The Doctors will take Manhattan together this April at the Wizard World convention in New York
By Huw Fullerton
Yearning to recreate the Doctor Who team-up glory days of The Day of the Doctor? Got several hundred dollars, plane tickets to America and a hotel booking in New York burning a hole in your pocket? Then you’re in luck – because former Doctors Matt Smith and David Tennant will be appearing together for a special convention appearance for the first time ever.
The pair will appear together this April at pop culture convention Wizard World in New York, the first time the two Doctors have attended such a public event together.
Their appearance will include a panel plus photographs with fans and autographs.
Tickets for a photo or autograph start at $150 (£105), while anyone hoping to snap a picture with both Doctors and see everything they’re up to will be looking at $850 (almost £600).
Still, if fans are worried that’s beyond their budget, there’s plenty more Doctor Who stars attending the conference to try your luck with, including Tennant and Smith’s companions Billie Piper, John Barrowman, Karen Gillan and Arthur Darvill, with mutual wife Alex Kingston also popping by for a quick “Hello Sweetie”.
It’s just a great big Tardis reunion really.
I can neither afford to go, nor do I have the time off to go.
Metro Magazine UK:Although the bottom line here is that the Doctor Who Level Pack is great, and if you have even a passing love for the good Doctor it’s probably the most affectionate homage to the series you’ll ever get as a video game.
It should be pointed out first of all that each of these themes are in the main game as well, including a Doctor Who level. But buying the Level Pack is the only way to play as The Doctor, or use K-9 and the TARDIS. And before you ask which Doctor the answer is all of them. Each one of the 13 Doctors, including John Hurt’s War Doctor, is in the game as their own minifgure, complete with dialogue from the show, their own unique TARDIS interior (even the Jules Verne one from Paul McGann’s TV movie), and their own era appropriate version of the theme tune.
When you die you can chose to regenerate as the next one in line, and many have heir own unique props such as Patrick Troughton’s recorder or Peter Davidson’s cricket bat. Developer Traveller’s Tales are obviously huge Doctor Who fans and at least two of their previous games have featured unofficial cameos of the TARDIS, as well as a Weeping Angel in Lego Batman 3. But here they’ve been able to go all out, with references and characters from the show’s entire 52 year history.
Doctor Who Level Pack – the black & white TARDIS even has glued on wallpaper
What makes the level itself unusual is that using the TARDIS vehicle you can actually travel to the same areas at different points in history, which is used for a couple of neat puzzles involving the passage of time. To do this the TARDIS has to park on special plinths, which are actually dotted around in other levels of the parent game and give access to some surprise homages to other TV franchises not in the rest of the game (we’re trying not to spoil anything).
The downside to all this is that there isn’t really any story – just a sequence of largely unconnected scenes that end with the Daleks being defeated, again. The Doctor Who level in the main game was like that too though, and like all the Level Pack levels there’s a lot of reused assets and backdrops between the two.
What sells the Doctor Who Level Pack though is the hub world, which is gloriously indulgent in terms of its fan service. It’s a series of connected worlds that include two time zones for London, as well as Mars, the Dalek homeworld, and others. Each has the usual range of mini-quests and secrets, most of which are based around recreations of famous episodes – from the first Silurian episode of Nu-Who to 1967 classic Tomb of the Cybermen.
The hub also features voiceovers from Michelle Gomez as Missy, who isn’t in the story levels, as well as Jenna Coleman, Peter Capaldi, and Nicholas Briggs as the Daleks and Cybermen. Whether we’ll ever get a standalone Lego Doctor Who is unclear – the series probably isn’t quite popular enough abroad to justify that yet – but this will do very well in the meantime.
Former Doctor Matt Smith has paid tribute to Doctor Who fans, with the actor commending their loyalty and support as he’s moved into pastures new.
“The Doctor Who fans, I owe a great debt to,” he told Comic Book Resources in an interview about his new role in zombie mash-up Pride and Prejudice and Zombies (where he plays Parson Collins).
“They’re wonderfully loyal, incredibly supportive. I’m just very proud to have been part of that show. It’s a fantastic part. And again, a bit like Parson Collins or even Hamlet or something, it’s a part that has been played before, but allows you to reinvent, if you can be inventive with it. So I’m forever grateful to the world of Doctor Who.”
Smith went on to discuss the legacy of his time in the Tardis, and how his run as the Doctor had affected his future role choices.
“I think Doctor Who is always going to sit in your ether for a bit, as it were,” he said. “It’s something I’m very proud of as well. It’s not like I’m trying to actively shed that.
“Also, I just think you’ve got to choose things that challenge you in a completely different way, and hopefully The Doctor and Parson feel different.
“I mean, I’m playing Prince Philip at the moment [for Netflix series The Crown], who’s very different to The Doctor as well.
“So it’s just about choosing work that feels like it’s going to challenge you in a different way.” (Radio Times)
Wizard World Comic Con Portland
Feb. 19-21, 2016 (Saturday only)
Oregon Convention Center
Portland, Oregon, USA www.wizardworld.com
Wizard World Comic Con Cleveland
Feb. 26-28, 2016 (Saturday & Sunday only)
Cleveland Convention Center
Cleveland, Ohio, USA www.wizardworld.com
Wizard World Comic Con Las Vegas
Mar. 18-20, 2016 (Saturday & Sunday)
Las Vegas Convention Center
Las Vegas, Nevada, USA www.wizardworld.com
Salt Lake Comic Con Fan Experience
Mar. 24-26, 2016
Salt Palace Convention Center
Salt Lake City, Utah, USA saltlakecomiccon.com
I think one could argue they both have science fantasy and mythological and fairy tale style formats.
Doctor Who and Star Wars are much closer than, say, Star Trek is to Who. Star Trek is a very structured world and very military (even though they don’t like to admit it).
Doctor Who and Star Wars are more fantastical than that.
Who Is The Only Actor To Appear In Star Trek, Star Wars, and Doctor Who?
Answer: Deep Roy
There is only one actor the world over who has achieved the Sci-Fi trifecta of appearing in the three biggest Sci-Fi franchises on earth. Deep Roy, best known to modern movie goers as the face of the Oompa Loompas in Tim Burton’s 2005 Charlie and the Chocolate Factory reboot of the Willy Wonka franchise, has appeared in Star Trek, Star Wars, and Doctor Who.
He appeared first in Doctor Who, playing Mr. Sin in the 1977 story arc “The Talons of Weng-Chiang”and a Posicarian delegate in the Doctor Who story Mindwarp. He then appeared in 1983’s Star Wars: Episode VI – Return of the Jedi as Droopy McCool. Finally, he sealed the trifecta with his Star Trek (2009) and Star Trek:Beyond (2016) appearance as Keenser.
In addition to his roles within the three mega franchises, Roy has always appeared in other Sci-Fi movies and shows such as The X-Files, Planet of the Apes, and Flash Gordon.
Storyboards from the 50th Anniversary show of Doctor Who reveal the Ninth Doctor’s role if he had made it into the episode as originally planned.
Bleeding Cool’s Rich Johnston obtained storyboards from comic and storyboard creator Andrew Wildman at a comic convention, showing the Ninth Doctor, played by Christopher Eccleston, in three scenes.
Wildman attributed the changes to the scenes to Doctor Who showrunner Steven Moffat.
“My run on the show spanned three Christmas Specials and most of Matt’s final season include his ‘regeneration’. That was me pretty much done other than the huge privilege of being asked to work – albeit in a small way – on the 50th Anniversary special,” Wildman said.
“There were going to be three Doctors in this one. The current, 11th Doctor and the previous two. Ok, so it didn’t quite work out that way in the end as we all know. Contracts are an odd thing and in the end show runner and writer supreme, Steven Moffat, had to come up with something… slightly different. At my time of working on the show however it was three ‘modern age’ Doctors and the current assistant, Clara.”
Andrew Wildman, comic creator, animator, TV producer and storyboard creator was one of the people who worked on the show, and has released a collection of storyboards that he sells at shows, for The Day Of The Doctor and Nightmare In Silver. I picked up a copy at the Geek Comic Con.
In introduction to the former tells us
My run on the show spanned three Christmas Specials and most of Matt ‘s final season including his ‘regeneration’. That was me pretty much done other than the huge privilege of being asked to work – albeit in a small way – on the 50th Anniversary special. There were going to be three Doctors in this one. The current, 11th Doctor and the previous two. Ok, so it didn’t quite work out that way in the end as we all know. Contracts are an odd thing and in the end show runner and writer supreme, Steven Moffat, had to come up with something… slightly different. At my time of working on the show however it was the three ‘modern age’ Doctors and the current assistant, Clara.
Nip in and take a peek behind the curtain. You may be a little surprised at what you see.
And I was, as well as scenes we do remember, we also get aspects we don’t.
Like Clara popping a wheelie on her runup to the TARDIS.
Then we see the barn on Gallifrey, but instead of the War Doctor played by John Hurt, we get The Ninth Doctor played by Christopher Eccleston. And instead of The Moment played by Billie Piper, we get a young girl…
And from that point onwards, the Tenth Doctor seems to take the narrative role of the Eleventh…
…after a trip through the time portal…
…and bumping into the Tenth Doctor played by David Tennant… And two Queen Elizabeth The Firsts…
This is just a smattering of the boards. You can find the rest at any convention that Andrew Wildman attends…
Andrew Wildman will be appearing at Worcester Comic Con 2016(August). Worcester, UK.
Today, February 1st would have been her 70th Birthday had she not tragically died in 2011 on break from filming The Sarah Jane Adventures.
Still the best companion ever, even after 40 years of competition.
The warmth. The charm. The gravitas. The Class. The fun. The cheek.
She was and still is, the greatest, at least to this Who fan.
She was so good she got her own TV show and it was #1 on CBBC for the entire run of the show. Now that’s presence and star power when 30 years after she was WHO.
Generations of people mourned her loss.
I only ever saw her once at a convention in Chicago in 1983. I will always regret I missed her last appearance at Gallifrey One due to working two jobs at then time.
As I have previously relayed I returned from England for the very time that Sunday Night. Got up on Tuesday morning after all that Jet lag to find out she’d passed away.
Sarah Jane Smith: No. The universe has to move forward. Pain and loss, they define us as much as happiness or love. Whether it’s a world, or a relationship… Everything has its time. And everything ends.
Rose Tyler: What do I do? Do I stay with him? Sarah Jane Smith: Yes, some things are worth getting your heart broken for.
Bringing with him a wealth of showrunner experience and genuine fanboy credentials, Chibnall is a smart choice; coming as he does off the back of Broadchurch, his biggest success to date. Featuring nearly every actor to have appeared in Doctor Who, the hit ITV drama isn’t the only experience he has of being in charge of a big TV project.
He was previously involved as the de facto showrunner for Russell T Davies Doctor Who spin-off Torchwood, which he ran for two series and, crucially for Doctor Who, penned finales for both series and the series 2 opener.
Along with Doctor Who – Chibnall penned 42, The Hungry Earth/Cold Blood, Dinosaurs on a Spaceship and The Power of Three – his time wrangling Captain Jack has given him experience of managing various tones and settings; a must for anyone looking to shape the world the Doctor inhabits.
If we were looking for themes to build a series upon, family and domesticity play an important part in most of Chibnall’s episodes – it was Chibnall who introduced Brian, Rory’s father, and took him on an adventure with the Doctor – along with a focus on celebrity historical guest stars like Egyptian Queen Nefertiti in Dinosaurs on a Spaceship.
Could this attention towards family and domesticity mean we’re heading back to Russell T Davies era home-life? And, what with the Torchwood connection, will this all be tempered with a darker, watershed baiting edge that’s become familiar under Moffat?
Outside the Doctor Who connection, he also served as a showrunner on ITV crime drama Law and Order: UK, Arthurian drama Camelot for Channel 4; was a producer or writer for BBC 1’s Born and Bred, helped develop Merlin and was the only guest writer to work on both series of Life on Mars.
Then there’s the acclaimed one-off dramas including The Great Train Robbery and United – about the Manchester United Munich air disaster staring the Tenth Doctor himself David Tennant (it’s great, a personal favourite of mine)
And, let’s face it, if nothing else comes from all this experience, Broadchurch has taught him to be discreet.
Without wanted to draw too many conclusions from his past, whatever happens in the future, Chibnall will almost certainly give us something unexpected, something familiar and hopefully, something that builds on past successes.
So what do you think of Chibnall’s appointment? What changes do you want to see under his tenure? What don’t you want to see? What’s your favourite Chibnall episode/drama? (kasterborous)
I have gotten this question before myself. Where do you start with a show that has 52 years and 35 seasons?
It’s hard enough to catch up if I’m a season behind.
I personally like the choices by the author below but I would also add :
ARK IN SPACE (1975)
The episode I started with, thjough starting with Episode Two after the main titles like I did is not recommended.
It is an excellent story (bubble wrap aside). It gives you all the basics about the Doctor, Time Travel and the characters, it just will explain some of the other nuisances later.
It’s a classic “base under siege” story also. But it has a lot going for it the plottinga nd the writing and the writing is what can hook people on Classic WHO.
The next story after it is “Genesis of The Daleks”. How’s that for a second bite of WHO?
Then you get the Cybermen in the Next story. Not at their best but still solid. Then The Zygons…And the “Golden Age” of Hinchcliffe/Holmes “Gothic WHO” and the Fourth Doctor and Sarah.
It’s a good start.
So, you want to get in to Doctor Who? Well, you’ve made a fantastic, life-changing choice.
But with 52 years’ worth of material to go through, where is the right place to start?
Let’s look at some of the best points in space and time to jump into the vortex as we explore the pros and cons of each story…
1. ‘An Unearthly Child’ (1963)
Of course, the very beginning would seem like a good place to start. This story kicks things off with the First Doctor (William Hartnell) back when we didn’t know that regeneration would be a thing. It starts us in a classroom with a young woman, Susan (Carol Ann Ford), who has knowledge of the extraordinary, but not the commonplace.
Her teachers, Ian Chesterson (William Russell) and Barbara Wright (Jaqueline Hill) follow her home. And where is home? A junkyard. But it’s what is inside that really counts, isn’t it? And inside is the TARDIS.
But here’s the thing: the First Doctor is not a merry man, to put it diplomatically, and he doesn’t take too well to two humans barging in on his TARDIS, or, for that matter, his life.
Pros: You start from the very start. You won’t miss a single reference, in theory.
Cons: You have a lot of catch up to do. It would take around 2 weeks of non-stop watching to catch up, and we’re not sure that even The Last Centurion could go that long without sleep.
2. ‘Spearhead from Space’ (1970)
This is the Third Doctor’s (Jon Pertwee) first story. Aside from that, it is also the first story in colour, which can make watching the classics a bit more palatable for younger audiences.
‘Spearhead from Space’ features the return of UNIT (United Nations Intelligence Taskforce, later just the Unified Intelligence Taskforce), Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart (Nicolas Courtney), and introduces companion Liz Shaw (Caroline John).
In the previous story, ‘The War Games’, the Second Doctor (Patrick Troughton) was forced to regenerate and also exiled to earth by his people, the Time Lords. This total change-of-pace makes it a great place to jump on.
Pros: Stories with new Doctors often do a lot of explanation. Also, it’s still early days – it hadn’t even been around for a decade yet!
Cons: Starting with Pertwee’s Earth-bound era, it’ll take some time for newcomers to really experience the full scope of the show.
3. ‘Rose’ (2005)
The first episode of the show’s 21st century revamp drops you with a bubbly shop girl named Rose (Billie Piper) and a brooding Doctor (Christopher Eccleston). They don’t sound like the best match, but let me assure you, they are.
Pros: This is where a lot of new fans jumped on, with writer Russell T Davies cleverly opting to name the Ninth Doctor’s run ‘Series 1’ rather than ‘Season 27’ so as not to scare off newcomers. Acting more as a pilot than the 1996 TV Movie (which actually was a pilot for a potential US series), ‘Rose’ seems specifically designed so that one does not need to have watched the classic series to understand things, jettisoning much of the baggier mythology. Because of this, it explains all the basics at breakneck speed. It even tells you what TARDIS stands for.
Cons: The story itself is generally not regarded as a classic by fans, who clearly can’t appreciate a burping wheelie bin when they see one.
4. ‘The Eleventh Hour’ (2010)
A blue box is hurtling over London as a floppy-haired young man dangles from its door before disappearing into the distance. If you’re going for bombastic spectacle, it’s a perfect opening.
Cue a young Scottish girl named Amelia Pond who just asked Santa for a policeman to investigate the crack in her wall and perhaps the most charming introduction to a companion in the show’s history.
Even if its actual threat is forgettable, ‘The Eleventh Hour’ is a thoroughly engaging story, establishing a new Doctor (Matt Smith), a new sidekick (Karen Gillan), a new showrunner (Steven Moffat replaces Russell T Davies) and a new “dark fairytale” tone.
Pros: You start with a whole lot of “new” and an accessible Doctor and companion to ease you in.
Cons: Having missed the Ninth and Tenth Doctors’ eras, you’ll be a bit lost when you get to the 50th anniversary year’s episodes.
5. ‘The Snowmen’ (2012)
Following the departure of the Ponds, Doctor Who returned on Christmas Day 2012 with a new title sequence, a new TARDIS set, a new look for the Doctor and a new companion.
While not as immediately accessible as ‘The Eleventh Hour’, ‘The Snowmen’ is certainly the best jumping-on point for fans who want to get up to date with the story of current companion Clara Oswald as quickly as possible.
Pros: It’s a really fun festive story and the ending will leave you desperate to know more about the mysterious Impossible Girl.
Cons: This is not technically Jenna Coleman’s debut, following her surprise appearance in Season 7’s opener, ‘Asylum of the Daleks’. However, a couple of lines of dialogue and a flashback will recap all you need to know.
This one was my least favorite choice, personally.
I finished the “first Year” of Matt Smith’s Eleventh Doctor by Titan.
Issue #15 was the best of the lot, but that’s not saying much. It was dreadful story. And just didn’t give me that Matt Smith feel. The Characters, and the main villain, were unappealing.
The story essentially boils down to the Snake in the Garden of Eden (The TARDIS) tempting all comers with everything there heart ever wanted but at the price of their soul.
The TARDIS “lost” his way and became a bad guy. Alice, the new companion wallowed in her own grief to manic purportions in a very unlikeable way. Jones was just a boring cypher of a future rock star. ARC was a child-like mind (literally) and spent several issue curled up in a ball just saying “fear”.
It was an evil corportion that was behind it all. I kind of Anti-capitalist Santa Claus (kind of reminded me of Bernie Sanders) :).
YAWN.
BUT all hope was not Lost!
I read the first couple of “second year” Matt Smith and while they still focus just a bit on torturing THE Eleventh Doctor the story is so much better and they all played well to the Classic WHO era of the 1980s with the return of Absom Daak, Dalek Killer (even though their are no Daleks in the story that was the point).
They dialogue sounded like rapid fire Matt Smith.
Hallelujah!
This one concerns something the War Doctor may have done (but it may also be because the Eleventh interfered later because of it).
It’s night and day. I actually look forward to reading it.
I see after the next issue they have another new writer, so we’ll have to see.
Just a quick note this morning. I have finished 14 of the first 15 Matt Smith comics from Titan than comprise the “first year”.
As I said awhile back, they suck. Well, on the cusp the finale of this storyline it still sucks.
#14 ended with The Doctor meeting his “Mother”.
Oh GAWD. GAG ME.
I have been avoiding reading it.
And I don’t do that with Doctor Who, unless I just don’t have the time (like the books and audios).
I have read Doctor Who Magazine religiously for over 32 years. The bloody thing now cost 100 pounds a year (approx $160+ a year!). But I couldn’t do without it.
I can’t say the same for the Matt Smith Comic right now.
THE David Tennant one that I’ve read so far has gone for good to very preachy bad and back to good.
Capaldi has been consistently good.
Eccleston, meh…
I have only read 1 issue of Eight and it was good.
So it’s been very inconsistent.
The biggest problem is “voice”.
Sounding like the Doctor. The person doing the first year of Matt Smith missed it 98% of the time.
So if you like them, Why?
As a Who fan I am always all about the story. The effects, even in comics, are just dressing. As a Classically trained WHO fan I can look past the shaky monsters and the wobbly sets to see the passion and the ambition behind the episode (if it exists).
Jenna Coleman was just talking about wobbly sets last weekend in New Orleans in 2016!
It just looks better now and they hide it much easier.
It’s going to be a long Doctor Who winter. So that’s why I hope the comics get better.
I need my WHO. 🙂
FYI: 20 years ago to the day Paul McGann was announced as being the 8th Doctor.