Briefly: Following the actually-kinda-cool trailer from a few weeks back, Paramount has just debuted five new character posters for Alan Taylor’s Terminator Genisys.

The images feature Sarah Conner, John Connor (in all his spoiler-filled glory), Kyle Reese, and the T-800 and T-1000.

It can’t be worse than Terminator: Salvation, can it? It looks really heavy on the homage, but it could still be fun, right? I don’t dig the whole John Connor is a Terminator thing, and Sarah Connor looks entirely too smiley in her poster, but I do have to say that I’m still looking forward to seeing what the full feature has to offer.

Take a look at the posters below, and let us know what you think! Terminator Genisys hits theatres on July 1st!

T3000

Connor

T1000

T800

Reese

When John Connor (Jason Clarke), leader of the human resistance, sends Sgt. Kyle Reese (Jai Courtney) back to 1984 to protect Sarah Connor (Emilia Clarke) and safeguard the future, an unexpected turn of events creates a fractured timeline. Now, Sgt. Reese finds himself in a new and unfamiliar version of the past, where he is faced with unlikely allies, including the Guardian (Arnold Schwarzenegger), dangerous new enemies, and an unexpected new mission: To reset the future…

It’s still got a stupid title (which I imagine has something to do with the huge spoiler that’s just been revealed), but Terminator Genisys looks pretty damned cool. The first trailer for the film was clearly made for fans of the franchise, mirroring scenes and quips directly from the first three films (and ignoring Salvation entirely), but today’s new trailer is definitely the one that ‘what the hell’ed me into being excited for the movie.

Here you go:

https://youtu.be/rGSxss7gWak

Yep. It certainly looks as though JC is the bad guy, doesn’t it? Which essentially turns the entire series on its head, which is probably what it needed more than anything. Seeing this, I’d guess that the Genisys subtitle is also the name of the program or experiment that John’s been through to turn him into something more than man or machine.

In any case, I’m down. Terminator Genisys hits theatres on July 1st. How do you feel about it?

The official trailer for Terminator: Genisys is now online.

http://youtu.be/62E4FJTwSuc

Do you love the Terminator series? I mean really, really love it? Because that’s who this movie seems to be targeting. Iconic lines, scenes, characters, and Arnold Schwarzenegger himself are in this new reimagining of the Terminator films, and Genisys is the, excuse me, genesis of a new series. Alan Taylor, director of Thor: The Dark World, will be at the helm of this… I can’t resist, genesis. I’m so sorry! I almost Googled for Sega Genesis pictures.

As for the trailer: it looks good! It’s what you would expect from a modern sci-fi action movie. Things explode and stuff. Yeah, it’s cool!

This new chapter in the franchise will star, besides Arnold Schwarzenegger of course, Emilia Clarke (Yes, Khaleesi), Jason Clarke (no relation), Jai Courtney (just announced for Suicide Squad), Matt Smith (Yes, the Eleventh Doctor), J.K. Simmons (Yes, J. Jonah Jameson), and Lee-Byung Hung (Yes, Storm Shadow). They just took everyone involved in genre franchises, didn’t they?

Terminator: Genisys will be released July 1, 2015. Oh man, 4th of July weekend? It will make so much money.

Here is part two of three posts including videos from the Doctor Who Panel from Saturday’s Philadelphia Comic Con.

First, a fan asks if it’s weird seeing their face on a t-shirt:

On this one, a fan asks Karen how much she had to do with Amy Pond’s wardrobe:

They were also asked about shooting in Central Park:

And finally, as promised, here they are talking about the best villains in Doctor Who, the weeping angels:

That’s it for segment two of the videos. Stay tuned for the third and final post of videos from Matt and Karen!

This morning in Philadelphia, Matt Smith and Karen Gillan were shown just how many Whovians there are in the Philly area during a panel at Wizard World’s Comic Con Philadelphia. The crowd filled up the Grand Ballroom:

DSC_0097

It only took the crowd about a minute to realize that the duo’s roles in the show seemed so perfectly matched because of their real-life relationship. They got along like old, best friends. Here is the first few (of many) videos I will be posting from the event.

A fan asked about how much of their dialogue was improvised:

Drunk elephant:

Their first time on the TARDIS:

Another asked about any pranks they ever pulled on the set:

And, as promised, a fan dared them to sing the theme song to Doctor Who, with hilarious and fun results:

That’s it for today. I’ll be posting more videos from the Q&A, plus some other fun interviews from the con during the next few days.

Philadelphia’s Wizard World Comic Con is coming this week (June 19th-22nd), and there are all kinds of exciting events happening this year! I’m headed there (as well as fellow Geekscape writer Matt Kelly) to take in the sights, and this year’s con promises to be legendary (insert Barney Stinson reference here).

The biggest event, at least in my eyes, is the fact that Doctor Who‘s Matt Smith and Karen Gillan will be in attendance. Not only are the pair doing photo ops and signings, they are also having a panel discussion about being on Doctor Who.

Karen-Matt-matt-smith-and-karen-gillan-32113623-894-595

And while Gillan is there, she will be on a Q&A panel for Guardians of the Galaxy along with fellow Guardians stars Dave Bautista (Drax the Destroyer), and Michael Rooker (Yondu). This should give fans some insight into the upcoming film that is sure to be a blast.

Along with Guardians, there will also be a panel discussing Captain America: Winter Soldier featuring Anthony Mackie (Sam Wilson/Falcon) and Sebastian Stan (Bucky/The Winter Soldier).

sebastian-stan-winter-soldier-bucky-barnes-anthony-mackie-sam-wilson-the-falcon-captain-america-coming-to-philadelphia-comic-con-2

Not into time travelers or superheroes? How about horror? John Carpenter will be on hand for “Conversations with John Carpenter” which will undoubtedly give insight into the horror legend’s filmmaking career. The website says Carpenter “will greet fans, sign autographs, pose for photo ops and and conduct an interactive Q&A panel (Saturday, 4 p.m.) in which he’ll discuss his great films.”

Another interesting one is a screening of The Karate Kid, with Ralph Macchio. There’s nothing like watching a movie with one of the stars, right?

One of the bigger names at the show is Whoopi Goldberg. “Oscar® winner Whoopi Goldberg will make her Wizard World debut at Philadelphia Comic Con, June 20-21. With dozens of television and film credits, including “The View,” “Star Trek: The Next Generation,” Sister Act, The Color Purple, and a wide range of talents and accomplishments, Goldberg is known to millions as an actress, comedian, host, producer, author, activist, and singer-songwriter.

whoopi

Goldberg will greet fans, pose for photo ops, sign autographs and conduct an interactive Q&A entitled “A Drink With Guinan” (Saturday, 1 p.m.) at Pennsylvania Convention Center. She will appear on Friday evening and the full event day Saturday.”

Along with the usual cosplay contests, comic artists and more, this year’s show should be a blast. If you’re in the area, make sure you check it out! Be sure to head to Wizard World’s official website to get the low-down on everything else that you can expect this weekend!

Are you headed to Philadelphia Comic Con? What are you most looking forward to this year? Let us know in the comments.

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!

So if it wasn’t enough that the 50th Anniversary special brought Gallifrey into the mix, and also allowed us our fist view of Peter Capaldi’s Doctor–both of which pitched our anticipation of this year’s Christmas Special to new heights–the new trailer (a special extended edition, an early Christmas present from the BBC) notches everything up another level. The Silence. Weeping Angels. Cyberman. Daleks. And, of course, Orla Brady as Tasha Lem, an old enemy (or maybe friend turned enemy? She certainly seems angry enough…) whose plans for the Doctor seem fairly nefarious.

“The Time War will begin anew,” she cries, “The siege of Trenzalore has now begun!”

Trenzalore, where the Doctor’s grave is. We just got shivers–how about you?

And, we’ve heard that we can expect to see more of the Doctor then ever before–Matt Smith will have to disrobe in order to enter a certain church. For whatever reason, we doubt anyone will be complaining!

Check out the new trailer below and let us know your thoughts in the comments! How do you think the Doctor gets out of Trenzalore?? Are you excited about Capaldi? Think he’s the perfect choice or the perfectly wrong choice? Let us know!

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

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

In case you weren’t excited enough, BBC America is winding things up to a fever pitch with a series of programming all week, culminating in the live simulcast of the Day of the Doctor on Saturday, November 23rd at 2:50 p.m. EST (that’s 11:50 a.m. for those of us on the West Coast). There’s been a slew of information coming out about it, so we here at Geekscape thought we’d put everything we know all in one place for you! Aren’t we nice?

Courtesy of the BBC.
Courtesy of the BBC.

BBC Programming

BBC America will be doing all-Doctor all-the-time this week (they’re calling it Doctor Who Takeover Week. Not as catchy as Shark Week, right?), starting on Monday (yes, yesterday, sorry–if you missed something, check your local on-demand). Here’s the line-up (all times EST unless otherwise stated):

Monday 11/18:

9 a.m. to 9 p.m.: The Doctor Revisited Marathon (specials on each of the Doctors for the past 50 years)

9 p.m. to 10 p.m.: Doctor Who: Tales from the Tardis

10 p.m.: The Science of the Doctor with Brian Cox

 

Tuesday, 11/19:

10 a.m. to 10 p.m.: The Ninth Doctor Marathon

10 p.m.: The Christmas Invasion (2005 Christmas Special)

11 p.m.: The Runaway Bride (2006 Christmas Special)

Don't Blink.
Don’t Blink.

Weds, 11/20:

Midnight: “Blink” Yes, that episode with Angels. The first one.

1 a.m.: “Voyage of the Damned” (2007 Christmas Special)

2 a.m: The Tenth Doctor Marathon, Part 1 (Ep 1-4, Season 4)

8 a.m.: The Tenth Doctor Marathon, Part 2 (Ep 4-13, Season 4)

5 p.m.: The Tenth Doctor Marathon, Part 3

David Tennant as the Tenth Doctor
David Tennant as the Tenth Doctor

Thursday, 11/21:

9 a.m. The Eleventh Doctor Marathon, Part 1

Friday, 11/22:

9 a.m.: The Eleventh Doctor Marathon, Part 2

8 p.m.: Doctor Who Explained

9 p.m.: An Adventure in Space and Time

Saturday 11/23

1 a.m.: The Eleventh Doctor Marathon, Part 3

11:30 a.m PST/2:30 p.m. EST: 50th Anniversary Live Pre-Show

11:50 a.m. PST/2:50 p.m. EST: “The Day of the Doctor” 50th Anniversary Special

7 p.m.: “The Day of the Doctor” 50th Anniversary Special Encore Primetime Broadcast

10 p.m.: Graham Norton Show with Matt Smith and David Tennant

Sunday, 11/24:

9 a.m.: Matt Smith Countdown (Top 11 Episodes)

8 p.m.: The Doctor’s Revisited—The Eleventh Doctor (U.S Premiere)

 

50th Anniversary Poster
50th Anniversary Poster

What The Internets is Doing

 And just to whet your appetite a little more, but here’s what’s popped up on the internet this week:

Official Mini-Episode: “The Night of the Doctor”

And the new trailer here:

And, catch interviews with the cast (asking such questions as “What Would Matt Smith Steal from the Tenth Doctor?” here; and celebrities (Nathan Fillion, what??) wishing the Doctor a Happy Birthday!

Let us know what you’re most excited about–or your theories on what the answer will be–in the comments! And tune in to our live twitter feed (@geekscapedotnet and @sjbwrite) during the Simulcast!

 

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.

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

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*

If you haven’t watched tonight’s episode of Doctor Who, I suggest you do so now. The episode, titled The Angels Take Manhattan, was the fall series finale as well as Amy (Karen Gillan) and Rory’s (Arthur Darvill) final adventure with the Doctor (Matt Smith). The ending was extremely heart wrenching, and if you are a Who fan, I, as well as the Doctor, expect you to “have a lump in your throat somewhere by the  end of it. And if you don’t, then you’re an alien.” And if you are an alien, then the Doctor will be coming to get you.

Below is a 12-minute tribute video to the Ponds featuring Smith, Gillan, and Darvill, along with Steven Moffat and Caroline Skinner. It timelines the Ponds’ adventures with the Doctor from the beginning to the extremely tearful goodbyes.

And all we’re saying is… we told you this had to happen a year ago.

Last week, we learned that Peter Jackson, director of The Lord of the Rings and The Hobbit, was interested in directing an episode of Doctor Who. The idea came up when Matt Smith expressed his interest in filming an episode in New Zealand with Jackson as the director:

“Let’s get Peter Jackson to direct one and go and make it in New Zealand. I would love to, I will campaign endlessly to come over and film there. There’s clearly a great film industry out there. It’s something I would be very interested in, it’s just whether we can persuade the producers to fly us all over.”

Upon hearing Smith’s interest, Jackson responded:

“I’m a huge Doctor Who fan, and I think Matt’s fantastic. Just name the time and place and I’ll be there!”

Since the initial talk of Jackson coming on board to direct an episode, the producers have been contemplating about whether or not the idea is feasible. Series 7 writer, Neil Cross, has spoken about potentially scripting a story that could “only be shot in New Zealand.” It’s a safe assumption that Jackson would probably be in the Director’s Chair.

Caroline Skinner, Executive Producer of Doctor Who, is just as keen on the idea:

“It is beyond wonderful that Peter is a fan of the show and it’s beyond flattering that he’d even think about it. I’m absolutely sure that we couldn’t afford him but, you know, we can always negotiate. His enthusiasm is just fantastic of course.”…”I’m with Matt [Smith]. Of course at some point we’d love to bring Doctor Who down under…it won’t be possible until at least a year after the 50th anniversary. We are already two-thirds of the way through the shoots of series 7 and although we filmed a couple of episodes abroad (Spain and the USA). I can confirm for the rest of series 7 we will be shooting entirely in Cardiff Bay.”…“It won’t be for a while but rest assured that we are thinking about it. The landscapes and just the world of New Zealand is of course phenomenal and many movies are set in your beautiful country. It is also an extremely long way from Cardiff Bay so the logistics and the sheer scale of moving Doctor Who to New Zealand is something that would take an awful lot of planning and time. It’s an enormous thing to move an entire production down there for an episode or two.”

Hopefully we see some Peter Jackson magic in the next series of Doctor Who. I’m thinking it will be a match made in heaven.

A lot of talk has been circulating about the heartbreak we can expect due to the departure of Amy (Karen Gillan) and Rory (Arthur Darvill) in this series of Doctor Who. We know that the last episode they appear in will be The Angels Take Manhattan, but Steven Moffat hasn’t ruled out whether or not one of our beloved companions will be killed off.

Now, in a recent interview with Matt Smith about series 7, he said:

“What’s really  interesting about these next five episodes…it deals with the fall of the Ponds and the demise of those two great companions that the Doctor is hugely, hugely attracted to and had such a significant impact on him as a character and for me as an actor. So that’s bound to be an event that flips his universe massively.”

His use of the word demise is what really piqued my interest. Does that mean we can expect the death of one, or possibly even both, of the Ponds? The suspense is killing me…

In a previous article, I wrote that BBC had confirmed that the premiere of Doctor Who will be Saturday, September 1 with Asylum of the Daleks. But, they have decided to give us a little treat by releasing a five-part mini adventure starting Monday, August 27, at noon on the official BBC website, with parts 2-5 broadcasting from the site throughout the week.

Pond Life, featuring the Doctor (Matt Smith), Amy (Karen Gillan), and Rory (Arthur Darvill), was written by Chris Chibnall and directed by Saul Metzstein. Throughout the mini adventure, we can expect to see what the crew has been up to since the end of the last series.

Chibnall gives some insight on what the mini series will be about:

“Pond Life provides us with a lovely opportunity to catch-up with Amy and Rory since we saw them at the end of the last series.  It opens with the Ponds at home and gives us an insight in to just what happens when the Doctor drops in and out of their lives.  Travelling with the Doctor is one of the greatest things you can do, but it’s fun to spend a few moments looking at the chaos he can also bring.”

Caroline Skinner, Executive Producer, also sheds some light on what we can expect:

“Chris has written a beautiful, heartfelt and wickedly funny piece about the adventures the Ponds have been having with the Doctor since we last saw them on-screen.  It’s not long till the series itself will be back with a vengeance – but in the meantime, Pond Life is a truly heart-warming piece about our best-loved companions and their madcap relationship with their raggedy Doctor.”

Check out this video of Karen Gillan and Arthur Darvill as they give you a brief introduction into Pond Life.

More information about Pond Life will be released as the date draws near.

So in the last article I wrote, we found out that the first episode would have it’s debut at the BFI. And now they have just released the titles for episodes 4 and 5! So here is a little sneak peak for what adventures you can expect in the upcoming series:

Asylum of the Daleks, by Steven Moffat

Dinosaurs on a Spaceship, by Chris Chibnall

A Town Called Mercy, by Toby Whithouse

The Power of Three, by Chris Chibnall

The Angels Take Manhattan, by Steven Moffat

You can expect more information as the premiere of series seven draws near.

If you are a Doctor Who fan and you happen to live in New York City, BBC is planning on having a screening of the first episode Asylum Of The Daleks on Saturday, August 25 at 6pm! Much like the screening at the BFI, there will be a live Q&A with the Doctor (Matt Smith), his companion (Karen Gillan), and executive producer Caroline Skinner.

Tickets go on sale tomorrow, Thursday, August 16 at the price of 11¢ (with a surcharge of 1$) in honor of the Eleventh Doctor and will be available exclusively through a link shared by the @BBCAmerica account. Tickets will sell out fast, so try to get one while you can! This will be your chance to be one of the first to view Asylum of the Daleks before the season premiere on BBC America’s Supernatural Saturday, coming this Fall.

The wait will soon be over for all you Doctor Who fans out there. It’s been a long couple of months, but later this week, series seven will finally begin and we will get the Doctor back into our lives! But for those of you who really can’t wait, the first episode, Asylum of the Daleks, will be premiered tomorrow night at the British Film Festival.

Following the preview, there will be a live Q&A with Matt Smith, who will be returning for his third series as the Doctor, along with Karen Gillan and Arthur Darvill. We can also expect to see award winning writer Steven Moffat and executive producer Caroline Skinner on stage alongside them. 

If you’re unable to make it out to the BFI in London, you can always follow the official Doctor Who Twitter, where Skinner will be posting the latest news periodically throughout the night. If you don’t already follow the Twitter feed, now would be the best time to start!

Check out the latest trailer for series seven of Doctor Who here!

So, what’s the best way to celebrate a franchise’s 50th anniversary? With a TV movie! Duh. BBC has announced that Dr. Who is going to be getting a TV movie titled An Adventure in Space and Time that is going to explore the genesis of Doctor Who from its first broadcast on Nov. 23, 1963. The 90-minute movie will explore all aspects of the series, including the many personalities who came together to bring the show to life. Given the nature of the Doctor, who regenerates in different bodies (and has thus, been played by different actors), his origin story has the potential to be really great. And fans are likely to be wondering (and hoping) if the other actors who have played the doctor appear in the special. Doctor Who has had at least 11 different actors playing the Doctor, beginning with William Hartnell and including Christopher Eccleston, David Tennant and the current Matt Smith. Mark Gatiss wrote the film with Steven Moffat and Caroline Skinner producing it. The latest season of Doctor Who starts in the UK this month with BBC America following in the fall.

Source: Deadline

As you are all well aware, the cast of Doctor Who along with head writer Steven Moffat and new executive producer, Caroline Skinner attended San Diego Comic Con last weekend. I was lucky enough to get some time in front of a camera with them and here are the results.

Enjoy and be sure to check out my Doctor Who podcast at AMadManwithaBox.com

They only just started shooting a month ago, but lucky enough for fans the Doctor Who team had enough in the can to pull together this fantastic teaser trailer for series 7 just in time for the official convention in Cardiff this past weekend. Robo gunslingers in the old west, egyptian dressed ladies, Farscape‘s Ben Browder and is that a Dalek eye stalk?!? Autumn can’t get here fast enough.

Jenna-Louise Coleman, 25 year old actress from Emmerdale and Waterloo Road was announced this morning as the newest companion to travel with the Doctor in the TARDIS after the Ponds take their in episode 5 of the coming series. Episode 5 Moffat has said will feature “a final encounter with the Weeping Angels in ep 5. Not everyone gets out alive & I mean it this time.”

Jenna’s first official episode will be the 2012 Christmas special which will be followed by 8 more episodes of series 7 in 2013. All of this of course leading directly into the 50th anniversary of the show in November 2013.

The only other information we currently have on the new companion is this quote from Steven Moffat, “It’s not often the Doctor meets someone who can talk even faster than he does, but it’s about to happen. Jenna is going to lead him his merriest dance yet. And that’s all you’re getting for now. Who she’s playing, how the Doctor meets her, and even where he finds her, are all part of one of the biggest mysteries the Time Lord ever encounters. Even by the Doctor’s standards, this isn’t your usual boy meets girl.”

You can read BBC America’s press release here