streamline wrote:Liked Amy Pond as well! Although I can't see us seeing her in a miniskirt again
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00s56d2
streamline wrote:Liked Amy Pond as well! Although I can't see us seeing her in a miniskirt again
My immediate thought was "oh dear, boy-racer daleks"Pista wrote:Are the daleks all made of tupperware now?
This just inlazarus corporation wrote:My immediate thought was "oh dear, boy-racer daleks"Pista wrote:Are the daleks all made of tupperware now?
They're on Dr Who Confidential - with The Top Gear theme playing ... I kid you not!
Other way round. Someone at the BBC announced it and pissed Eccleston off because they'd apparently agreed not to announce it at all so that it would be a shock. That announcement claimed that it was the gruelling schedule that prompted his decision - but it was hastily withdrawn and a new one issued saying that this wasn't the reason at all. I don't think any other official reason has been given. RTD has always claimed that they knew from day 1 that Eccleston would only do one year but it doesn't fit with the fiasco over the announcements nor with later admissions that they only knew towards the end of the season - plus RTD seems to be physically incapable of telling the truth under any circumstances.weebleswobble wrote:He (Eccleston) did announce his departure before ther BBC had planned to, maybe he did that to p*ss 'em off...
No. I did say "rumours". However, the story apparently goes that Eccleston was dragging his heels about signing on for a second season and eventually the Beeb made the decision for him. It would still fit with him not enjoying the schedule or not wanting to be typecast or whatever but would also explain why he's had so little to say about the show since leaving and why he's said he would never work for the BBC again.timsinister wrote: Any corroborating evidence, stufarq?
Mine was Matey bubblebath.lazarus corporation wrote:My immediate thought was "oh dear, boy-racer daleks"Pista wrote:Are the daleks all made of tupperware now?
There's no real doubt about that part. He wouldn't have got out of a longer contract very easily. Doesn't mean he'd made it clear that he wouldn't do another.Phono Paul wrote:It's pretty likely that Eccleston was only ever contracted for the single season
Tennant was cast in February 2005, when Eccleston only had a few weeks left to record.Phono Paul wrote:when you consider the given lead time for casting Tennant
How, exactly, does the character develop? And how does the Bad Wolf arc prove your point? It's not really an arc at all, just a bunch of cryptic and ultimately meaningless references that Davies didn't even understand when he wrote them. He eventually turned them into a plot element after the event but not one that would only work if Eccleston's departure was agreed from the outset.Phono Paul wrote:the way the character develops, the Bad Wolf arc
Possibly but none of this proves that they knew from the outset that Eccleston would only do one season. His departure wasn't confirmed to the production office until January 2005, almost at the end of shooting.Phono Paul wrote:Taking that bit as read, what really happened was that, despite all the clever planning, Eccleston rather let it slip that he was only doing one season when he appeared on Jonathon Ross's show, mere days before the first episode was aired:
"Stho ththen Cthwistothpher, are you in it for the long haul?" (spot my hilarious Ross impression there)
"I think I've already done the long haul"
Cue sirens, flashing lights and Family Fortunesesque "duck" noises.
And somewhere in the BBC Press department the phone starts ringing off the hook. Unable to get hold of RTD for an official statement, some PR trainee hurriedly rushes out a press release, basically making the whole "pressures of filming" thing up.
Cue lots of bitterness and anger all round and a (somewhat less) hastily written retraction, well after the damage had been done.
Eccleston has a massive strop and supposedly refuses to work with the BBC ever again, although that bit is clearly bollocks as he's appearing in a BBC drama about Lennon imminently.
Agreed. Plus it becomes predictable (did anyone NOT guess that the Master would be in Series 3 just because it was his turn next?) They need to have at least one series with no returning monsters at all and two or three years without Daleks or Cybermen. (Although, frankly, if I never see the modern Playmobil Cybermen again I'll be very happy.)spot778 wrote:as with Cybermen and other iconic enemies, they have to be used sparingly otherwise they lose their impact
worth itErudite wrote:All right, we get it - you've got the horn for the Invernessian Ginger Goddess.
To be fair, she is gorgeous.
However, you do realise that ginger + ginger = kids who burn to a crisp if exposed to direct sunlight for more than five minutes?
It's not an image I want to contemplate...Graham Norton appearing over Matt Smith's face.Quiff Boy wrote:
One wrote: "The tension and enjoyment of the moment was completely ruined by the cartoon figure of Graham Norton which appeared over Matt Smith's face..."
i'd have thought that was a blessing