doctor in an episode titled The Girl in the Fireplace. It’s the only 2006 episode written by Moffat. If you haven’t seen it, you should. It is very, very good, and also one of the first episodes that unequivocally makes the Doctor a romantic figure. Which makes this episode’s clear statement that the Doctor is not a romantic figure very much the bookend at the end of that particular era.)

The Doctor and Clara getting stuck in the restaurant (what happened to the Doctor running away?). Once in the Larder and running away, Clara has to go back for the Doctor, pushing him in front of her, and then stops, for NO REASON, and that’s why he leaves her behind (‘Too slow.’ the Doctor says. But she wasn’t).

I don’t mind the idea of this Doctor being one to sacrifice others for a greater good–the Doctor has done that in the past–but I do have a problem with it being so blatantly stupid.  The fact that Clara pounds on the door and wails against its not opening when there’s a GIANT RED LEVER right next to it. The fact that she stays in the Larder for an improbable amount of time when the door is open, panicking. The fact that the clockwork robots can tell if you’re breathing, but crying apparently does not clue them into one’s humanity. The fact that Vastra and Jenny swirl down to the larder on giant swathes of cloth but don’t think to, I don’t know, drop a rope or ladder so they can get out. No, they literally jump in and pull their only method of escape down with them. Or that Strax, the military-trained, death-before-dishonor, we-are-Sparta-warrior-dude was the first to need to breathe and didn’t even react to that.

Or the fact that the entire episode is spent telling Clara that this Doctor is different. He’s not her Doctor anymore. He’s still the Doctor, but changed, and she’ll need to accept his changes and then at the very end, the Doctor comes out and says he hasn’t changed, he’s exactly the same, and can’t she see him for him?

So which is it? It’s enough to make a girl’s head explode.

Dinosaur!?! Courtesy of BBC
Dinosaur!?!
Courtesy of BBC

I have high hopes about Capaldi’s Doctor and the rest of the season. This particular episode was not a great one–certainly not for such a long-awaited premiere–but there were hints of a excellence in it. I hope the rest of the season gets better. Considering the episode didn’t even touch on Gallifrey and the other Time Lords who clearly exist since, you know, they saved the Doctor, hopefully we’ll find out more about that soon.

Also, what kind of Doctor do we think this 12th Doctor will be? If the 10th Doctor was ‘the one who regrets’ and the 11th Doctor was the ‘one who forgets’ does that make the 12th Doctor the one who’s redeemed? It certainly seems so, with the Doctor’s ‘I’ve made mistakes’ speech.

What did you think? Love Capaldi? Hate Capaldi? Don’t care? Let us know in the comments!

Briefly: Doctor Who may not be making an appearance at this year’s San Diego Comic Con, but that’s probably because the entire team will be hard at work preparing for the new series’ just-announced, fast approaching premiere date.

BBC has debuted a short new teaser for the upcoming episodes (which I can’t watch as I’m not in the US), and has also debuted a new key image featuring Capaldi’s Doctor and our pal Clara inside the Tardis.

US readers can take a look at the teaser below, while everyone else will have to settle for a poster. Doctor Who‘s eighth series will premiere on August 23rd.

Season8

The BBC Just uploaded this hyper quick teaser trailer for the next season of their hit show Doctor Who. The trailer shows Peter Capaldi silhouetted inside the TARDIS, with the newest news that he will be hitting screens this August!

This season marks the Twelfth iteration of The Doctor as Matt Smith transforms into Peter Capaldi. I, much like a lot of geeks, am very excited to see what direction Capaldi take the role of The Doctor. I got bored of Smiths portrayal after his first season and never bothered to watch any of the others. You could also blame me not returning due to Moffats bland writing, he just followed the same damn formula over and over.

It’s also going to be interesting to see how the fandom reacts to a much OLDER Doctor.

Catch it all in August! We are VERY excited!

Briefly: Following our first look at the new Time Lord on set earlier this month, BBC has debuted the first image of Peter Capaldi’s Doctor in costume.

According to a BBC blog post, Capaldi had this to say about his new garb: “He’s woven the future from the cloth of the past. Simple, stark, and back to basics. No frills, no scarf, no messing, just 100 per cent Rebel Time Lord.”

Stephen Moffat adds “New Doctor, new era, and of course new clothes. Monsters of the universe, the vacation is over – Capaldi is suited and booted and coming to get you!”

Take a look at the photo below, and let us know what you think of the new Doctor, and his new costume!

CapalldiCostime

Perhaps we shouldn’t be too hard on Mr. Moffat. He did, after all, give us a nearly note-perfect 50th Anniversary special. And the David Tennant farewell special was, in our opinion, almost perfect television. Maybe we could curb our disappointment in Matt Smith’s finale—but that is proving difficult, because it could have been so good.

The Christmas Episode was a lot like Christmas—weeks spent in delirious anticipation as the wrapped presents pile higher and higher, followed by an hour and half of slow realization that most people are as stumped as you are in regards to gift-giving, and ending in a sort of bland, vague, obstinate depression that even chocolate can’t seem to fix.

Matt Smith as the 11th Doctor.
Matt Smith as the 11th Doctor.

What Worked, Really Worked

What we loved in this episode:

1. Owning Matt Smith’s bald head and pretty-good wig.

2. The rhyme found in the Christmas Cracker. Simple, sad. Like much that is great with the Doctor, it echoes and knocks around and provokes unexpected reactions.

3. The fact that he hasn’t fixed the phone yet.

4. The Papal Mainframe. Could we get a spin-off of that, please?

5. The gentleness of Matt Smith’s final good-bye.

6. The Time Lords are definitely stuck in a pocket universe. No more debate about that.

7. We never have to worry about limited regenerations again.

8. The wooden Cyberman (it was a little goofy but still…)

Clara (JENNA COLEMAN), The Doctor (MATT SMITH) surrounded by all of our favorite bad guys. (C) BBC - Photographer: Ray Burmiston
Clara (JENNA COLEMAN), The Doctor (MATT SMITH) surrounded by all of our favorite bad guys.
(C) BBC – Photographer: Ray Burmiston

A Season’s Worth of Story

It wasn’t that there weren’t great ideas in this episode—indeed, there was a plethora of them—but it felt as if those ideas were never given time to breathe. So many awesome and terrible things happening, and yet the episode never really landed on any of them, making everything seem impermanent and somehow, unimportant. The Church of the Papal Mainframe—what an amazing thing. What an incredible addition to the world of the Doctor. And Orla Brady was luminous in all her dark, mysterious beauty as Mother Superious Tasha Lem (and did anyone else get some Dune flashbacks throughout that whole sequence?), a woman who is neither awed nor frightened of the Doctor; a women with power equal to—if not greater than—his. We could have watched the Doctor and Tasha Lem debate moral imperatives all day. But, like almost all of the things introduced or visited in this episode, it was over too soon and not explored enough.

What other things, you may ask? Well, let’s take the Silence. One of the most intriguing villains created during the Matt Smith era, they are—quite suddenly—decreed to be allies of the Doctor. Via voice over. At one point the Doctor blithely says “oh, them, they’re confessional priests. Engineered to make you forgot everything you’ve confessed” (or something to that effect) which brings a few more questions to mind: How does he know this? Why didn’t he know it before? And what, exactly, is the point of forgetting that one has confessed one’s sins? You don’t forget the sins, and you won’t remember whatever penance you are given, you just forget you’ve confessed? (As a recovering Catholic, this particular throwaway line boggled our mind for quite a while). The idea was very, very cool. Chill inducing, even…but it was brought out, waved about quickly so we couldn’t think about it much, then thrown aside in favor of yet another Doctor/Clara conversation.

Matt Smith as the 11th Doctor--with a random Cyberman head he calls Handles.  Courtesy of BBC,
Matt Smith as the 11th Doctor–with a random Cyberman head he calls Handles.
Courtesy of BBC,

Or the whole explanation about the Silence, and the splinter sect set upon destroying the Doctor (essentially all of the Rory/Amy Pond storyline) was just thrown out and forgotten. The moment that should have been chill-inducing—Tasha Lem declaring “Silence Will Fall”—fell strangely flat. The episode hadn’t earned that yet, and it didn’t ring true.

Or what about the town of Christmas? The best episodes of the Doctor are the ones where we, the audience, see clearly what sacrifice is being asked of the Doctor—and understand what each decision costs him. Save the child or the world? Save the last of a species or all of humanity? Lose a planet, to win a war? In “The Time of the Doctor,” we never see what is so special about the town of Christmas. Why doesn’t he just put everybody in the TARDIS and send them somewhere safe? Yes, the crack is there but that doesn’t mean the town is important. Just the crack. And why did the townspeople just sort of shrug and say, ‘ok, I guess we’re at war now. No biggie. We’ll just live in a life-destroying warzone and see our children die young because the Doctor is our Sheriff now’ Why? Did no one ever stop and say, ‘gee, Doctor, maybe one of your spacefaring friends could give us a ride out of here?’ or even, ‘gee, Doctor, you seem like a nice guy, but why are we dying in your private war? That doesn’t seem right…’

What about the truth field? That was an exciting device that also wasn’t used to its full potential. Moments of levity, moments of heartbreak—the truth field could have been utilized so much more, with potentially astonishing results.

Clara’s family dinner (who were the adult couple there? Had we met them before? We were so confused as to who they were and why the Blond one was soooooo unlikeable)—again, it didn’t add anything to the episode (other than a reason for Clara to call the Doctor) and it felt flat and a little trite. And, really, cooking a turkey in the TARDIS is why Clara was with the Doctor when he went to Trenzalore?

The town of Christmas, with it's vaguely Victorian citizens, minutes of daylight, and year-round Christmas decorations. Courtesy of the BBC
The town of Christmas, with it’s vaguely Victorian citizens, minutes of daylight, and year-round Christmas decorations.
Courtesy of the BBC

What–How–What?

Even ignoring some of the leaps of logic the episode forced on us…you know what? We can’t ignore it. Here’s our list of the some of the worst ones, in our opinion:

1. It took 300 years for the TARDIS to come back because Clara was on the outside?

2. The Daleks, who no longer remember anything about the Doctor, still show up, with all the other baddies?

3. What about the Weeping Angels, who were just hanging out in the forest, unwatched by anyone, who never attack, ever, for all those centuries?

The Weeping Angels, who showed up once and then...decided it was time to go home, curl up by the fire and watch TV? Courtesy of the BBC
The Weeping Angels, who showed up once and then…decided it was time to go home, curl up by the fire and watch TV?
Courtesy of the BBC

4. Where did the Doctor get that Cyberman head? Why did he even have it?

5. Did not one person in the Church of the Papal Mainframe send out a distress signal when the Daleks invaded? How is that possible?

6. Once the Daleks invaded the Papal Mainframe, why didn’t they just wipe the planet out? Why were they still involved in land-based siege warfare?

7. In the hundreds of years the Doctor was there, he couldn’t have built a wall around the town to defend it?

8. Could the Doctor not have shouted through the crack: “Hey, stop sending out this signal, you’re starting Galactic War 14 up here, I’ll let you know when you can come over!” Could he not have at least tried, once? It worked when Clara did it.

9. How did Tasha Lem get the TARDIS? How did she know where to find Clara? How did she know how to fly it?

The phenomenal Orla Brady as Tasha Lem in "The Time of the Doctor." Courtesy of BBC.
The phenomenal Orla Brady as Tasha Lem in “The Time of the Doctor.”
Courtesy of BBC.

 

10. How did the Doctor not know that the planet was Trenzalore? He’d been there before.

11. What is the point of a Church that requires you to be naked, but is ok with holographic cloths? What is the difference, really, between actual cloths and projected clothes that do the exact same thing, i.e., cover up your nakedness? If you have to be naked to enter, than be naked. Sheesh. And why was being naked so important??

12.Was the Doctor Santa? Because he kept making toys for the Children of Christmas…

The episode creaked along despite those, relying upon Matt Smith’s bravura and Jenna Coleman’s huge pair of brown eyes (where did you think we were going with that?? Naughty!). Moffat’s greatest episodes have always had a few ‘wait-a-minute—how—’ moments, but those were usually minor quibbles that tended to get lost in the epic quality of the events surrounding them; this episode, unfortunately, never reached that epic, breathtaking momentum of “The Day of the Doctor,” or “Demon’s Run.”

Perhaps all of the flaws boil down to the fact that the episode tells us quite a lot; people throw about explanations (a lot of it in voice over) and facts, that tie the basic elements of the plot together, but we are never shown most of it. One example: The Doctor allied with the Silence. Yes, please, show us that. Take the time spent with Clara’s family (ugh) and show us how the Doctor found common ground with the Silence. That would have been worth watching. Or give us more Tasha Lem. Or spend some time in the town of Christmas so we cared about it, even a little.

Peter Capaldi as the 12th Doctor in his debut during the Doctor Who Christmas Special, "The Time of the Doctor." Courtesy of BBC
Peter Capaldi as the 12th Doctor in his debut during the Doctor Who Christmas Special, “The Time of the Doctor.”
Courtesy of BBC

Regenerations? As Many As You Want

We did get some answers, the most important was the explanation as to how the Doctor would get past the ‘only 12 regenerations’ rule (SPOILER AHEAD)—Clara pleads with the Time Lords (via the crack) to help the Doctor, and the Time Lords move the crack and give the Doctor more regenerations. Problem solved.

If you are wondering to yourself, why, if the Time Lords could move the crack, why they didn’t do that HUNDREDS OF YEARS AGO and solve the whole blockading-the-planet issue, so are we, dear reader, so are we.

The Doctor’s regeneration took out the enemy ships (ok…) and after all the fallout is over, he goes back to the TARDIS. Note, he doesn’t bring the Time Lords through, even though the way is now clear. Not really sure why not.

Clara follows, and Matt Smith’s Doctor appears because apparently the regeneration’s first step was to make him young before, you know, actually regenerating. Because that’s what it does, now.

He then gives what we think was meant to be a heartwarming speech about how we all change throughout our lives (which sounded remarkably similar to a letter we wrote some months ago, you can compare here) but really, it felt both a little clichéd as well as somewhat chiding—we could hear the writer/showrunner instead of the Doctor, telling the fans that change is good for them, so stop whinging and give the new guy a fair shake.

Karen Gillan as Amy Pond says good-bye to Matt Smith's Doctor in "The Time of the Doctor." Courtesy of BBC
Karen Gillan as Amy Pond says good-bye to Matt Smith’s Doctor in “The Time of the Doctor.”
Courtesy of BBC

Amy Pond shows up (the Doctor hallucinates during regeneration now, apparently) and says good bye to her raggedy man.

Then, BAM!, it’s Capaldi. The kidney line was great. The ‘do you know how to drive this thing?’ was, like the episode, too on-the-nose and a little predictable (since Lem had already stated that flying the TARDIS was easy, perhaps a better line would have been ‘who’s been driving this thing?”). And then we ended the episode, not on the 12th Doctor’s face, in a panic, but rather on Clara’s face, which made it seem like there was more dialogue, or something, supposed to happen. It actually took a minute to realize the episode was over. And then, all we could muster was sort of a huge ‘meh.’ It was no “I don’t want to go.”, that’s for sure. It wasn’t even an ‘I have to kiss you to save you but in doing so I will sacrifice myself!’ regeneration. It certainly wasn’t how we envisioned the end of Matt Smith’s Doctor—the Doctor referred to in “The Day of the Doctor” as the ‘one who forgets.’

We will miss Matt Smith—he who taught us that bow ties and fezzes are cool—and we still have high hopes for Capaldi. But we do wish that this Christmas special had been, well, more about our lovely madman with a box, who had so many rules and so much grief, and who thought every one of us were important.

Still, it was a grand ride, and we’re sad it had to end.

What did you think? Let us know in the comments and follow us at @geekscapedotnet and @sjbwrite!

Briefly: There’s just five days to go until The Time of the Doctor finally airs, and Matt Smith is no longer our doctor.

BBC has debuted a new, longer trailer for the special (watch the previous teaser here), and just as before, everything looks great. Seriously, I can’t wait to ignore whatever family gathering I happen to be at when 8pm rolls around, and watch the magic happen on BBC instead.

Take a look at the new trailer below, and as always, let us know what you think!

Orbiting a quiet backwater planet, the massed forces of the universe’s deadliest species gather, drawn to a mysterious message that echoes out to the stars – and amongst them, the Doctor. Rescuing Clara from a family Christmas dinner, the Time Lord and his best friend must learn what this enigmatic signal means for his own fate and that of the universe.

Briefly: We’re now just 14 days away, everyone!

No, not from Christmas, silly. I’m talking about The Time of the Doctor of course! The much more important event (and Matt Smith’s final appearance as the Doctor) just so happens to take place on December 25th, and we couldn’t be more excited!

BBC has just launched the first teaser for the episode, which naturally features a few small spoilers. It clocks in at a short 36 seconds long, but it’s 36 seconds of perfect, and really gets us excited to throw on our new Tardis bath robes (the ones we put right at the top of our lists) and get down to business on Christmas day.

Take a look at the teaser below, and let us know what you think! Are you ready to say goodbye to Matt Smith?

Orbiting a quiet backwater planet, the massed forces of the universe’s deadliest species gather, drawn to a mysterious message that echoes out to the stars – and amongst them, the Doctor. Rescuing Clara from a family Christmas dinner, the Time Lord and his best friend must learn what this enigmatic signal means for his own fate and that of the universe.

After stunning audiences and silencing critics with the (mostly) pitch-perfect 50th anniversary special, “The Day of the Doctor,” Moffat et. al.  now have their work cut out for them with the Christmas Special. Per tradition (if one other reincarnation at a Christmas Special can be a tradition…) this episode must be: Seasonal, Sad, Funny, Heroic and Devastating. Not exactly the easiest thing to pull off. And now that we know that Gallfirey is still in existence (can we get a big, loud woot! for that?), what possible adventure can our 11th Doctor (he’s the 11th, not the 12th–you know what, that’s a different article) have that brings together all of the above themes and moments while also including Cyberman, Daleks, Weeping Angels and the Silence? Not to mention the regeneration into the 12th Doctor at some point?

New pictures released by the BBC yesterday answer no questions but are certainly fuel for the fire. Persue below at your leisure and let us know what you think in the comments. Rampant speculation about what the Christmas Special could be about encouraged.

Clara (JENNA COLEMAN), The Doctor (MATT SMITH) surrounded by all of our favorite bad guys. (C) BBC - Photographer: Ray Burmiston
Clara (JENNA COLEMAN), The Doctor (MATT SMITH) surrounded by all of our favorite bad guys.
(C) BBC – Photographer: Ray Burmiston
 Clara (JENNA COLEMAN), The Doctor (MATT SMITH), same as the first photo but this time with gears and clockwork around them. (C) BBC - Photographer: Ray Burmiston
Clara (JENNA COLEMAN), The Doctor (MATT SMITH), same as the first photo but this time with gears and clockwork around them. (C) BBC – Photographer: Ray Burmiston
The Doctor (MATT SMITH) - with a Cyberman head. That can't be good! (C) BBC - Photographer: Adrian Rogers
The Doctor (MATT SMITH) – with a Cyberman head. That can’t be good!
(C) BBC – Photographer: Adrian Rogers
The Doctor (MATT SMITH), Clara (JENNA COLEMAN) striding purposeful towards (away?) from something. (C) BBC - Photographer: Adrian Rogers
The Doctor (MATT SMITH), Clara (JENNA COLEMAN) striding purposeful towards (away?) from something.
(C) BBC – Photographer: Adrian Rogers
Clara (JENNA COLEMAN) - looking somber (and cold!) and holding...something. (C) BBC - Photographer: Adrian Rogers
Clara (JENNA COLEMAN) – looking somber (and cold!) and holding…something.
(C) BBC – Photographer: Adrian Rogers

Not sure how we missed this (well, with all the hullabaloo over the actual special, maybe we can be forgiven).

It’s a full 30-minute (ish) short with the ‘classic’ doctors (Peter Davison, Sylvester McCoy, Colin Baker, Paul McGann with a VO cameo by Tom Baker) attempting to get involved in the 50th anniversary special. The full “reboot” can be found at the BBC Website, and just for giggles here’s the trailer (keep an eye out for Capt. Jack!):

Briefly: Doctor Who‘s upcoming Christmas special (and Matt Smith’s final appearance as the doctor) just got its official title. The episode is called The Time of the Doctor, and here’s its official synopsis:

Orbiting a quiet backwater planet, the massed forces of the universe’s deadliest species gather, drawn to a mysterious message that echoes out to the stars. And amongst them – the Doctor. Rescuing Clara from a family Christmas dinner, the Time Lord and his best friend must learn what this enigmatic signal means for his own fate and that of the universe.

BBC has also revealed the key art and first teaser for the special, which you can also see below. Again, I’ve never actually seen an episode of the show, so I don’t understand exactly what I’m looking at, but in any case it appears that fans have a great Christmas ahead of them.

Time of the Doctor Key Art

Rumors are spreading about a reunion of the comedy group Monty Python, and this time they are apparently true! The group has a press conference scheduled for this Thursday at the Playhouse Theatre in London, where Spamalot is currently playing.

The group, including John Cleese, Terry Gilliam, Terry Jones, Michael Palin and Eric Idle, weren’t clear on what the comeback would entail. This information is likely to be shared at the press conference.

“We’re getting together and putting on a show – it’s real,” Jones confirmed to the BBC early Tuesday. “I’m quite excited about it. I hope it makes us a lot of money. I hope to be able to pay off my mortgage!”

100714_EricIdle-blogSpan

Idle let the cat out of the bag early via Twitter:

Idle

Briefly: BBC has just debuted a new trailer for the Doctor Who 50th anniversary special, The Day of the Doctor.

The trailer looks pretty fantastic, though I can’t say that I really know what’s going on as I still haven’t seen a single episode of the show.

In any case, take a look at the video below, and let us know how excited you are! The Day of the Doctor airs on November 23rd (and is also hitting theatres)!

Yesterday, the BBC released a new trailer for the Doctor Who 50th Anniversary special. The trailer clocks in at 1:01 and features each of the eleven doctors–if you can spot them. It’s a little bit like Where’s Waldo–but not to worry, we scoured the video for you so you don’t have to.

Doctor Who, the First Doctor (William Hartnell), the Second Doctor (Patrick Troughton), the Third Doctor (Jon Pertwee), the Fourth Doctor (Tom Baker), the Fifth Doctor (Peter Davison), the Sixth Doctor (Colin Baker), the Seventh Doctor (Sylvester McCoy), the Eighth Doctor (Paul McGann), the Ninth Doctor (Christopher Eccleston), the Tenth Doctor (David Tennant) and the Eleventh Doctor (Matt Smith) © BBC 2013
Doctor Who, the First Doctor (William Hartnell), the Second Doctor (Patrick Troughton), the Third Doctor (Jon Pertwee), the Fourth Doctor (Tom Baker), the Fifth Doctor (Peter Davison), the Sixth Doctor (Colin Baker), the Seventh Doctor (Sylvester McCoy), the Eighth Doctor (Paul McGann), the Ninth Doctor (Christopher Eccleston), the Tenth Doctor (David Tennant) and the Eleventh Doctor (Matt Smith)
© BBC 2013

1st Doctor (William Hartnell): 10 seconds in. And, for the first time ever, in living color. We may tire this phrase out by the end of this article, but oh-my-God-super-awesome.

2nd Doctor (Patrick Troughton): 17 seconds in (yes, the BBC let us wallow in the glory of Mr. Hartnell in color for a good, long time); he’s in silhouette, in the back of a tunnel

4th Doctor (Tom Baker): 17 seconds in. Yes, out of order. Baker floats, surrounded by his scarf–and his jelly babies

A break, where we see Sarah Jane (Elisabeth Sladen) holding on orb, with the:

3rd Doctor (Jon Pertwee): 23 seconds, in the Tardis. Looks like he’s lecturing someone.

Pull back, it’s Clara (Jenna-Louise Coleman) holding the orb as we rush towards an alien landscape.

5th, 6th, 7th Doctors (Peter Davison, Colin Baker, Sylvester McCoy): 37 seconds. You’ll have to pause the video to catch them all, but here they are (in foreground to background order):

7th Doctor: just his hat, as he his leaping, headfirst, towards the camera

5th Doctor: in profile, reaching for something

6th Doctor: back to camera, walking away from 5th and 7th and towards the:

9th Doctor (Christopher Eccleston): 37 seconds to 39 seconds; while he is in the frame you also see four other doctors, 5th, 6th, 7th and:

8th Doctor (Paul McGann): 39 seconds, look to the left of the screen as the camera is about to pass the 9th Doctor, he’s just there

10th Doctor (David Tennant): visible in the background from 37 seconds, the 10th Doctor comes to the foreground at 41 seconds

11th Doctor (Matt Smith): 43 seconds to end.

Matt Smith, David Tennant and John Hurt in "The Day of the Doctor." Credit: Adrian Rogers, BBC
Matt Smith, David Tennant and John Hurt in “The Day of the Doctor.”
Credit: Adrian Rogers, BBC

Unfortunately, no John Hurt or Peter Capaldi (which makes sense when viewed as a trailer to the Doctor’s legacy but still…)

If you look in the frames around each doctor, you’ll see iconic images from both the series and that Doctor’s particular time. The trailer has got more symbolism than a Bosch painting.

The BBC said “This special trailer is set to show all of the Doctors as they first appeared on screen.” It is meant to be a homage to the legacy of each of the Doctors–and as such, there’s no new footage from the upcoming special–but it certainly amps up expectation.

“The Day of the Doctor,” the Doctor Who 50th Anniversary special, is set to air in simulcast on November 23, 2013 (still no air time as of today) on BBC America here in the States, and will be followed by the Christmas Special later in the year.

David Tennant as DI Hardy in the UK version of Broadchurch. Photo Courtesy of the BBC
David Tennant as DI Hardy in the UK version of Broadchurch.
Photo Courtesy of the BBC

Fox announced last summer that it was remaking the eight-episode Broadchurch, the critically acclaimed BBC series about a horrific crime in a small seaside town, now, according to EW.com, they have confirmed that David Tennant will be reprising his role of the lead detective for the American version.

Tennant, well known for his portrayal of the Tenth Doctor in the Doctor Who series, will be playing an American detective in the Fox version; the series is expected to follow the original closely. Chris Chibnall, the series’s creator, says: “I’m very, very fascinated to see this story in a different landscape with an acting ensemble that’s just a strong but taken from really great American actors.”

No news yet on any other casting decisions, though.

Broadchurch’s finale drew more than ten million viewers when it aired on ITV in the UK; the drama also recently aired on BBC America, drawing critical praise on both sides of the pond. The BBC is planning a second season but no word yet if Tennant and his co-star, Olivia Colman, will be returning.

Fox is set to air the US version in the 2014-2015 season. Chibnall is on board to write the premiere episode, while Dan Futterman (Capote) and Anya Epstein (In Treatment) have joined as executive producers and showrunners.

To the Twelfth Doctor:

It’s hard, changing. People don’t react well to someone who is different—we like conformity. We like to keep our boxes neatly partitioned and separate, sealed and shut once we ‘know’ someone. You may have noticed, Doctor #12, a certain reaction to the announcement of your regeneration. Please don’t take it personally. You have to understand, this cycle is normal. This is what we do.

We don’t like change, humans. We like to keep things as close to stagnant as we can.

We don’t like people breaking out of our notions of them.

We fear that change will make us unimportant, irrelevant.

That in the cataclysms we will lose our anchor.

We view change as death.

It’s why, perhaps, fanatics react so pugnaciously to changes. Fandoms are built around a world, a person, a myth that resonates so deeply that for that world to change means that nothing is sacred. Being part of a Fandom is a religious experience, in that metaphor becomes myth becomes dogma and Fandoms worship—critically, intelligently, but wholeheartedly—at the altar of personality and story.

Most authors/creators of worlds with a Fandom following take altering the fabric of that world very seriously. Or take a demented joy out of ensuring that the readers/viewers/followers never know who’s safe (looking at you, R.R.Martin, Whedon) but either way, the world remains secure. Fans take a glee in knowing that Games of Thrones is really Don’t Get Attached; some get a perverse sense of enjoyment being martyrs to a fandom whose leaders declare: ‘No one is safe. Anyone can die.’ But at the end, Westeros still stands in conflict; Serenity flies again.

Courtesy of the BBC.
Courtesy of the BBC.

But, Doctor, you’re different.

You don’t die. You change. You become unrecognizable, retaining only certain core values. You see the world differently; you approach problems with different tactics. You like different foods. You are unarguable different.

But not.

Not really.

You’re still you, aren’t you?

You’re an anomaly. You don’t make sense. A fandom shouldn’t follow a character through twelve cast changes, through long gaps of silence, for over fifty years, and still care so deeply, so wonderfully, so closely as your fandom does.

Why do they care so much? About a raggedy man, a time traveler with a screwdriver in a dodgy blue box and somewhat crap special effects?

What is it about you, Doctor, that captures our imaginations and our allegiance not just once or twice but twelve times over fifty years?

Fifty years. That’s three generations, fathers to daughters to grandsons…aunts to nephews to cousins. There are countries who haven’t lasted that long.

Why, Doctor?

Maybe it’s because, as much as humanity fights change, we know, deep down, that change is constant. Change is everywhere. Every moment alters our perceptions, our opinions, our judgment—if we are an amalgam of what we have experienced then every heartbeat make us someone new.

The child we were is unrecognizable to the adult we are now; the girl in high school is a stranger. Our twenties feel like they happened to someone on TV; last year is a memory of who we had been.

Perhaps we react to the Doctor because we know, instinctively, what it is like to sit up and wonder ‘am I a ginger?’ because sometimes in the morning, caught between the alarm clock and start of day, we don’t remember. Are we the child? The fifteen-year-old caught making a 37-point turn on our driving exam? The 21-year-old clubbing in New York City? The young wife or the stern teacher? When we open our eyes at the blare of the clock, will we suddenly remember why we loved sour candies as a child, even though we can’t eat them now?

Doctor, you may get a new face, but so do we. Lines appear, freckles fade, our hair turns grey, then white. We get taller, than shorter, we get thinner or fatter. We change, every year, so that sometimes we are unrecognizable to ourselves.

Courtesy of BBC, Peter Capaldi as the Twelfth Doctor.
Courtesy of BBC, Peter Capaldi as the Twelfth Doctor.

So when you regenerate, Doctor, and each time you find your footing—each change is a successful you—it comforts us. It eases that deep worry that as we have changed, we have lost.

Doctor, you prove to us that as we change, we only gain. We only improve. We have not lost the five-year-old who could play, naked, happy, joyful, for hours in a haystack. We have only gained all the other us-es.

The Doctor allows us to look forward to who we will be become, and encourages us to let go of who we were—holding onto only that which serves us for the now, but never forgetting what we owe to all that we did before.

So, Twelfth Doctor, the fandom may be querulous now, but they are reacting only to the fear in their own lives—we will grow to champion you. And accept you. Just as we—hopefully—grow to accept and champion ourselves.

You show us that change is not death, only different.

So, welcome, Doctor.

And thanks.

Well Whovians, the time is upon you.

Well, okay maybe not yet. There’s still a bit of waiting to do before the new 50th anniversary special premieres. But who isn’t excited to see the return of David Tennant (along with Matt Smith) in The Day of the Doctor?

This is the first time the modern-era series will feature two different incarnations of The Doctor and fans are excited to say the least. Billie Piper also returns to the series as Rose Tyler, another fan favorite from the Doctor Who timeline.

And John Hurt (V for Vendetta, Hellboy) isn’t exactly small time either, is he?

The new 75 minute episode The Day of the Doctor will air November 23rd on BBC America and is written by Stephen Moffat.

In other Who news, writer Mark Gatiss (Doctor Who, Sherlock) wrote An Adventure in Space and Time, starring David Bradley (Harry Potter movies, Broadchurch), Brian Cox (Red, Bourne Supremacy), Jessica Raine (The Woman in Black, Call the Midwife) and Sacha Dhawan (After Earth). This one follows the making of Doctor Who starting with William Hartnell, the first Doctor. Also airing is a special documentary looking at the science behind the popular show and Me, You and Doctor Who, which covers the cultural significance of the long running television show.

Are you excited? Let us know how you will be celebrating the new season. Geronimo!

doctor-who-final-poster__130911115911

orphanblackYou mean to tell me you missed it? Orphan Black, the story of Sarah Manning, a drifter who finds out the hard way that she’s a clone, is returning for an encore presentation starting Saturday, September 14th on BBC America. What is “finding out the hard way”, you ask? She watches a woman commit suicide at a train station and only after trying to rob her does she realize the woman is her exact duplicate. So what does she do? Steal her identity, of course!

What Sarah doesn’t know (at first) is that she’s stolen the identity of a police officer. She’s then forced into the role as she learns more about her past, herself, and begins meeting more and more of her clones.

Why should you watch? How about to see Tatiana Maslany (Diary of the Dead, The Vow), who was nominated for quite a few awards for the role. She plays multiple characters (she’s a clone, duh), and is rather excellent. She even does a variety of accents, since many of the clones come from different countries.

If her acting and hotness aren’t enough, her brother Felix, played by Jordan Gavaris, adds a level of sarcastic comedy and hilariously negative one-liners that make for guaranteed laughs. He gives Orphan Black a comedic side that at times it needs, with some of the dark characters that viewers eventually learn are pulling the strings.

The best part of watching is trying to decide which clone is the hottest. Yes, it sounds dumb since they’re all played by the same actor, but she is so good, you find yourself forgetting they’re all the same person in real life.

I have to admit, I only caught this show because of the multitude of commercials they aired during last season’s Doctor Who, but I am certainly glad the commercials made me curious.

Of course, if you did catch the show first time around, you likely agree it is absolutely worth seeing again. It airs at 10:00 P.M. on BBC America starting September 14th.

OrphanBlack-Blog-1-1024x576

Briefly: After what seems like weeks (and weeks) of waiting, pondering, and speculation, BBC has finally revealed just who will take up the reins as Doctor Who‘s new Doctor.

The network has chosen 55-year old Scottish actor and Torchwood / World War Z star Peter Capaldi to portray the twelfth Doctor, whose role will officially begin after Matt Smith’s final performance in this year’s Christmas special.

I (still) have never seen an episode of the series in my entire life (despite having it recommended to me almost daily), so I really have no thoughts on the casting choice. Fans, are you looking forward to seeing Capaldi in action? Will he be a worthy replacement of Matt Smith, or is it simply too early to tell? Be sure to sound out below!

Sad news for fans of Doctor Who (who love Matt Smith… I think).

Less than two weeks after a new season was confirmed, and just a day after former partner Karen Gillan joined Marvel’s Guardians of the Galaxy, BBC has announced Matt Smith’s departure from the Doctor Who franchise.

Smith has portrayed the good doctor for four years now, and the series has only skyrocketed in popularity over that time. Matt’s final performances will be this year’s 50th anniversary special in November, and the Christmas special less than a month later.

What are your thoughts on the news? Is there an actor that you would like to see fill the role? Read statements from lead writer and executive producer Steven Moffat, and Matt Smith himself below!

Matt Smith says: “Doctor Who has been the most brilliant experience for me as an actor and a bloke, and that largely is down to the cast, crew and fans of the show. I’m incredibly grateful to all the cast and crew who work tirelessly every day, to realise all the elements of the show and deliver Doctor Who to the audience. Many of them have become good friends and I’m incredibly proud of what we have achieved over the last four years.
 
Having Steven Moffat as show runner write such varied, funny, mind bending and brilliant scripts has been one of the greatest and most rewarding challenges of my career. It’s been a privilege and a treat to work with Steven, he’s a good friend and will continue to shape a brilliant world for the Doctor.
 
The fans of Doctor Who around the world are unlike any other; they dress up, shout louder, know more about the history of the show (and speculate more about the future of the show) in a way that I’ve never seen before, your dedication is truly remarkable. Thank you so very much for supporting my incarnation of the Time Lord, number Eleven, who I might add is not done yet, I’m back for the 50th anniversary and the Christmas special!
 
It’s been an honour to play this part, to follow the legacy of brilliant actors, and helm the TARDIS for a spell with ‘the ginger, the nose and the impossible one’. But when ya gotta go, ya gotta go and Trenzalore calls. Thank you guys. Matt.”

Steven Moffat, lead writer and executive producer, says : “Every day, on every episode, in every set of rushes, Matt Smith surprised me: the way he’d turn a line, or spin on his heels, or make something funny, or out of nowhere make me cry, I just never knew what was coming next. The Doctor can be clown and hero, often at the same time, and Matt rose to both challenges magnificently. And even better than that, given the pressures of this extraordinary show, he is one of the nicest and hardest-working people I have ever had the privilege of knowing. Whatever we threw at him – sometimes literally – his behaviour was always worthy of the Doctor.
 
But great actors always know when it’s time for the curtain call, so this Christmas prepare for your hearts to break, as we say goodbye to number Eleven. Thank you Matt – bow ties were never cooler.
 
Of course, this isn’t the end of the story, because now the search begins. Somewhere out there right now – all unknowing, just going about their business – is someone who’s about to become the Doctor. A life is going to change, and Doctor Who will be born all over again! After 50 years, that’s still so exciting!”
 
Having starred alongside three different companions, Amy Pond (Karen Gillan), Rory Williams (Arthur Darvill) and most recently Clara Oswald (Jenna Coleman), Matt’s Doctor has fought Daleks and Cybermen, as well as Weeping Angels in New York. Regularly heard shouting ‘run’ and ‘Geronimo’, through Matt’s Doctor fans have been introduced to a new culinary combination – fish fingers and custard!
 
Matt’s spectacular exit is yet to be revealed and will be kept tightly under wraps. He will return to BBC One screens in the unmissable 50th anniversary episode on Saturday 23rd November 2013 – TUNE IN!

DOCTOR WHO *embargoed 19th March*

After the cliffhanger ending to Saturday’s Doctor Who season (or series… whatever) finale, I can’t even begin to imagine the fan uproar had BBC decided not to continue the show. It’s a good thing then, that BBC today confirmed a continuation into 2014, and even more new content before the end of this year.

No information has been released about the next season, but I’d expect most of the lead cast to be returning. As for 2013, on November 23rd a new 3D special will air, starring Matt Smith, Jenna Coleman, David Tennant, and John Hurt , celebrating the 50th anniversary of Doctor Who (that is a ridiculous amount of time). A Christmas special has also been announced, but no further information has been revealed.

Lead writer and executive producer Steven Moffat will of course be returning for next year’s Doctor Who offering. What do you hope to see during the season? What did you think of Saturday’s finale?

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Source: BBC

After viewing the new episode of Doctor Who, “The Bells of Saint John”, I was struck with the overwhelming feeling that this might finally be the companion that really sticks with the Doctor for the long haul. In the last seven series (or seasons, as we would call them here in the US), the companions have been some of the most memorable in the entire run of the show. That is, aside from Sarah Jane Smith, who was the companion for the majority of the Tom Baker years.  Now, let’s take a look at the previous companions before we jump into the breakdown of who Clara is.

Title card from last week's series premiere.
Title card from last week’s series premiere.

Rose was certainly the novice, but did have some street smarts. Martha was the more scientific mind, as she began her journey as a post-grad doctoral candidate, and came back into the series as an actual doctor. Both fell in love with him. Captain Jack was the seasoned adventurer, who rebranded Torchwood in his honor. Donna was the daft one with the great destiny, who finally realized he always needed someone to keep him in check. Amy made him her whole world until her marriage to Rory, and both were finally what he would have to consider family, as well as friends. Of course, that was mostly because of Melody Pond, aka River Song.

You can say what you’d like about writer and executive producer, Steven Moffat, but he certainly knows how to make people real and relatable. The dialogue is perfect in every character and even in the three episodes she’s already appeared in, that has never seemed more clear than for the newest companion, Clara “Oswin” Oswald.

Jenna-Louise Coleman and Matt Smith in "The Bells of Saint John"
Jenna-Louise Coleman and Matt Smith in “The Bells of Saint John”

Now, we have this impossible girl who he may never figure out. Through all of her incarnations (yes, even through being an insane Dalek), she’s been flirty, even kissing him once. They’re both trying to figure the other out. The Girl Who Died Twice, the Impossible Girl is a paradox. She really shouldn’t exist. Her place is here with the Doctor, as possibly the only companion to really give him a run for his money and be in many ways, an equal. Saying this may get me into some hot water with the fans, but I’m starting to really believe it, even after this small bit of time I’ve gotten to know her through the episodes. “Soufflé Girl” may be something of an anomaly, but she seems as relatable to most as Rose Tyler or the Ponds. She also seems to be taking it much better than any of the previous companions.

With all of that said, I’m really looking forward to what Moffat and the rest do with this new companion, and I’m definitely hoping that she stays around for a good long while.

Promo Still of "Clara Oswald" and "The Doctor"
Promo Still of “Clara Oswald” and “The Doctor”

The show looks amazing, and I’ve still never seen it; what’s a guy to do?

 

BBC has released a new trailer for next week’s return of Doctor Who. It looks exciting, it looks intense, and I have no idea what’s going on in any of it.

 

Watch the new trailer below, and let us know just how excited you are for the good Doctor’s return! The new series premieres with The Bells of Saint John on March 30th!

 

BBC today released a batch of new images from the upcoming season of Doctor Who. 

 

Now, I’ve still never seen the show, so I don’t have any clue what’s going on in any of them! Check out the new stills below, and let us know what you think! Doctor Who series 7 premieres on March 30th!

 

DOCTOR WHO SERIES 7B SERIES PREVIEW IMAGES DOCTOR WHO SERIES 7B SERIES PREVIEW IMAGES DOCTOR WHO SERIES 7B EPISODE 3 DOCTOR WHO SERIES 7B SERIES PREVIEW IMAGES DOCTOR WHO SERIES 7B SERIES PREVIEW IMAGES DOCTOR WHO SERIES 7B SERIES PREVIEW IMAGES doctor-who-season-7-image-jenna-louise-coleman-matt-smith DOCTOR WHO SERIES 7B SERIES PREVIEW IMAGES DOCTOR WHO SERIES 7B SERIES PREVIEW IMAGES DOCTOR WHO SERIES 7B SERIES PREVIEW IMAGES DOCTOR WHO SERIES 7B SERIES PREVIEW IMAGES

 

So what do you think? Are you looking forward to the new season? The show has been on my watch list for quite some time now; where do I start!?

First of all, what did everyone think of that Christmas special? Those snowmen looked pretty freaking creepy!

Doctor Who is over for 2012, but fear not! In just a few short months (April to be exact), the good doctor will return for more adventures.

BBC has already released a trailer for next year’s offering, and it looks (from a non-watchers perspective), pretty damn awesome. Watch it below, and let us know what you think!

BBC has just released a teaser poster for the anticipated Doctor Who Christmas special. This year’s celebration will air right on Christmas day, so superfans have a tough choice ahead: drop out of dinner early, or force your family to crowd around the TV?

As many times as it’s been recommended to me, I’ve still never seen an episode (I know, crazy right). I’ve heard that Doctor Who is simply incredible, and it’s definitely on my list to watch, so I’m sure I’ll get to it one day!

Are you excited for this special? Will you be watching it the night it airs, or simply TIVOing it for later? Check out the poster below along with a first look at the frosty villains of the episode, and of course let us know what you think!

These things look TERRIFYING!

Source: BBC