Masterclass with Neill Gorton

Monday, 10 March 2014 - Reported by Marcus
The BBC is offering fans the chance to take part in a special masterclass in Cardiff with Neill Gorton, director of Millennium FX and the man behind the creation of many of the monsters and aliens on Doctor Who.

The event is part of BBC Radio 4 Character Invasion, a project that will let people spend the day with the nation's best-loved characters. On Saturday 29 March 2014 writers' creations will take over the airwaves, invading Radio 4's programmes throughout the day, beginning with Tweet of the Day and through Any Answers? and Loose Ends. There will be public events at all BBC sites producing radio drama.

The Cardiff masterclass with Gorton will offer an insight into how some of some of television's best-loved monsters and aliens from Doctor Who and Wizards vs Aliens are created using cutting-edge prosthetics, animatronics and special make-up FX.

Tickets will be allocated through a random draw. To be in with a chance you need to register your interest on the BBC website by 4pm on Thursday 13 March. You can apply for a maximum of four tickets per household. It should be noted, though, that as this is a free event, the allocation of tickets does not guarantee entry.

Additional Character Invasion events are taking place in Belfast, Birmingham, Bristol, Cardiff, Glasgow, London and Salford.




FILTER: - Special Events - Production

James Ellis 1931-2014

Saturday, 8 March 2014 - Reported by Marcus
The actor James Ellis has died at the age of 82.

Ellis played Peter Warmsly, the archaeologist in charge of the dig in the 1989 Doctor Who story Battlefield.

He was best known for the role of Bert Lynch in the hit Sixties BBC TV police series Z-Cars, appearing in 565 episodes between 1962 and 1978.

Born in Belfast, the actor began his career with the Ulster Group Theatre in 1952. He got his big break in television in 1961 when he was cast as Dandy Jordan in the BBC television production of Stewart Love's Randy Dandy. Subsequent roles included Philip in The Sugar Cube before winning the role of Bert Lynch, where his character rose from the rank of PC to Inspector over the series run. He also played Paddy Reilly in the 1984 zoo vet series One By One (created by Anthony Read who, coincidentally, wrote for Z-Cars in 1962). From 1982, he portrayed Norman Martin, the violent and troubled father in BBC Northern Ireland's series of Billy plays. Sir Kenneth Branagh, who was just out of drama school, played his son Billy.

Ellis also appeared in Eternal Law, Casualty, Heartbeat, Playing the Field, Sunburn, Ballykissangel, Big Bad World, Birds of a Feather, The Precious Blood, Oliver's Travels, The Detectives, Lovejoy, Perfect Scoundrels, In Sickness And In Health, So You Think You've Got Troubles, Woof!, All Creatures Great And Small, Hammer House Of Mystery And Suspense, Boys From The Blackstuff, ITV Playhouse, The Long March, Till Death Us Do Part and The Adventures Of Robin Hood.

As well as being an actor, Ellis was also a writer of poems and prose and a translator. The BBC broadcast a selection of his adaptations from French in 2007. He was awarded an honorary doctorate from Queen's University in 2008 for services to the performing arts.

He died from a stroke in Lincoln Hospital early today. In line with his wishes, he will be buried in his home city of Belfast.




FILTER: - Obituary - Classic Series

Three-disc Region 1 Blu-ray release of An Adventure In Space And Time announced

Saturday, 8 March 2014 - Reported by John Bowman
A three-disc Blu-ray edition of the drama An Adventure In Space And Time is to be released for Region 1 territories on Tuesday 27th May.

The 90-minute special - which tells the story of Doctor Who's genesis - was made for BBC Two as part of the 50th-anniversary celebrations. Written by Mark Gatiss and directed by Terry McDonough, it stars David Bradley as William Hartnell, Jessica Raine as Verity Lambert, Brian Cox as Sydney Newman and Sacha Dhawan as Waris Hussein.

The first disc will be the Blu-ray of the drama, while the second disc will be a DVD containing the pilot episode of Doctor Who plus the four episodes comprising the first story, An Unearthly Child, and disc three will be a DVD of An Adventure In Space And Time.

The disc one contents have been listed by Blu-ray.com as follows:

Disc 1: An Adventure In Space And Time Blu-ray
  • Feature film presented in 1080p with DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 surround
  • The Making of An Adventure in Space and Time
  • William Hartnell: The Original
  • Regeneration: Doctors 1, 2 and 3, Re-cast
  • Reconstruction: Four Sequences
  • Farewell: David Bradley
  • Christmas Greeting: David Bradley
  • Titles Sequence
  • Deleted Scene: Delia Derbyshire
It is not known as yet if a Region 2 Blu-ray release of the drama has been scheduled.

The Region 1 Blu-ray is available for pre-order.

The trailer for the drama and a behind-the-scenes video can be watched below:






FILTER: - Merchandise - Canada - USA - WHO50 - Blu-ray/DVD

BBC Three set to stop transmission

Thursday, 6 March 2014 - Reported by Marcus
The BBC has confirmed plans to move digital channel BBC Three to become an online-only channel in the autumn of 2015.

BBC Three has been the home of Doctor Who repeats since the series returned in 2005. It was the channel behind Doctor Who Confidential, and the spin-off series Torchwood debuted on the channel. Last year BBC Three marked the 50th anniversary of Doctor Who with a documentary, The Ultimate Guide, and a live show, Doctor Who Live: The Afterparty.

The corporation says that the changes will save it more than £50m a year and will allow it to put £30m back into BBC One drama. It needs to save around £100m after the licence fee was frozen in 2010, an effective cut of 15% in its total budget.

BBC Three has been running since 9th February 2003, when it replaced BBC Choice. Its presence was predicted in an episode of the 1971 story The Dæmons, with the dig at Devil's Hump being broadcast on BBC Three.

The bandwidth previously occupied by BBC Three will be used for a timeshifted channel, BBC One + 1, and an extra hour of children's channel CBBC a night. The proposals still need to be ratified by the BBC Trust, which will hold a public consultation on the changes.

The BBC is also thought to have struck a deal with TV ratings body Barb that will allow online viewing on the iPlayer to be included in official audience figures for the first time.

An e-mail from director-general Tony Hall to BBC staff about the proposal has been made public:
Since I came back to the BBC I hope I've made two things clear.

First that the BBC is living with a licence fee that for five years will have been flat - it will not have gone up at all. And, at the same time, we are absorbing extra costs that we were asked to take on - for the World Service, S4C and the roll-out of broadband. That's why the organisation has had to look for savings - so that we, like everyone else in these difficult economic times, can live within our means. My concern - along with that of everybody I meet inside and outside the BBC - is to ensure that the quality of what we do is not compromised along the way. We are here to produce exceptional and distinctive programmes and services for Britain and the world. But I do believe, as I said only last week, that the BBC has taken incremental change as far as it can. Something has to give. And that means hard choices. But there is one choice I will never make - and that's to sacrifice quality. And I believe that's what the British public thinks too.

The second point I've made is that the BBC is, by its nature and history, an organisation that constantly reinvents itself, an organisation that takes the idea of public service broadcasting - to inform, educate and entertain - and makes it relevant for each generation in our nearly one hundred year history. I remember myself the launch of BBC News Online when I was running BBC News. There was a great deal of scepticism to put it mildly. But we were doing what the BBC and its staff have always done - using our innate creativity to lead the way. That's why now - for this generation - I believe the iPlayer is a key part of the future for public service broadcasting. It's the gateway for people who increasingly want to watch and listen to what they want, when they want it - on tablets, on mobiles as well as other screens. I am sure that this is going to be increasingly important for our younger audiences. And reaching those audiences is vital for the BBC.

Reconciling these two aims - financial and strategic - has led us to this difficult conclusion. We should close BBC Three as a broadcast or linear channel and ask Danny [Cohen, director of BBC Television] and his team to reinvent it as a channel online and on the iPlayer. We propose making this change in the autumn of next year. I believe it's the right thing to do: young audiences – the BBC Three audience – are the most mobile and ready to move to an online world. 25% of viewing by 16-24 year olds is to catch-up or other screens and over the next few years we expect that to reach 40%. We recognise that, for now, most of this audience still do their viewing on television, and that is why we plan to show BBC Three’s long-form content on either BBC One or BBC Two.

I'm convinced that the BBC as a creative organisation will be able to reinvent a space for young people on the iPlayer that will be bold, innovative and distinctive. It will not just be a TV channel distributed online - it will be an opportunity to look at new forms, formats, different durations, and more individualised and interactive content. It will play to BBC Three’s strengths, offer something distinctive and new, and enhance the BBC’s reputation with young audiences. And I will challenge everyone in the BBC to spend much more time focusing on programming for young audiences. We will lead the way.

Let me just say to Zai [Bennett, BBC Three controller] and the BBC Three team: you produce, and will continue to produce, amazing programmes – bringing new ideas, new stories and new talent to our screens. BBC Three has an extraordinary track record – it’s been home to Gavin & Stacey, Little Britain, Bad Education and, right now, Bluestone 42. I’ve also been seriously impressed by the current affairs I’ve seen – from Blood, Sweat And T-Shirts and Our War, to Reggie Yates’s outstanding reports from South Africa, ending just this week. You can be rightly proud of what you have achieved so far. I want you to carry on making programmes for young audiences that continue to break new ground.

This is the first time in the BBC's history that we are proposing to close a television channel. I can’t rule out it being the last change to our programmes or services. It will save the BBC over £50 million a year. £30 million of that will go into drama on BBC One. And it also means we will extend Children's programmes by an hour a night and provide a BBC One +1 channel. I must stress - all of this is what we are proposing to the BBC Trust. They will have the final say.

I am certain that this decision is strategically right - but it's also financially necessary too. Delivering the savings programme following the last licence fee negotiation means these changes are happening earlier than they might in a better financial environment. And I don’t simply want to keep salami slicing the budgets in a way that means our frontline staff are always asked to keep doing more with less. I am sure that we will have to face up to further difficult challenges as we build the BBC for the future. But in making those changes, I am determined to ensure we embrace the new opportunities technology gives us - and match that with programming of the highest quality that is simply the best in the world.

Danny Cohen, the director of BBC Television, issued a statement concerning the news:
This is the biggest strategic decision the BBC has made in over a decade. While it has been an extremely difficult decision born out of financial necessity, I believe it is also a creatively energising and innovative move. In autumn 2015 we plan to close BBC Three as a linear TV Channel and in its place we will develop a bold, ambitious, future-facing new version of BBC Three online. I think this can be transformational for both the BBC’s relationship with young audiences and the BBC’s approach to the digital age overall. When we take BBC Three online we need to see it as a brand new Service launch. It is an opportunity for both radical thinking and unprecedented collaboration both inside the BBC and with our audiences and creative partners outside the corporation.

The new version of BBC Three online will continue to have the things we all cherish most about the Service – innovative comedy, unrivalled current affairs for young people, incisive and entertaining factual, and original entertainment. I want and expect us to keep making shows for young audiences of the quality of Our War and the public service value of BBC Three’s recent season on young people and mental health. BBC Three will continue to build on the comic brilliance of Little Britain, Gavin And Stacey and Bad Education, of the entertainment value of Russell Howard’s Good News and Backchat. And BBC Three will continue to commission current affairs of the pedigree of recent documentaries on Afghanistan, the Congo, India, South Africa and of course the tough challenges faced by young people here in the UK. What is changing is the way we deliver these programmes to our audiences.

BBC Three will continue to do all the things we love but it will also have the freedom to break traditional shackles and allow the BBC to be a leader in digital change. It will not just be a TV channel distributed online. There is a wonderful creative opportunity here to develop new formats with new programme lengths – and to reach young audiences in an ever growing number of ways. Will we still want to make all of our current affairs documentaries at 60 minutes in the age of Vice and YouTube? Will we find that contemporary documentary and formats work much better at 40 or 45 minutes than 58? What will we learn about the length we want to make each episode of our dramas or comedies, perhaps learning from new market players like Netflix and Amazon? Although I’m sure that video – televisual – content will be at the core of the new BBC Three, we’ll need to challenge ourselves to think and create differently. In this sense, BBC Three will be the spearhead for a new age of digital change for the BBC. It will be the pathfinder as we learn how audience behaviour is changing in the coming years – and it will allow the BBC to be ready for the next waves of disruptive digital disruption.

We will also make sure that every piece of long-form BBC Three content finds a home on one of our linear television channels. We do not want our content for young audiences to be available only to those with a broadband connection – and we don’t want anyone to miss out on the great new programmes we will be producing. So every long-form programme will be transmitted on either BBC One or BBC Two, with most playing at 10.35pm or a little later. Playing them on BBC One will massively increase the reach of these programmes for young audiences and guarantee that we do not risk creating a ‘haves and have nots’, a digital divide when it comes to enjoying what we are making for the public. It will also make BBC Three an even more exciting place to be for on-screen talent. Their shows will be shown on BBC Three’s new home on iPlayer but they will also know that their work will get a showing on either the nation’s biggest television channel, BBC One or the hugely popular BBC Two.

There is undoubtedly a strong counter-argument to this change and I want to be direct and open about that. The BBC has less money than it used to but it is trying to do ever more. That is why we are making this decision on BBC Three now. In an ideal world we would not be making this move for a few more years. Given an entirely free hand I would make this change in about four or five years’ time, using the years between now and then to slowly shift the balance between linear and on-demand BBC Three content. That would be a safer, less risky strategy. But we don’t have the choice to wait and do that due to the investments we need to make. I want to protect programme budgets from more major cuts across the board and the BBC has to find the money for new obligations including the World Service that will cost £350m a year.





FILTER: - Broadcasting - BBC

Doctor Who Magazine celebrates 50 years of the Daleks

Wednesday, 5 March 2014 - Reported by John Bowman
The new edition of Doctor Who Magazine is a special souvenir issue celebrating 50 years of the Daleks.

Issue 471, which is out tomorrow, comes with a free, giant, double-sided poster - all inside a special bag - and includes the following:
  • We Are the Daleks - An in-depth feature looks at why the Daleks remain Doctor Who's number one monster after 50 years
  • 1960s Dalek voice artist David Graham comes face to face with his modern equivalent - Nicholas Briggs
  • Discover surprising facts and see rare images from the first Dalek story in The Fact of Fiction.
  • Anatomy of a Dalek - Find out what lurks within those metal casings
  • Doctor Who showrunner Steven Moffat reveals the secrets of being a successful writer in Production Notes
  • The Blood of Azrael - The second part of a new comic strip adventure for the Doctor and Clara
  • Model-maker extraordinaire Mike Tucker and members of the Model Unit talk exclusively to DWM about their work on Doctor Who, Red Dwarf and more
  • The Time Team travels back to ancient Rome to witness The Fires of Pompeii
  • Jacqueline Rayner recalls her favourite moments from Doctor Who's 50th anniversary in Relative Dimensions
  • A review of the rediscovered The Web of Fear on DVD
  • The Watcher champions a little-known Dalek story by the writer who created them, Terry Nation, in Wotcha!
  • Reviews and previews of the latest DVDs, CDs and books
  • Prize-winning competitions, official news and much more




FILTER: - Magazines - DWM

Fannual published for Peter Cushing's Doctor

Sunday, 2 March 2014 - Reported by John Bowman
An annual devoted to the film version of the Doctor as played by Peter Cushing has been created by fans.

Designed to fit between the second and third annuals brought out by World Distributors in the 1960s and produced in a similar style, the unofficial FANNUAL: The Peter Cushing Dr. Who Annual has 172 pages of stories, features and artwork, all complying with the continuity of the two 1960s films Dr. Who and the Daleks and Daleks - Invasion Earth 2150 A.D.

Publisher Scott Burditt said:
It's rare to find new adventures of Peter Cushing's Dr. Who in print. There was a comic book adaption of Dr. Who and the Daleks by Dell Publishing in 1966 and that's about it. FANNUAL is all set to change this. For the first time ever, the unofficial Dr. Who is treated to his very own unofficial annual. Most appropriate!

This really has been a labour of love for all concerned, done out of genuine affection and fondness for the films' interpretation of the Doctor Who mythology, and I've had a great response from the people who already have a copy of it.
The publication is available in the following options:
    HARDBACK
  • Yellow or violet cover with colour pages
  • Blue or lime cover with black-and-white pages
    PAPERBACK
  • Red cover with colour pages
Plus, in a nod to one of the scenes in the first film, there is also an alternative paperback cover available with the title Time Travel For The Inquiring Mind. This version has black-and-white pages.

A teaser message from Dr. Who himself is given below:
Time travel. It's supposed to be impossible, isn't it? Well, actually, going forwards in time isn't really a problem at all is it? Just imagine if you could bend the rules . . . Well, I have managed to do just that! Moving freely forwards and backwards through time and space with my own invention is most exciting I can tell you!

1963 was the year it all began. I finally worked out how to make the machine work, and despite the fact that I am a grandfather and quite an old man now, I am still very sprightly because my adventures have given me a new lease of life! Which is just as well, as you will soon discover! Sadly, I can't turn back my own body clock and travel around the cosmos as a young man but I have shared all of the fun with my close friends and family and now I will share it with you . . .

So, let me take a rest from adventuring for a moment to regale some of the tales and the mysteries and challenges we've all faced across the galaxy from visiting our own and other strange worlds, with all of the many unusual and terrifying creatures we have encountered and the new lessons the universe has taught us in the process.

In this book you will find out about myself, my family and friends and the inner workings of my wonderful time machine with a friendly technical diagram highlighting all of the main features.

In my travels I have become caught in events surrounding the civil war of the 1600s, been to a distant alien world in a prelude to a mystery involving a couple I encountered on Barnes Common, and visited the planet Silicus, where I discovered men made of metal! Scary stuff indeed!

I've become a hostage of alien stowaways in my time machine, and on the planet Samsara my granddaughter and I were caught up in a conflict between two sides of the Brethren of Infinity as they waited for their Great Deity to save them from its imminent apocalypse . . .

My friends have even been accidentally miniaturised with one of my other inventions! Oh, the fun they had sorting that out! I've upset a couple of alien traders, encountered familiar-looking robots and landed in one of the most terrible places in human history - No Man's Land during the First World War . . .

I've explored the far side of the galaxy and managed to salvage the cultural heritage of an alien race, and I visited the strange Museum of Space Science in the year 3000 . . .

Also, on a very beautiful planet, my granddaughter encountered an alien prince and the two became romantically involved, which was very sweet. I've defeated evil terrifying robots who enslaved the people of the Earth in the year 2150AD and met intergalactic traders on the War Moon of planet Skirm, and my granddaughter befriended a strange creature on yet another alien planet, unaware that it was actually plotting to kill her at the first opportunity!

I've upset The Knights of Chronos, who are the self-styled guardians of time, and they put me on trial for creating a temporal paradox by returning a policeman I had met to 1966 before he actually left with me on my travels! Most confusing!

Anyway, you can find out about it all for yourself in detail in this marvellous book. I had hoped to write more about my adventures but I am so very busy exploring as I just don't want to miss out on all of the wonders and secrets the universe has to offer before, one day, I have to retire.

I know this sounds like the witterings of a mad old man but I can promise you that these events did actually happen! Enjoy this volume compiled by my friends and travel with me into this fantasy world that I have made a reality!
Examples of the covers and pages are given below:


And in an exclusive for Doctor Who News, here is clean artwork by Tony Clark for the fannual story Day of the Automatons, reproduced by kind permission of the artist:


UPDATE - 3rd MARCH: The red-cover paperback with colour pages is now sold out.




FILTER: - Merchandise - Fan Productions - Peter Cushing - Books

Titan Comics releases preview of first covers for new series

Saturday, 1 March 2014 - Reported by John Bowman
Titan Comics has released more details about its forthcoming range of adventures featuring the Tenth and Eleventh Doctors, including the covers for the first issues.

As previously reported, the publisher secured the rights to bring out the series in a deal with BBC Worldwide Americas. The company has now said that the range will launch on Wednesday 23rd July with covers by Alice X Zhang.

THE TENTH DOCTOR

The Tenth Doctor is back in an all-new ongoing series! New companion! New horizons! Unforgettable new foes! Allons-y!

Eisner Award-winning writer Nick Abadzis (Laika) and fan-favourite artist Elena Casagrande (Doctor Who, Angel, Suicide Risk, Star Trek) take control of the TARDIS for their first five-issue arc with the Tenth Doctor.
The second arc will be by fellow series architect Robbie Morrison (Drowntown, Nikolai Dante, The Authority).
THE ELEVENTH DOCTOR

The Eleventh Doctor returns in an all-new ongoing series with a time-twisting leap into the unknown! Geronimo!

Series architects Al Ewing (Loki: Agent of Asgard, Mighty Avengers, Trifecta) and Rob Williams (Revolutionary War, Ordinary, Miss Fury, The Royals: Masters of War, Trifecta) start a whirlwind adventure through eternity for the Eleventh Doctor, with artist Simon Fraser (Doctor Who, Nikolai Dante, Grindhouse).
A series featuring the Twelfth Doctor will follow in due course.




FILTER: - Comics - Magazines - Eleventh Doctor - Tenth Doctor

Bournemouth police box takes shape

Saturday, 1 March 2014 - Reported by John Bowman
A TARDIS-style police box aimed at cutting crime and anti-social behaviour in Bournemouth as well as acting as a tourist attraction is nearing completion.

As previously reported, police in Boscombe wanted to reintroduce police boxes, and a councillor has been calling for their return for a number of years. Now it is soon to become a reality, with Dorset Police saying a box will be up and running at the western end of the precinct in Christchurch Road this spring.

The police box will be regularly staffed during the day, offering help, advice and support. In addition, it will have a yellow phone attached to it via which the public can contact police at other times.

Based on the classic look that was created for the Metropolitan Police by Gilbert Mackenzie Trench in 1929, the steel box has been designed by James Roberts at Christchurch-based architect and design practice Anders Roberts Cheer. It will weigh more than two tonnes and be three metres high by 1.8 metres wide. The box is being built by AMK Industries, also of Christchurch, and has been paid for by local businesses and organisations.

Inspector Chris Weeks, whose policing responsibilities include the Bournemouth East neighbourhood, said:
The community voiced concerns regarding levels of crime and disorder in Boscombe precinct. Due to these concerns I considered an enhanced policing presence essential to reassure the public. The introduction of the police box will place an obvious policing footprint exactly where it is required.

The Boscombe police box is just one of a number of projects aimed at reducing crime and anti-social behaviour.

It will provide a much-needed and alternative engagement point with the community and send a very clear message that the area is policed.
Boscombe Regeneration Partnership officer Sgt Chris Amey added:
Building a police box in Boscombe has been a lengthy project which began in May 2011 and has seen years of hard word, dedication and support to make it a reality. I would like to thank all those companies and organisations that have donated sponsorship - they are as keen as we are to help make a difference in Boscombe.

The police box will be staffed by police officers and police community support officers who will be able to help members of the public with any issues or concerns they may have, as well as reporting crime.
Jane Kelly, the cabinet member for partnerships and regeneration at Bournemouth Borough Council, said:
We welcome this exciting new initiative in Boscombe. Working together with the police, we are determined to drive down anti-social behaviour in Boscombe and boost regeneration. I fully support this initiative to maintain a regular police presence in the precinct area, acting as both a convenient information point for the public and also to provide reassurance to residents, businesses and visitors to the area.
Once a widespread sight in Britain, police boxes started being phased out in the 1960s with the rise of personal radios within the police force. Currently, the only other operational "Mackenzie Trench" police box in the UK is at Earl's Court in London, having been installed there in 1996.

The progress of the Boscombe police box can be checked by following Dorset Police on Twitter - hashtag #boscombepolicebox - and by visiting Dorset Police's Facebook page.




FILTER: - UK - Miscellaneous

Design a mixed-up monster with Doctor Who Adventures

Saturday, 1 March 2014 - Reported by John Bowman
Doctor Who Adventures readers are being invited to design a mixed-up monster in the latest edition of the fortnightly magazine.

Editor Moray Laing said:
We want to know what readers think would make the ultimate creature made up from other monster parts. Would the scariest design have the head of an Angel, legs of a Cyberman and arms of a Zygon? We want to know, and can't wait to see what readers come up with!
As well as news, posters and puzzles, issue 340 of DWA comes with a free make-your-own wind-up Angel kit, plus:
  • Essential facts about the Weeping Angels
  • Pictures of Peter Capaldi and Jenna Coleman filming in Cardiff
  • A time-travelling quiz - find out if you are more likely to travel to the past or future
  • 15 mega monster secrets - the truth behind the beasts
  • Win Doctor Who playsets and Lego Movie goodies
  • A comic strip featuring an unseen adventure with the Eleventh Doctor and Clara - use the free Blippar app to bring the comic strip to life
  • Use Blippar for more Weeping Angel scares, too
The new issue of DWA is out now and available until Tuesday 11th March.




FILTER: - Magazines - DWA