So, anyone here catch the first part of "The End of Time" cliffhanger episode?
I thought ti was awesome!
Doctor Who
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Sil? The little alien with the disturbing laugh? Nabil Shaban. He also shows up in the episode "Mindwarp."
Dan
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Maybe The Doctor was the Ripper himself.
THink about it. His title might give him the necessary medical knowledge in the case and his TARDIS provides him with a means of escape after killing Mary Jane. it also explains why the murders stopped.
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When my son was at university, he got to interview Sylvester McCoy over the telephone concerning his role in Dr Who. McCoy was delighted as he tends to be over-looked as one of the ex Doctors.
It was actually Dr Who that got my son started on reading. He was a very reluctant and slow-to-develop reader until he was about 8 years old and he started to watch my husband's old Dr Who videos. In W H Smith one day he noticed a Dr Who magazine and from that day he read everything he could get his hands on concerning the Doctor. He realised he could further his knowledge of all sorts of things he was interested in my reading about them and within a few months his reading age was way above the norm for his age.
Good old Dr Who!
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Originally posted by Chris View Post****Anorak Moment****
Jago was played by Christopher Benjamin, who had earlier appeared in the Barlow and Watt investigation of the Ripper case.
In Barlow & Watt:
As "Jago" in Dr Who:
Thanks, Chris.
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Tennant is one of my favorite Doctors and John Simm is one of my favorite Masters
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Of course, sometimes things just get too much, even for the Doctor :
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I've been a fan of Doctor Who since the mid '70s when I first got my hands on some of the novelizations of the episodes. a few years later the local cable TV company began to carry a channel from New York, as I recall, which played two half-hour episodes every Saturday morning. During the '80s the local PBS station began showing full-length stories without adverts, and I was hopelessly hooked!
Now I have almost all of the Target novelizations of the original series shows, a Tom Baker scarf that Lyn got for me for Christmas one year recently, a David Tennant sonic screwdriver & psychic paper collectible, and friends in England have sent me copies of every episode from 1963 up to the special broadcast last month- even the reconstructions of the shows the BBC deleted from the video archives way back when. Lyn & I have been enjoying the new series episodes, and we're looking forward to seeing Tennant's last 2 eps. in a couple of weeks, as well as seeing what the new actor can bring to the part next year.
Masterpiece Theater-quality acting on a Dark Shadows-shoestring budget makes the original 27 years worth of shows fun to re-watch. With the new series, the budget has been increased to match the fantastic quality of the acting. In any case, it is the story that counts. I've been loving nearly all the stories so far in the new shows.
My only wish would be for another multi-Doctor story featuring *all* the surviving Doctors! But I admit, in order to do them all justice, that'd have to be a huge miniseries rather than a single 2 hour-long story.
Vila
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In 1998 a Doctor Who novel, titled Matrix, was published which pitted the Doctor against the Ripper.
Apparently the Ripper is an old enemy of the Doctor's named the "Valeyard" who is murdering women in order to "empower the Dark Matrix," the "evil contained in the thoughts of all deceased Time Lords," which is to be unleashed on the world.
Sounds like it could make a great episode or two.
Wolf.
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Originally posted by Sam Flynn View PostThere was also The Talons of Weng-Chiang, which was rather effectively set in the Limehouse of the Late Victorian Period. Interestingly, one of the main characters was a showman called "Jago" - a hint that the show's writer, Robert Holmes (a former Bow St policeman) might have encountered Arthur Morrison in his research, perhaps?
Jago was played by Christopher Benjamin, who had earlier appeared in the Barlow and Watt investigation of the Ripper case.
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There was also The Talons of Weng-Chiang, which was rather effectively set in the Limehouse of the Late Victorian Period. Interestingly, one of the main characters was a showman called "Jago" - a hint that the show's writer, Robert Holmes (a former Bow St policeman) might have encountered Arthur Morrison in his research, perhaps?
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Well, the time meddler idea could always be resurrected. I think there was a story c1965, in which Peter Butterworth played a time meddler, complete with his own Tardis, who was trying to muck around with the result of the Battle of Hastings. Bill Hartnell had to stop him. Maybe someone could go back in time and try to save the women - with unforeseen and nasty consequences.
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Anyone have any ideas on a good story of how The Doctor could meet The Ripper?
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