Tennant gets way darker than Eccleston as well. Wait till you get to the double episodes with The Family and you'll see.
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Tennant gets way darker than Eccleston as well. Wait till you get to the double episodes with The Family and you'll see.
I'm sort of like Chux and taking the Doctor Who dive now that I can just stream it all on Netflix. Season 3 was on when I was england and the toys where eeeeverywhere, so I've seen a scant few Tennant episodes here and there but never really committed that much. So I'm going back to Eccleston, who I have seen less of, and watching all of it to earn my nerd merit badge.
For some reason I have seen the second episode of the first series like 5 times. I feel like it's all they played on BBC America for a spell.
I felt Tennant was much better than that invisible fuck from Heroes. Dr. Who is kind of great and kind of awful at the same time. The eps are really brilliant or dumb and boring with very few falling in between. Haven't seen the new doctor yet, but I'm glad the head writer is gone since most of his shit was bleah.
Donna can eat shit, she's ugly and stupid. It's all about Martha Jones.
Go the extra mile and watch some Touchwood for man on man action in nearly every episode.
DID YOU KNOW THAT JOHN BARROWMAN IS GAY????
Golly, you've cracked The Code. Same is true of every single thing to come out of England, really.
(my favorite thing about the BBC is how they decided to film everything on video at some point in the early, early 80's and proceeded not to buy a better camera for twenty years)
Haha that was great, thanks for posting.
Some interesting stuff on Wikipedia about it, notably "...it serves as a production - if not narrative - bridge between the 1963 and 2005 versions of the programme. Most notable amongst the many connections between "old" and "new" versions is the fact that it showcases the first televised Doctor Who script by Steven Moffat, the first post-production work of The Mill on the programme, the only time a woman produced an episode of the programme between Verity Lambert and Susie Liggat, and the final performance by the longest-serving Dalek vocal artist, Roy Skelton."
It reminds me of old Christmas videos my parents would take in the 80's.