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Wednesday’s “Doctor Who’s 50th celebrations, American Psycho TV sequel and Sigur Ros on Game of Thrones” news

The 50th anniversary special poster

Doctor Who

Trailers

  • Trailer for The Railway Man, with Colin Firth and Nicole Kidman
  • Trailer for JJ Abrams’s S

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New US TV show casting

Is Doctor Who Doctor Who, no matter what actor plays him?

It’s a thorny question in certain areas of Doctor Who fandom: is the Doctor still the same person between regenerations? Obviously, the question of continuity of personal identity is one that’s been puzzling philosophers for 2,500 years or so, so in a sense this is nothing new, but in the crazy world of Doctor Who, it takes on greater urgency – individuals can have fads, they can be different in different decades of their lives and experiences can change them, but does regeneration itself change the personality to the extent that the Doctor will do and say things as one incarnation that a previous or future incarnation would never do?

For example, was the sixth Doctor more violent than others? Surprisingly, both first and second Doctors were capable of violence and killing. Jon Pertwee’s Doctor may have known martial arts but Tom Baker’s Doctor apparently didn’t – until Seeds of Doom. Did the Doctor simply decide he was tired of twatting people until necessity overtook him, just as a kid got tired of hobby as he grew older?

Here, at least, is an interesting comparison: it’s Colin Baker reading out Matt Smith’s dialogue from Rings of Akhaten. What do you think? Does it work? Could the 6th Doctor have delivered the same speech in the same way? Would he have?

Tuesday’s “12 Monkeys TV show, Fight Club sequel, The Professionals movie and Russian Hot in Cleveland” news

Doctor Who

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Streaming TV

Netflix’s ‘Classic Doctor Who’ fail

So I’m looking on my iPad for something to watch on Netflix. Although the golden rule of Netflix still applies – it’ll never have the thing you were actually hoping to watch, but it will have something that you’ll be happy to watch instead – of late, they’ve been getting some good stuff in, so it wasn’t an entirely pointless mission. 

Noticing that it had the Paul McGann Doctor Who TV movie available, I decided to see what other ‘classic Doctor Who‘ Netflix had. Its ‘new Who‘ range is quite extensive, with seemingly everything from Christopher Eccleston onwards in stock. Yet this is what I was presented with when I had a look at its range.

Be warned: if you’re a Doctor Who fan, you might have a brain aneurism.

So let’s take this from the top. First, the creators of Doctor Who. CE Webber, okay (just about), but where’s Donald Wilson?

Next, Netflix has episodes from four seasons listed: seasons 21, 22, 25 and 26. Those would be Peter Davison’s final season, Colin Baker’s first season and Sylvester McCoy’s final two seasons. A quick check of the credits, though, establishes that in fact William Hartnell and Patrick Troughton will be starring in these episodes. Huh.

Netflix also doesn’t give the story titles for individual episodes, just the episode numbers. They also have only one story per season – all of them Dalek stories. With the exception of Remembrance of the Daleks from season 25, none of the episodes have the correct numbers for those seasons, since only Remembrance was the first story in its season.

Moving on, if you look above, you’ll notice that Revelation of the Daleks, which is what the story listed above is actually called, has been chopped up: it originally aired as two 45-minute episodes, but these were chopped in two for sales to some countries. Netflix is certainly not appealing to the purists here.

But lastly, I’ll just highlight the most obvious point: ‘season 26’ actually contains Genesis of the Daleks, a Tom Baker story from season 12.

Quadruple oops. Someone needs to have a word with Netflix’s librarian.