Idiot marketing department. They're a real issue on a lot of things. Films and TV included.
Idiot marketing department. They're a real issue on a lot of things. Films and TV included.
I just want a little more Paul McGann. I'd have loved to see him interact with Tennant and Smith. I love John Hurt, but he doesn't have the connection to the show that he has. Heck, I'd like a little Chris Eccelston too, but I suspect I'm asking too much, there.
Not as expected, but still fantastic… Yeah, I think that's where I sit on this too, as though there was more to this story that just never came into being.
First off, I love John Hurt and he never fails to bring the magic into every scene he's in. However, him coming in as a new Doctor means there's not a big connection with him and his plight throughout the story. If I had a wish list, it would be to have Chris Eccleston back with the new Doctors, his take on the…
Is that in America, then? I don't think they gave anything away with the description in the UK.
I would certainly say that this series has been the best of the revival….If not the Dr Who series. It might not be fair to compare the revival to the original as writing standards and styles have evolved since then, but I certainly enjoy this a lot more than I did the 6th, 7th and 8th Dr adventures.
The actor playing Dr Renfrew, doing the southern accent in the orphanage was actually a Canadian. Kerry Shale.
She totally sold that baby bump.
When River talked about 'her' Doctor in 'Silence In The Library', this was the man I imagined she was talking about. Fierce and terrible and old, but brilliant and all powerful too. I watched this, then watched Silence and Forest of the dead afterward. They synced up almost perfectly.
I know this is a widely loved episode, but I'm one of the few that simply didn't like it. The basic premise of it just didn't go over with me and from there, I didn't really enjoy any of what followed.
Gavin and Stacy is good. But very, very British. Don't know what an American audience will get out of it.
It wasn't about the money or fame. Just the fact that people understood what he was trying to say. That's what moved him.
I'm aghast at how low the reviewer rated this episode. I thought the acting was top notch all around. I found Tony Curran engaging as Vincent and invested in his character from the outset of the episode.
I'm not saying it's perfect, the 'monster of the week' aspects of the story don't gel as well as they could have,…