Monday Series News
Monday, 13 June 2005 - Reported by Shaun Lyon
The BBC has begun posting the daily trailers for The Parting of the Ways at the official Doctor Who website. The BBC also ran a banner ad for it on the BBC homepage, although it disappeared later (possibly due to the intense web traffic.)
Michael Grade has apparently had an about-face. According to BBC News, the BBC Chairman is now celebrating the series' success. "Sir Michael Grade came face to face with the TARDIS, currently in BBC Wales reception, as he gave a speech to the Institute of Welsh Affairs in Cardiff today. 'It has been a memorable year in terms of the BBC showcasing strong Welsh productions for the whole UK audience to enjoy,' noted Sir Michael during his speech. 'Casanova, Tribe, A Year at Kew - and, of course, my favourite, Doctor Who. We will not dwell on the fact that I - in an earlier incarnation - took Doctor Who off the air. You live. You learn... especially in Wales, you learn.'"
The Times reports on the BBC's attempt to lure fans offline in order to keep the secrets of this coming weekend's episode just that, secret. "Whoever [Bad Wolf] is ù and fastidious Doctor Who fans should already have a reasonably good idea ù the BBC would rather that no one found out for certain until the final episode of the latest series is broadcast at 7pm on Saturday. The corporation has gone to extreme lengths to protect the ending of the season finale. It commissioned fake scripts, filmed alternative endings and even produced a website full of clues and misinformation, badwolf.org.uk, to suggest various endings..." The BBC told fans on the official site, "Publicity pictures will appear tomorrow, and thereÆs a screening for the press on Wednesday, so stuff will leak out. Our best advice to you ù STAY OFF THE INTERNET THIS WEEK!" The Times namechecked Outpost Gallifrey in their report, quoting at least one poster on the Outpost's Forum about his theories on Bad Wolf's identity.
Christopher Eccleston has voiced a TV advert for a campaign to support the fight against some of the world's most deadly diseases such as AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, according to reports at BBC News, the Daily Mail,Manchester Online, The Scotsman.
Last night's Top Gear which featured a guest appearance by Eccleston as the Star in a Reasonably Priced Car, featured the actor doing a lap of 1 minute 52.4 seconds, beating Vinnie Jones. It was also a special lap, since Christopher is only licenced to drive automatic cars, so the Top Gear team managed to find him one of the forty Suzuki Lianas in the UK. He also made a few spin-outs during his practice runs. On the official lap, the Top Gear team had a little fun with his Doctor Who legacy by having the Liana materialise on the starting line, complete with the TARDIS sound effect!
More reviews of Bad Wolf from last weekend. Says the Guardian: "It seems that if Russell T Davies's Doctor Who vision comes true, TV won't be changing much in the next 200,000 years, except that there'll be more of it and it will be nastier. ... It's an interesting vision of TV in the future. You can see what Russell T Davies did to get there. He just observed what's been happening in the last few years - a huge increase in the number of channels, nastier programmes, more sinister powers behind the scenes - and he just took it a bit further. I'm actually surprised it's going to take so long to get to live deaths, more than 200,000 years after the first on-screen sex. Maybe we got prudish again, there was a second Victorian age somewhere in between. Or another Mary Whitehouse. And there will certainly be reality in space well before 202005." The Northern Echo says "What's been great about the new Who is the way Davies and the other writers have taken the elements fans expect to see - slimy villains, incomprehensible technological talk, dodgy special effects and a sonic screwdriver - and coupled them with a crisper, cooler, more modern approach. The results have been unmissable. Rarely has a series so successfully been brought back from the dead. ... And those who moaned that only a solitary Dalek was seen in a previous episode will rejoice that the cliffhanger revealed not one, not two, but half a million Daleks ready to exterminate everyone. It would have come as more of a surprise if last week's trailer hadn't given the game away. But the scene is set for a confrontation between the Doctor and his feared enemy that will leave him a changed man."
Russell T Davies wrote a piece for today's Guardian in which he says the only scary part of the series was meeting the monsters. "When I was asked to bring back Doctor Who, I did pause. Going back can work for maybe one night - a drink, a flirt, a snog, then vanish - but this was going to be a year of my life. Plenty of people told me that it was a mistake, that revivals never work, that science fiction was irretrievably niche, that frankly, I had better things to do. It sounded like a great mistake. And that's what made my mind up. Flying in the face of opinion, lovely. ... I never expected any of this to work. I swear, I thought the niche would win. I'd watch rushes of Christopher Eccleston and Billie Piper being so very, very excellent, and feel sad that all this hard work would be relegated to a Friday at midnight by week seven. But somehow, it seems to have worked, although you will not find me celebrating until after the last episode - sorry, season finale. And even then, I am not going to think too much about what worked. Beware the analysis. I went into the first series on instinct, and that's how it should stay. But I love this show as much as ever. It has not diminished as I feared it would. I can still catch a Jon Pertwee repeat on UK Gold and be happy as a Zygon. And as a writer, I have had a ball. This programme gave me the chance to swing from New Labour to Dalek armies, taking in plastic surgery, Fox News, religious fanatics and farting obesity along the way, with a Christmas special to come (just wait till you see what we do with Santa). I should never have worried about going back. This programme's about time travel. In the act of going back, it is hurtling forward, as fast as it can go." You can read the full article at the Guardian site.
Some other press mentions: scriptwriters must have had Bath in mind writing Boom Town at This is Bath; the Guardiandoes a Diary roundup including the theft of the Dalek, as well as a comment here from an ITV boss on the Who 'revival' and another here about the slaughter of 'Celebrity Wrestling'.
(Thanks to Steve Tribe, Paul Engelberg, Andrew Norris, Jamie Austin, Mike Mould, David Traynier)