Doctor Who Adventures 286

Wednesday, 12 September 2012 - Reported by Harry Ward
This week's Doctor Who Adventures magazine comes with either a squirty bow tie or a build-your-own TARDIS kit.
Your latest Doctor Who Adventures is packed with dinosaurs!

How brilliant are the latest episodes of new Who? Does it get any better than this? Well, yes actually - it does. In this week's magazine we've got a sneaky peek of A Town Called Mercy! Get ready for some real cowboy fun this Saturday.

This week's issue is also packed with loads of monster fun - check out the design secrets behind the witchy hagbags, the Carrionites, chuckle at our vegetable lookalikes and pull-out your very own Dinosaurs on a Spaceship guide!

Will your issue come with a squirty bow tie or a build-your-own TARDIS kit?*

* We cannot guarantee that you will be able to travel through time and space in your TARDIS. If you can, please go back to last week and let us know. Many thanks. And if you get the squirty bow tie, please do not squirt us as we can't swim.
Issue 286 of Doctor Who Adventures is out in the UK from 13 September.




FILTER: - DWA - Series 7/33

Dinosaur ratings on a SPACE ship

Tuesday, 11 September 2012 - Reported by Chuck Foster
Canadian broadcaster SPACE has reported another ratings success with its broadcast of Dinosaurs on a Spaceship last Saturday.

Dinosaurs, Queen Nefertiti and a “spaceship the size of Canada” were no match for the Time Lord as Saturday night’s episode of DOCTOR WHO drew an astronomical 575,000 viewers on SPACE, making it the #1 program on television overall Saturday with the key A18-49 demo. For the second week in a row, SPACE was the #1 network – conventional or specialty – in the DOCTOR WHO timeslot (Saturday night at 9 p.m. ET) with total viewers and in the key A25-54 and A18-49 demos.

The episode peaked at 693,000 viewers and attracted 817,000 unique viewers. Based on the average audience of the first two episodes of DOCTOR WHO Season 7 (599,000 P2+), the iconic series remains the most-watched program in SPACE history.
 

Canadian viewers can catch up on Doctor Who at SPACEcast.com.





FILTER: - Canada - Ratings - Series 7/33

Asylum of the Daleks - Official Ratings

Tuesday, 11 September 2012 - Reported by Marcus
Final ratings data for the week ending 2nd September 2012 have now been released by the Broadcasters’ Audience Research Board or BARB, putting Doctor Who as the sixth most-watched programme of the week on British television.

Asylum of the Daleks was the third most-watched programme on BBC television for the week, with the crime series New Tricks taking top place followed by EastEnders. ITV had two episodes of Coronation Street and one of The X Factor in the list above the Doctor. While BBC One BARB listings include those watching on BBC One HD, ITV listings do not include ITV HD or ITV+1 which need to be added to the main channel statistics in order to compare like for like.

The chart position of 6th is equal to last year's series opener The Impossible Astronaut.

In the long history of Doctor Who only 14 of the 785 episodes broadcast achieved a higher chart position.

The final ratings figure does not include those watching on iPlayer where over 600,000 people accessed the episode in the first three days.




FILTER: - Ratings - UK - Series 7/33

Next Time: A Town Called Mercy

Tuesday, 11 September 2012 - Reported by Chuck Foster
The BBC have released a variety of photos to promote A Town Called Mercy, which will premiere on BBC1 next Saturday at 7:35pm.


The Doctor gets a Stetson (and a gun!), and finds himself the reluctant Sheriff of a Western town under siege by a relentless cyborg, who goes by the name of the Gunslinger.

But who is he and what does he want? The answer seems to lie with the mysterious Kahler-Jex, an alien doctor (yes another one!) whose initial appearance is hiding a dark secret.

Writer: Toby Whithouse
Executive Producers: Steven Moffat and Caroline Skinner
Producer: Marcus Wilson
Director: Saul Metzstein
 


A Town Called Mercy is due to be broadcast at these times around the world:
United Kingdom : Saturday 15th September, 7:35pm BST   BBC1
United States : Saturday 15th September, 9:00pm ET BBC America
Canada : Saturday 15th September, 9:00pm ET SPACE
Australia : Saturday 22nd September, 7:30pm AEST ABC (also on iView from 16th Sept)
New Zealand : Thursday 27th September, 8:30pm NZST Prime


Radio Times visits A Town Called Mercy

This week's Radio Times features an interview with the cast, who talk about their Wild West adventure.

Matt Smith:
We're in the Wild West! I get to ride horses! I get to play cowboy. Guns! Saloon bar doors… You literally get Doctor Who does the Wild West.
Arthur Darvill:
I don't get to burst through any saloon bar doors. I might try to put some in. I've invented a new award, which I think Bafta should give, which is the Best Performance in the Back of Shot. So I'm going to burst through some saloon doors and see if it makes the episode.
Karen Gillan:
I do have a bit of a gun moment in this. But then Amy has had a few gun moments. I'm thinking now she knows how to use a gun. Which is going to be fun because we're in the Wild West and I'm going to look like I know what I'm doing.”

The full interview can be read in the latest edition, out today.
(with thanks to Radio Times)


Coming Soon: The Power of Three

Meanwhile, Radio Times has listed The Power of Three to remain in the 7:35-8:20pm timeslot on 22nd September; BBC Programme Information has yet to confirm the time, which will be finalised later in the week.

The Doctor and the Ponds puzzle an unlikely invasion of Earth, as millions of sinister black cubes arrive overnight, almost like presents falling from the sky.

But what are they, what’s inside them and most importantly, who sent them? With the international community at a loss, it’s left to the Doctor to unearth who is behind the mystery.

Guest stars: Mark Williams, Steven Berkoff and Jemma Redgrave

Written by Chris Chibnall
Executive produced by Steven Moffat and Caroline Skinner
Directed by Douglas Mackinnon
Produced by Marcus Wilson





FILTER: - Online - Radio Times - Series 7/33

Australian ratings for Asylum of the Daleks

Monday, 10 September 2012 - Reported by Adam Kirk
Asylum of the Daleks has debuted in Australia to good ratings. The series debut averaged 549,000 viewers in the five major capital cities. Up against the football finals, it was the top-rating drama of the day and the eighth highest rating programme of the day overall. These figures follow the episode setting a daily viewer record for the Australian Broadcasting Corporation iView internet TV service, recording 75,900 plays on its first day. All episodes of series 7 will debut on iView immediately after their broadcast in the UK.

Fans have noted that when the weekly episode is on made available to viewers on Sundays via ABC iView, it is at approximately 5am or 6am local time - making it very close to the transmission time in the UK!


Media Links: TV Tonight, Sydney Morning Herald

(iView availability details with thanks to Christian Kent)




FILTER: - Ratings - Broadcasting - Series 7/33 - Australia

Dinosaurs on a Spaceship AI:87

Monday, 10 September 2012 - Reported by Marcus
Doctor Who: Dinosaurs on a Spaceship had an Appreciation Index or AI score of 87 - one of the highest scores on Saturday night.

The score is a measure of how much the audience enjoyed the episode and is based on a survey of 5000 people. The score of 87 puts the programme into the excellent category.

Doctor Who scored higher than most Saturday evening shows, being beaten by the music spectacular Last Night Of The Proms, which scored 90, and Paralympics London 2012, with 88. NCIS on Channel Five also scored highly, albeit with a much lower audience.

With Sunday's overnight rating figures now available, Doctor Who finished 18th for the week, being pushed down by Sunday's X Factor and the closing ceremony of the Paralympic Games. Final figures will be released next week and should see the programme much higher in the final chart once those time-shifting the drama are factored in.




FILTER: - Ratings - UK - Series 7/33

Asylum of the Daleks - Final UK Rating

Sunday, 9 September 2012 - Reported by Marcus
Asylum of the Daleks had a final consolidated rating of 8.33 million viewers.

The final figure includes all those who recorded the programme and watched it within 7 days of transmission. It is a large increase on the initially estimated figure and gives the show a 34.4% share of the total TV Audience.

The figure does not include those watching on iPlayer.

A full report of the week, giving Doctor Who's place in the top ten, should be issued by BARB tomorrow.




FILTER: - Ratings - UK - Series 7/33

Dinosaurs on a Spaceship - UK Overnight Viewing Figures

Sunday, 9 September 2012 - Reported by Marcus
Dinosaurs on a Spaceship had an overnight audience of 5.5 million viewers, a share of 26.2% of the total TV audience.

The rating was the highest on BBC One for the day, and second overall, with ITV1's The X Factor once more winning the night with 8.2 million watching. Ratings across the evening were down on the previous week with Ant and Dec's Red or Black? taking 3rd and 4th place, achieving 3.4 million viewers against The Doctor.

The summer of music at the Royal Albert Hall concluded with The Last Night of the Proms which had 3.2 million watching.

The rating compares with last year's second story of the autumn, Night Terrors, which also had 5.5 million watching, but had a slightly lower audience share and lost out to Red or Black?

The rating for Doctor Who puts it at 15th place for the week, with Sunday's ratings still to come, although final consolidated figures, which will be available next week, should see this position rise.

Meanwhile Friday's BBC Three repeat of Asylum of the Daleks had 0.40 million watching.




FILTER: - Ratings - UK - Series 7/33

Dinosaurs on a Spaceship: Press Reaction

Sunday, 9 September 2012 - Reported by Chuck Foster
A roundup of selected quotes from the media for the premiere of Dinosaurs on a Spacesship last night - links to the full review can be found via the author's name. You can also read our own reviews here and here.

Please note that as these are reviews, spoilers may be present within the text!

Telegraph

As the story drew to a close, the Doctor effectively acted as Solomon’s executioner, ensuring he was on his spaceship when it was sent to its fate as a diversion for incoming missiles. This showed a harsher side to the Time Lord’s character; yes it is not the first time he has knowingly been responsible for someone’s death and Solomon was probably getting his just desserts, but given the Doctor’s ethical stance, such instances can sit uneasily within the viewers. While it had its moments, Dinosaurs on a Spaceship veered firmly towards the sillier end of the programme’s spectrum; and while it showed that the programme can go to places that no other TV show can, it was ultimately a bit of a mess.
(Gavin Fuller)

Guardian

Well, that was fun, wasn't it? The only way this could have been more of a riot is if Samuel L Jackson had turned up. Fandom will probably hate Dinosaurs on a Spaceship. Yes, it was flimsy and, yes, it was pretty much a story built around a title. The producers have admitted as much. But second episodes are supposed to be fun – and you only have to think back to The Curse of the Black Spot to realise that this is the finest episode two from Doctor Who in some time.
(Dan Martin)

Independent

This week was a more childish and fun episode before things start getting dark and heavy again, there’s only so dark and depressing that Doctor Who can get before it becomes off-putting. For those who may be disappointed by this week, there will be far more darkness to come and Dinosaurs on a Spaceship was gentle respite from the impending tragedy that is to befall the Ponds.
(Neela Debnath)

SFX

This was fun. Big fun. Slight and fluffy and silly, with the occasional creaky bit of plotting (how handy the Doctor accidentally brings Rory’s dad along for the ride when the spaceship needs two pilots from the same gene pool) but enormously entertaining. Tonally, it’s spot on, with director Saul Metzstein showing an assured control over the material. Sensibly, with ideas so broad and outrageous he reins in the performances. Only the robots (voiced by comedy duo Mitchell and Webb) are deliberately played for laughs, and even then it’s a kind of Douglas Adams humour rather than Galloping Galaxies (and speaking of Adams, anyone else think the wave generator engines and the “Argos for the universe” system could have come straight out of Hitchhiker’s Guide?).
(Dave Golder)

WhatCulture!

If you scoop up a pick-and-mix of characters and ideas that have worked before, fling them all at the page and keep everybody quipping back-and-forth then you might make a "fun" 45 minutes of television, but at the end of it – what’s the point? If it's bracingly original, remarkably structured or features a truly astonishing turn from a major guest-star then it may not need to be high drama. But familiar components don't get any less familiar when you mix-and-match them and clumsy plotting is still clumsy plotting even if you’re lucky enough to have Matt Smith reciting your exposition. This sounds as if I didn’t like it, but it was perfectly entertaining while it was on, it’s just that – with the whole universe to explore, I’m frustrated at being given hand-me-downs. But, you know what, if this is as bad as this series gets, then this could be regarded as a classic year.
(Tom Salinsky)

Other reviews

Further reviews from: Den of Geek, Digital Spy, Entertainment Weekly, TVOvermind, Bleeding Cool





FILTER: - Press - Series 7/33

Raptors, Robots and a Bumpy Ride

Saturday, 8 September 2012 - Reported by Chuck Foster
The BBC have released their latest 'confidentialette' to accompany the new episode, Dinosaurs on a Spaceship; the behind-the-scenes video takes a look at how to ride a triceratops, render a raptor, and construct a robot ... There are also galleries of production artwork and the first and second sets of storyboards available to see on the BBC website.





FILTER: - Online - Series 7/33