David Tennant named 'best Dr Who'
Fans have named David Tennant the best ever Doctor Who in a poll, beating Tom Baker into second place.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/entertainment/6211584.stm?ls Man, Valium must need a Valium right about now. The thing that surprises me about this is not that DT is on top but that Peter Davison is way down the list. Sometimes I feel like the only Fifth Doctor fan on Earth. |
Quote:
I did watch 'The Three Doctors' again last night, (effects still as bad as ever) But boy was it good. Pertwee was great. Troughton too. I loved the way they played off each other. Like moody brothers. There were friends in real life though! But anyway, thats the kind of doctor I liked, grandfather like but still young and funny. And kinda 'grand' speaking...with secrets in him.... Quote:
|
Very interesting. I'm handicapped by a lack of experience with the first eight Doctors, but personally, I would have voted for Eccleston over Tennant. It's downright tragic that he only stuck around for one season.
|
1. Can anyone really tell me what the big deal is with Doctor Who? It reminds me of people gushing about B5, when all I see is a show. A good show, no question, nice characters, but shows that force me to watch all of them in order to understand all the nuances (seriously, if you don't watch from Day One at least 80% of B5 goes right over your head) really tick me off.
2. How come they've never syndicated DW on regular TV? Late night on PBS, if nothing else. |
1. It's the longest-running science fiction series in the world. (I think.) Also, it's one of the few shows that can plausibly recast the main character every couple seasons to give the show a fresh new look and not suffer for plot or character development because of it. And the TARDIS is awesome.
2. Because they hate us. |
Uh, I'm not so sure about that longest-running thing anymore. I think in terms of sheer number of seasons, yeah, but continuous...Stargate owns that title, and I get the feeling it's gonna hold it for awhile.
|
Quote:
One thing's for sure, though: Tom Baker was "the" Doctor for ages because ... he was "the" Doctor for ages. It was self-perpetuating. If that spell is broken, the Fourth Doctor episodes are going to start to look dated. I think that's one reason that Pertwee did so well -- turning away from Tom for new fans meant looking at David Tennant, but for classic fans meant looking at Tom's predecessor. (Before anyone gets up in arms, I'm not ranking on Tom -- I think he turned in some brilliant stuff. It's just all a long time ago now.) By the way, "Three Doctors" is fun, but -- wow. Not only are the effects bad, but the set design is really nasty, and some of the plot is very dumb. But the Pertwee-Troughton-Brigadier dynamic is a hoot. Quote:
DW, however, delivered 695 episodes in consecutive seasons from 1963 to 1989. I'm not saying that's Better, or More Impressive. I'm saying that means DW is still the "longest running science fiction television series." Quote:
Yes, there are obsessive fans of DW, and they get just as obsessive and stubborn and exclusively cliquey as B5 fans or anyone else. Ignore them. The joy of DW is that it centers without fail on how one outsider and his friends submerge themselves in someone else's crisis and use ingenuity, not violence, to resolve it -- though not without an emotion toll on themselves. The Doctor compelling because he made himself into this sort of wandering god, and after doing it for so long, with all else fallen away, with his home world destroyed and his whole people gone, there is no other way of being for him. And in that respect Zeke is right -- no one portrayed that tragic aspect of the Doctor's character as well as Chris Eccleston. CE "got" it -- the Doctor is lonely and damaged and he keeps going on to new worlds and other people's disasters because that's all there is for him. David Tennant (deliberately, I'm sure) lightened that aspect of his character, but it shows through occasionally. In "School Reunion," he says to his adversary, "I'm so old now. I used to be so full of mercy. You get one warning from me -- that was it." Only the Tenth Doctor could have a line like that and convey what it really meant -- but partly because we'd seen its rawer form as revealed by Chris Eccleston. But getting back to what I said before, "School Reunion" is a delight even if you never saw Chris Eccleston's Doctor, and even if you have no idea who this woman is who claims to have once traveled with the Doctor long ago. It stands on its own just as well as it fits into the larger puzzle. One thing has stayed constant over the whole 43 years of TV, radio, film, plays, and books. Even the most ham-handed hack episode writer has a job messing up this core concept, though many have tried. Ultimately, DW is about the trade-offs of having the power to do good, and how it changes you as a person and affects the people you care about. |
You can have a problem with the statistic, but it's still true. Nya-nya. :)
Yes, I am juvenile. Maturity is overrated. 695 episodes. That's crazy. When you get to that point, I don't think it qualifies as a single series anymore. That's soap opera territory. Actually, it sounds more like a franchise. There are five different (canonical) Trek series. They all derive from the same source, the same genius, but they are still VERY different. Oh, and twenty-six years? Bluh-huh? Who comes up with that many stories for the "same" character without going insane? |
Quote:
Quote:
|
Quote:
The main difference is that unlike the ST franchises, all 10 DW "series" follow the same character and have the same (albeit, evolving) premise. So you're also following the long story of one man having endless adventures and being changed by them. "School Reunion" showed the Doctor interacting with Sarah Jane not as the 10th Doctor, not as the 4th Doctor, but as the Doctor. That said, yeah, it does get silly "occasionally." Fortunately no one works on it for very long. :) And there is occasionally repetition, though not so much now as in the late 60s. This week: the Cybermen attack an isolated base -- yes, again! |
I'm not sure if the "same main character=same series" argument really works or not, so let's move on...
I'm not watching DW because it's not on regular TV. I thought we'd established that. |
Quote:
...hey, you could watch the Shalka episodes. They're Flash animations on the BBC website, and one's soul doesn't need to be sold to see 'em. |
Hey, it's cool if you don't watch, it's cool if you don't like it. We all have our things. I don't want to be the guy who gets wound up if people don't like his show. My original responses were to the question of why people like it, but I'm not going to beat anybody over the head. It's all good, OK, Nate?
|
That was an excellent huge mother of a post, Scooter. You guys have reminded me I've gotta track down some older DW material.
By the way, did anyone else read Hejira's comment about "farting aliens" and immediately think Farscape? |
Okay, let me reiterate. No cable, no DirectTV, no uberDVD player, no DVD-Rs, no piles of cash just waiting to be spent on DVD sets. Sorry, but the first few hundred bucks that magically pop out of thin air are going to Trek and Stargate sets, not DW.
As for bittorrent, no cable Internet and a few scruples. I sort of follow the idea of "if you can obtain it legally, don't take it for nothing. If you can't obtain it legally, then maybe you can download it." Still stinks, though, because the thing that I really want that I'll never get is Keen 6. The owners of the copyright (not Apogee et al) went belly-up, so you can only get it through the uberrare iD Anthology set. It's still floating around eBay and such, so it's still obtainable "legally," so no one's ripped it yet. A shame. |
The Doctor is the Doctor is the Doctor, though he's also the guy with two hearts.
I'm not surpised by the poll. I personally wouldn't list Tennant as my favourite Doctor, because I couldn't now list any of them as my favourite. I just like the whole of the character too much to choose only one facet of it as being the best in my eyes. I'd recommend, Zeke (and anyone else who is interested) in keeping an eye out for the tie-in novels. There are plenty that are worth reading, and certainly no shortage to choose from - there are more than a hundred that have been published by the BBC so far, and I know there are at least fifty or sixty of the Virgin novels as well (though they're all at least a decade out of print now, and harder to come by). |
Quote:
The only Doctors I’ve seen much of are the 4th 9th and 10th (I know the names of the actors but I’m sure I’d butcher the spelling and I’m to lazy tonight to look them up :rolleyes: ) and i couldn't possibly pick which of those is my favorite. |
All times are GMT. The time now is 10:53 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.2
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.