Sunday, March 31, 2013

The Bells of Saint John Review

May contain spoilers. Read ahead at your own risk if you haven't watched the episode yet.

Amazing. Just amazing. Not quite the urban thriller we were told about, but otherwise lived up to my expectations.

Not quite sure how we didn't all get the part about the bells of St. John before. It should have been rather obvious. I mean, the St. John's Ambulance logo has been there for two and a half seasons now. Come to think of it, I think someone did mention it, but only briefly. It really should have been picked up on more, I mean, it's staring us in the face.

I was actually surprised to learn that Oswin was not Clara's middle name. I thought all three of them were named Clara Oswin Oswald. Raises the question of whether Clara is any part of Oswin's name. So maybe they're not all that similar in that respect.

Also, in Asylum of the Daleks, the Doctor asks Oswin why she's such a good hacker, and she says that it's a bit of a long story. It's like she remembered the whole thing about the Wi-Fi, but forgot that the Doctor was there. Maybe they're all derivative works of the same girl, only with their memories of the Doctor edited out. That still doesn't answer the bit about dying twice, though.

We very quickly learn that "run you clever boy and remember" is more than just something she says when she dies. In this episode, it's something that could very easily have been made up by this family (the Mayfields) and may not originate with Clara at all. This just heightens the question of "where did this phrase come from?" and makes it all the more mysterious.

As for the bit about the woman in the shop, I'm rather hesitant to speculate. It could be River, it could be Rose (seeing as we now know she's going to be back, she could already be in the Doctor's universe), I doubt it's Martha (she's not very likely to be working in a shop), could even be Rani from the Sarah Jane Adventures, or someone from the classic series. There's too many women with the Doctor's phone number, I'm not really going to guess. Hell, it could even be someone we haven't met yet (Doctor #12 anyone?).

There were of course, the numerous similarities between what the Great Intelligence was doing in this episode, and what it was up to in the past (which you can read about here). I do like how the Great Intelligence referenced the Doctor and UNIT being old friends. This is especially awesome seeing as UNIT and the Brig are introduced in the Great Intelligence's second appearance, the 1968 episode, The Web of Fear.

Steven Moffat promised us an urban thriller, and while it was very urban, it wasn't really what I would call a thriller. A thriller should be fast paced throughout. This didn't really get going all that fast until the part where the Doctor discovers Clara in the cafe with her mind drained. The bit about the motorbike was very good, but not quite enough to qualify it as a thriller.

One littler thing that kinda bothered me was that in the scene where the Doctor and Clara got on the motorbike, two things happened A) the perception filter didn't work and B) the TARDIS doors closed on their own. Maybe the Doctor just deactivated the perception filter so he could get money for breakfast, but it could also be a malfunction in the TARDIS that is foreshadowing larger failures later on. As for the doors, either the Doctor snapped he fingers when I wasn't looking, or Sexy is smarter than she looks and closed the doors on her own.

Also are they preparing us for WhoLock? I mean, those special effects are very Sherlock and there was the Sherlock theme music in The Snowmen. I mean if the director for this episode was someone who had worked on Sherlock, I could understand, but as far as I can tell, Colm McCarthy has never directed an episode of Sherlock. Maybe Moffat is just merging the shows, maybe we'll get orange glowy stuff in Season 3.

Saturday, March 30, 2013

Meet the Doctor... Again!

New video from BBC America.

The Rings of Akhaten BBC America Trailer

BBC America's trailer for next week's episode.

The Great Intelligence's MO

All of the Great Intelligence stories (I haven't seen the classic series ones, but I've read the Wikipedia articles, so please forgive me) have certain elements in common. Be warned, some of this may be spoilery if you haven't seen The Bells of Saint John yet.

The mirroring multi-nuclear host: In each story, the Great Intelligence has a multi-nuclear (that means it has more than one nucleus, or center) host that it possesses. In the classic series stories, it was those metal balls. In The Snowmen, it was the telepathic snow, each snowflake a nucleus. The snow actually had nothing to do with the Great Intelligence, it just happened, and the Great Intelligence took advantage of it. In The Bells of Saint John, it was the wireless routers and the Spoonheads. Both the snow and the Spoonheads appeared to be able to mirror people's thoughts back at them. It would soak up images and words from the surrounding people (like the girl on the book, the Doctor, the snowmen, and "that's the way to do it!") and copy them.

The beasts/foot soldiers: There were also the creatures that the Great Intelligence controlled to do its bidding. In the classic series these were the Yeti, while in the new series they were the snowmen and the Spoonheads. The Yeti were simply animals that the Great Intelligence was controlling telepathically, though they later turned into robots. The snowmen were controlled by the Great Intelligence because they were made of the telepathic snow that the Great Intelligence was already in control of. The snow was able to remember the shape of Dr. Simeon's snowman as a child. The Spoonheads were manufactured specifically for their purpose by Ms. Kizlet's company. They were controlled by the Great Intelligence simply because they were Wi-Fi connected, and the Great Intelligence was living inside the Wi-Fi.

The boss: This was the person that the Great Intelligence had contacted as a child and was connected to telepathically. I don't know who it was in the classic series episodes (I think there was something about a monk or a professor in one of the episodes), but in The Snowmen, it was Dr. Simeon, while in The Bells of Saint John, it was Ms. Kizlet. Each of these people became telepathically linked to the Intelligence as a child. Both of them felt very alone (Simeon didn't like the other children and Kizlet's parents had disappeared) and the Intelligence used this to befriend them and use them for its own purposes.

The Rings of Akhaten Trailers

Here are the trailers for The Rings of Akhaten.

TV trailer


Next time trailer

Behind the Scenes of The Bells of Saint John

Watch this behind-the-scenes clip about today's episode.

David Tennant and Billie Piper to Appear in 50th Anniversary

Doctor Who Magazine has confirmed that David Tennant and Billie Piper will be making an appearance in the big 5-0! Someone named John Hurt will also be appearing in the special, but no other details have been released.











Friday, March 29, 2013

The Bells of Saint John Spoiler Summary

The following is a summary of all the information I could get my hands on about tomorrow's episode, The Bells of Saint John, which is written by Steven Moffat and directed by Colm McCarthy.

Clip 1

Clip 2

Prequel

Trailer

Clip 3

Clip 4

Clip 5

Teaser

There are also trailers for Series 7 here and here.

The Doctor somehow finds Clara after spending time at a monastery in 1207 Cumbria. He meets her, she's suspicious of him, yada yada yada, they get in the TARDIS, bigger on the inside, etc etc. Anyway, a company run by Ms. Kizlet (Celia Imrie) is using software to take people's minds and upload them onto the internet. The people's minds are taken when they click on some alien symbols in their wireless network list.

<mega spoiler>Her client is the Great Intelligence, played by Richard E. Grant.</mega spoiler>

<speculation>After people's minds are uploaded, evil bad guy (see mega spoiler, if you dare) is going either use them to increase his own powers or take over their bodies and use them as hosts.</speculation>

Monday, March 25, 2013

Demons' Run: Two Days Later

A new clip is available on Amazon and iTunes explaining how Strax came to be with Vastra and Jenny. Here it is in Youtube form if you don't have an account on those places.

New Picture for The Bells of Saint John

A similar version of an image that's been floating around the internet for a few days and that was on the cover of a magazine has been released by the BBC.



Matt Smith and Jenna-Louise Coleman on The Nerdist

Matt Smith and Jenna-Louise Coleman will be on The Nerdist on March 30th on BBC America. Catch a sneak preview here.

Question Time with Matt and Jenna - Part 2

This time around, Matt interview Jenna in this BBC America clip.

John Barrowman on 50th

John Barrowman recently tweeted that he's not going to be involved with the 50th Anniversary. I honestly don't believe it, seeing as the BBC got angry with him a few weeks ago for stating on TV that he had been contacted in regards to the 50th Anniversary. This is probably just him covering his tracks. Jack is an important enough character that this is probably a complete lie fabricated to make the BBC happy.

Matt Smith and Steven Moffat Interview - Digital Spy

Digital Spy does an interview with Matt Smith, Jenna-Louise Coleman, and Steven Moffat. Moffat promises that the 50th Anniversary episode will be "chapter one of a new story".

Sunday, March 24, 2013

Destiny of the Doctor: Vengeance of the Stones Review

I'm doing a series of reviews on the AudioGO/Big Finish audio adventure series Destiny of the Doctors. This month, it's Vengeance of the Stones, written by Andrew Smith and featuring the third Doctor, Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart, and Lieutenant Mike Yates.

This is basically another one of your classic third Doctor-UNIT stories. It appears to be the first time the Doctor and the Brig meet Mike Yates, which would put it sometime in the first couple of seasons of the third Doctor.

The science in the story is completely rubbish. I mean some stuff on Doctor Who could actually happen, such as time travel and chameleon circuits, but stones as energy sources? Connecting with them telepathically? I mean, I can understand connecting with living things telepathically, but a rock? Come on!

The same thing that happened in the last two stories happened again. I'm really not sure what the Doctor is getting at, with a special telepathic rock and some data on a civilization of pure energy. He obviously needs them for something, but I can't tell quite what. I have a feeling that it may not be until the new series Doctors that we get an idea of what's really going on.

I like the idea of UNIT having a mobile command post in a C-130 Hercules. I'm not sure if they had that in the classic series (I doubt the BBC could have afforded to rent one), but it's definitely the type of thing UNIT would have.

I also like the inclusion of perception filters, which is not something you would have found in any classic series stories. I'm not sure how often Big Finish stories about classic Doctors borrow things like perception filters and psychic paper from the new series. I really haven't listened to enough of their stories to know.

Coming up next month, it's Babblesphere, written by Jonathan Morris and starring the fourth Doctor and Romana.

Question Time with Matt and Jenna

Jenna interviews Matt in this new clip from BBC America. Hey, wait a minute... that sounds suspiciously like Adventure Time with Finn and Jake. Well, I know what show the video department there likes.

Series 8 is When?!

Noooooo! Actress Jenna-Louise Coleman has stated there could be another big gap until series 8. In an interview with the Mirror she stated that "There could be a big gap ­until the next series. I think the writer Steven Moffat is off doing Sherlock and there’ll be a lot of preparation for the 50th anniversary special."

Does this mean we'll have to wait until autumn again to get series 8? Are we going to get another eight-month gap between the Christmas special and the beginning of the new season? This seems especially likely since the Christmas special doesn't begin filming until September.

Now with the current season, filming didn't begin until February. If filming for series 8 began in say, October, the series could start as early as April or May. There's no reason we'll have to wait as long for the next season as we did with the current one. I mean with series 7, they had to find a whole new actress to play the companion. They won't have to go through that casting process again, so the next season might start quicker.


Saturday, March 23, 2013

Doctor Who Pointless Celebrities

The BBC game show Pointless Celebrities had a Doctor Who special earlier today. You can watch it in the player below.

First Trailer for The Bells of Saint John

New TV trailer out for next week's episode.

Third Doctor eShort Now Available for Sale

The third Doctor eShort, The Spear of Destiny, is now available for download. Starring the third Doctor and Jo Grant, it is written by Marcus Sedgwick and is the third in a series of eleven short stories.

http://www.amazon.com/Doctor-Who-Destiny-Anniversary-ebook/dp/B00B54TZD8/ref=sr_1_3?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1364061182&sr=1-3&keywords=doctor+who


The Prequel to the Bells of Saint John

So my only question is "what year does this take place in"? Though I suppose there's always "just how many versions of her are there anyway"?

Friday, March 22, 2013

The Great Intelligence Returns!

Spoilerphobes beware!

The BBC has released the full cast list for The Bells of Saint John and it includes Richard E. Grant as the Great Intelligence, which is very curious, since he technically played Dr. Simeon. The Intelligence was voiced by Ian McKellan. Perhaps it has found corporeal form, or perhaps this is just a mistake.

Cast list: (courtesy of Doctor Who TV)
  • The Doctor – Matt Smith
  • Clara – Jenna-Louise Coleman
  • Miss Kizlet – Celia Imrie
  • Mahler – Robert Whitlock
  • Alexei- Dan Li
  • Nabile – Manpreet Bachu
  • Paul – Sean Knopp
  • The Abbott – James Greene
  • George – Geff Francis
  • Angie – Eve de Leon Allen
  • Artie Kassius – Carey Johnson
  • Little Girl – Danielle Eames
  • Barista – Fred Pearson
  • Waitress – Jade Anouka
  • Newsreader – Olivia Hill
  • Child Reading with Comic – Isabella Blake-Thomas
  • Man with Chips – Matthew Earley
  • Pilot – Antony Edridge
  • The Great Intelligence – Richard E. Grant

This does confirm what I've been thinking for some time now that the Great Intelligence is behind the events of this episode. I mean, it fits its MO (Method of Operations). It's a disembodied mind, floating in some host (in this case, the Wi-Fi), draining people of their mind, then taking them over.

UPDATE: The BBC have since removed the offending spoiler from their page.

Doctor Who Insider: Meet Jenna

BBC America has released a video about Jenna, where she tells what episode she watched before her audition and how she first met Matt.

Thursday, March 21, 2013

New Clip from The Bells of Saint John

There's a new clip out from The Bells of Saint John. I'm not sure where it was released, appears to be something to do with BBC America.

Series 7, Part 2 is on iTunes and Amazon

The second part of Series 7/Season 33 is now available on iTunes. It's priced US$20.99 for HD and $13.99 for standard definition on iTunes. There currently no price available on Amazon since the only item is a free trailer.

https://itunes.apple.com/us/tv-season/doctor-who-season-7-pt.-2/id611365356 

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00BW75MKI/ref=atv_dp_season_select?ie=UTF8&redirect=true


Wednesday, March 20, 2013

Could the Master Be Behind Clara?

So we know the 21st century version of Clara is a governess for someone. Perhaps it's the Master, trying to attract the Doctor's attention. Maybe he got his TARDIS back somehow and cloned Clara and planted her where he knew the Doctor would find her. He then programmed her to say the same thing upon her death as a clue. The Master might want the Doctor to meet him at some point in the future to get his help or lure him into a trap or something. He knew the Doctor would eventually track her back to the 21st century and meet him.

The thing about this scenario is that it kinda implies the Master has kids. Maybe they're not his kids or maybe she doesn't work for him, maybe she works for his next door neighbor. Or maybe she works for his associate/companion.

Series Producer Challenges Fans to Figure Out Clara's Mystery

In an interview with TV & Satellite Week, series producer Marcus Wilson has challenged fans to figure out the mystery behind Clara.

What’s lovely this year is that we’ve also got a thread running through these eight very different, very exciting stories – the mystery of Clara. She’s the impossible girl. The Doctor has met her twice before and both times she died. This time he’s determined to keep her alive and to discover who or what she really is. It’s a riddle that won’t easily be cracked. I defy anybody to guess it. Steven Moffat has found a way to lead everybody down the garden path and then knock them over with surprise at the end.

It sounds like we're going to be given a giant red herring and won't really know the answer until the end. So it will basically be impossible to figure it out until the end. That doesn't mean we can't try, though.

Tuesday, March 19, 2013

New Clip of the Doctor and Clara on a Motorcycle

Jenna-Louise Coleman was on The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson last night, where they showed a special clip from The Bells of Saint John.



Full interview below

Monday, March 18, 2013

Interview with Matt Smith (Includes New Clips)

There's a new video interview with Matt Smith out, which includes some new footage from The Bells of Saint John.

The Bells of Saint John Air Times

BBC One has finally announced the air time of The Bells of Saint John as 6:15pm. The episode will air as follows

  • BBC One (UK): 6:15pm UTC on March 30th
  • BBC America (US): 8pm EDT on March 30th
  • Space (Canada): 9pm EDT on March 30th
  • ABC1 (Australia): 7:30pm on March 31st
  • BBC Entertainment (South Africa): 7pm on March 31st
  • Fox (Germany): June 12th

BBC America Promo Pics for The Bells of Saint John

BBC America has released a set of promotional pictures for the spring opener, The Bells of Saint John, set to air on the 30th of this month.













Sunday, March 17, 2013

First Four Episode Synopses

The Bells of Saint John

The Doctor’s search for Clara Oswald brings him to modern day London, where Wi-Fi is everywhere. Humanity lives in a Wi-Fi soup. But something dangerous is lurking in the signals, picking off minds and imprisoning them. As Clara becomes the target of this insidious menace, the Doctor races to save her and the world from an ancient enemy.


The Rings of Akhaten

Clara wants to see something awesome, so the Doctor whisks her off to the inhabited rings of the planet Akhaten, where the Festival of Offerings is in full swing. Clara meets the young Queen of Years as the pilgrims and natives ready for the ceremony. But something is stirring in the pyramid, and a sacrifice will be demanded.

Cold War

The Doctor and Clara land on a damaged Russian Submarine in 1983 as it spirals out of control into the ocean depths. An alien creature is loose on board, having escaped from a block of Arctic ice. With tempers flaring and a cargo of nuclear weapons on board, it’s not just the crew but the whole of humanity at stake!

Hide

Clara and the Doctor arrive at Caliburn House, a haunted mansion sat alone on a desolate moor. Within its walls, a ghost hunting Professor and a gifted psychic are searching for the Witch of the Well. Her apparition appears throughout the history of the building, but is she really a ghost? And what is chasing her? 

More Pictures from The Bells of Saint John

Loads more images hot off the press!




















Destiny of the Doctor: Shadow of Death Review

I am doing a series of reviews on the 11-part audio adventure by AudioGO and Big Finish, entitled Destiny of the Doctor. Shadow of Death came out last month and features the second Doctor, Jamie McCrimmon, and Zoe Heriot.

The story is a very nice one. Another classic Doctor Who type where the characters drop in on some place in the far future and immediately get themselves into trouble. There's also the usual wibbly-wobbly timey-wimey goings on that happen in the show.

The story is one where you see the villain, see how they operate, but you don't know what they are or what they want. You have to actually listen to the story and find out. It's not a recurring villain like the Daleks, Sontarans, or Cybermen that always want the same thing.

Partway into the story, you get the sense again that there's a story arc to Destiny of the Doctors. I'm not going to say what, for fear of spoilers, but something that happened in Hunters of Earth happens again in this story. You still don't have a clue what the story arc is, but if what happened happened, then surely the events of this story must be of great importance later on.

The voice acting is a bit better in this story than in some of the other audiobooks I've listened to. Frasier Hynes actually does a good job of imitating Patrick Troughton. I don't know what Wendy Padbury's voice sounds like, but this is not some overly fake female voice that I've heard Matt Smith and David Tennant doing in some of the other audiobooks.

Once again, the Hostile Action Displacement System is mentioned. The HADS is a system on the TARDIS that causes it to move out of the way if it detects a threatening force. I find it interesting that it is mentioned in the books and now in the audio adventures, but never in the TV shows.

Overall, I like the story a bit better than the last one. Maybe that's just because it doesn't take place at a high school, though. I would definitely keep listening to the stories at this point because it's clear something is going to happen, and I want to find out what.

BBC America Trailer

Available yesterday on ew.com, finally available in embeddable form. Check out the other trailer released yesterday here.

Friday, March 15, 2013

Doctor Who at Red Nose Day 2013

The Doctor made an appearance at the end of the Call the Midwife clip in today's Red Nose Day event. He also got to be chased around the stage by co-host Claudia Winkleman.

Red Nose Day Tonight at 7pm

The BBC's Red Nose Day event is tonight at 7pm UTC. The event is a charity fundraiser to help impoverished children in Africa and the UK. It's the 25th anniversary of the event this year, which includes an appearance from the Doctor Who crew. It's not stated when the Doctor will appear or for how long, but we might just get something along the lines of the 2011 Space & Time specials or maybe even The Prequel to the Bells of Saint John.

If you're outside the UK, you can watch the event in my BBC One stream by clicking the link at right. Please be aware that the video player does not appear to work in Firefox for Mac OS X as of yesterday evening.


Wednesday, March 13, 2013

Caroline Skinner Leaving Doctor Who

It has been announced that executive producer Caroline Skinner is leaving Doctor Who. Caro has been one of the executive producers for the show since the 2011 Christmas Special The Doctor, the Widow, and the Wardrobe. She will return to BBC Drama London to be an executive producer there. BBC Wales Head of Drama, Faith Penhale, will be replacing her for the 50th Anniversary alongside Steven Moffat.


Tuesday, March 12, 2013

Daleks in Part 2?

The BBC Shop description of the Series 7, Part 2 DVD boxset includes a mention of the Daleks. We all know they featured in the first part of the season, but could they be making a return in the second half? We don't know exactly what the Doctor will be going up against in the series finale, and it's entirely possible his oldest enemies could be making a double appearance.
Dust off your bow ties (bow ties ARE cool) and get ready to witness the official introduction of the Doctor’s new companion, Clara Oswald, played by Jenna-Louise Coleman in the opening episode entitled “The Bells of St John”, written by Steven Moffat. Set in London and featuring iconic landmarks like The Shard and Westminster Bridge, the Doctor has to battle a new enemy, the Spoonheads as he discovers that something sinister is lurking in the Wi-Fi.

Doctor Who Series 7 Part 2 promises to be the biggest and most exciting yet, to coincide with the fantastic Doctor Who 50th Anniversary year. With episodes written by Steven Moffat, Neil Gaiman and Mark Gatiss, the Doctor will have to outwit foes, both old and new including Daleks, Cybermen and Ice Warriors.

Doctor Who actor Matt Smith will be joined a stellar list of guest stars including: Celia Imrie; Richard E Grant; Warwick Davies, Jessica Raine; Dougray Scott and Tamzin Outhwaite, as well as for the first time on screen together, mother and daughter ‘combo’ Dame Diana Rigg and Rachael Stirling.
The Part 2 DVD set will be released on May 20th, with the complete season being released later in the year.

Monday, March 11, 2013

Jenna Confirmed for Series 8

Speaking in an interview on Five Live earlier today, Jenna-Louise Coleman has confirmed she will be staying until Series 8. Filming is going to pause after the filming for the 50th Anniversary (which starts in one week) for Matt Smith's time on How to Catch a Monster and will resume in September for the Christmas Special and Series 8.

Video for Third eShort

A video featuring author Marcus Sedgwick has been released for this month's eShort. Starring the third Doctor and Jo Grant, the story is the third in a series of eleven short stories featuring the Doctors. Entitled The Spear of Destiny, it is due to be released on the 23rd for the price of $2.61.

Saturday, March 9, 2013

Destiny of the Doctor: Hunters of Earth Review

I'm doing a series of reviews on the AudioGO/Big Finish 50th Anniversary audio series, Destiny of the Doctors. I'm going to play catch-up first, then I'll being doing one each month.

Assuming there is any kind of story arc to Destiny of the Doctors, this is a good way to start it out. Just another day at Coal Hill, nothing out of the ordinary. Then you realize something's wrong. Someone's acting up. Then the Doctor sends a message from the future. Okay, no biggy, that can't be the first time he's interfered in his own timeline. Then something's really up. By the end of the story, you're still not sure who was behind it all. Maybe it was the Nazis, maybe it was aliens. Finally, at the end, it hits you: there is a story arc after all.

So there's a story arc, but that's all you know. What's happening? Who's behind it? How long is it going to take? Was this a first strike? Will the next story play into it more? These are all questions the listener has to deal with.

As far as the story goes, it's not your usual Doctor Who one. There are no aliens to speak of. It's based more on human tendencies than alien aggression. It also deals more with day to day life than fast-paced exciting life with the Doctor.

There is actually a timing error in the story. The Doctor and Susan have supposedly been there for four months and Susan has been in school almost the entire time. However, in An Unearthly Child, it's November and they have been there for about seven months. So unless school started sometime around June, that can't work.

All in all, maybe not the best story to listen to if you haven't watched An Unearthly Child and Remembrance of the Daleks, but still very good as an introduction to the eleven-part story.